Full interest payments are exchanged at each settlement date, each in different currency ... value, present value, effective annual rate, annuity, perpetuity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
A DERIVATIVE is a financial instrument whose value depends on the price of some other asset
Exchange traded derivatives are standardized and backed by the clearing hose
Over-the-counter (OTC) are custom made instruments and are traded/created by dealers in a market with no central location
4 DERIVATIVES
FORWARD CONTRACT is a bilateral contract that obligates one party to buy and the other party to sell a specific quantity of an asset, at a set price, on a specific date in the future
Long forward position the party that has decided to buy
Short forward position the party that has decided to sell
Each party of the forward contract is exposed to default risk, the probability that the other party (the counterparty) will not perform as promised
5 DERIVATIVES
Example party A agrees to buy a 1,000 face value, 90-day Treasury bill from party B 30 days from now at a price of 990
Party A agrees to buy 5 bushels of wheat from party B three months from not at a price of 20
Party A agrees to buy from party B 10,000 shares of Microsoft 50 days from now at a price of 28.
Settlement
Delivery
Cash settlement
6 DERIVATIVES
A party to a forward contract can terminate the position prior to expiration by entering into an opposite forward contract with an expiration date equal to the remaining on the original contract
7 DERIVATIVES
EQUITY INDEX FORWARD CONTRACT
A portfolio manager desires to generate a return on 10 million 100 days from now from a portfolio that is quite similar in composition to the SP 100 index. She requests a quote on a short position in a 100-day forward contract based on the index with a notional value of 10 million and gets a quote of 525.2. If the index level at the settlement date is 535.7, calculate the amount the manager will pay or receive to settle the contract
-200,000
8 DERIVATIVES
BOND FORWARD CONTRACT
T-bill prices are often quoted as a percentage discount from a face value. The percentage discount is annualized so that 90-day T-bill at a 4 discount will be priced at a 1 discount (90/3604) from a face value
A forward contract covering a 10 million face value T-bill that will have 100 days to maturity at contract settlement is priced at 1.96 on a discount yield basis. Compute the USD amount the long has to pay at settlement for the T-bill
9,945,560
9 DERIVATIVES
CURRENCY FORWARD CONTRACT
One party agrees to exchange a certain amount of one currency for a certain amount of another currency at a future date
Company X expects to receive EUR50 million 3 months from now and enters into a cash settlement currency forward to exchange these euros for dollars at USD 1.48 per EUR. If the market fx rate is USD 1.50 per EUR at settlement, what is the amount of the payment to be received or paid by X
Pay 1,000,000
10 DERIVATIVES
FORWARD RATE AGREEMENT
Can be viewed as a forward contract to borrow/lend money at a certain rate at some future day. The contract settles in cash and no actual loan is made. The contract is based on a notional value.
The long position is the party that would borrow the money
The short position is the party that would lend the money
Cash payment at the settlement of the forward is the present value of the interest savings
11 DERIVATIVES
FORWARD RATE AGREEMENT
Consider FRA that
Settles in 30 days
Is based on a notional principal amount of 1 million
Is based on a 90-day LIBOR
Specifies a forward rate of 5
The actual LIBOR rate 30 days from now is 6
Compute the cash payment at expiration and identify which party makes the payment
Payment from the short to the long of 2,463.05
12 DERIVATIVES
FORWARD RATE AGREEMENT
a days fraction, i.e. number of days in the loan term / 360
13 DERIVATIVES
FUTURES CONTRACTS differ from the forward contracts
Traded on the organized exchanges
Are highly standardized
A single clearing house is the counterparty to all future contracts
Government regulates futures markets
Futures contract can be easily closed by entering a reverse/offsetting trade
Futures are marked to market on a daily basis
14 DERIVATIVES
INITIAL MARGIN the money that has to be deposited in a futures account before any trading takes place
MAINTENANCE MARGIN is the amount of margin that must be maintained in a futures account. If the margin balance in the account falls below the maintenance margin, additional funds must be deposited to bring the margin balance back to the initial margin requirement
VARIATION MARGIN is the funds that must be deposited into account to bring it back to the initial margin amount
SETTLEMENT PRICE closing price for the futures contracts, based on which margins are calculated
15 DERIVATIVES
consider a long position of five in July wheat contracts, each of which covers 5000 bushels. The contract price is 2.00. Each contract requires an initial margin deposit of 150 and a maintenance margin of 100. Compute the margin balance for this position after a 2-cent decrease in price on day 1, a 1-cent increase on day 2, and a 1-cent decrease in price on day 3
16 DERIVATIVES 17 DERIVATIVES
Ways to terminate a futures contract
Delivery
Cash settlement
Offsetting trade
Exchange for physicals
Examples of futures contracts bond, stock index, single stocks, currency
18 DERIVATIVES
OPTION CONTRACTS gives its owner the right, but not the obligation, to conduct a transaction involving and underlying asset at a predetermined future date (the exercise date) and at a predetermined price (exercise or strike price). The seller of the option has the obligation to perform if the buyer exercises the option
CALL OPTION has the right to purchase the underlying asset. Long Call vs. Short Call
PUT OPTION has the right to sell the underlying asset. Long Put vs. Short Put
19 DERIVATIVES
AMERICAN OPTION may be exercised at any time up to and including the contract expiration date
EUROPEAN OPTION can be exercised only on the contracts expiration date
Therefore, the value of the American Option will equal or exceed the value of the European Option
20 DERIVATIVES
IN-THE-MONEY OPTION immediate exercise of the option will generate a positive payoff. For a call option current price gt strike price For a put option current priceltstrike price
OUT-OF-THE-MONEY OPTION immediate exercise would result in a loss. For a call option current priceltstrike price for a put option current pricegtstrike price
AT-THE-MONEY OPTION no loss or gain would be generated if exercised immediately.
21 DERIVATIVES
OPTION PREMIUM option value
Option value intrinsic value time value
INTRINSIC VALUE is the amount at which the option is in the money
TIME VALUE is the mount of which the option premium exceeds the intrinsic value. Equals 0 when the option reaches expiration date. The longer the time to expiration the greater the time value
22 DERIVATIVES
Consider a call option with a strike price of 50. Compute the intrinsic value of this option for stock prices 55, 50, 45
Consider a put option with a strike price of 20. Compute the intrinsic value of this option for stock prices 22, 19, 15
Interest rate cap is a series of interest rate call options, place a maximum on the interest payment on a floating rate loan
Interest rate floor is a series of interest rate put options. Place a minimum on the interest payment that are received from a floating rate
28 DERIVATIVES
FACTORS AFFECTING THE VALUE OF THE OPTION
Strike price
Current market price
Volatility of the underlying asset
Time to expiration
Risk free rate (increases the value of call and decreases the value of put)
C S P X/(1RFR)T
P C S X/ (1RFR)T
29 DERIVATIVES
SWAP is an agreement to exchange a series of cash flows on periodic settlement dates over a certain time period (tenor).
Require no payment by either party at the initiation
Custom instruments
Are not traded on any organized exchange
Are largely unregulated
Default risk is important
Most participants are large institutions
30 DERIVATIVES
INTEREST RATE SWAP one party makes a fixed-rate interest payment on a notional principal specified in the swap in return for a floating-rate payment from the other party.
Notional principal is not swapped
Net interest is paid by the party who owes it
It is called plain vanilla interest rate swap
31 DERIVATIVES
Bank A enters into a 1,000,000 quarterly-pay plain vanilla interest rate swap as the fixed-rate payer at a fixed rate of 6 based on a 360-day year. The floating-rate payer agrees to pay 90-day LIBOR plus 100bps margin 90-day LIBOR is currently 4, 90 days from now 4.5, 180 days from now 5, 270 days from now 5.5, 360 days from now 6
Calculate the amounts Bank A pays or receives 90, 180, 270, 360 days from now. THE PAYMENT 90 DAYS FROM NOW DEPENDS ON CURRENT LIBOR!!!!!
90 2,500 180 1,250 270 0 360 -1,250
32 DERIVATIVES
CURRENCY SWAP one party makes payments denominated in one currency, while the payments from the other party are made in a second currency.
Notional amounts of the contracts are exchanged at the initiation at the current exchange rate
Notional amounts are returned at the contract termination
Full interest payments are exchanged at each settlement date, each in different currency
X can borrow in US for 9, while Y for 10, Y can borrow in Australia for 7, while X would have to pay 8. X needs AUD, while Y needs USD. The current exchange rate is AUD/USD 2. X needs AUD 2 million, while Y needs USD 1 million. Structure the transaction, assume the tenor is 1 year and only one periodic payment is made.
34 DERIVATIVES
EQUITY SWAP the return on a stock, a portfolio, or a stock index is paid each period by one party in return for a fixed-rate or a floating-rate payment.
The return can be the capital appreciation or the total return including dividends on the stock, portfolio or index
35 DERIVATIVES
Investor X enters into a 2-year 10 million quarterly swap as the fixed payer and will be receiving the index return on the SP500. The fixed rate is 8 and the index is currently at 986. At the end of next three quarters the index level is 1030, 968, 989.
Calculate the net payment for each of the next three quarters and identify the direction of the payment
q1 246,000 q2 -802,000 q3 17,000
36 DERIVATIVES
HEDGING involves taking an offsetting position by buying or selling a financial instrument whose value changes in the opposite direction from the value of the asset being hedged
37 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
EXCHANGE RATE is a ratio that describes how many units of one currency you can buy per unit of another currency
The appreciation of one currency makes that countrys goods more expensive to residents of another countries while depreciation makes a countrys goods more attractive to foreign buyers
38 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Direct quotes domestic currency per foreign currency
Indirect quotes foreign currency per domestic currency
Bid price is the price the bank will pay for FC
Ask price is the price the bank will sell FC
39 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
The cross rate is the rata of exchange between two countries, computed from the exchange rates between each of these two countries and a third country
The spot exchange rate between CHF and USD is 1.7799, and the spot exchange rate between NZD and USD is 2.2529. Calculate the direct CHF/NZD spot cross exchange rate
1.26575
40 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Spot rate is the exchange rate for immediate delivery of the currency
Forward rate is the rate for currency transactions that will occur in the future
41 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
A US firm is obliged to make a future payment of CHF 100,000 in 60 days. To manage its exchange risk the firm contracts to buy CHF in 60 days in the future rate at 1.7530 CHF/USD. The current exchange rate is 1.7799 CHF/USD.
How much would the firm lose/gain if the rate fell to 1.6556, what about 1.8250 (with/without hedging)
42 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
A foreign currency is at a forward discount if the forward rate expressed in USD is less than the spot rate. Foreign currency units will be cheaper in the future
A foreign currency is at a forward premium if the forward rate expressed in USD is greater than the spot rate. Foreign currency will be more expensive in the future
forward rate spot rate 360
Forward premium/discount spot rate number of forward contract days
43 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Assume the 90-day forward rate for NZD is USD 0.4439 and the spot rate is USD 0.4315. Determine if the NZD is trading at a premium of discount to the USD. Calculate the annualized premium or discount
11.49
44 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
INTEREST RATE PARITY
The only difference between exchanging currencies in the spot market and exchanging currencies in the forward market is the timing of the transaction, where time is presented by interest rates
There is a relationship between the spot and forward exchange rates and the domestic (rd) and foreign (rf) interest rates
Covered interest parity holds because investors will take advantage of interest rate differentials to move funds between countries where spot and forward rates are not in balance
45 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
INTEREST RATE PARITY
(1rd)
Forward DC/FC spot DC/FC (1rf)
46 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Suppose you can invest in NZD at r5.127, or you can invest in CHF at r5.5. You are a resident of New Zealand, and the current spot rate is 0.79005 NZD/CHF. Calculate the one-year forward rate expressed in NZD/CHF
0.78726
47 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Covered interest arbitrage is a trading strategy that expoits currency positions when interest rate parity equation is not satisfied
(1rf)(forward rate)
(1rd) spot rate covered interest differential
If domestic interest rate is less than the hedged foreing interest rate, an arbitrageur will borrow in the domestic cah market, buy foreign currency at a spot rate, and enter into a forward contract granting him the ability to convert the foreign funds back to domestic funds at some future date
48 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
The forward rate between GBP and USD is 0.7327 GBP/USD, and the current spot rate is 0.7045 GBP/USD. The UK interest rate is 6.056, and the US rate is 5.95. Find the arbitrage opportunity if there is any
49 FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FACTORS INFLUENCING EXCHANGE RATES
Current and financial account balance
Differences in income growth
Differences in inflation rates
Differences in real interest rates
Monetary and fiscal policies
Overall country investment attractiveness
50 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
PORTFOLIO THEORY ASSUMPTIONS
Investors are risk-averse the prefer less risk to more risk for a given level of expected return
Investors will only accept a riskier investment if they are compensated in the form of greater expected return
Investors have homogeneous expectations, they have the same risk/return distribution
Investors have the same information, interpret the same, and make the same forecasts
INVESTORS ARE RATIONAL
ARE THEY????
51 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
Rather than research financial statements and other relevant data, individuals form investment rules and make investments using information that is most prominent in the media or otherwise most readily available
52 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
Representativeness investors base expectations upon past experience, applying stereotypes
Ex good earnings announcement is a good predictor of good future performance
53 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
Overconfidence placing too much confidence in the ability to predict
To narrow confidence intervals
Investors tend to systematically underestimate the risk
Investors tend to trade more frequently than can be justified by the information
Professionals feel they are good because of their training and experience, so any inaccuracies in their forecasts are due to outside factors
Inividuals feel that if they are good at one thing they will be good in another thing as well
Portfolios are not properly diversified, containing small new stocks
54 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
Frame dependance investors judge the information within the information it is received rather then on its own merits
Treating The Wall Street Journal as a better source than The New Your Times
When the market is up, investors loss aversion falls and they jump in, further pushing prices up
55 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
Loss aversion individuals are reluctant to accept a loss
A stock may be down considerably from its purchase price, but investors holds on to it hoping it will recover
Investors monitor stocks performance too often and based on that make irrational decisions
Feeling to regret
56 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
Risk-seeking behaviour accepting more risk in order to generate return
Portfolio manager who has recently experienced losses, will take riskier position, increase leverage etc.
57 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
Anchoring-and-adjustment inability to fully incorporate the impact of new information
Analysts have they own forecasts and they do not revise fully
Individual investors tend to anchore to forecasts, even knowing that the forecasts are probably inaccurate, because they provide a measure of assurance
58 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
1/n diversification naïve diversification.
Emloyees put equal amount into each of the alternative funds provided
59 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
Familarity investors invest in stocks they know (from they region, employees employer
Home bias when allowed to choose between international and domestic securities, the typical individual will select domestic (home) securities
60 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE
Status qou bias sticking to the original asset allocation
Defined contribution plan participants make an original allocation and do not change it
61 COURSE SUMMARY
Organization of financial markets and financial instruments
Financial statemements (balance sheet, income statement, cash flow statement)
Time value of money future value, present value, effective annual rate, annuity, perpetuity