Title: Futures Hedging Strategies
1Futures Hedging Strategies
- FIN 653 Lecture Notes
- Yea-Mow Chen
- Department of Finance
- San Francisco State University
2I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- An interest rate futures has an interest-bearing
discount security as the underlying commodity,
its value depends on the market value of the
underlying asset the price of an interest rate
futures contract also changes inversely with
interest rates. Thus a financial institution can
use futures to reduce its exposure to adverse
rate changes. -
3I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- I. Long Hedge
- A long hedge is chosen in anticipation of
interest rate declines and requires the purchase
of interest rate futures contract. If the
forecast is correct, the profit on the hedge
helps to offset losses in the cash market. - Example In June 2002, the manager of a money
market portfolio expects interest rates to
decline. New funds, to be received invested in
90 days, will suffer from the drop in yields. The
manager expects an inflow of 10m in September.
The discount yield currently available on 91-day
T-bills is 10, and the goal is to establish a
yield of 10 on the anticipated funds.
4I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
5I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- Effective Discount Yield with the Hedge
- 10,000,000- (9,797,778- 50,000) 360
- --------------------------------------------
- ---------- - 10,000,000
91 - 9.978
- Note 1. At a discount yield of 10, the price of
a 91-day T-bill is
91 - P 10,000,000 1 - 10 -----------
9,747,222 - 360
- 2. T-bill futures are standardized at 90-day
maturity, resulting in a price different from the
one calculated in the cash market.
6I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- Even if the expectation on future interest rates
for the cash market is incorrect, the position is
still hedged. The cost is that the potential
profitable opportunities in the cash market is
foregone. - EX Assume the T-bill discount yield rises to 12
, instead of declining to 8 as expected. -
7I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- Cash Market Futures Market
- __________________________________________________
__June T-bill discount yield at 10 June buy
10 T-bill Contracts - Price of 91-day T-bills, for September delivery
at - 10m par 9,747,222 10 discount yield.
Value - of contracts 9,750,000
-
- Sept T-bill discount yield at 12 Sept Sell 10
Sept. T-bill - Price of 91-day T-bills, contracts at 12
discount - 10m par 9,696,667 yield.
- Value of contracts
- 9,700,000
- __________________________________________________
_______ - Opportunity gain 50,555 Loss 50,000
8I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
9I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- Effective Discount Yield with the Hedge
-
- 10,000,000- (9,696,667 50,000) 360
- -----------------------------------------------
- ----- --
10,000,000 91 - 10.022
- The investor is still making about 10, the
target rate of return.
10I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- Long speculation Instead of expecting new funds
to arrive invest in September, the manager
could speculate on the direction of interest
rates.
11I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- If he/she speculates on a declining interest
rate, but market rate rises in September instead
12I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- II. Short Hedge
- A short hedge is chosen in anticipation of
interest rate increases and requires the sale of
interest rate futures. If the forecast is correct
the profit on the hedge helps to offset losses in
the cash market. - Example A saving institution in September 1999
wants to hedge 5m in short-term CDs whose owners
are expected to roll them over in 90 days. If
market yields go up, the thrift must offer a
higher rate on its CDs to remain competitive,
reducing the net interest margin. If the CD rare
rises from 7 to 9, the interest cost will
increase by 25,000 for the 3-month period. The
asset/liability manager can reduce these by the
sale of T-bill futures contracts.
13I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- Cash Market Futures Market
- __________________________________________________
_______ - Sept. CD rate 7 Sept.
Sell 5 Dec. T-bill Interest cost on 5m
3-month contracts at 7 discount yield - Interest costs 87,500 Value of
contract - 4,912,500
- Dec. CD rate 9 Dec. Buy 5 Dec. T-bill
contracts - at 9 discount
- Interest cost on 5m 3-month interest Value of
contracts - 112,500 4,887,500
- __________________________________________________
__Opportunity Loss 25,000 Gain 25,000 - Net result of hedge 0
-
14I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- 112,500 -25,000 360
- Effective CD rate -------------------------
------ 7 - 5,000,000
90
15I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- Basis Risk Using the Long Hedge Example
-
- Example In June 1993, the manager of a money
market portfolio expects interest rates to
decline. New funds, to be received invested in
90 days, will suffer from the drop in yields. The
manager expects an inflow of 10m in September.
The discount yield currently available on 91-day
T-bills is 10, and the goal is to establish a
yield of 10 on the anticipated funds.
16I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- Cash Market Futures Market
- __________________________________________________
_______June T-bill discount yield at 10
June buy 10 T-bill Contracts - Price of 91-day T-bills, for September delivery
at - 10m par 9,747,222 10 discount yield.
- Value of contracts
- 9,750,000
- Sept. T-bill discount yield at 8 Sept Sell 10
Sept. T-bill - Price of 91-day T-bills, contracts at 8
discount - 10m par 9,797,778 yield.
- Value of contracts 9,800,000
- __________________________________________________
______ - Opportunity Loss 50,556 Gain 50,000
17I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
18I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- Revised Example Rather than using T-bill
contract for hedging, a long-term T-bond futures
contract is used for hedging which is price at
96-12. If the T-bill rate drops to 8 in
September as expected, the T-bond futures will
have it price increased to 98-16.
19I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
20I. Interest Rate Futures as a Hedging Device
- The how many contracts to buy to make it a
perfect hedge? -
21II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- When the futures price changes by less than the
cash price, a larger futures position than cash
position is optimal. On the other hand, if the
futures price changes by more than the cash
price, a smaller futures position than cash
position is optimal. - The first step in structuring a perfect hedge is
to identify the assets and/or liabilities to be
protected. The volume and interest rate
characteristics of the instruments to be hedged
are the foundation for the futures decision. - Once the size and cash market position has been
chosen, the hedge ratio, or the number of
contracts to be traded must be determined.
22II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- a. Optimal Hedging - Mean-Variance Approach
- The uncertain gain, pn, of the hedger who holds
NA, units of the asset (commodity) and hedges
using NF futures contracts is -
- pn (ST S0)NA (FT-F0)NF
-
- The term (ST S0) is the random price change per
unit of asset over the life of the hedge, and the
term (FT-F0) is the random price change of the
futures contract over the life of the hedge.
23II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- To derive the optimal number of futures contracts
to sell, first rewrite the above equation in
terms of price change per unit of the underlying
asset - pn /NA (ST S0) (FT-F0)NF / NA
- ?s h?F
- When price change terms are ?S (ST S0) and ?F
(FT-F0) and the hedge ratio, h, is the number
of future contracts per unit of the underlying
asset. Since the hedger is concerned with
minimizing risk, the variance of the hedge
portfolio profit - sn2 ss2 h2sF2 2hsSF
24II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- The value of h that minimizes s2 is found by
- dsn2 / dh 2hsF2 2sSF 0
- solve for h, the optimal hedge ration is
- h -sSF / sF2
- The optimal hedge ratio thus depends on the
covariance between the cash and future prices
changes relative to the variance of the future
price changes. - It is interesting to note that the expression for
the optimal hedge ratio, sSF /sF2 is the slope
coefficient in an ordinary least squares (OLS)
regression of the cash price changes, ?S, on the
futures price change, ?F.
25II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- Example Suppose that a securities Portfolio
manager, anticipating a decline in interest rates
over the next 3 months, wishes to protect the
yield on an investment of 15m T-bills and that
a T-bill futures contract is now selling far
989,500. If the hedge ratio between price
changes in T-bills and T-bill futures contract
has been estimated through regression to be 0.93,
the number of contracts to be used in the hedged
can be determined by - NF (V/F)h
- The number of contracts to be purchased is
- (15,000,000/989,500) 0.93 14.098
26II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- b. Optimal Hedging- OLS Regression Approach
- Consider the following regression equation
- ?S a0 a1?F e
- The intercept term, a0, captures any expected
change in the cash price unaccompanied by an
expected change in the futures price. We know
that, if E(?F) 0, the expected cash price
change equal the basis, i.e., E(?F) E(ST) - S0
(F0 - S0). The regression model states that the
expected cash price change equals a, under the
assumption that E(?F) 0, then the intercept
represents the basis.
27II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- The basis in turn, reflects the storage costs
which a store of the assets must recover by price
appreciation. The term a1?F, reflects the fact
that the random changes in the futures price will
be reflected in the cash price according to the
slope coefficient, a1.a1, the slope coefficient,
is equal to - Cov(?S,?F)
- a1 -----------------
- Var(?F)
28II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- Moreover, the value of a1 has theoretical meaning
as the hedge ratio (h) that minimizes the risk of
a portfolio of spot assets and futures contracts.
That is, we can use the estimated of a1 from the
regression model as the appropriate measure of
the hedge ratio h to be used by the FI manager. - The term e reflects basis risk which arises from
the fact that certain random changes in ?S are
unique to the cash asset and uncorrelated with
the futures price change.
29II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- The hedged portfolio profit can be written
- pn /ns a0 a1?F e h?F
- a0 (a1 h) ??F e
- This equation shows clearly that the profit on
the hedge portfolio, ?h ,can be made independent
of movements in cash and futures prices by
setting h -a1,
30II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- Ifa1 1.0, a one-dollar change in the cash price
is matched by a one-dollar change in the futures
prices. In this case, the optimal hedge is h -1
or 100 percent hedge. - If a1 0.0, futures and cash prices are
unrelated and there is no point in hedging and
the optimal hedge ratio, h, is zero.
31II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- The degree of confidence the FI manager may have
in using such a method to determine the
appropriate hedge ratio depends on how well the
regression line fits the scatter of observations.
- The standard measure of the goodness of fit of a
regression line is the R2 of the equation, which
is the square of the correlation coefficient
between S and F -
- R2 p2 Cov(?S,?F)/ (s?s s?F)
32II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- A low R2 would mean that we might have little
confidence that the slope coefficienta1 , from
the regression is actually the true hedge ratio. - As R2 approaches 1, our degree of confidence
increases in the use of futures contracts, with a
given hedge ration estimate, to hedge our cash
asset-risk position. R2 therefore measures
hedging effectiveness.
33II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- Optimal Hedge Ratio An Application to Cross
hedges - Example Ajax expects at the beginning of 1991
that it has to borrow 36m on June 1 by issuing
one month commercial paper. On January 2, the
3-month LIBOR is 9.25, the CP rate is 8.75, and
the price of June Eurodollar Futures is 90.45. -
34II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- 1. Selecting the Appropriate Futures Contracts
- The appropriate futures contracts for instituting
a cross-hedge is normally selected on that
futures contracts most highly correlated with the
underlying exposure.
35II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- 2. Determining the Appropriate Number of Futures
Contracts - (1) the relation between movements in the
underlying exposure and the price of the futures
contract being used as a hedge - The estimate of relative sensitivity tells how
the interest rate to which the firm is exposed
moves in relation to the interest rate imbedded
in the futures contract. If the hedge ratio
(beta) is estimated to be .75, then the treasurer
knows that to hedge 36m exposure, he would need
to sell 36 contracts .75 27 contracts June
Eurodollar contracts.
36II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- (2) If a given change in the interest rate has a
larger impact on the underlying exposure than on
the value of the futures contract, fewer futures
contracts will be needed to hedge the position,
and vice versa. -
- If the response of the futures contract is three
times that of the underlying exposure, then to
hedge the 36m exposure, it only need - 36 contracts .75 .33 9 contracts
37II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- Spot Future
- __________________________________________________
__________ - Jan 2 Jan 2 Sell 9 June Eurodollar
- contracts at 90.45 to yield
- 9.55
- June 1 Borrow 36m at June 1 Close out (buy
back) - 1-month CP rate of 10.20 the futures position
at 89.25 - to yield 10.75
- __________________________________________________
__________ - Additional Cost Gain
- 36m (10.20-8.75) 30/360
9m(10.75-9.55) 90/360 - 43,500 27,000
38II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- C. Duration-Based Hedging Strategies
- For interest rate sensitive assets, assume
- F interest rate futures contract price
- DF duration of the asset underlying the
futures - contract at the maturity of the futures
contract - A asset portfolio value to be hedged
- DA duration of the asset portfolio at the
maturity - of the hedge
39II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- C. Duration-Based Hedging Strategies
- If assume that the change in yield, I, is the
same for all maturities, i.e., only parallel
shifts in the yield curve can occur, it is
approximately true that - ? A -A DA ? I
- To a reasonable approximation, it is also true
that - ? F -F DF ? I
- The number of contracts required to hedge against
an uncertain is therefore given by - N ADA/FDF
40II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- Ex Hedging a bond portfolio
- On August 2, a fund manager has 10m invested in
government bonds and is concerned that interest
rates are expected to be highly volatile over the
next 3 months. The fund manager decides to use
the December T-bond futures contract to hedge the
value of the portfolio. - The current futures price is 93-02 or 93.0625 or
93,062.50 per contract. The duration of the
bond portfolio in 3 months is 6.8 years. The
cheapest-to-deliver T-bond is a 20-year 12 per
annum coupon bond. The yield on this bond is
currently 8.8 per annum, and the duration will
be 9.2 years at maturity of the futures contract.
41II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- Ex Hedging a bond portfolio
- The fund manager requires a short position in
T-bond futures to hedge the bond portfolio. The
number of bond futures that should be shorted - N (10,000,000 6.8)/(93,062.50 9.20
79.42
42II. Choosing the Optimal Numbers of Contracts
The Hedge Ratio
- The result During the period Aug. 2 to Nov. 2,
interest rate declined rapidly. The value of the
bond portfolio increased from 410m to
10,450,000. - On Nov. 2, the T-bond futures price was 98-16 or
98,500 per contract. A loss of
7998,500-93,062.50) 429,562.50 was
therefore made on the contracts. - Overall the value of the portfolio changed by
only - 450,000 - 429,562.50 20,437.50
43III. Macrohedging with Futures for a Financial
Institution
- Suppose a FI's balance sheet structure is as
follows Assets 100m, Liabilities 90m, and
equity 10m. The average duration of assets and
liabilities is 5 and 3 years, respectively. If
interest rates are expected to rise from 10 to
11, then - ?E - (DA - kDL) A (?R/1R)
- - (5 - .9 3) 100m (.01/1.1)
- - 2.09m
- The manager's objective is to fully hedge the
balance sheet exposure by constructing a futures
position to make a gain to just offset the loss
of 2.09m on equity.
44III. Macrohedging with Futures for a Financial
Institution
- When interest rates rise, the price of futures
contracts falls. The sensitivity of the price of
a futures contracts depends on the duration of
the deliverable bond underlying the contract, or -
- ?F/F - DF (?R/1R), or
- ?F - DF F (?R/1R)
- - DF (NF PF) (?R/1R)
45III. Macrohedging with Futures for a Financial
Institution
- Fully hedging can be defined as selling
sufficient number of futures contracts so that
the loss of net worth on the balance sheet is
just offset by the gain from off-balance-sheet
selling of futures - ?F ?E
- which implies
- N F (DA - kDL) A / DF PF
- (5-.93)100m/(9.597,000)
- 249.59 contracts
46III. Macrohedging with Futures for a Financial
Institution
- If a T-bond futures contract is used for hedging.
The futures is quoted 97 per 100 of face value
for the benchmark 20-yr., 8 coupon bond that has
a duration of 9.5 yrs. -
- Suppose instead of using the 20-yr. T-bond
futures to hedge it had used the 3-month T-bill
futures that has a price of 97 per 100 par
value and a duration of .25 yrs. Then - NF (5 - .93)100m/.2597,000 948.45
contracts
47III. Macrohedging with Futures for a Financial
Institution
- The Problem of Basis Risk
- Because spot bonds and futures on bonds are
traded in different markets, the shift in yields
(?R/1R) affecting the value of the
on-balance-sheet cash portfolio may differ from
the shift (?RF/1RF) in yields affecting the
value of the underlying bond in the futures
contracts i.e., spot and futures prices or
values are not perfectly correlated. To take this
basis risk into account - ?E -(DA - kDL) A (?R/1R)
- ?F - DF (N FP F ) (?RF/1RF)
48III. Macrohedging with Futures for a Financial
Institution
- Setting ?E ?F , we have
- N F (DA - kDL) A / DF PF b,
-
- Where b (? RF /1 RF)/ (?R/1R) which measures
the degree to which the futures price yields move
more or less than spot price yields. - For example, if b 1.1, this implies that for
every 1 change in discounted spot rate (?R/1R),
the implied rate on the deliverable bond in the
futures market moves by 1.1. - NF (5 -.93) 100m/9.597,000 1.1
- 226.9 contracts
49IV. Hedging Credit Risk with Futures
- For well-diversified FIs their credit risk
exposure may be largely nondiversifiable
systematic risk. In particular, the return on the
loan portfolio may come to be uniquely reliant on
general macro-factors relating to the state of
the economy. Under this circumstance, a FI might
consider the use of stock index futures to hedge
the systematic credit risk of its portfolio. - The reason that stock index futures may be useful
is that stock prices could reflect the underlying
current and expected present values of the
earnings and dividends of the firms, which are
positively correlated with the performance of the
economy.
50IV. Hedging Credit Risk with Futures
- Suppose that a FI manager attempts to use SP 500
index futures to hedge its loan portfolio the
value of which will be adversely affected by
economic recession. If the settlement price of
the index futures dropped from 507.30 to 450, the
FI would make - (507.30 - 450) 500 28,650
- for each contract shorted. The cash flow profits
the FI manager gets from selling futures when bad
economic states arise can offset losses from the
loan portfolio due to increased systematic risk.
51IV. Hedging Credit Risk with Futures
- There might be two problems in using futures to
hedge credit risk. - 1. Selling futures may produce sufficient cash
flows to offset credit losses in bad economic
states. In good states, the seller of futures
contracts loses as the index rises and the
marking-to-market cash flows favor the contract
buyer. Such losses are not likely to be
compensated fully by gains on the loan portfolio
since the return on this portfolio has a limited
upside return potential that is the full payment
of loan interest and principal. Thus a manager
would prefer a derivative securities product that
limits the risk of losses in good economic states
while still producing profits in bad states.
52IV. Hedging Credit Risk with Futures
- 2. Managers must decide how close and stable the
correlation is between stock index futures prices
and the general macroeconomic conditions
affecting the systematic credit risk exposure to
losses of the FI's loan portfolio. The stronger
this correlation, the smaller the basis risk and
the better the hedging effectiveness.