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Module III: Practical Issues and Value Creation Using Derivatives

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J. K. Dietrich - FBE 432 Spring, 2002 ... Citron bet on the yield curve and short-term rates staying low. Advised by investment bankers ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Module III: Practical Issues and Value Creation Using Derivatives


1
Module III Practical Issues and Value Creation
Using Derivatives
  • Week 9 October 21 and 23, 2002

2
Session Outline
  • Complete discussions from Weeks 7 and 8
    concerning interest-rate risk management
  • Outline some points to consider in Union Carbide
    case
  • Discuss some recent examples of problems using
    derivatives

3
Factor Model Risk Measures
  • The general factor model expresses the portfolio
    (or firm) returns (or cash flows) as a linear
    function of a number of factors
  • Example the familiar CAPM market model is a
    single-factor model
  • The stocks return is expressed as a linear
    function of the market factor
  • But many industrial firms and banks are also
    exposed to significant interest rate risk

4
Stylized Example
  • Suppose Citibanks cash flows are negatively
    related to interest rate movements but increase
    with the Yen/ rate. Define
  • C cash flow, millions of U.S. dollars a
    month
  • Fcurr the percentage change in the Yen/
    exchange rate, monthly
  • Fint the change in LIBOR, monthly

5
Regression Measuring Risk
  • The firm estimates a two-factor model (using
    regression analysis) of the form
  • The term e represents idiosyncratic or
    unsystematic risks and the ? coefficients are the
    factor loadings
  • Sign (positive or negative) indicates whether
    firm has long or short exposure to risk (but be
    careful with interest rates)

6
Hedging Balance Sheet Risk
  • Hedging on balance sheet
  • Assets and liabilities chosen to offset risks
  • Changing mismatches of assets and/or liabilities
    through swaps
  • Floating rate securities with short re-pricing
    intervals have little interest-rate risk (low
    duration)
  • Hedging off balance sheet
  • Futures, forward contracts, and options

7
Balance Sheet Hedges
  • Example United Airlines receives income in
    Canadian dollars from its operations in Canada
  • In 1997-98, the Canadian dollar depreciated
    against the US Dollar.
  • How can United hedge its currency risk from
    Canadian operations?

8
Balance Sheet Hedge
  • Consider taking a long-term liability in Canadian
    dollars to offset the (risky) income in Canadian
    dollars from UALs operations in Canada
  • A bank loan or bond issue (in Canada or Eurobonds
    denominated in Canadian dollars), generates cash
    which can be converted to US dollars
  • Interest obligations are met from Canadian income

9
Balance Sheet Hedge
Income in Canada
Initial Cash Inflow is converted to US Dollars
Canadian Dollar Liability
10
Swaps
  • Exchange of future cash flows based on movement
    of some asset or price
  • Interest rates
  • Exchange rates
  • Commodity prices or other contingencies
  • Swaps are all over-the-counter contracts
  • Two contracting entities are called
    counter-parties
  • Financial institution can take both sides

11
Interest Rate SwapPlain vanilla, LIBOR_at_5.5
1/2 5 fixed
Company A (receive floating)
Company B (receive fixed)
2.5mm
2.75mm
1/2 6-month LIBOR
Notional Amount 100 mm
12
Example Interest Rate Swap
  • Two companies want to borrow 10 million with a 5
    year duration
  • Company A, a financial institution, can borrow at
    fixed rate of 10 B can borrow at a 11.2 fixed
    rate
  • Company A can borrow at a floating rate of 6
    month LIBOR 0.3 B can borrow at a floating
    rate of 6 month LIBOR 1

13
Comparative Advantage
Fixed Floating
A 10 LIBOR 0.3
B 11.2 LIBOR 1
Difference
1.2 0.7
14
Preferences
  • Company A prefers floating interest debt while B
    wants to lock in a fixed rate
  • However, A has a comparative advantage in the
    fixed rate market while B has a comparative
    advantage in the floating rate market

15
Swap Mechanics
  • Suppose A borrows at 10 fixed and B borrows at
    LIBOR 1, and then the two companies swap flows
  • Company A pays B interest at 6-month LIBOR on 10
    million
  • Company B pays A interest at 9.95 per annum on
    10 million

16
Interest Rate Swap
LIBOR1
9.95
A
B
10
LIBOR
17
Both Parties are Better Off
  • Cost to A
  • 10 to outside bank - 9.95 from B LIBOR
    LIBOR 0.05
  • Cost saving is 25 basis points per year
  • Cost to B
  • LIBOR 1 to outside bank - LIBOR from A 9.95
    to A 10.95
  • Cost saving is 25 basis points per year

18
Swaps Some fine points
  • The source of the gain is the fact that the two
    firms have different comparative advantages even
    though A has an absolute advantage, there are
    still gains from trade
  • The total gain is 0.25 0.25 0.5 1.2 -
    0.7, the difference in the relative borrowing
    costs

19
Swaps in Practice
  • Note that a swap does not involve the exchange of
    principals
  • All that is swapped is the cash flows
  • To guard against default, the deal will typically
    be structured with an intermediary (usually a
    large bank) between the two parties

20
Swap Bank Intermediary
Bank fees are 0.1
LIBOR1
A
B
9.95
Bank
9.90
10
LIBOR
LIBOR- 0.05
Even with fees, both parties are still better off
21
Swaps in Practice
  • The intermediary will charge fees for acting as a
    clearing house and guaranteeing the payments
  • As long as these fees are below 0.5, all parties
    can be made better off
  • If the deal is put together by the intermediary,
    it is not necessary for either firm to know the
    trade counter-party

22
Swaps in Practice
  • Many interest rate swaps also involve currency
    swaps or commodity swaps
  • Recently, the swap market has grown so rapidly
    that dealers will act as counterparties

23
Dealer Quotations for Swaps
  • Example
  • IBM can issue fixed rate bonds at 7.0 per annum.
    IBM wants a floating rate obligation believing
    rates will fall.
  • An OTC dealer gives IBM a fixed rate quote of 60
    basis points over treasuries to be exchanged for
    6-month LIBOR on a 5 year swap
  • If 5-year treasuries are at 5.53, this quote
    means that you can get 6-month LIBOR by paying
    6.13 ( 5.53 0.60) fixed rate.
  • In IBMs case, it would thus get 6.13 from the
    counterparty (or dealer) and would have to pay
    6-month LIBOR, plus the 7.0 on its original debt
  • All-in costs are approximately LIBOR 0.87

24
The Value of Swaps
  • Swaps are beneficial because they allow hedging
    with one contract since they typically involve
    cash flows over several years
  • There are no losers financial engineering
    results in value creation
  • The source of this value is in overcoming
    segmented markets

25
Interest-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

26
Caps, 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

27
Collars Cap 6, floor 4
  • Profit

0
9400
9500
9600
Loss
28
Other option developments
  • Credit risk options
  • Casualty risk options
  • Requirements for developing an option
  • Interest
  • Calculable payoffs
  • Enforceable

29
Replication Futures with Options
Profit
Profit
Buy Call
Long
0
0
P0
P0
Loss
Loss
Write Put
30
Short and Long Treasury Rates
Source FRB St. Louis
31
Treasury Rates since 1970
32
Orange County, November, 1994
  • Citron bet on the yield curve and short-term
    rates staying low
  • Advised by investment bankers
  • Leveraged bet by
  • Structured notes (inverse floaters)
  • Borrowing using reverse repos
  • Duration mis-measured
  • Short-term portfolio (e.g. T-Bills) roughly .25
  • Orange County duration raised to around 7

33
Metall Gesellschaft
  • American unit of German company hedged short oil
    position
  • Strategy theoretically sound, as illustrated in
    Merton Miller article
  • Problem in required size of position
  • Analog in GM case for five-year note would be 5
    times 400 million or 2 billion in futures
  • Hedging assumes markets are liquid and prices are
    valid

34
Long-Term Capital Management
  • LTCMs strategy depended on using arbitrage
    (risk-free buying and selling of assets) to make
    profits from temporary pricing anomalies
  • Used derivatives (e.g. futures and forwards,
    options, etc.) to arbitrage pricing of
  • European bond yields, expected to converge
  • 30-year versus 29year U.S. Treasuries
  • Russian and junk bonds

35
Arbitrage and Derivative Prices
  • Markets are assumed to be liquid and mostly
    efficient
  • Prices are assumed to be good for large
    transactions
  • Arbitrage position can be closed or off-set at
    equilibrium values
  • Market imperfections are reality
  • Russian and global liquidity collapse in 1998
  • Stock market crash of 1987 and derivatives

36
Derivatives Summary
  • Derivatives have been an important and beneficial
    expansion of financial markets
  • Allow better risk management
  • Enables more explicit pricing of risks/returns
  • Assumptions used to price derivatives are not
    always satisfied in the market-place
  • Government often steps in to change the rules and
    incentives for players in the game

37
Next -- October 28 30, 2002
  • Midterm discussed
  • Review RWJ, Chapters 6 and 7, for next class
  • Read and think about issues in Financing PPL
    Corporations Growth Strategy case
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