Title: Effectiveness Issues
1Effectiveness Issues
2ACCOUNTING EFFECTIVENESS
- Fair value hedges
- Derivatives should offset the changes in fair
value of the hedged item attributable to the
hedged risk - Cash flow hedges
- Derivatives should offset cash flows of the
hedged item attributable to the hedged risk
3EXCLUDABLE HEDGE RESULTS
- Changes in forward points
- Assessment based on changes in spot prices or
forward prices - Changes in the time value of options
- Assessment based on intrinsic value
- Changes in the options volatility value
- Assessment based on an options minimum value
4SPOT/FORWARD PRICES
Price
Forward
Spot
Time
5Forward Versus Futures ContractsQuotations from
Walter Teets
September 7, 2000 email message to Bob JensenThe
error in our case is simply that the futures
values (due to changes in either spot or futures
prices) shouldn't be present valued, since there
is daily settling up. But the (change in) values
of the anticipated cash flows of the hedged item
should be present valued, because there is
usually no periodic settling of the cash flows
associated with the hedged item. The change to
the case is minor the major point of the futures
case is to show exclusion of the change in the
difference between future and spot price from the
determination of effectiveness. Present valuing
the cash flow associated with the anticipated
transaction, while not present valuing the
futures (change in) value adds additional
ineffectiveness to the hedging relation. Walter
Teets at Gonzaga University
6KPMG Example 4.2Cumulative Dollar Offset
7Future Values Must Be Discounted
- If forward values are used to estimate current
values, FAS 133 and IAS 39 require that these be
discounted backwards to the current dates. - See http//www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speak
ers/133glosf.htmYieldCurve
8TIME VALUE / VOLATILITY VALUE
- Time value is the option premium less intrinsic
value - Intrinsic value is the beneficial difference
between the strike price and the price of the
underlying - Volatility value is the option premium less the
minimum value - Minimum value is present value of the beneficial
difference between the strike price and the price
of the underlying
9FEATURES OF OPTIONS
Option Value Intrinsic Value Time Value
- Intrinsic Value Difference between the strike
price and the underlying price, if
beneficial otherwise zeroz - Time Value Sensitive to time and
volatility equals zero at expiration
10Sub-paragraph b(c) of Paragraph 63 of FAS 133
- c. If the effectiveness of a hedge with a forward
or futures contract is assessed based on changes
in fair value attributable to changes in spot
prices, the change in the fair value of the
contract related to the changes in the difference
between the spot price and the forward or futures
price would be excluded from the assessment of
hedge effectiveness.
11Sub-paragraph b(a) of Paragraph 63 of FAS 133
- a. If the effectiveness of a hedge with an option
contract is assessed based on changes in the
option's intrinsic value, the change in the time
value of the contract would be excluded from the
assessment of hedge effectiveness.
12Sub-paragraph b(b) of Paragraph 63 of FAS 133
- b. If the effectiveness of a hedge with an option
contract is assessed based on changes in the
option's minimum value, that is, its intrinsic
value plus the effect of discounting, the change
in the volatility value of the contract would be
excluded from the assessment of hedge
effectiveness.
13THE IMPACT OF VOLATILITY
A
B
Price
Price
P
P
Time
Time
14Minimum Value
Option Value Risk Free Value Volatility Value
- If the underlying is the price of corn, then the
minimum value of an option on corn is either zero
or the current spot price of corn minus the
discounted risk-free present value of the strike
price. In other words if the option cannot be
exercised early, discount the present value of
the strike price from the date of expiration and
compare it with the current spot price. If the
difference is positive, this is the minimum
value. It can hypothetically be the minimum
value of an American option, but in an efficient
market the current price of an American option
will not sell below its risk free present value.
15INTRINSIC VALUE / MINIMUM VALUE
Option Price
Minimum Value
Strike Price
Intrinsic Value
Underlying Price
16Minimum (Risk Free) Versus Intrinsic
ValueEuropean Call Option
- X Exercise Price in n periods after current
time - P Current Price (Underlying) of Commodity
- I P-Xgt0 is the intrinsic value using the
current spot price if the option is in the money - M P-X/(1r)n is the minimum value at the
current time - MgtI if the option if the intrinsic value I is
greater than zeroValue of Option exceeds
minimum M due to volatility value
17INTRINSIC VALUE / MINIMUM VALUE
Option Price
Minimum Value
Strike Price
Intrinsic Value
Underlying Price
18Minimum Versus Intrinsic ValueAmerican Call
Option
- X Exercise Price in n periods after current
time - P Current Price (Underlying) of Commodity
- I P-Xgt0 is the intrinsic value using the
current spot price if the option is in the money - M 0 is the minimum value since option can be
exercised at any time if the
options value is less than intrinsic value
I.Value of option exceeds M and I due to
volatility value
19Selected IAS 39 Paragraph Excerpts
- 146. 80ltDeltalt125 Guideline.
- 147. Assessing hedge effectiveness will depend on
its risk management strategy. - 148. Sometimes the hedging instrument will offset
the hedged risk only partially. - 149. The hedge must relate to a specific
identified and designated risk, and not merely to
overall enterprise business risks, and must
ultimately affect the enterprise's net profit or
loss. - 150. An equity method investment cannot be a
hedged item in a fair value hedge because the
equity method recognizes the investor's share of
the associate's accrued net profit or loss,
rather than fair value changes, in net profit or
loss. If it were a hedged item, it would be
adjusted for both fair value changes and profit
and loss accruals - which would result in double
counting because the fair value changes include
the profit and loss accruals. For a similar
reason, an investment in a consolidated
subsidiary cannot be a hedged item in a fair
value hedge because consolidation recognizes the
parent's share of the subsidiary's accrued net
profit or loss, rather than fair value changes,
in net profit or loss. A hedge of a net
investment in a foreign subsidiary is different.
There is no double counting because it is a hedge
of the foreign currency exposure, not a fair
value hedge of the change in the value of the
investment. - 151. This Standard does not specify a single
method for assessing hedge effectiveness. - 152. In assessing the effectiveness of a hedge,
an enterprise will generally need to consider the
time value of money.
20FAS Effectiveness Testing --- http//www.qrm.com/p
roducts/mb/Rmbupdate.htm
- Dollar Offset (DO) calculates the ratio of dollar
change in profit/loss for hedge and hedged item - Relative Dollar Offset (RDO) calculates the ratio
of dollar change in net position to the initial
MTM value of hedged item - Variability Reduction Measure (VarRM) calculates
the ratio of the squared dollar changes in net
position to the squared dollar changes in hedged
item - Ordinary Least Square (OLS) measures the linear
relationship between the dollar changes in hedged
item and hedge. OLS calculates the coefficient of
determination (R2) and the slope coefficient (ß)
for effectiveness measure and accounts for the
historical performance - Least Absolute Deviation (LAD) is similar to OLS,
but employs median regression analysis to
calculate R2 and ß.
21Regression Versus Offset Effectiveness Tests
22EXCLUDABLE ITEMS
Premium 5 Strike 50 PV(Strike) 49
Volatility Value 5 5 5 4 3 2 1
Time Value 5 5 5 5 4 3 2
Intrinsic Value 0 0 0 0 1 2 3
Minimum Value 0 0 0 1 2 3 4
Spot 47 48 49 50 51 52 53
23LONG OPTION HEDGES
- Fair value hedges
- Mark-to-market of the option will generally be
smaller than exposures contribution to earnings - Cash flow hedges
- Changes in intrinsic values of options go to
other comprehensive income to the extent
effective - Remaining changes in option prices goes to
current income
Bounded by the magnitude of the exposures
price changes
24GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS
- For most static option hedges Exclude time
value from hedge effectiveness considerations - For most fair value hedges Exclude forward
points from hedge effectiveness considerations - For non-interest rate cash flow hedges Assess
effectiveness based on comparisons of forward
prices
25THE RISK BEING HEDGED
- For non-interest rate exposures
- Entities must identify their firm-specific
exposures as hedged items - Differences between firm-specific prices and
hedging instruments underlying variables will
foster income volatility - Pre-qualifying hedge effectiveness documentation
is required for all cross-hedges
26Sub-paragraph b(c) of Paragraph 63 of FAS 133
- c. If the effectiveness of a hedge with a forward
or futures contract is assessed based on changes
in fair value attributable to changes in spot
prices, the change in the fair value of the
contract related to the changes in the difference
between the spot price and the forward or futures
price would be excluded from the assessment of
hedge effectiveness.
27Example 6 from Appendix B of FAS 133
At the beginning of period 1, XYZ Company enters
into a qualifying cash flow hedge of a
transaction forecasted to occur early in period
6. XYZ's documented policy is to assess hedge
effectiveness by comparing the changes in present
value of the expected future cash flows on the
forecasted transaction to all of the hedging
derivative's gain or loss (that is, no time value
component will be excluded as discussed in
paragraph 63). In this hedging relationship, XYZ
has designated changes in cash flows related to
the forecasted transaction attributable to any
cause as the hedged risk.
28Example 6 in Appendix B of FAS 133From File
133ex06a.xls
29HEDGEABLE INTEREST RATE RISKS
- Overall fair value effects
- Fair value changes due to changes in a benchmark
interest rate (i.e., the risk-free rate or the
LIBOR-based swap rate) - Fair value changes due to interest rate effects
associated with credit quality and/or rating
changes - Fair value changes due to foreign exchange rate
changes
30FAIR VALUE INTEREST RATE HEDGES
- The benchmark interest rate will likely be the
predominant selection for the hedged item - The shortcut method is only applicable for
interest rate swaps if all the criteria of s 68
and 69 are met - Fair value hedges that dont qualify for shortcut
may have considerable unintended income effects
31FLOATING FIXED RATE DEBT
- Originally issue fixed rate debt
- Maturity - 2 quarters
- Rate - 8 (fixed)
- Enter swap
- Receive 6 fixed pay 3-mo LIBOR
- At start, 3-month LIBOR 5
- After 3 months, LIBOR increases to 9
32SWAPS MARK-TO-MARKET VALUE
- At start -
- End of Q1 -
- End of Q2 -
MV 0
MV 0 ?MV 7,335
33SHORTCUT CALCULATIONS
34LOANS MARK-TO-MARKET VALUE
- At start -
- End of Q1 -
- End of Q2 -
MV 1,000,000
MV 0 ?MV 7,299
35NON-SHORTCUT CALCULATIONS
36PERSPECTIVES ON INEFFECTIVENSS
Impact of 50 basis point fall in interest rates
on 1 million par bonds semi-annual compounding
37NON-SHORTCUT PROCEDURES
- Identify appropriate benchmark security
- Determine rate change on benchmark security over
the hedge period - Calculate present values of the hedged item (PV)
using original discount rates adjusted by the
amount of the benchmark rate change - The basis adjustment on the hedged item (going to
earnings) is the difference between PV and the
original present value
38NON-SHORTCUT EXAMPLE
- Hedged item 5-year Corporate debt
- Hedging deriviative 5-year swap
- Hedging objective Offset changes in the
LIBOR-based swap rate
39ALTERNATIVE BENCHMARK RATE CHANGES
- Use the change in 5-year swap rates
- Use the change in 4 3/4-year swap rates
- Use the difference between the 5-year swap rate
at the start vs. a 4 3/4-year swap rate at the
end - Use the difference between the forward 4 3/4-year
swap rate at the start vs. a spot 4 3/4-year rate
at the end
40FAIR VALUE HEDGING KEY POINTS
- Ideally, all contributions to earnings -- other
than accruals -- will be entirely offsetting - The ideal outcome is achieved if the shortcut
method is employed - If the shortcut method is not used, differences
between the swaps fixed rate and the hedged
items fixed rate will generate income effects
41USING REGRESSION
- Should the regression use price levels or price
changes? - What is the proper frequency of the observations?
- Can overlapping samples be used?
- Is measuring correlation sufficient?
42PERFECTLY CORRELATED CHANGES
43AN ALTERNATIVE TO REGRESSION
- Given time series of price changes for both the
derivative and the hedged item, generate a
frequency distribution for the combined results - Assign a threshold value and a level of
confidence for high effectiveness (e.g., the
combined results must be smaller than 2 of the
initial value of the hedged item in 95 of the
observations)
44CAVEATS
- Price changes of the hedged item should reflect
only the effect of the risk being hedged - Price changes of the hedging derivative should
not included excluded items - Price changes of fixed income securities should
appropriately reflect aging of the security - In general, interest accruals (on both debt and
swaps) should not be included in price change
measures
Relevant only for fair value hedges
45Shortcut Method conditions applicable to both
fair value hedges and cash flow hedges
- The notional amount of the swap matches the
principal amount of the interest-bearing asset or
liability being hedged. - If the hedging instrument is solely an interest
rate swap, the fair value of the swap at its
inception is zero. There are other applicable
conditions if the instrument is a compound
derivative composed of an interest rate swap and
an option. - The formula for computing net settlements under
the interest rate swap is the same for each net
settlement. (That is, the fixed rate is the same
throughout the term, and the variable rate is
based on the same index and includes the same
constant adjustment or no adjustment.) - The interest-bearing asset or liability is not
prepayable, unless the asset or liability is
prepayable solely due to an embedded option and
the hedging instrument is a compound derivative
composed of an interest rate swap and an
option.
46Shortcut Method conditions applicable to both
fair value hedges and cash flow hedges
- The index on which the variable rate is based
matches the benchmark interest rate designated as
the interest rate risk being hedged for that
hedging relationship. - Any other terms in the interest-bearing financial
instruments or interest rate swaps are typical of
those instruments and do not invalidate the
assumption of no ineffectiveness. - Conditions applicable to fair value hedges only
- The expiration date of the swap matches the
maturity date of the interest-bearing asset or
liability. - There is no floor or cap on the variable interest
rate of the swap. - The interval between repricings of the variable
interest rate in the swap is frequent enough to
justify an assumption that the variable payment
or receipt is at a market rate (generally three
to six months or less).
47Shortcut Method conditions applicable to both
fair value hedges and cash flow hedges
- The index on which the variable rate is based
matches the benchmark interest rate designated as
the interest rate risk being hedged for that
hedging relationship. - Any other terms in the interest-bearing financial
instruments or interest rate swaps are typical of
those instruments and do not invalidate the
assumption of no ineffectiveness. - Conditions applicable to fair value hedges only
- The expiration date of the swap matches the
maturity date of the interest-bearing asset or
liability. - There is no floor or cap on the variable interest
rate of the swap. - The interval between repricings of the variable
interest rate in the swap is frequent enough to
justify an assumption that the variable payment
or receipt is at a market rate (generally three
to six months or less).
48Shortcut Method conditions applicable to only to
cash flow hedges
-
- The expiration date of the swap matches the
maturity date of the interest-bearing asset or
liability. - There is no floor or cap on the variable interest
rate of the swap. - The interval between repricings of the variable
interest rate in the swap is frequent enough to
justify an assumption that the variable payment
or receipt is at a market rate (generally three
to six months or less).
49Shortcut Method conditions applicable to only to
fair value hedges
- All interest receipts or payments on the
variable-rate asset or liability during the term
of the swap are designated as hedged, and no
interest payments beyond the term of the swap are
designated as hedged. - There is no floor or cap on the variable interest
rate of the swap unless the variable-rate asset
or liability has a floor or cap. In that case,
the swap must have a floor or cap on the variable
interest rate that is comparable to the floor or
cap on the variable-rate asset or liability.
(For this purpose, comparable does not
necessarily mean equal. For example, if a swap's
variable rate is LIBOR and an asset's variable
rate is LIBOR plus 2 percent, a 10 percent cap on
the swap would be comparable to a 12 percent cap
on the asset.) - The repricing dates match those of the
variable-rate asset or liability.