Title: Module III: Techniques for Risk Management
1Module III Techniques for Risk Management
- Week 7 October 7 and 9, 2002
2Asset-Liability Risk
Cash Outflows
Cash Inflows
3Cash-Flow Risks
Variation in Cash Flows Due to Relation Between
Inflows and Outflows
4Risk Management
Product Prices Substitute Prices Exchange Rates
Commodity Input Prices Fixed Asset Values Labor
Costs
Short-Term Borrowing Long-Term Borrowing
5Asset-Liability Management
- Focus on variability of cash flows
- Main concern is to be able to make all
contractual payment to avoid defaults - Secondary concern is to minimize risk
(variability) - Third concern is to increase net cash flows by
taking advantage of predictability in variations - Objective is to measure and manage variability in
cash flows
6Exposure to Risk
- A general term to describe a firms exposure to a
particular risk (e.g. a commodity price) is to
classify the exposure as long or short - Long exposure means that the firm will benefit
from increases in prices or values - Short exposure means that the firm will benefit
from decreases in prices or values
7Long Exposure
- A firm (or individual) is long if at the time of
the risk assessment if it has or will have an
asset or commodity. As examples - The firm owns assets, as in inventories of raw
materials or finished goods - The firm produces a commodity or product, as in
an agribusiness raising wheat or livestock - The firm will take possession in the future or a
commodity or an asset - The firm has bought a commodity or asset
8Short Exposure
- A firm (or individual) is short if at the time of
the risk assessment if it needs or will need an
asset or commodity. As examples - The firm is planning or has promised to deliver
raw materials or finished goods - The firm uses a commodity or product in
production as inputs, like steel or lumber - The firm will have possession in the future or a
commodity or an asset it does not need or needs
to sell - The firm has sold a commodity or asset and must
deliver
9Price Exposure in a Diagram
Profit
Profit
Long
0
0
P0
P0
Loss
Loss
Short
10Exposure to Risks
11Examples of Exposure
- Farmer with wheat is long wheat
- Honey Baked Ham is short pork before Easter
selling season - Treasurer with excess cash in three months is
short investments - Company needing cash in nine months is long
financial assets (its liabilities are others
assets) to sell
12Types of Derivative Contracts
- Three basic types of contracts
- Futures or forwards
- Options
- Swaps (we discuss next week)
- Many basic underlying assets
- Commodities
- Currencies
- Fixed incomes or residual claims
13Futures Contracts
- Wall Street Journal tables
- Standardized contracts
- Quantity and quality
- Delivery date
- Last trading date
- Deliverables
- Clearing house is counterparty
- Margin requirements, mark to market
14Forward vs. Futures Contracts
- Bilateral contract (usually with a financial firm
as counterparty) - Terms are tailor made to needs of corporate, not
standardized - No exchange of cash until maturity of contract
- Over-the-counter market not as liquid as
organized exchange
15Managing Risk with Futures
- Offset price or interest rate risk with contract
which moves in opposite direction - Cross diagonally in the box
- Identify contract with price or interest rate
which moves as close as possible with the price
or interest rate exposure - Imperfect correlation is basis risk
- Not using futures or forwards can be speculation
16Hedging
Bank Planning to Borrow
Insurance Company Hedge
Borrowing Hedge
Insurance Company with Premiums
17Forward Contracts
- Example 1 GE is awarded a contract to supply
turbine blades to Lufthansa. On December 1, GE
will receive DM 25 million. - How should GE hedge its risk?
18Forward Market Hedge
- Current spot price for DM 1 0.40
- One year forward rate is DM 1 0.3828
- Hedge future income by selling DM 25 million for
delivery in one year (short in futures or forward
market) - This transaction assures future revenue of 9.57
million without any cash flows today.
19Possibilities
- Say the spot price on December 1 is 0.36 per DM.
- GE sells its DM 25 million for 0.3828 per DM,
yielding 9.57 million - If it had not hedged, its DM 25 million, at a
rate of 0.36, would yield 9 million. - The forward is worth 0.57 million.
20Possible Outcomes
21Key Points
- Revenues are guaranteed irrespective of exchange
rate movements - The cost of hedging varies depending on exchange
rate movements - Futures hedging is effective when the magnitude
and timing of future currency cash flows is known - Pricing in dollars simply shifts risk
22Options (Definition)
- An option is the right (not the obligation) to
buy or sell an asset at a fixed price before a
given date - call is right to buy, put is right to sell
- strike or exercise price is a fixed price which
determines conversion value - expiration date
- Options on stocks, commodities, real estate, and
future contracts
23Call Options Profits at Maturity
Profit
Payoff to Buyer
0
Asset Value
Strike Price
24Call Writers (Sellers) Profits
Profit
Strike Price
Asset Value
0
Possible Cost to Writer
Loss
25Option Value Sensitivityto Price Changes in
Assets
Buy Call
Buy Put
S
S
Write Call
Write Put
26Managing Risk with Options
- Similar to hedging risk with futures or forwards
except that you only hedge again bad or adverse
outcomes - Partially offset price or interest rate risk with
contract which moves in opposite direction - Identify options with price or interest rate
which moves as close as possible with the price
or interest rate exposure but again imperfect
correlation results in basis risk - Options only hedge against adverse outcome so
they are similar to insurance and cost money
27Foreign Currency Options
- Useful if the timing of foreign currency cash
flows is uncertain - Example 2 GE submits a bid to supply turbine
blades to Lufthansa for DM 25 million - The funds will be received on December 1 only if
GE wins - How does GE hedge this risk?
28Using Options
- Selling DM forward is not the answer GE may
lose the bid and the DM may rise - Options solve the problem GE buys put options to
sell DM 25m on December 1 at a rate of, say, 1 DM
0.40 - GE pays a bank 100,000 for the puts
29Suppose GE Loses the Bid
- If the rate is below 0.40, GE can buy DM in the
market at a lower price and sell them for a
profit by exercising the put. - If the rate is above 0.40, GE lets the option
expire - Hedging costs in either event are 100,000
- If the puts are fairly priced GE will not suffer
an expected loss even net of hedging costs
30Suppose GE Wins the Bid
- If the rate is below 0.40, GE exercises the put
for 10m, using the DM 25 million paid by
Lufthansa. - If the rate is above 0.40, GE lets the option
expire, and converts the DM 25 million at the
market rate - GE makes at least 10 million if it wins the bid,
less the 100,000 cost of the option
31Other Uses of Options
- Use call options to hedge the risk of foreign
tender offers - Hedge risk when quantity of cash flows is
uncertain - Currency options can be used to protect profit
margins and prevent frequent revisions of product
prices abroad
32Interest-Rate Derivatives
- Interest rates and asset values move in opposite
directions - Long cash means short assets
- Short cash means long (someone elses) asset
- Basis risk comes from spreads between exposure
and hedge instrument, e.g. default risk premiums - Problem with production risk, e.g. interest rates
up, needs for funds may be down with slowdown
33Caps, floors, and collars
- If a borrower has a loan commitment with a cap
(maximum rate), this is the same as a put option
on a note - If at the same time, a borrower commits to pay a
floor or minimum rate, this is the same as
writing a call - A collar is a cap and a floor
34Collars Cap 6, floor 4
0
9400
9500
9600
Loss
35Other option developments
- Credit risk options
- Casualty risk options
- Requirements for developing an option
- Interest
- Calculable payoffs
- Enforceable
36Replication Futures with Options
Profit
Profit
Buy Call
Long
0
0
P0
P0
Loss
Loss
Write Put
37Next Week October 14, 2002
- Review this weeks discussion to identify areas
needing clarification - Review weekly Objectives and prepare for midterm
examination on October 16, 2002 - After exam, read and prepare case Union Carbide
Corporation Interest Rate Risk Management and
identify issues in the case you have questions
about