Title: Swaps That Shook an Industry
1Swaps That Shook an Industry
- Proctor Gamble versus Bankers Trust
2History
- PG is an industrial company with over 30B in
annual sales - This case led to a 157M loss
- American rate swap
- German mark rate swap
3Why is This Case Important?
- Landmark court rulings
- Spurred accounting reforms
- Provided unflattering glimpses into Investment
Banking through taped conversations of BTs
bankers
4What is an Interest Rate Swap?
- Off balance sheet agreement
- Exchange of cash flows
- Generally medium to long term maturities
- Principal is notional
- Content Highlight 5.1 Page 132
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6PGs Motivation for the Swaps
- Lower overall borrowing costs
- Expected 40 basis point gain on US deal
- No apparent reason for German mark deal
7Motives for Using the OTC Market
- Liquidity of the futures market
- Not marked to market
- Value of transactions reported off the balance
sheet -
- Losses would not have been so extreme had
CBOT been used.
8The US Dollar Denominated Swap
- PG betting that US interest rates would fall
- Deal had 2 parts
- Plain Vanilla Swap
- The Speculative Side Bet
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10Plain Vanilla Swap
- Notional principal of the deal was 200 M
- BT paid PG 5.3 fixed annual rate
- PG paid a floating rate tied to the average
daily yield on 30 day commercial paper - Nothing particularly unusual or risky
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12The Speculative Side Bet
- PG sold BT the equivalent of a call option
- PG earned an annual premium of 75 basis points
on the 200M notional principal - Deal was structured irregularly so PGs
liability was calculated on the spread between 30
year bond price and 5 year bond yield
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16German Mark Interest Rate Swap
- Deal was for 4.75 years and notional principal of
93 M - Not a cross currency swap
- 1st year of deal was considered odd
- BT pays German mark spot rate 2.33
- PG pays German mark sport rate 1.33
- Deal changed in second year
17German Mark Interest Rate Swap
- Current German swap rate was 5.35
- If it fell below 4.05 PG would make no payments
- It it rose above 6.01 PGs premium would change
to 10X the difference between German mark swap
rate and 4.50 - Exhibit 5.9 Page 143 The Wedding Band
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19German Mark Interest Rate Swap
- US Federal Reserve tightened monetary policy
leading to soaring international interest rates - 2 weeks after PG had signed the deal rates had
already exceeded 6.01 - PG was now responsible for payments rates of
16.40 on the 93M notional principle - Discounted present value of loss was 60.9M
20Lawsuit Against Bankers Trust
- PG suggested
- Breach of Fiduciary Duty
- BT Refused to Divulge its Pricing Model
- BT should have tracked the gains and losses on
these swaps
21The Settlement
- PG agreed to pay BT 35M of the nearly 200M
owed - Both sides claimed victory
- Both sides caused collateral damage to their
reputations
22The Landmark Court Ruling
- Swaps are defined as securities
- BT did not have a fiduciary relationship with PG
23Disclosure Reform
- US accounting standards for off balance sheet
transactions were inadequate - FASB and SEC developed reforms to make financial
transactions more transparent to investors and
regulators
24Conclusions
- PG carried most of the risk in this deal
- PG seemed incapable of tracking their market
risks - On a total notional principal of 300M, PG
managed pre-tax losses of 157M