Title: Hedging risk with Derivatives
1Hedging risk with Derivatives
- Review of equity options
- Review of financial futures
- Using options and futures to hedge portfolio risk
- Introduction to Hedge Funds
2Options -- Contract
- Calls and Puts
- Underlying Security (Number of Units)
- Exercise or Strike Price
- Expiration date
- Option Premium
- American, European, Asian, etc.
3Options -- Markets
- 1 Buyer 1 Seller (writer) 1 Contract
- Examples of Price Quotations
- Premium Intrinsic Value Time Prem
- Options available on
- Equities
- Indicies
- Foreign Currencies
- Futures
4Options -- Basic Strategies
- Buy Call
- Sell (write) Call
- Buy Put
- Sell (write) Put
5Options -- Advanced Strategies
- Straddle
- Strips and Straps
- Vertical Spreads
- Bullish
- Bearish
6Options - Determinants of Value
- Value of Underlying Asset
- Exercise Price
- Time to Expiration
- VOLATILITY
- Interest Rates
- Dividends
7Options -- Black Scholes Option Pricing Model
- C SN(d1) - Xe-rTN(d2) ln(S/X)
(rs2/2)T d1 ---------------------------
sT1/2 d2 d1 - sT1/2 - Put-Call Parity P C Xe-rT - S
8Futures Contract
- Agreement to make (sell) or take (buy) delivery
of a prespecified quantity of an asset at an
agreed upon price at a specific future date. - ex. SP 500 Index Futures
- Price 1126.10 Delilvery month June
- Buyer agrees to purchase a portfolio representing
the SP 500 (or its cash equivalent) for 1126.10
x 250 281,525 on Thursday prior to 3rd Friday
in June. (Buyer is locking in the purchase price
for the portfolio.) - Seller agrees to deliver the portfolio described
above. - Note since this is a cash settled contract, if
the price was 1116.10 on the delivery date, the
buyer would pay the seller 2,500 ( 10 x 250).
If the price was 1136.10, the seller would pay
the buyer 2,500
9Futures Contract Marking to Market
- Marking to market
- Price of Futures contract is reset every day
- Gains/Losses versus previous day are posted to
buyer and seller margin accounts - Futures a bundle of consecutive 1-day forward
contracts - If futures held to expiration, effective delivery
price is same as when contract initiated
10Futures Contract Marking to Market example (C
contract)
11Index Futures Market
- Speculators often sell index futures when they
expect the underlying index to depreciate, and
vice versa.
12Index Futures Market
- Index futures may be sold by investors to hedge
risk associated with securities held.
13Index Futures Market
- Most index futures contracts are closed out
before their settlement dates (99). - Brokers who fulfill orders to buy or sell futures
contracts earn a transaction or brokerage fee in
the form of the bid/ask spread.
14Hedging with Derivatives
- Basic option strategies
- Covered call
- Protective put
- Synthetic short
- Basic futures strategies
- Using interest rate futures to reduce risk
15Covered Call
- Sell call on stock you own. (Long stock, short
call) - Good
- As value of stock falls, loss is partially offset
by premium received on calls sold. - Essentially costless since hedge generates a cash
inflow - Bad
- Maximum inflow from call premium Hedge is less
effective for large drop in stock price - If stock price rises, call will be exercised
Investor transfers gains on stock to holder of
call.
16Protective Put
- Buy put on stock you own. (Long stock, long put)
- Good
- As value of stock falls, loss is partially offset
by gain in value of put. Gain from put continues
to grow as stock price falls. - If stock price rises, maximum loss on put
premium Investor keeps all stock gains less
fixed put premium. - Bad
- More expensive to hedge with put
17Synthetic Short
- Sell call and buy put on stock you own. (Long
stock, short call, long put) - Good
- As value of stock falls, loss is offset by gain
in value of put. Gain from put continues to grow
as stock price falls. - If stock price rises, gain is offset by loss on
call. Loss from call continues to grow as stock
price rises. - Very effective hedging device
- Can be self-financing (premium received on put
sold offsets premium paid on call purchased) - Bad
- Often more expensive than simply shorting the
stock itself.
18Delta Hedging with Options
- Call Delta DC dC/dS
- From Black-Scholes model,
- DC N(d1)
- Ex. If S74.49, X75, r1.67, s 38.4,
- t0.1589 yrs.
- Then, C 4.40 and N(d1) 0.5197
- If S increases by 1, C increases by 0.5197
- Hedge Ratio H 1/DC 1/0.5197 1.924
- Sell 1.924 calls per share of stock held to
hedge!
19Example of Call Hedge Held to Expiration, 1000
share stock position
20Delta Hedging - Puts
- Put Delta DP dP/dS
- From Black-Scholes model and Put-Call Parity,
- DP DC 1 N(d1) - 1
- Ex. If S74.49, X75, r1.67, s 38.4,
- t0.1589 yrs.
- Then, C 4.40, P 4.71, N(d1) 0.5197,
- and N(d1) -1 -0.4803
-
- If S increases by 1, P decreases by 0.4803
- Hedge Ratio H 1/D 1/0.4803 2.082
- Buy 2.082 puts per share of stock held to hedge!
21Example of Put Hedge Held to Expiration, 1000
share stock position
22Delta Hedging with Options
- Delta changes over time!
- S changes
- Time declines
- Other factors (r, s) may change
23True Delta Hedging Adjust hedge when S changes
- Scenarios 1 2
- IBM stock drops by 1 to 73.49 gt Loss of
1000 - Call options also drop by 0.5197 gt Gain of
1037.97 gtNet change 37.97 - IBM stock rises by 1 to 75.49 gt Gain of
1000 - Call options also rise by 0.5193 gt Loss of
1037.97 - gt Net change (37.97)
24True Delta Hedging Adjust hedge when t changes
- Scenario 3
- One week passes, IBM stock at 71.49 gt Loss
of 3000 - Call options now worth 2.73 gt
Gain of 3173 gtNet change 173 - New call delta 0.4029
- New hedge ratio 1/0.4029 2.482 gt Sell 5
more contracts! - Scenario 4
- One week passes, IBM stock at 77.49 gt Gain
of 3000 - Call options now worth 5.82 gt
Loss of 2698 - gt Net change (302)
- New call delta 0.6238
- New hedge ratio 1/0.6238 1.603 gt Buy 3
contracts!
25True Delta Hedging Adjust hedge when S changes
- Scenarios 1 2
- IBM stock drops by 1 to 73.49 gt Loss of
1000 - Put options also rise by 0.4803 gt Gain of
1008.63 gtNet change 8.63 - IBM stock rises by 1 to 75.49 gt Gain of
1000 - Put options also fall by 0.4803 gt Loss of
1008.63 - gt Net change (8.63)
26True Delta Hedging Adjust hedge when t changes
- Scenario 3
- One week passes, IBM stock at 71.49 gt Loss
of 3000 - Put options now worth 6.06 gt
Gain of 2835 gtNet change (165) - New put delta 0.4028 1 -0.5972
- New hedge ratio 1/0.5972 1.674 gt Sell 4
contracts! - Scenario 4
- One week passes, IBM stock at 77.49 gt Gain
of 3000 - Put options now worth 3.15 gt
Loss of 3276 - gt Net change (276)
- New put delta 0.6238 1 -0.3762
- New hedge ratio 1/0.3762 2.658 gt Buy 5
more contracts!
27Delta Hedging with options
- Delta represents response of call (or put) price
with change in the stock price - Delta changes as stock price, time to expiration,
interest rates, volatility change - It is too expensive to hedge individual stock
positions with matching options. It is more
common to hedge a portfolio with index options
(cross hedging) - Most managers monitor delta itself to decide when
to rebalance.
28A True Protective Put
- Puts can be used to build a floor under the value
of a long position - Buy 1 put per long share
- Ex. Long 1000 shares of IBM at 74.49
- Buy 1000 puts at 4.71
- Puts guarantee a value of 75 per share
- This is insurance, not a hedge!
29A True Protective Put
30Hedging with Futures (example from May 2001)
- There are futures on the SP500. Suppose I have
a portfolio that is currently worth 1,117,672.
The portfolio has a beta of 1.3. - June SP500 futures are at 1430.70
- gt contract is worth 500 x 1430.70 715,350
- Hedge ratio
- (Value of portfolio / Value of Futures
contract)(Portfolio Beta) - (1,117,672/715,350)(1.3) 2.031 gt Sell 2
Contracts !
31Hedging with Futures (example from May 2001)
32Adjusting Systematic Risk with Futures
- PM may choose to adjust systematic exposure up or
down to reflect - investor desires
- expectations of market movements
- About index futures
- Represents contract to make/take delivery of a
portfolio represented by the index - Since index itself may be non-investable, most
index futures contracts are cash-settled - example
- SP500 futures CME contract value 250 x index
- Initial margin 6K for spec, 2.5K for hedgers.
33Adjusting Systematic Risk with Futures
- I have an 11 million stock portfolio with
b1.05. I want to increase b to 1.2. - Value of Futures 1314.50 x 250 328,625
- bf 1.0.
- Target b contribution from portfolio
contribution from futures - 1.2 (1.0)(1.05) (F x 328,625)/11,000,000(1.
0) - F (bT - Wsbs)(Vs/VF)
- F 5.02 gt buy 5 contracts
- What have we done?
- Used futures contracts to leverage holdings and
increase exposure to market risk
34Adjusting Systematic Risk with Futures
- Suppose target b .90
- 0.90 (1.0)(1.05) (F x 328,625)/11,000,000(1
.0) - F (.90 - 1.05)(33.4728)(1.0) -5.02 contracts
(sell) - We have shorted futures to reduce systematic
exposure.
35Hedging with Interest Rate Futures
- How do you reduce duration for a bond portfolio?
- Sell high D, buy low D
- Sell bonds, buy Tbills
- Sell interest rate futures
- Interest rate futures agreement to make/take
delivery of a fixed income asset on a particular
date for an agreed upon price - ex Sept Tbond futures contract
- 100K FV US Treas bonds with 15-years to maturity
and 8 coupon (what if they don't exist?) - Price 99-27 99 27/32 of 100,000
998,437.50 - (Tick 31.25) D 8.64 years
36Hedging with Interest Rate Futures
- I own an 11,000,000 face value portfolio of high
grade US corporate bonds with an aggregate value
of 101-08 (or 11,137,500) and a duration of 7.7
years. - I expect rates to rise. How can I immunize my
portfolio? - Target D contribution of bond port
contribution of fut. - 0 (1.0)(7.7) (F x 998,437.50)/11,137,500(8.6
4) - F (0.0 - (1.0)(7.7))(11,137,500/998,437.50)/8.64
- F -9.94 contracts gt short 10 Tbond futures
contracts - This is the weighted average duration approach