Title: FUTURES
1 2Introduction
- The futures market enables various entities to
lessen price risk, the risk of loss because of
uncertainty over the future price of a commodity
or financial asset - The two major market participants are the hedger
and the speculator - A futures contract is a legally binding agreement
to buy or sell something in the future - The person who initially sells the contract
promises to deliver a quantity of a standardized
commodity to a designated delivery point during
the delivery month the other party to the trade
promises to pay a predetermined price for the
goods upon delivery
3Forward and Futures
- Forward contract two parties agree to exchange
an asset on a future date at a price set today. - no collateral posted
- Tailor-made
- OTC
- Futures Contract a highly liquid version of a
forward contract. - margin account settlement price
- Futures commission merchant
- Trading pit
- Exchange clearinghouse
4Forward and Futures Trading Mechanics
5Trading Mechanics
- Most futures contracts are eliminated before the
delivery month - The speculator with a long position would sell a
contract, thereby canceling the long position - The hedger with a short position would buy a
contract, thereby canceling the short position - Example
- Suppose a speculator purchases a July soybean
contract at a purchase price of 6.12 per bushel.
The contract is for 5,000 bushels of No. 2 yellow
soybeans at an approved delivery point by the
last business day in July. - Upon delivery, the purchaser of the contract must
pay 6.12(5,000) 30,600. - At the delivery date, the price for soybeans is
6.16. This equates to a profit of 6.16 - 6.12
0.04 per bushel, or 200. If the spot price on
the delivery date were only 6.10, the purchaser
would lose 6.12 - 6.10 0.02 per bushel, or
100.
6Ensuring the Promise is Kept
- In 1974, Congress passed the Commodity Exchange
Act establishing the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC) - Ensures a fair futures market
- A self-regulatory organization, the National
Futures Association was formed in 1982 - Enforces financial and membership requirements
and provides customer protection and grievance
procedures - The Clearing Corporation ensures that contracts
are fulfilled - Becomes party to every trade
- Ensures the integrity of the futures contract
- Assumes responsibility for those positions when a
member is in financial distress
7Some contracts size and margin requirements
- Good faith deposits (or performance bonds) are
required from every member on every contract to
help ensure that members have the financial
capacity to meet their obligations
- Selected Good Faith Deposit Requirements
- Data as of January 2, 2004
8Quotations
9Types of Orders
- A broker in commodity futures is a futures
commission merchant (not the individual who
places the order) - When placing an order, the client should specify
the type of order - A market order instructs the broker to execute a
clients order at the best possible price at the
earliest opportunity - With a limit order, the client specifies a time
and a price - E.g., sell five December soybeans at 540, good
until canceled - A stop order becomes a market order when the stop
price is touched during trading action - When executed, stop orders close out existing
commodity positions - E.g., a short seller may use a stop order to
protect himself against rising commodity prices
10Market Participants
- A hedger is someone engaged in a business
activity where there is an unacceptable level of
price risk - A processor earns his living by transforming
certain commodities into another form? e.g., a
soybean processor buys soybeans and crushes them
into soybean meal and oil - A speculator finds attractive investment
opportunities in the futures market and takes
positions in futures in the hope of making a
profit (rather than protecting one). The
speculator is willing to bear price risk. For
example, a position trader is someone who
routinely maintains futures positions overnight
and sometimes keep a contract for weeks a day
trader closes out all his positions before
trading closes for the day - Scalpers (or locals) are individuals who trade
for their own account, making a living by buying
and selling contracts. Scalpers help keep prices
continuous and accurate. - Example Scalping With Treasury Bond Futures
- You just sold 5 T-bond futures to ZZZ for 77
31/32. Now, a sell order for 5 T-bond futures
reaches the pit and you buy them for 77 30/32.
Thus, you just made 1/32 on each of the 5
contracts, for a dollar profit of - 1/32 x 100,000/contract x 5 contracts 156.25
11ClearingHouse Matching Trades
- Every trade must be cleared by or through a
member firm of the Board of Trade Clearing
Corporation - Each trader is responsible for making sure his
deck promptly enters the clearing process - After the Clearing Corporation receives trading
cards - Mismatches (out trades) result in an Unmatched
Trade Notice being sent to each clearing member - After resolving all out trades, the computer
prints a daily Trade Register - Shows a complete record of each clearing members
trades for the day - Contains subsidiary accounts for each customer
clearing through the firm - Commodity prices may move so much in a single day
that good faith deposits for many members are
seriously eroded before the day ends. - The president of the Clearing Corporation may
issue a market variation call for members to
deposit more funds into their account
12Dealing with Margins
- Assume you are short 2 December SP 400 futures
contracts for 924.5 (an SP 400 contract is for
500 times the index). The total value of the
position is 2 times 500 times 924.5 or 924,500.
Let s assume that your initial margin is 5 or
46,225 and your maintenance margin is 4.5, that
is 41,602.5. Lets look at when a margin call
will occur
13Margins
14Some notations
- Futures Price the price, set today, at which
the asset will be traded in the future - At Maturity futures price spot price
- Trade agreements
- Buy a futures, you are long in the futures market
() - Sell a futures, you are short in the futures
market(-)
15Speculating with futures
- Assume that a buyer and seller agree on a futures
price of 45. At expiration, the underlying
security is priced at 53. - Buyer makes 8.00
- Seller loses 8.00
- At t0, Buyer went long on the contract at 45
- At maturity, Buyer bought from seller at 45and
sold on the spot at 53 to realize the profit of
8. - At t0, seller went short on the contract at 45
- At maturity, seller rushed to buy at 53 on the
spot, and sold at a committed 45 to buyer, to
lose 8.
16Hedging
- Futures contracts allow buyers and manufacturers
to lock into prices and costs, respectively - If a firm wants gold, it buys contracts,
promising to pay a set price in the future (long
hedge) - A gold mining company sells contracts, promising
to deliver the gold (short hedge) - Hedge - a trading strategy in which derivative
securities are used to reduce or completely
offset a counterparty's risk exposure to an
underlying asset. - Long hedge - created by supplementing a short
spot holding with a long futures position. - Short hedge - holding a short futures position
against the long position on the spot.
17Example
- A farmer expects to harvest 40,000 bushels of
wheat in August. It costs him about 3.05 a
bushel to plant and harvest the crop. An August
futures price of 3.45 is available. How can the
farmer lock the price of his crop?
18Solution
- Build a selling (short) hedge sell 8 of these
August futures contracts (40,000/5,000).
19An other example
- You are managing a 100,000 (face value)
portfolio in T-BONDS priced at 98-10 or
98,312.5. In June, you are concern with a
forthcoming increase in interest rates (within
the next 6 months, around Novembermay be). A
December T-bond futures priced at 97-00 (97,000)
is available. On November 15th interest rates
increase and T-bonds drop to 96-08 the December
futures contract price drops to 95-10.
20Solution
- You enter into a short hedge to lock the value
of your portfolio for the next seven month.
21Another Example
- you are managing 5 million of common stock
portfolio. You are concern that the market will
go down in the next three months. The current
3-month SP400 index futures is selling at 200.
The price of 1 contract is 500 per index point
Assume that the portfolio value falls to 4
million two months after and that the SP400
index futures falls simultaneously at 170.
22Solution
- you are long in the cash market to protect
yourself, you will go short in the futures market
(short hedge) if the value of one contract is
100,000 (200 x 500), you need 50
(5,000,000/100,000) contracts to hedge the
whole 5,000,000.
23Imperfect hedge
- In practice, a contract on a similar asset may
not exist----gtuse the closest proxy! - For bond portfolio, a T-bond futures
- For Stock portfolio, an index futures
- For a combination, treat each asset class
independently
24Imperfect hedges and bond portfolio
- The objective of hedging is to select a hedge
ratio (D) such as - (change in S) hedge ratio X (change in F) 0
- or
- hedge ratio D (change in S) / (change in F)
25Imperfect hedges and bond portfolio(continued)
26Imperfect hedges and bond portfolio(continued)
27Example
- suppose an investment banker underwrites the
issue of a bond that will be sold in 3 months. He
has set the indenture and expect to sell the
animal at par! The total issue amounts to
10,000,000 (or 10,000 bonds). Yet, he is
concerned about a rise in interest rates.
28Solution
- He short-hedges the new issue in the T-BOND
futures market. He knows that the bond is far
from being a T-BOND, but futures on this bond are
not traded. Knowing that a T-Bond futures
contract covers 100,000, he finds that the right
amount of contracts to be sold to hedge the new
issue should be 82 contracts
29Solution (continued)
30Example
- You manage a fund you plan to sell 100,000,000
of a type of bonds in 2 months from now to
reallocate the assets of the portfolio.
31Solution
- You build a short hedge by selling 1,111 T-Bond
futures
32Dealing With Coupon Differences
- To standardize the 100,000 face value T-bond
contract traded on the Chicago Board of Trade, a
conversion factor is used to convert all
deliverable bonds to bonds yielding 6
33Hedging With Interest Rate Futures
- The hedge ratio is
- The number of contracts necessary is given by
34Futures Hedging Example
- A bank portfolio holds 10 million face value in
government bonds with a market value of 9.7
million, and an average YTM of 7.8. The weighted
average duration of the portfolio is 9.0 years.
The cheapest to deliver bond has a duration of
11.14 years, a YTM of 7.1, and a CBOT correction
factor of 1.1529. - An available futures contract has a market price
of 90 22/32 of par, or 0.906875. What is the
hedge ratio? How many futures contracts are
needed to hedge?
35On the equity side Index futures
- The fastest growing segment of the futures market
is in financial futures - Stock index futures are similar in every respect
to a traditional agricultural contract except for
the matter of delivery - Index futures settle in cash rather than by
delivery of the underlying asset - There is no actual delivery mechanism at
expiration of an SP 500 futures contract - You actually deliver the dollar difference
between the original trade price and the final
price of the index at contract termination
36Synthetic Index Portfolios
- Large institutional investors can replicate a
well-diversified portfolio of common stock by
holding - A long position in the stock index futures
contract and - Satisfying the margin requirement with T-bills
- The resulting portfolio is a synthetic index
portfolio - The futures approach has the following advantages
over the purchase of individual stocks - Transaction costs will be much lower on the
futures contracts - The portfolio will be much easier to follow and
manage - As time passes, the difference between the cash
index and the futures price will narrow - At the end of the futures contract, the futures
price will equal the index (basic convergence)
37Imperfect hedge and equity portfolio
Using Futures Contracts to Hedge Portfolios You
are the manager of an equity portfolio. You are
bullish in the long term, but anticipate a
temporary market decline. How can you use
futures contracts to hedge your stock portfolio?
If you are long stock, you should be short
futures. You need to calculate the number of
contracts necessary to counteract likely changes
in the portfolio value.
- In a perfect hedge
- N portfolio value/contract value
- In reality, there are only index futures and your
portfolio is not exactly the same as the index! - Nportfolio value/contract value x ?portfolio
38Example
- Suppose that in mid-December you own a portfolio
worth 3,243,750 you expect the market to plunge
within the next 6 months thus, you sell June SP
500 futures contracts which currently trade at a
settlement price of 617.00. The value of a single
contract is 308,500--i.e., 500 x 617-- your
portfolio has a beta of 1.15 with the SP400
then, you decide to short 12 contracts, as you
are long in the equity market
39Hedge Ratio example
- Determining the Factors for A Hedge
- Suppose the manager of a 75 million stock
portfolio (with a beta of 0.9 and a dividend
yield of 1.0) wants to hedge using the December
SP 500 futures. - On the previous day, the SP 500 closed at
1,484.43, and the DEC 00 SP 500 futures closed
at 1,517.20. - The value of the futures contract is 250 x
1,517.20 379,300 - And the hedge ratio is 178 contracts
40The Market Falls
- Using the Hedge in A Falling Market
- Assume the SP 500 index falls 5, from 1,484.43
to 1,410.20 after four months. - Given beta, the portfolio should have fallen by
5.0 x 0.9 4.5, which translates to
3,375,000. However, you receive dividends of 1
x .333 x 75,000,000 250,000. - If you sold 178 contracts short at 1,517.20,
your account will benefit by (1,517.20
1,410.20) x 250 x 178 4,761,500. - The combined positions (stock, dividends, and
futures contracts) result in a gain of 1,636,500.
41The Market Rises
- Using the Hedge in A Rising Market
- Assume the SP 500 index rises from 1,484.43 to
1,558.70 after four months. - Given beta, the portfolio should have advanced
by 5.0 x 0.9 4.5, which translates to
3,375,000. You still receive dividends of 1 x
.333 x 75,000,000 250,000. - If you sold 178 contracts at 1,517.20, your
account will lose (1,517.20 1,558.70) x 250 x
178 1,846,750. - The combined positions (stock, dividends, and
futures contracts) result in a gain of
1,778,250.
42The Market is Unchanged
- Using the Hedge in An Unchanged Market
- Assume the SP 500 index remains at 1,484.43
after three months. - There is no gain on the stock portfolio.
However, you still receive dividends of 1 x .333
x 75,000,000 250,000. - If you sold 178 contracts short at 1,517.20,
your account will benefit by (1,517.20
1,484.50) x 250 x 178 1,455,150. - The combined positions (stock, dividends, and
futures contracts) result in a gain of
1,705,150.
43Speculation Active bond portfolio management
Increasing Duration With Futures
- Extending duration may be appropriate if active
managers believe interest rates are going to fall - Adding long futures positions to a bond portfolio
will increase duration
44Example
- A portfolio has a market value of 10 million,
an average yield to maturity of 8.5, and
duration of 4.85. A forecast of declining
interest rates causes a bond manager to decide to
double the portfolios duration. The cheapest to
deliver Treasury bond sells for 98 of par, has a
yield to maturity of 7.22, duration of 9.7, and
a conversion factor of 1.1223. Determine the
number of futures contracts needed to double the
portfolio duration.
45Speculation Active management-- Adjust Portfolio
Beta
46Example
- You have a 25 million equity portfolio
consisting of 22.5M in stocks and 2.5M in
T-bills. Current beta of equity portion is 0.95.
You want to increase it to 1.10. An SP400
futures contract is quoted at 476.6. Thus, You
need to be long 26 contracts - N1.1-(22.5/25) X .95 X 25,000,000/(500 X
476.6)25.7 - It is positive thus buy 26 contracts (you cannot
buy 25.7 contracts).
47Adjusting Market Risk Example
- Determining the Number of Contracts Needed to
Increase Market Exposure - Suppose the manager of a 75 million stock
portfolio with a beta of 0.9 would like to
increase market exposure by increasing beta to
1.5. Yesterday, DEC 00 SP 500 futures closed at
1517.20 - How can the manager use futures to accomplish
this goal, assuming the composition of the stock
portfolio remains unchanged? - The manager should go long futures and hold them
with the stock portfolio. Specifically, he should
purchase 119 SP 500 futures contracts
48Speculation Tactical Changes using Futures
- Investment policy statements may give the
portfolio manager some latitude in how to split
the portfolio between equities and fixed income
securities - The portfolio manager can mix both T-bonds and
SP 500 futures into the portfolio to adjust
asset allocation without disturbing existing
portfolio components
49Example Initial Situation
- Portfolio market value 175 million
- Invested 82 in stock (average beta 1.10) and
18 in bonds (average duration 8.7 average YTM
8.00) - The portfolio manager wants to reduce the equity
exposure to 60 stock - Determine
- How many contracts will remove 100 of each
market and interest rate risk - What percentage of this 100 hedge matches the
proportion of the risk we wish to retain - Some data
- Stock Index Futures ?September settlement
1020.0 - Treasury Bond Futures? September settlement
91.05 - Cheapest to deliver bond
- Price 95
- Maturity 18 years
- Coupon 9
- Duration 8.60
- Conversion factor 1.3275
50Initial Situation
51Bond Adjustment
Thus, the manager should buy 521 T-bond futures
52Stock Adjustment
- For this portfolio, the hedge ratio is
53In sum
- The portfolio manager can change the asset
allocation from 82 stock, 18 bonds to 60
stock, 40 bonds by - Buying 521 T-bond futures and
- Selling 166 stock index futures
54Neutralizing Cash
- It is harder to beat the market with the
downward bias in relative fund performance due to
cash - Cash can be neutralized by offsetting it with
long positions in stock index futures - Cash can be neutralized by offsetting it with
long positions in interest rate futures
55Example
- An all-equity fund has a benchmark that follows
the SP500. - Fund size500M
- SP500 futures1200
- Beta1
- SP500 return11.5 (long run return)
- Cash return2.5 (long run return)
- Allocation 95 Equity, 5 cash
- Cash need to be on hand in case of investors
redemptions. - The fund receives periodic contributions. They
have a problem cash does return less than equity
and over long period of time, large cash
positions biases the performance of a portfolio. - ?E(Rp)95 x 11.55 x 2.511.05versus 11.5
- One can offset this 45 BP loss by being long on
SP500 futures?increase the beta of the portfolio
by neutralizing the cash portionI.e., - N(Cash Portfolio size)/(futures size) x beta
(5 x 500M)/(1200 x 250) x183 - By buying 83 SPX futures, the 95 equity and 5
cash portfolio will behave exactly like a 100
equity portfolio - 475M in stock25M in cash 83 in stock futures
500M in stocks