Derivatives - Futures: Forward Contracts
Derivatives - Futures: Forward Contracts
A derivative is a contract or agreement whose value depends upon the price of some other (underlying) commodity, security or index.
A. FORWARD CONTRACTS Forward: an agreement between 2 parties that is initiated at one point in time, but requires the parties to the agreement to perform, in accordance with the terms of the agreement, at some future point in time. Seller / Holder of the Short Position: Party obliged to Deliver the Stated Asset Buyer / Holder of the Long Position: Party obliged to Pay for the Stated Asset Deliverable Item/ Underlying Asset: asset to be traded under the terms of the contract Settlement / Maturity / Expiration: Time at which the contract is to be fulfilled by the trading of the underlying asset. Contract Size: Quantity of the underlying asset that is to be traded at the time the contract settles Invoice Amount / Forward Contract Price: Amount that must be paid for the contract size of the underlying asset by the holder of the long position at the time of the settlement Forward Contracts are NOT Investments; they are simply agreements to engage in a trade at a future time and at a fixed price. Thus, it costs NOTHING to enter into such a contract; Since nothing is Bought or Sold, contracts are Entered Into or Sold Out. There are THREE ways to Close Out (Settle) a contract Enter an Offsetting Transaction: Making/Taking Physical Delivery of the underlying commodity under the terms & conditions specified by the contract: Cash Settlement Over-the-Counter Forward Contracts are Flexible, but 3 major disadvantage ILLIQUID: designed for specific needs CREDIT RISK: No collateral or marked to marketing, rather it is just trust UNREGULATED: no formal body regulates the players in the market
B. FUTURES CONTRACTS
Futures: special forms of forward contracts that are designed to reduce the disadvantages associated with forward agreements. Indeed, they are Forwards whose terms have been STANDARDIZED to that they can be traded in a public marketplace. Less Flexible, but more liquid. Usually traded on FUTURES exchanges, who establish terms of standardization, rules or Pit trading, daily price limit, trading hours, and settlement price methods. Regulated by the CFTC. Brokers: Account Executives who take orders from customers and relay them to the floor; and Floor Brokers who operate on the floor and execute orders for others and for themselves. CLEARINGHOUSE: interposed between each side and guarantees the contract. POSTING MARGIN, MARKING TO MARKET Capital Gains are based upon the NET DAILY SETTLEMENT gains or losses that occur in a tax period, rather than upon the net gains or losses that result form contracts that are closed out during a tax period. FUTURES is a ZERO sum GAME
CFA Examination
DERIVATIVES - FUTURES
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CFA Examination
DERIVATIVES - FUTURES
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TREASURY BILL & EURODOLLAR FUTURES TREASURY BILL: require the holder of the short to deliver $1,000,000 face value of treasury bills that mature 3 months from the delivery date. A T-bill future (IMM index) is stated as: F0 = IMM Index = 100 R0 : R0 is the Annualized Discount Rate; i.e., 100 95 = 5 Invoice Price(%) = 100 [R0tm/360] If the quoted price is 95, that does NOT mean that when 1,000,000 face value of 3 month treasury bills are delivered at the time of settlement the invoice price to be paid is $950,000. Rather, the Quotation of 95 means that the contracted price to be paid on settlement day is a price that will correspond to an ANNUALIZED discount of 5% at that time. Will be 98./75. 1 Basis Point (.01) change in the IMM Index for 90 day treasury bills = $25 change in its dollar value. EURODOLLAR: similar to treasury bills, but different. R0* = [R0/Price][360/tm] Invoice Price (%) = 100 [R0*tm/360] For Both Treasury Bill & Eurodollar Futures
Position Held to Settlement Position NOT Held to Settlement Daily Settlements Gain on Long = Loss on Short = $2,500 * (Ss F0) Gain on Long = Loss on Short = $2,500 * (Ft F0) Gain on Long = Loss on Short = $2,500 * (Ft Ft-1)
CURRENCY FUTURES Most Currency Trading takes place between banks. But, there are speculative opportunities
Position Held to Settlement Position NOT Held to Settlement Daily Settlements Gain on Long = Loss on Short = Contract SizeX/Y * (SX/Y s FX/Y 0) Gain on Long = Loss on Short = Contract Size X/Y * (FX/Y t FX/Y 0) Gain on Long = Loss on Short = Contract SizeX/Y * (FX/Y t FX/Y t-1)
CFA Examination
DERIVATIVES - FUTURES
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Arbitrage Opportunities Exit if the Implied Repo Rate is different from the borrowing rate or risk free rates
CFA Examination
DERIVATIVES - FUTURES
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Valuing Currency Futures Contracts FY/X = SY/X [ (1+ rY Periodic) / (1 + rX Periodic)] FX/Y = SX/Y [ (1+ rX Periodic) / (1 + rY Periodic)] Covered Interest Arbitrage Interest rate parity defines the relationship between the value of a forward currency exchange rate and the spot exchange rate because it is a no-arbitrage Solution. If Interest rate parity does not hold, an arbitraging opportunity exists. If the Forward Market is Too Expensive, the Covered Interest Arbitrage requires the Arbitrageur to Short the Forward and buy the Spot (and vice versa)
CFA Examination
DERIVATIVES - FUTURES
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