Chapter 8 PDF
Chapter 8 PDF
and swaps
CHAPTER 8
A derivative is a contract between two or more
parties whose value is based on an agreed-upon
underlying financial asset, index, or security.
Common underlying instruments include: bonds,
commodities, currencies, interest rates, market
indexes, and stocks.
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• These instruments can be used for two
very distinct objectives:
• Speculation – use of derivative
instruments to take a position in the
PURPOSES OF expectation of a profit
FINANCIAL • Hedging – use of derivative
instruments to reduce the risks
DERIVATIVES associated with the everyday
management of corporate cash flow
firms to achieve payoffs that they would not be able to achieve without derivatives, or could achieve only
Permit at greater cost
BENEFITS OF DERIVATIVES
A foreign currency futures contract is an
alternative to a forward contract that calls
for future delivery of a standard amount of
foreign exchange at a fixed time, place, and Foreign
price (i.e., exchange rate).
Currency
Futures
It is similar to futures contracts that exist for
commodities such as cattle, lumber, interest-
bearing deposits, gold, etc.
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• Contract specifications are established by the
exchange on which futures are traded.
• Major features that are standardized are:
• Contract size
• Method of stating exchange rates
Foreign
• Maturity date
Currency • Last trading day
Futures • Collateral and maintenance margins
• Settlement
• Commissions
• Use of a clearinghouse as a counterparty
Mexican Peso (CME)-MXN 500,000; $ per 10MXN
• Foreign currency futures contracts differ from
forward contracts in a number of important ways:
• Futures are standardized in terms of size while
forwards can be customized
• Futures have fixed maturities while forwards can
have any maturity (both typically have maturities
Foreign of one year or less)
• Trading on futures occurs on organized
Currency exchanges while forwards are traded between
Futures individuals and banks
• Futures have an initial margin that is marked to
market on a daily basis while only a bank
relationship is needed for a forward
• Futures are rarely delivered upon (settled) while
forwards are normally delivered upon (settled)
• A foreign currency option is a contract
giving the option purchaser (the buyer)
the right, but not the obligation, to buy
or sell a given amount of foreign
Foreign exchange at a fixed price per unit for a
specified time period (until the maturity
Currency date).
Options • Two basic types of options, puts and
calls:
• A call is an option to buy foreign currency
• A put is an option to sell foreign currency
• The buyer of an option is the holder; the
seller is referred to as the writer or
grantor.
• Options have three different price
Foreign elements:
• The exercise or strike price – the exchange
Currency rate at which the foreign currency can be
purchased (call) or sold (put)
Options • The premium – the cost, price, or value of
the option itself
• The underlying or actual spot exchange rate
in the market
An American option gives
the buyer the right to
exercise the option at any
time between the date of
writing and the expiration or
maturity date. Foreign
Currency
A European option can be Options
exercised only on its
expiration date, not before.
An option whose exercise price is the
same as the spot price of the underlying
currency is said to be at-the-money
(ATM).
Forward Rate
The buyer of an FRA obtains the right to lock in an interest
rate for a desired term that begins at a future date.
Agreements
The contract specifies that the seller of the FRA will pay the
buyer the increased interest expense on a nominal sum
(the notional principal) of money if interest rates rise
above the agreed rate, but the buyer will pay the seller the
differential interest expense if interest rates fall below the
agreed rate.
• Swaps are contractual agreements to
exchange or swap a series of cash
flows.
• These cash flows are most commonly
the interest payments associated with
debt service, such as that on a
Interest Rate floating-rate loan.
• If the agreement is for one party to swap its
Swaps fixed interest rate payments for the floating
interest rate payments of another, it is
termed an interest rate swap
• If the agreement is to swap currencies of
debt service obligation, it is termed a
currency swap
• A single swap may combine elements of
both interest rate and currency swaps
The swap itself is not a source of
capital, but rather an alteration of the
cash flows associated with payment.
Currency
Firms often raise capital in currencies in which they do not
possess significant revenues or other cash flows.
Swaps
The utility of the currency swap market to an MNE is
significant. An MNE wishing to swap a 10-year fixed 6.04% U.S.
dollar cash flow stream could swap to 4.46% fixed in euro,
3.30% fixed in Swiss francs, or 2.07% fixed in Japanese yen.
It could swap from fixed dollars not only to fixed rates, but also
to floating LIBOR rates in the various currencies as well.
Interest Rate and Currency Swap Quotes