Assignment Unit 4 Fernando Lichucha
Assignment Unit 4 Fernando Lichucha
Assignment Unit 4 Fernando Lichucha
Assignment Unit 4
School of Management
April 8, 2016
ASSIGNMENT UNIT 4
Table of Contents
List of Abbreviations.......................................................................................................................3
List of Figures..................................................................................................................................3
List of Tables...................................................................................................................................3
Introduction......................................................................................................................................4
PART A............................................................................................................................................5
Why are currency derivatives important in currency trading?........................................................5
How is the valuation of currency derivatives performed?...............................................................7
Describe major elements of risk management in currency derivatives trading...............................8
PART B..........................................................................................................................................12
What are the major features of trading Interest Rate derivatives?.................................................12
How is risk management for Interest Rate Derivatives performed?..............................................16
What are interest rate swaps? How are they used?........................................................................18
How do caps, floors and collars used in trading of interest rate derivatives?...............................20
Describe the important models used in interest rate derivatives trading.......................................21
How is bond valuation performed?................................................................................................24
References......................................................................................................................................28
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List of Abbreviations
CAD
CBT..
CDR
CME.
.
BIS...
PHLX...
OTC.....
Canadian Dollar
Chicago Board of Trade
Collateralized Depository Receipts
Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Bank for International Settlements
Philadelphia Stock Exchange
over- the-counter
List of Figures
Figure 1 Market values of bonds and stocks outstanding in the United States as of December 31,
2003...............................................................................................................................................13
Figure 2 Three-period binomial lattice for no-arbitrage pricing model assuming the short rate is
log-normally distributed, the zero-coupon yield curve is R(t) = 0.10 0.05 e0 . 18(t1) ,
where t is measured in years, and the volatility rate is (t) = 0.20 for all t...................................25
Figure 3 Valuation of a four-year zero-coupon bond using a no-arbitrage pricing model that
assumes the short rate is log-normally distributed, the zero-coupon yield curve is R(t) = 0.10
0.05 e0 . 18(t1) where t is measured in years, and the volatility rate is (t) = 0.20 for all t.
.......................................................................................................................................................25
Figure 4 Valuation of a four-year 6% coupon-bearing bond using a no-arbitrage pricing model
that assumes the short rate is log-normally distributed, the zero-coupon yield curve is R(t) = 0.10
0.05 e0 . 18(t 1) where t is measured in years, and the volatility rate is (t) = 0.20 for all
t......................................................................................................................................................26
List of Tables
Table 1 Selected terms of euro futures option contract...................................................................6
Table 2 Selected terms of euro option contract................................................................................6
Table 3 Implied yield to maturity of US bonds (debt).....................................................................9
Table 4 Implied yield to maturity of second alternative..................................................................9
Table 5 Selected terms of CMEs Eurodollar futures contract.....................................................14
Table 6 selected terms of CBTs U.S. Treasury bond futures contract..........................................15
Table 7 Selected terms of CBTs 10-year U.S. Treasury note futures contract.............................15
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Introduction
This short essay is divided into two parts:
Part A answers the following questions.
a. Why are currency derivatives important in currency trading?
b. How is the valuation of currency derivatives performed?
c. Describe major elements of risk management in currency derivatives trading
Part B answers the following questions.
a. What are the major features of trading Interest Rate derivatives?
b. How is risk management for Interest Rate Derivatives performed?
c. What are interest rate swaps? How are they used?
d. How do caps, floors and collars used in trading of interest rate derivatives?
e. Describe the important models used in interest rate derivatives trading
f. How is bond valuation performed?
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PART A
Why are currency derivatives important in currency
trading?
Currency derivatives are important in currency trading because they help to manage the risk
caused by exchange rate fluctuations in regimes where the exchange rate is not fixed (Whaley,
2007).
(Geczy, Minton, & Schrand, 1997) report that currencies derivatives are needed in currency
trading because of exposure to foreign currency risk from foreign operations, foreigndenominated debt, capital market imperfections and the possibility to reduce the variation in cash
flows.
The market of currency derivatives is dominated by interbank market where major banks around
the world trade both spot and forward currencies. Spot transactions are delivered and paid within
two days. Forward transactions are delivered and paid at the time specified in the forward
contract. OTC currency derivatives market are more active than exchange-traded FX futures and
options markets because OTC market is more well suited to tailor FX derivatives contracts to
meet customer management needs (Whaley, 2007).
The highlights from the latest BIS semi-annual survey of over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives
markets reports that foreign exchange derivatives make up the second largest segment of the
global OTC derivatives market. At end-December 2014, the notional amount of outstanding
foreign exchange contracts totalled $76 trillion, which represented 12% of OTC derivatives
activity (OTC derivatives statistics at end-December 2014, 2015, p. 4):
FX futures contracts are traded all over the world. In the USA, the most active FX futures
contracts market is the Chicago Mercantile Exchanges International Monetary Market division.
Each of the exchanges contracts has present terms. In Chicago the FX futures contracts are
traded virtually 24 hours a day (Whaley, 2007).
In USA, the FX options contracts take two forms: options on FX futures and options on FX spot
currencies. The CMEs futures options are the most active, followed by the Philadelphia Stock
Exchanges spot currency options. These two markets are very similar in nature, however, there
are some minor distinction. The contract specifications of the CMEs EUR futures option
contract and the PHLXs EUR futures options contract are provided in (Table 1 and Table 2),
respectively. CMEs EUR futures options contracts require the delivery of the underlying futures
and a contract denomination of EUR 125000. The CMEs most active futures options are
American-style, although they also offer European-style contracts (Whaley, 2007).
The currency options traded on the PHLX are half the size of the CMEs futures option, EUR
62500 and require the delivery of the underlying currency. The most active FX options traded on
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the PHLX are its customized currency options. PHLXs EUR futures options contract market
offers both American-style and European-style (Whaley, 2007).
Table 1 Selected terms of euro futures option contract
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( r d r f ) T
were F and S denotes the forward and spot prices of the currency in USD per unit of foreign
currency, rd is the domestic (U.S.) risk-free interest rate and rf is the risk-free rate of interest in
the foreign market. The net cost of carry relation (Equation 1) arises from the absence of costless
arbitrage opportunities in the marketplace (Whaley, 2007).
The terminal cost is
Sx e
rdT
rfT
(r d r f ) T
=S e
Since the two alternatives are perfect substitutes, the two sides of (Equation 2) must be equal
(Whaley, 2007).
Interest Rate Parity
Interest rate parity can be computed using (Equation 1), or can be expressed in relative terms,
that is,
FS
( r d r f ) T
= e
-1
S
were
FS
S
( r d r f ) T
is called forward premium or swap rate and e
-1 is the interest
=1
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Another way of thinking about it is the U.S. dollars cost of euros should be the same if Canadian
dollars are bought using U.S. dollars and then use Canadian dollars to buy euros or use U.S.
dollars to buy euros directly, that is
USD
USD CAD
EUR
CAD EUR
) (
)(
If the two methods gave different answers an opportunity for triangular arbitrage would exist. In
the absence of triangular arbitrage opportunities, the following relation must hold for all triplets
of currencies:
Si,j = Si,kSk,j
4
Were Si,j is the number of units of the i th currency required to purchase one unit of the j th currency
(Whaley, 2007).
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US Bonds
The implied yield to maturity of borrowing in U.S. market is shown in (Table 3)
Table 3 Implied yield to maturity of US bonds (debt)
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if the transaction is cancelled the loss is limited to the cost of the put. In the event that the Swiss
franc appreciates may also gain (Whaley, 2007).
Using FX futures and options to manage a transaction risk
When multinational firms are faced with inputs or outputs denominated in a foreign currency
they may hedge the price risk of their inputs or outputs using fixed rate swaps and average rate
options contracts in addition to many others risk management tools (Whaley, 2007).
Using FX futures and options to manage balance sheet risk
Exchange currency risk is not only tied to a particular transaction but also to assets or liabilities
on the firms balance sheet such as accounts receivable and inventory denominated in various
foreign currencies. Managing balance sheet risk depends on whether the foreign currency
obligation is contractual or not. Since, the terms of a contractual foreign currency obligation are
fixed so the asset or liability is subject to exchange rate risk. The terms of a non-contractual
foreign currency obligation are not fixed so prices can adjust to offset changes in exchange rates
(Whaley, 2007).
PART B
What are the major features of trading Interest Rate
derivatives?
According to (Fabozzi, Fixed Income Analysis, 2007) interest rate derivative instruments
derive their value from some cash market instrument or reference interest rate. Examples of
interest rate derivative instruments include futures, forwards, options, swaps, caps, and floors.
(Fabozzi, Fixed Income Analysis, 2007) describes the following major features of trading
interest rate derivatives:
Interest rate derivatives markets
o Exchange Traded interest rate derivative instruments.
o OTC interest rate derivative instruments. According to (Whaley, 2007) more than
two thirds of OTC derivatives are written on interest rate instruments.
Cheaper (less execution cost) than underlying instrument transactions
Quicker to adjust the portfolio positions
More liquid than the underlying instrument
Popular interest rate derivative instruments are:
o interest rate Futures
o interest rate Swap
o interest rate Cap
Interest rate derivative instruments categories
o Short-term - Underlying security with maturity less than a year
Treasury bills futures contract
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Settlement - For interest-rate contracts that do not call for actual delivery (e.g., Eurodollar
futures), settlement is in cash at the settlement price on the delivery date otherwise
physical delivery (Fabozzi, Mann, & Pitts, 2005).
Figure 1 Market values of bonds and stocks outstanding in the United States as of
December 31, 2003.
Source: (Whaley, 2007, p. 604)
Chicago Board of Trades (CBTs) futures on GNMA Collateralized Depository Receipts (CDRs)
were the first interest rates futures contract to be introduced in the fall of 1975. The (CBTs)
futures contract on GNMA was delisted in the late 1980 because was not effective as a hedging
vehicle. The next interest rate futures contracts to be introduced were the Chicago Mercantile
Exchanges (CMEs) T-bill futures contract in January 1976 and the CBTs U.S. In December
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1981 the CME Eurodollar futures contract was introduced and this marked the first time an
interest rate futures specified cash-settlement rather than physical delivery. In late 1982, the CBT
and the CME simultaneously launched for the first time trading of options on interest rate
contracts on T-bond futures and Eurodollar futures, respectively (Whaley, 2007).
The last event of the the evolution of interest rate derivatives markets is the introduction of
interest rate swap in the early 1980s. the most common interest rate swap called a plain-vanilla
interest rate swap is to exchange payments on fixed rate debt for floating rate debt (Whaley,
2007).
Features details of interest rate Futures
According to (Whaley, 2007), stock, stock index, and foreign currency products have a single
source of risk underlying the derivatives contracts, namely, the price risks of a stock, stock index,
or foreign currency respectively. But, interest rate derivatives the risk come in three categories
namely, short-term, intermediate-term, or long-term. Futures contracts examples of these three
categories of temporal risk are: short-term interest rate contract is the CMEs three-month
Eurodollar futures, intermediate-term interest rate contract is the CBTs 10-year futures and
long-term interest rate contract is the CBTs T-bond futures.
The types of interest rate Futures being traded are:
Eurodollar futures - the contract specifications for the CMEs Eurodollar futures are
given in (Table 4). The Eurodollar futures is cash settled at expiration, which is set as the
second London business day.
Table 5 Selected terms of CMEs Eurodollar futures contract.
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U.S. T-Bonds and T-Notes Futures the contract specifications of the CBTs T-bond
and 10-year T-note contracts are given in Table 6 and Table 7, respectively. Both
contracts follow a quarterly expiration cycle and delivery may take place at any time
during the delivery month at the discretion of the short (Whaley, 2007).
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Conversion Factor - the CBTs Treasure contracts call for the delivery of any Treasury
instrument satisfying a particular maturity constraint. The conversion formula is
5
where CF is the conversion factor, C is the annual coupon rate of the bond in decimal form,
equals 0.06, n is the number of whole years to first call if the bond is callable or the number of
years to maturity if the bond is not callable, and X is the number of months that the maturity
exceeds n, rounded down to the nearest quarter (e.g., X =0, 3, 6, 9) (Whaley, 2007).
Invoice Price - the amount of the invoice price equals the sum of the futures price times
the conversion factor of the delivered bond and the accrued interest on the delivered bond
(Whaley, 2007).
Eurodollar Futures Options the options are American-style, and expire together with the
underlying futures on the second London business day before the third Wednesday of the
contract month. Eurodollar futures options follow a quarterly expiration cycle like the
futures (Whaley, 2007).
U.S. T-Bond Futures Options Like the Eurodollar futures options, early exercise results
in receiving a position in the underlying futures (Whaley, 2007).
Short term, Long Hedge - interest rate risk management is by buying and selling
Eurodollar futures contracts as a cost-efficient means of locking-in forward rates of
interest.
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Long term, Short Hedge - interest rate risk management is performed using duration
based hedging techniques applied to futures contracts. Here, hedging means finding the
number of futures to buy or sell such that the value of the overall hedged portfolio does
not change if interest rates change, that is,
where
BP
BP
nF
F = 0
and F are the changes in value of the bond position and the futures
DP
and
DP
n F DF
F=0
respectively. The number of units of the hedge instrument to buy or sell is therefore given
by
nF
=-
D P BP
D F BF
(Whaley, 2007).
Asset Allocation the asset allocation decision refers to the allocation of fund wealth
among various asset categories including stocks, bonds, and so on (Whaley, 2007).
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10
where, the first payment, is treated separately to reflect the fact that the amount of the first
interest payment was set at the beginning of the period and is already known. By definition, the
payment on an inverse floater equals a fixed rate less the reference floating rate, that is.
INVFLOAT = FIXED FLOAT
11
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12
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13
with
Because interest rates now considered to be stochastic, the expected payoff is discounted by
multiplying with V (t, T). With the E(VT ) = Ft the value of the option at time t is:
14
with
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To value a bond option, (Groth, 2009) applied Blacks model and changed the numeraire from
the current cash amount to a bond V (t, T) and in combination with the result from (Equation 15),
he considered that the current value of any security as its expected future value at time T
multiplied by V (t, T).
15
(Groth, 2009) shown that the expected value of any traded security at time T is equal to its
forward price. Thus the price of an option with maturity T on a bond V (t, S) with S > T is given
by:
and
16
with ET denoting the forward risk neutral expectation w.r.t to V (t, T) as the numeraire.
Again, (Groth, 2009) applied the same assumptions as above and he got
17
with
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24
18
where
ti represents the time until the reset date, and ti+1 represents the time until the payment date for the
ith reset. The overall value of the interest rate cap is the sum of the n caplets in the interest rate
cap agreement, that is,
19
(Whaley, 2007) states that an interest rate floor agreement can be developed in a similar manner.
Since the interest rate floor provides protection against downward movements in the floating
rate, each floorlet is valued using a put option formula, that is,
20
And the overall value of an interest rate floor is
21
If a cap is bought and a floor is sold with the same terms, the value of each combined caplet and
floorlet is
22
Valuation of Swaptions
A swaption is an option on an interest rate swap and it gives its holder the right to enter into a
certain interest rate swap at a certain time in the future (Whaley, 2007).
(Whaley, 2007) states that the valuation of a swaption assumes that the underlying forward
(swap) rate is distributed log-normally at the options expirations. The payoff from the swaption
at expiration consists of a series of cash flows equal to
23
where R is the rate on an n-year swap, L is the principal amount of the swap, m is a
compounding frequency per year. The value of the cash flow at time ti (where ti = T + ilm) is
24
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where
is the forward rate on an n-year swap that begins at time T, and r i is the continuously
compounded zero-coupon interest rate for maturity ti. The swaption value is therefore
25
(Whaley, 2007) notes that this formula is the present value of an annuity, that is,
26
The value of put option is
27
Finally, (Whaley, 2007) notes that both caps/floors and swaptions are quoted in terms of the
Black (1976) model, as cited in (Whaley, 2007), in the marketplace even though it is
theoretically inconsistent to do so.
(Whaley, 2007) says that to compute the bonds value in year 2, it is necessary to include the
probabilities of upward and downward interest rate movements. So the value of the bond at the
uppermost node in year 2 is computed as
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Putable Bonds
(Whaley, 2007) states the a putable bond permits the bondholder to sell the bound back to the
issuer, usually at the par value of the bond. This put gives the bondholder some protection from
loss of principal due to higher interest rates or credit deterioration of the issuer and can be valued
using the interest rate lattice procedure developed earlier.
Bond Option Valuation
(Whaley, 2007) indicates that lattice procedure can also be used to value bond options.
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References
Fabozzi, F. J. (2007). Fixed Income Analysis (Second ed.). New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Retrieved April 07, 2016, from
http://www.books.mec.biz/tmp/books/RTZCEJSF7HQOKE65XZFQ.pdf#page=1&zoom
=auto,-173,486
Fabozzi, F. J., Mann, S. V., & Pitts, M. (2005). INTRODUCTION TO INTEREST-RATE
FUTURES AND OPTIONS CONTRACTS. In F. J. FABOZZI, & S. V. MANN (Eds.),
THE HANDBOOK OF FIXED INCOME SECURITIES (Seventh ed., pp. 1163-1185).
New York: McGraw-Hill. Retrieved April 07, 2016, from
http://students.ceid.upatras.gr/~aggelidis/mort.pdf
Geczy, C., Minton, B. A., & Schrand, C. (1997). Why Firms Use Currency Derivatives. The
Journal of Finance, 52(4), 1323-1354. Retrieved April 5, 2016, from
http://www.jstor.org/stable/2329438
Groth, L. (2009). Interest Rate Derivatives. In L. Groth, & L. Sun, Models for Interest Rates and
Interest Rate Derivatives (pp. 16-21). Berlin: CASE - Center of Applied Statistics and
Economics. Retrieved April 08, 2016, from http://edoc.hu-berlin.de/master/sun-li-grothlasse-2009-05-12/PDF/sun.pdf
OTC derivatives statistics at end-December 2014. (2015, April). Retrieved March 29, 2016, from
http://www.bis.org/publ/otc_hy1504.pdf
Whaley, R. E. (2007). Markets, Valuation, and Risk Management. New Jersey: John Wiley &
Sons, Inc. Retrieved March 17, 2016, from http://reader.eblib.com/%28S
%28idx03suk1goej3lutbvlfpy2%29%29/Reader.aspx?
p=287286&o=520&u=494464&t=1458219076&h=BA9BE476CE403C818B64D3CF2F6
341058AE51EF2&s=43186935&ut=1563&pg=1&r=img&c=-1&pat=n&cms=-1&sd=2
What Are Interest Rate Swaps and How Do They Work? (2008, January). Retrieved April 7,
2016, from PIMCO:
http://www.pimco.co.uk/EN/Education/Pages/InterestRateSwapsBasics1-08.aspx