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Actuarial Investments

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Title: Actuarial Investments


1
Actuarial Investments
  • Shane Whelan
  • L527

2
Derivative Markets
3
Derivatives
  • A derivative is a financial instrument whose
    value is a function of another asset (the
    underlying). So it is a contract between 2 or
    more parties whose value is derived from another
    asset, e.g., futures, forwards, options, and
    swaps.
  • Used to hedge (reduce risk)
  • Used to speculate (increase return).
  • Also used in portfolio management
  • e.g., to increase speed of execution of switch.

4
Forwards Futures
  • A forward is a contract between two parties to
    trade a specified asset on a specified date in
    the future at a specified price. Generally a
    non-standardised contract.
  • A future is an exchange tradeable contract
    between two parties to trade a specified asset at
    a specified date in the future at a specified
    price. It is a standardised contract and a
    special case of a forward.
  • The underlying trades in the cash or spot market
    while the forward/future trades in the futures
    market.
  • One party is long the contract (buy the future)
    while the other party the seller of the future
    - is short.
  • Delivery of underlying rarely occurs in practice.

5
Operation of Futures Exchanges
  • The contract must be standardised by
  • Exact details of underlying assets
  • Units of underlying of one future contract
  • The delivery date
  • How the settlement price is to be determined.
  • Hence futures traders simply agree contract type
    to to deal, the number of contracts, and the
    price of contract.
  • Hence appears exactly like spot market. However
    here no money changes hands at beginning of
    contract.

6
Example Gold Future
  • Contract Size 100 troy ounces
  • Quality 24 carat ounces
  • Currency Sterling
  • Delivery Date 3rd Monday in March
  • Min. price move 10.
  • Let us say that gold prices are 198.7 per troy
    ounce. Then total value of underlying is about
    100198.719,870. So traders agree future price,
    say, 19,980.

7
Example Gold Future
  • The min. price movement of a contract is set by
    the exchange and is known as the futures tick
    value. It is 10, say, in this example.
  • The smallest movement between quoted prices is
    the tick size.
  • This contract would be quoted as 19.98

8
Method of Trading
  • Most exchanges use electronic trading systems but
    some still favour face-to-face dealing (known as
    open outcry).
  • In open outry, the dealing floor is divided into
    trading areas known as pits a pit of each
    contract type. Traders shout out what they want
    to do and a trade occurs when buyer meets seller.
  • On either system, the parties to the trade fill
    out clearing slips and give to exchange which
    register deal with exchanges clearing house.
  • The clearing house is a party to every trade
    each party now has an obligation to the clearing
    house not one-another. It acts as the
    counter-party, guaranteeing delivery hence credit
    risk of individual participants removed.

9
How Clearing House Manages it Credit Risk Exposure
  • Margin Calls
  • Initial margin payable to clearing house at start
    of contract.
  • Variation margin due (or released) at the end of
    each trading day calculated by marking-to-market
    the contract at the close of each day.
  • Hence no big liability to one party on delivery
    day it is spread as smoothly as market daily
    gyrations allow.
  • Margin payments are credited with interest.

10
How Clearing House Manages it Credit Risk Exposure
  • Margin Calls
  • Initial margin payable to clearing house at start
    of contract.
  • Variation margin due (or released) at the end of
    each trading day calculated by marking-to-market
    the contract at the close of each day.
  • To mark-to-market, the price used is the market
    value of the future at the end of the day.
  • Hence no big liability to one party on delivery
    day it is spread as smoothly as market daily
    gyrations allow.
  • Margin payments are credited with interest.

11
Margining v- Final Settlement
  • In terms of PV, settling on the Settlement Day
    is equivalent to marking-to-market on a daily
    basis. Discuss.

12
Price Limits
  • Futures markets generally have price limits.
  • A band centring on the previous days close is
    constructed about a futures contract price so, if
    it moves outside the band during the day, the
    market closes for a cooling-off period. Market
    can close limit-up (price hits upper bound) or
    limit-down.
  • Closing out a position take the opposite
    position in the same amount on the same contract.
  • E.g., if long 150 March bund futures then sell
    150 March bund futures so net exposure is now
    zero.
  • The Clearing House calculates net exposure of
    each trader and the sum of these gives the open
    interest the number of contracts outstanding at
    any one time.
  • Almost everyone closes out prior to delivery
    the formal settlement process in the futures
    market.
  • If delivery reached then still normally settled
    for cash the exchange publishes the EDSP (the
    exchange delivery settlement price) which is the
    final settlement price on all outstanding futures.

13
Calculation of Fair Value for Future Contract
  • Actual price of a future results from interplay
    of supply demand.
  • However, the Law of One Price or, equivalently,
    the No-Arbitrage Condition, allow us to compute a
    fair value for future.
  • The actual future price should trade very closely
    to the fair priceor arbitrageur gets a free
    lunch.

14
Calculation of Fair Value for Future Contract
  • Two ways to manufacture the same economic
    exposure
  • Buy future, leaving money on deposit to gain
    interest.
  • Buy the underlying and receive whatever income
    the underlying gives prior to the delivery date.
  • The price of doing either must be the same
    (otherwise an arbitrage opportunity).
  • Hence
  • Fair futures price income from underlying
    current cost of underlying interest on deposit.
  • i.e., fair futures price underlying interest
    on deposit income from underlying.

15
Terminology
  • Deposit interest is sometimes called the cost of
    carry. While income on underlying is the return
    on carry.
  • Basis Spot price of underlying futures price.
  • At time ? delivery, then basis ? 0

16
Investment Risk Characteristics of Futures
  • Derivative are generally not held in their own
    right (i.e., as individual assets) but must be
    considered as part of the overall portfolio.
  • Always think in terms of economic exposure the
    quantity of the underlying.
  • Term short term contracts that can be rolled
    over to maintain exposure. Volatility a function
    of the underlying.
  • Income Capital no income but capital flows
    over term by margining arrangements.
  • Security high with exchange-traded futures but
    not complete.

17
Investment Risk Characteristics of Futures
  • Marketability excellent. Generally better than
    underlying with higher turnover figures. Dealing
    costs lower than underlying.
  • Volatility, if related to margin payment is
    extremely high because of gearing. If related to
    economic exposure then it is same as underlying.
  • Expected returns zero as, ignoring the modest
    dealing costs, it is a zero-sum game between
    buyers and sellers ???

18
Options
  • Option a contract that gives one party the
    right but not the obligation to buy or sell the
    underlying at or by a future specified date at a
    specified price.
  • Define call option put option strike price
    exercise price (option) writer (option)
    premium.
  • Is buying a put the same as selling a call?
  • 4 exposures with the two option types
  • buy a call buy a put
  • write a call write a put.
  • American option
  • can be exercised at any time prior to expiry.
  • European option can only be exercised at
    expiry.

19
Traded options
  • Traded options contracts that are standardised
    by and traded on an exchange.
  • Available on financial future foreign
    currencies short-term interest rates stock
    market indices individual equities commodities.
  • Traded generally by open outcry.
  • Clearing house becomes party to every trade
    severing link between buyer seller.
  • Only one party only pays margin. Which one?
  • OTC (over-the-counter) security/derivative is
    one not traded on a recognised exchange.

20
Option Prices
  • Option price ultimately set by supply and demand.
    But again we can derive (but not on this course)
    a theoretical price that it generally trades
    near.
  • Option value
  • Instrinsic value of call greater of zero or
    current price of underlying less exercise price.
  • if positive the call option in the money, zero
    then option out of the money
  • Time value the choice that can still be
    exercised until expiry give it a time value.
  • Option Price Option Premium

21
Option Prices
  • Call premium
  • Is an increasing function of share price.
  • Decays with decreasing time (other things being
    equal), reaching instrinsic value at expiry.
  • Deep out of money option not so sensitive to
    share price movements at around exercise price
    it increases by about 0.5 for very 1 move in
    share price.
  • What happens when deep in-the-money?

22
Options Position Diagrams
  • Position diagrams help to see profit/loss on
    option or option book at expiry, as a function of
    the underlying price.
  • Convention has it that
  • You allow for premium.
  • Ignore dealing costs.
  • Ignores interest on premium.
  • Draw position diagram of
  • Long call option
  • Short call option
  • Long put option
  • Short put option

23
Investment Risk Characteristics of Options
  • Term short-term, so roll-over regularly if want
    longer-term exposure.
  • Income none but capital flows to writer via
    margining.
  • Security as good as the clearing house.
  • Marketability very good generally with low
    dealing costs.
  • Volatility very high relative to premium.
  • Expected return zero as a zero-sum game?

24
Forwards Swaps
  • Forwards swaps are OTC instruments (synthesised
    by investment banks). They are bespoke, less
    liquid, less transparent, and credit risk is a
    major factor.
  • Institutional investors mostly use these
    instruments for hedging foreign currency exposure
  • Generally run to delivery
  • No margining unless specified in special contract
  • As with futures, it is straightforward to price
    forwards.

25
Swaps
  • Swap a contract between 2 parties under which
    they agree to exchange a future series of
    payments according to an agreed formula.
  • e.g. two different currencies (a currency swap)
  • e.g., two different types of interest payments
    (an interest rate or coupon swap)
  • In both cases they are bundles of forward
    agreements so straightforward to price but must
    make allowance for credit risk.

26
Example Interest Rate Swap
  • In a plain vanilla interest rate swap, company B
    agrees to pay company A cash flows equal to
    interest at a predetermined fixed rate on a
    notional principle for a number of years. At the
    same time, company A agrees to pay company B cash
    flow equal to interest at a floating rate on the
    same notional principal for the same period of
    time in the same currrency.
  • Note that the notional principal is used only for
    the calculation of interest payments. The
    principal itself is not exchanged.
  • The swap contract has the effect of transforming
    the nature of the liabilities or assets. In the
    example, company B can use the swap to transform
    a floating-rate loan into a fixed-rate loan.
  • Usually, two non-financial companies deal with a
    financial intermediary which is remunerated by
    the difference between the value of a pair of
    offsetting transactions, providing neither client
    defaults on their swap.
  • The intermediary has two separate contracts, one
    with company A and the other with company B.  

27
Example Interest Rate Swap
  • In practice, it is unlikely that two companies
    will contact an intermediary at the same time and
    want to take opposite positions in exactly the
    same swap. For this reason, a large financial
    institution will be prepared to enter into a swap
    without having an offsetting swap with another
    counterparty in place. This is known as
    warehousing swaps.
  • If we assume no possibility of default (e.g.,
    collateralised), an interest-rate swap can be
    valued as
  • a long position in one bond compared to a short
    position in another bond, since the notional
    principal is the same in both cases.
  • Alternatively, as a portfolio of forward rate
    agreements.

28
Risk of Swaps
  • to either party
  • market risk the risk that market conditions
    change to their detriment,
  • credit risk the other party defaults (when NPV
    of contract is positive).

29
Credit Derivatives
  • Another way of managing credit risk is by using
    credit derivatives credit derivatives are
    contracts where the payoff depends partly on upon
    the creditworthiness of one (or more) commercial
    (or sovereign) entities.
  • The most common types of credit derivative is the
    credit default swap
  • Credit default swaps A contract that provides a
    payment if a particular event occurs. The party
    that buys the protection pays a fee to the
    seller. If the credit event occurs within the
    term of the contract a payment is made from the
    seller to the buyer, otherwise it no payment is
    made by seller. There are two ways to settle a
    claim under a credit default swap
  • A pure cash payment, representing the fall in the
    market price of the defaulted security. However,
    the market value may be difficult to
    determine/agree.
  • A more robust method is, perhaps, the exchange of
    both cash and a security (physical settlement).
    The protection seller pays the buyer the full
    notional amount and receives, in return, the
    defaulted security.
  •         

30
Credit Derivatives
  • Main Use of Credit default swaps Lenders who
    have reached their internal credit limit with a
    particular client, but wish to maintain their
    relationship with that client can use credit
    default swaps. Main users of credit default swaps
    are banks.
  • Other credit derivative instruments
  • Total return swaps Here, the total return from
    one asset (or group of assets) is swapped for the
    return on another. This enables financial
    institutions to swap one type of exposure for
    another. In the absence of counterparty risk,
    the value of a total return swap is the
    difference between the values of the assets
    generating the returns on each side of the swap.
    A total return swap is normally structured so
    that it is worth zero initially.
  • Credit spread options An option on the spread
    between the yields earned on two assets, which
    provides a payoff whenever the spread exceeds
    some level (the strike spread).
  • A credit-linked note consists of a basic
    security plus an embedded credit default swap.
    They provide a useful way of stripping and
    repackaging credit risk.

31
ASIDE Dont forget the Web
  • A great source of information
  • www.cme.com
  • www.liffe.com
  • www.nyse.com
  • www.ise.ie
  • Etc.
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