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Futures Contracts and Pricing

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6. Metals -- Gold, silver, platinum, palladium, copper ... F = current futures price ... If interest rates are constant, forward prices and futures prices are equal. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Futures Contracts and Pricing


1
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • A. Basics of futures contracts
  • Differences between futures and forward contracts
  • Forwards not market to market
  • Delivery common on forwards
  • Forwards not traded on organized exchanges

2
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 1. What do you do with futures contracts
  • a. Speculation
  • b. Hedging

3
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 2. Major types of futures contracts
  • There are essentially two basic types of futures
    contracts, those written on commodities and those
    written on financial contacts

4
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 2. Major types of futures contracts
  • a. Commodity futures
  • 1. Grains -- Corn, wheat, oats
  • 2. Oil and Meal -- Soybeans, soymeal, soyoil,
    sunflower seed, sunflower oil
  • 3. Livestock -- Hogs, cattle, pork bellies,
    fryer chickens
  • 4. Foodstuffs -- Cocoa, coffee, orange juice,
    rice, sugar
  • 5. Manufacturing goods-- Lumber, plywood, cotton
  • 6. Metals -- Gold, silver, platinum, palladium,
    copper
  • 7. Petroleum-- Crude oil, heating oil, gasoline,
    propane

5
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 2. Major types of futures contracts
  • b. Financial futures
  • 1. Interest earning assets -- Treasury bills,
    notes, and bonds Eurodollar deposits, munis
  • 2. Currencies -- Pound, Canadian dollar, yen,
    franc, mark
  • 3. Indexes --- SP 500, MMI, NYSE, Value Line,
    Nikkei 225, TOPIX

6
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 3. Margins for futures contracts
  • A margin account is the amount of money, held by
    a brokerage house, an investor must be put up to
    fund investment in a futures contract.
  • The initial margin is the amount deposited with a
    broker at the time of the purchase of the futures
    contract. Exchanges require a minimum initial
    margin for all contracts.
  • Generally, for futures contracts, the minimum
    initial margin is between 5 - 10 of the initial
    value of the contract. Brokerage houses may
    require more than the minimum initial margin.

7
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 3. Margins for futures contracts
  • Any changes in the value of the futures contract
    are added or subtracted from the margin account.
  • A maintenance margin is the minimum amount that
    must be maintained a margin account at any time.
    Exchanges require that the maintenance margin be
    roughly 75 - 80 of the initial margin.
    Brokerage houses may require higher maintenance
    margins.
  • If the value of the margin account falls below
    the maintenance margin a margin call is made. The
    investor must put enough money into the account
    to replenish the margin account back to the
    initial margin.

8
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 4. Closing a futures account
  • a. Delivery -- In this instance, you hold the
    futures contract until the expiration date and
    you actually take physical delivery of the good.
    Some contracts, particularly index contracts,
    allow for cash settlement, as opposed to physical
    delivery, at the end of the contract. Physical
    delivery is rare, however.

9
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 4. Closing a futures account
  • b. Offset -- The most common mechanism for
    closing a futures account is to take a reversing
    or offset position. A reversing or offset
    position is simple taking a position exactly
    opposite to the position that you currently have.

10
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 4. Closing a futures account
  • c. Exchange for physicals (EFP) -- In an
    exchange for physicals, two traders agree to a
    simultaneous exchange of a cash commodity and
    futures contracts based on that commodity.
    Although the EFP is similar to an offsetting
    position, it differs in several ways. First, the
    traders actually exchange the physical good.
    Second, the futures contract was not closed by a
    transaction on the floor of the exchange. Third,
    the traders privately negotiated the price and
    other terms of the transaction.

11
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • B. Workings of futures markets
  • 5. Functioning of markets
  • Standardization of contracts
  • Daily price limits -- Restrict the range in which
    futures prices can vary on a daily basis. A
    contract that reaches the upper price limit is
    said to be limit up and a contract that reaches
    the lower price limit is said to be limit down.

12
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • C. Example of valuing futures and forwards

13
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • D. Pricing futures contracts and the opportunity
    for arbitrage
  • 1. Notation
  • T time when the futures contract matures
  • t current time
  • S current spot price of the underlying asset
  • ST spot price of asset at time T
  • f current value of futures contract
  • F current futures price
  • r current, annual, continuously compounded
    risk-free rate of interest for an investment
    maturing in time T

14
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • D. Pricing futures contracts and the opportunity
    for arbitrage
  • 2. Assumptions
  • There are no transactions costs
  • All trading profits are subject to the same tax
    rate
  • Market participants can borrow and lend at the
    same risk free rate
  • Market participants take advantage of arbitrage
    opportunities as they exist
  • Additionally, it is assumed that interest rates
    are constant. If interest rates are constant,
    forward prices and futures prices are equal.

15
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • D. Pricing futures contracts and the opportunity
    for arbitrage
  • The value of a financial futures contract that
    provides no income is

16
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • D. Pricing futures contracts and the opportunity
    for arbitrage
  • To see that the previous pricing relationship is
    true, we will examine the potential for abitrage
    when

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18
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • D. Pricing futures and the opportunity for
    arbitrage
  • 3. The expectations hypothesis for pricing
    financial futures
  • The result that F Ser(T-t) is know as the
    expectations hypothesis for pricing financial
    futures. Basically, we are assuming that the
    futures price is an unbiased expectation of the
    future spot price. That is, F E(ST)
    Ser(T-t). Thus, we are assuming that the
    expected future spot price is just the future
    value of the current spot price.

19
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • D. Pricing futures and the opportunity for
    arbitrage
  • Pricing T-bill Futures
  • Since T-bill futures are a risk-free, pure
    discount instrument we can use the basic futures
    pricing relationship to price T-bill futures

20
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • D. Pricing futures and the opportunity for
    arbitrage
  • Pricing Currency Futures
  • With some slight modification we can use the
    expectations hypothesis to price currency futures
    and show when potential arbitrage opportunities
    may exist. Here we must consider an old economic
    concept interest rate parity.

21
Interest rate parity suggests that
With some rearrangement we can see that
22
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • Pricing Stock Index futures
  • When pricing index futures we must consider the
    fact that dividends may be paid. If a dividend
    is paid, that will reduce the value of the asset,
    making the futures value of the asset less.
    Hence, holders of futures contracts must be
    compensated for future dividends.
  • If the dividend is considered to be a constant
    proportion of the stock price (i.e. dividend
    yield) we can use

23
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • D. Pricing futures and the opportunity for
    arbitrage
  • 4. Arbitrage in the futures markets
  • The following pricing relationships that are
    developed are arbitrage relationships. This
    implies that if the pricing relationships do not
    hold there would be a riskless profit opportunity
    available. In reality, arbitrage opportunities
    do exist in futures markets and people do try to
    exploit those opportunities.

24
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • D. Pricing futures and the opportunity for
    arbitrage
  • 4. Arbitrage in the futures markets
  • a. Comments on T-bill Arbitrage -- Rendelman and
    Cabrini (1979) indicate that after accounting for
    brokerage costs, bid-ask spreads, and borrowing
    costs there were no significant arbitrage
    opportunities in the Treasury bill futures
    market. Capozza and Cornell (1979) found that
    near-term Treasury bill contracts were
    efficiently priced, but longer-term contracts
    tended to exhibit some under-pricing (F lt S ).

25
Futures Contracts and Pricing
  • Comments on Currency Arbitrage
  • If F lt S you would want to buy the futures
    contract, sell the spot foreign currency, lend
    dollars, and borrow the foreign currency. If F gt
    S you would want to sell the futures contract,
    buy the spot foreign currency, borrow dollars,
    and lend the foreign currency.

26
Futures contracts and pricing
  • Comments on Stock Index Arbitrage
  • If F gt S, arbitrage profits can be made by
    buying the stocks underlying the index and
    shorting the futures contract. Conversely, if F
    lt S, arbitrage profits can be made by shorting
    the stocks underlying the index and taking a long
    position in the futures contract.

27
Stock Index Futures and the 1987 Stock Market
Crash
  • At the time of the crash, both hedgers and
    speculators were using computerized transactions
    in index futures.
  • Hedgers short futures contracts to protect
    portfolios against declines in value. When the
    market started dropping, a massive amount of sell
    orders were initiated pushing futures prices
    below their rational level. Hence, F lt S.
  • An arbitrage play existed by shorting the index
    and buying the futures contract. This pushed the
    index lower, creating a downward spiral.

28
Pricing commodity futures
  • Pricing commodity futures is very difficult.
    Commodity prices are highly variable and accurate
    spot market prices are often difficult to obtain.
    Additionally, factors such as storage and
    convenience yield need to be factored in to the
    futures price.

29
Pricing commodity futures
  • 1. Pricing a futures contract on a commodity
    used for an investment
  • When pricing futures contracts on commodities it
    is necessary to determine if the commodity is to
    be used for investment or consumption.
  • Storage costs include the interest foregone on
    the value of the commodity being stored, the
    warehousing cost, and any shrinkage. Storage
    costs can be considered as negative income and
    must be reflected in the futures price.

30
Pricing commodity futures
  • 1. Pricing a futures contract on a commodity
    used for an investment
  • If U represents the present value of all storage
    costs, the futures price of an investment
    commodity would be
  • F (S U)er(T-t). If storage costs are
    proportional to the price of the commodity we can
    write the futures price of an investment
    commodity as F Se(rU)(T-t).

31
Pricing commodity futures
  • 1. Pricing a futures contract on a commodity
    used for an investment
  • Arbitrage exists if F ? (S U)er(T-t). If
    F gt (S U)er(T-t), it would pay to borrow
    an amount equal to SU at the risk-free rate to
    buy one unit of the commodity and pay storage
    costs and then short the futures contract. If
    F lt (S U)er(T-t) it would pay to sell the
    commodity, save the storage costs, and invest the
    proceeds at the risk-free rate and then buy the
    futures contract.

32
Pricing commodity futures
  • 2. Pricing a futures contract when the commodity
    is used for consumption
  • When a commodity is used for consumption,
    arbitrage opportunities like those described
    above may not exist. For example, if F lt (S
    U) and the underlying commodity is being used for
    consumption, the investor holding the commodity
    may not want to sell. Holding the asset may be
    of some value.

33
Pricing commodity futures
  • 2. Pricing a futures contract when the commodity
    is used for consumption
  • In this case there is a convenience yield
    associated with holding the commodity. The
    convenience yield is defined roughly as the
    benefit to holding a commodity.

34
Pricing commodity futures
  • Convenience yield should be low when inventories
    are plentiful and should be high when shortages
    of the commodity occur. The convenience yield
    serves to reduce the futures price. Thus, if the
    convenience yield is defined as y, the futures
    price of a commodity used for consumption would
    be F Se(ru-y)(T-t) .

35
Relationship between expected spot price and
futures price
  • Recall that early in our discussion we assumed
    that E(ST) F. What happens if this is not the
    case? One of the earliest theories on the
    pricing of futures contracts, presented by Keynes
    (1930) suggested that F lt E(ST), which is known
    as normal backwardation.

36
Relationship between expected spot price and
futures price
  • The origin of this idea came from the fact that
    farmers (producers) want to hedge their risk by
    shorting the commodity. To attract speculators
    in to the market they have to offer futures
    contracts at a discount from the expected spot
    price. Thus, futures contracts should earn a
    rate of return higher than the risk-less rate and
    their prices should increase as the maturity of
    the contract nears.

37
Relationship between expected spot price and
futures price
  • It is also possible that hedgers may want to go
    long, in which case F gt E(ST), which is known as
    contango. In this situation, hedgers have to
    offer futures contracts at a premium above the
    expected spot rate to attract speculators.

38
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