Title: Chapter 9 Derivatives
1Chapter 9Derivatives
21. Terminology
- Stocks, bonds, etc., are direct claims on
productive assets like factories, houses, etc.
- Derivatives are not direct claims on productive
assets
- Rather they are contracts promising payoffs that
depend on what happens in the future
- Often they derive their values from direct claims
on productive assets hence their name
32. Terminology
- In a real sense, derivatives are merely bets
about the future that some parties make with
other parties
- Direct claims involve immediate settlement i.e.
the buyer pays the seller for it now and obtains
it now in a spot transaction in a spot market
- With derivatives, settlement occurs when the
event on which the bet was made actually occurs
43. Terminology
- Transactions in derivatives are termed forward
transactions
- Derivatives exist because they facilitate
risk-sharing by permitting diversification and
risk-shifting at very low cost
- The diversification occurs because parties with
very different risks make bets with each other
51. Example of Diversification
- On 3/1, a wheat farmer and a miller are uncertain
about the price of wheat on 9/30
- On 9/30, the farmer will harvest and sell 500,000
bushels, and the miller will buy 500,000 bushels
- The farmer bets that the price will be low the
miller bets that it will be high
62. Example of Diversification
- If the price is high
- The farmers crop sells for more, but she loses
her bet.
- The miller must pay more for wheat, but she wins
her bet.
- If the price is low
- The farmers crop sells for less, but she wins
her bet.
- The miller can pay less for wheat, but she loses
her bet.
73. Example of Diversification
- If the bets are done properly, neither the farmer
nor the miller bears any risk
- Their opposite exposures to risk from the
uncertain price of wheat on 9/30 enable this
complete diversification
- This process of diversification is called two-way
hedging
8Risk-Shifting
- Risk-shifting occurs when a party exposed to risk
(a hedger) makes a bet with a speculator more
willing to bear the risk
- For example, a wheat farmer bets that the wheat
price will be low while a Saudi Prince bets that
it will be high.
- This is an example of one-way hedging.
9Futures
- A futures contract is an agreement that specifies
that a commodity or financial instrument be
delivered on an agreed-upon future date at an
agreed-upon price - Futures originated in grains, metals, and other
commodities
- Most active current use futures in financial
instruments like Treasury bills and bonds
10Some Facts about Futures
- Virtually all are traded on organized exchanges
- Most important exchanges Chicago Board of Trade
(CBT) and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (The
Merc)
- Contracts are standardized, specifying exactly
what and how much is to be delivered and when
- Example 5000 bushels of a certain kind and grade
of wheat on certain fixed dates in June,
September, etc.
11More Facts about Futures
- The exchanges eliminate risk by intermediating
between the buyers and sellers of futures
- That is, buyers and sellers actually deal only
with the exchange, not each other
- The exchanges guarantee performance of the
contracts
- The exchanges protect themselves by requiring
both sellers and buyers to post surety bonds in
margin accounts
- Standardization and the elimination of default
risk raise trading volumes, thereby enhancing
liquidity
121. Extended Example
- On 3/1, a farmer who will harvest and sell
500,000 bushels of wheat on 9/30 hedges her
position by selling 100 September wheat futures
i.e. buying -100 September wheat futures. (Each
future is for 5000 bushels.) - On 3/1, a miller who will buy 500,000 bushels of
wheat on 9/30 hedges her position by buying 100
September wheat futures
- No cash changes hands between them
- The exchange requires both to deposit surety
bonds in margin accounts say, 25,000 each
132. Extended Example
- The futures price on Sep wheat futures is
3/bushel, making the millers and farmers
positions worth 1,500,000 and -1,500,000 (equal
to ?100?5000bushels?3/bushel) - On 3/2, the futures price falls to 2.98/bushel
- The millers and farmers positions are now worth
1,490,000 and -1,490,000
- The farmers position improves in value by
10,000 the millers improves by -10,000
143. Extended Example
- The exchange credits the farmers margin account
with 10,000 and debits the millers for 10,000
154. Extended Example
- The exchange may now ask the miller to deposit
more in her margin account and if she doesnt,
sell her position to someone else
- That is how the exchange protects itself
- The farmer and miller made bets the farmer won
and the miller lost between 3/1 and 3/2
- But they have offsetting losses and gains on
wheat and are therefore hedged
- The farmer lost 10,000 on the wheat net 0
- The miller gained 10,000 on the wheat net 0
165. Extended Example
- Typically, both would liquidate their positions
before 9/30no one wants to make or take delivery
with the exchange
- The farmer does so by buying 100 contracts
- (-100100 0)
- The miller does so by selling 100 contracts
- (100-100 0)
- The exchange then closes their margin accounts
and mails them checks for their original surety
bond cumulative capital gain any additions to
their margin accounts any withdrawals
interest earned
17Futures Prices
- Minute by minute, futures prices are determined
so that of contracts bought sold
- Equal are betting spot price of wheat on 9/1
will be and - The futures price must approach the spot price
that will prevail on 9/1 as date approaches 9/1
- Speculators help make futures price expected
9/1 spot price
- Speculators also enhance liquidity
18Example FFR Futures
- On 2/21/06, the price of the Feb futures contract
on 30-day federal funds was 95.50, implying that
the funds rate was then expected to average
10095.50 4.50 in Feb, the Feds target for
it. - The price of the Apr futures contract was 95.25,
implying the fed funds rate was then expected to
average 10095.25 4.75 in Apr.
- The FOMC was to meet on 3/27-28/06.
- We can conclude that on 2/21/06 the market
expected FOMC to raise the target to 4.75 at
that meeting.
191. Options
- An options contract is a right to buy or sell a
given asset at an agreed-upon price on or before
an agreed-upon future date
- The right to buy is termed a call option
- The right to sell is termed a put option
- Key feature of options they are rights, not
obligations
- The owner of an option need not exercise it and
therefore never does if shed lose by doing so
202. Options
- The strike price (or exercise price) is the
agreed-upon price in the option contract
- The expiration date is the agreed-upon last date
on which the option can be exercised
- The premium is the price that the buyer pays the
seller for the option
21Options Are Bets
- The buyers of a call option are betting that the
assets price will exceed the strike price by
more than the premium
- The sellers are betting the opposite
221. Trading of Options
- Over-the-counter markets
- Exchanges such as CME, NYSE, AMEX
- The most widely traded options stock indices,
futures on stock indices, interest-rate futures,
currencies, futures on currencies, a few large
companies - Exchange options are sold in anonymous markets in
which buyers and sellers deal with the exchange,
not each other
232. Trading of Options
- Sellers provide surety bonds that must be
deposited into margin accounts at the exchange
- But not the buyers because they have no
obligation on which to default
- Sellers of options must add funds to their margin
accounts whenever P changes enough to put the
exchange at risk.
- If not, the exchange sells out the positions and
refunds the balance in the margin accounts.
24Intrinsic Value
- Intrinsic value of an option is what its owner
would receive if she exercised it immediately
- Example 1. Intrinsic value Max(0,PS) of a
call option with strike price S on an asset with
price P.
- Example 2. Intrinsic value Max(0,SP) for the
analogous put option
25Intrinsic Value of a Call Option
P
S
time
26Intrinsic Value of a Put Option
P
S
S
S
time
27Pricing Options
- An options premium (price) is never less than
its intrinsic value because the option can always
be exercised to obtain its intrinsic value.
- An options premium exceeds its intrinsic value
by more,
- The longer the time until it expires
- The more variable the price of the underlying
asset
- The higher the interest rate
28Effect of Intrinsic Value, Jan SP500 Index on
11/26/2008When P Was 888
29Effect of Expiration Date, SP500 Index with S
900 on 11/26/2008When P Was 888
30Effect of Variability, March Options,11/26/2008,
Intrinsic Value 0
- The Nasdaq100 index is more variable than the
SP500 index.
31Effect of Expiration Date
P
S
time
0
T2
T1
32Effect of Variability
P
P
S
S
time
time
T
0
0
T
33Illustration of Margin
- On 3/30, Mary sells 100 June call options on the
SP500 with a strike price of 1100 when the SP
index is 1115.
- The options premium is 30. She receives
100x30, or 3000.
- She is required to put 5000, say, into a margin
account.
- On 3/31, the index rises to 1125. The exchange
may ask for more margin.
- On 4/1, the index falls to 1005. The exchange
may let her withdraw some funds from her margin
account.
34Standardization of Options
- Exchange-traded options are highly standardized
only a few strike prices, expiration dates, and
underlying assets are available
- Standardization, low transaction costs, and the
intermediation of the exchange make these options
highly liquid and generate large trading volumes
35Swaps
- A swap is an agreement between two or more
parties to exchange specified sets of cash flows
over a specified period of time.
- The three most common types of swaps are
- Interest-rate swaps
- Currency swaps
- Credit-default swaps
- Swaps are not traded on exchanges but rather are
negotiated by the parties or by brokers.
36Interest-Rate Swaps
- We consider two parties, A and B.
- A is receiving cash flows that vary with the
level of interest rates but would rather have a
constant cash flow.
- B has the opposite situation.
- Each could hedge in the futures market, but those
markets offer only short-term hedges.
- Instead, they swap their cash flows.
371. Currency Swaps
- Party A has easier access to financial markets in
one currency (say, US) than in another currency
(say, Euros).
- Party B has the opposite situation.
- A lends US to B, and B lends Euros to A.
- The loans are equal at the initial exchange rate
and have the same maturity date.
382. Currency Swaps
- The interest and principal on the US loan are
paid in US.
- The interest and principal on the Euro loan are
paid in Euros.
- The interest rates on the loans are set at
competitive levels.
- The currency swap benefits both parties by
lowering their effective borrowing rates.
391. Credit-Default Swaps
- A wants to hold the bonds of XYZ Corp but does
not want to bear the default-risk.
- B agrees to pay A an agreed-upon amount if XYZ
defaults on its bonds on or before some
agreed-upon expiration date.
- In return, A agrees to pay B a fixed fee every
quarter until the expiration date.
- In essence, credit-default swaps are a type of
insurance policy.
402. Credit-Default Options
- Much in the news recently.
- Many holders of bonds backed by subprime
mortgages bought credit-default swaps.
- When the price of housing began falling and
subprime mortgages began to default in large
numbers, the sellers of these credit-default
options found themselves in deep do-do. - One big seller American Insurance Group, which
received a giant bailout.
413. Credit-Default Swaps
- World-wide, these swaps total about 70 trillion,
more than world GDP.
- The large value reflects the tendency of sellers
to offset their positions by buying
credit-default options from some other party
say, C. - Long buy-sell chains can be generated A ? B ? C
? D ? ??? ? Z.
- If all of the positions were netted out, the
total would be perhaps only a few trillion.
42Social Benefits of Derivatives
- Derivatives enable hedgers with opposite risks to
diversify their risks away at very low
transaction costs.
- They also enable hedgers to shift risk from
themselves to speculators more willing to bear it.
43Social Costs of Derivatives
- Many socially beneficial things can be abused
e.g., fire.
- Society evolves mechanisms for keeping abuse
under control e.g., technologies like furnaces,
institutions like fire departments, and
regulations like fire codes
44Infamous Examples of Abuse
- The Treasurer of Orange County CA used derivative
to speculate with county funds rather than
hedge.
- A trader in the Singapore office of Barings Bank
lost billions and bankrupted it.
- A trader in the Paris office of Societe Generale
lost about 7 B in unauthorized speculations.
45Responses to Abuses of Derivatives
- Appropriate response better institutions of
governance such as
- Removing discretion of public officials to
speculate with funds under their management
- Imposing tighter internal controls by managements
of financial institutions on their traders
- Greater understanding of the risks
- More equity backing over-the-counter options
- Exchange rather than over-the-counter trading
- Inappropriate response hinder the use of
derivatives by the market as a whole