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Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education.
All rights reserved.
CHAPTER 24
Hedging with
Financial
Derivatives
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-1
Chapter Preview
Starting in the 1970s, the world became a
riskier place for financial institutions. Interest
rate volatility increased, as did the stock and
bond markets. Financial innovation helped
with the development of derivatives. But if
improperly used, derivatives can dramatically
increase the risk institutions face.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-2
Chapter Preview
 In this chapter, we look at the most important
derivatives that managers of financial institution
use to manage risk. We examine how the markets
for these derivatives work and how the products
are used by financial managers to reduce risk.
Topics include:
─ Hedging
─ Forward Markets
─ Financial Futures Markets
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-3
Chapter Preview (cont.)
─ Stock Index Futures
─ Options
─ Interest-Rate Swaps
─ Credit Derivatives
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-4
Hedging
 Hedging involves engaging in a financial
transaction that reduces or eliminates risk.
 Definitions
─ long position: an asset which is purchased
or owned
─ short position: an asset which must be
delivered to a third party as a future date, or
an asset which is borrowed and sold, but must
be replaced in the future
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-5
Hedging
 Hedging risk involves engaging in a
financial transaction that offsets a long
position by taking an additional short
position, or offsets a short position by taking
an additional long position.
 We will examine how this is specifically
accomplished in different financial markets.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-6
Forward Markets
 Forward contracts are agreements by two
parties to engage in a financial transaction at a
future point in time. Although the contract can be
written however the parties want, the contact
usually includes:
─ The exact assets to be delivered by one party,
including the location of delivery
─ The price paid for the assets by the other party
─ The date when the assets and cash will be exchanged
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-7
Forward Markets
 An Example of an Interest-Rate Contract
─ First National Bank agrees to deliver $5 million
in face value of 6% Treasury bonds maturing
in 2023
─ Rock Solid Insurance Company agrees to pay
$5 million for the bonds
─ FNB and Rock Solid agree to complete the
transaction one year from today at the FNB
headquarters in town
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-8
Forward Markets
 Long Position
─ Agree to buy securities at future date
─ Hedges by locking in future interest rate of
funds coming in future, avoiding rate
decreases
 Short Position
─ Agree to sell securities at future date
─ Hedges by reducing price risk from increases
in interest rates if holding bonds
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-9
Forward Markets
 Pros
1. Flexible
 Cons
1. Lack of liquidity: hard to find a counter-party
and thin or non-existent secondary market
2. Subject to default risk—requires information to
screen good from bad risk
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-10
The Practicing Manager: Hedging
Interest Rate Risk with Forwards
 First National Bank owns $5 million of
T-bonds that mature in 2029. Because
these are long-term bonds, you are
exposed to interest-rate risk. How do you
hedge this risk?
 Enter into a forward contract with Rock
Solid Insurance company, where Rock
Solid agrees to buy the bonds for $5m.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-11
The Practicing Manager: Hedging
Interest Rate Risk with Forwards
 First National Bank is hedged against
interest-rate increases
 Rock Solid, on the other hand, has
protected itself against rate declines.
 Both parties can gain or lose, since we
don’t know which way rates will actually go
in one year. But both are better off. We’ll
review the details a bit more…
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-12
Financial Futures Markets
 Financial futures contracts are similar to
forward contracts in that they are an
agreement by two parties to engage in a
financial transaction at a future point in
time. However, they differ from forward
contracts in several significant ways.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-13
Financial Futures Markets
 Financial Futures Contract
─ Specifies delivery of type of security at future date
─ Arbitrage: at expiration date, price of contract = price of
the underlying asset delivered
─ i , long contract has loss, short contract has profit
─ Hedging similar to forwards: micro versus macro hedge
 Traded on Exchanges
─ Global competition regulated by CFTC
Commodity Futures Options Trading, Inc. home page
http://www.usafutures.com/
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-14
Example: Hedging Interest
Rate Risk Revisited
 A manager has a long position in Treasury bonds.
She wishes to hedge again interest rate increases,
and uses T-bond futures to do this:
─ Her portfolio is worth $5,000,000
─ Futures contracts have an underlying value of $100,000,
so she must short 50 contracts.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-15
Example: Hedging Interest
Rate Risk
─ As interest rates increase over the next 12 months, the
value of the bond portfolio drops by almost
$1,000,000.
─ However, the T-bond contract also dropped almost
$1,000,000 in value, and the short position means the
contact pays off that amount.
─ Losses in the spot T-bond market are offset by gains
in the T-bond futures market.
─ You can see all of the details of this example in the
book, on page 636.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-16
Financial Futures Markets
 The previous example is a micro hedge—
hedging the value of a specific asset.
Macro hedges involve hedging, for
example, the entire value of a portfolio, or
general prices for production inputs.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-17
Financial Futures Markets
 In the U.S., futures are traded on the CBOT
and the CME in Chicago, the NY Futures
Exchange, and others.
 They are regulated by the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission. The most
widely traded are listed in the Wall Street
Journal, as we see on the next slide.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-18
Following the News
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-19
Financial Futures Markets
 The U.S. exchanges dominated the market
for years. However, this isn’t true anymore.
 The London Int’l Financial Futures
Exchange trades Eurodollar futures
 The Tokyo Stock Exchange trades Euroyen
and gov’t bond futures
 Several others as well, as seen next.
24-20
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-21
Financial Futures Markets
 Success of Futures Over Forwards
1. Futures are more liquid: standardized
contracts that can be traded
2. Delivery of range of securities reduces the
chance that a trader can corner the market
3. Mark to market daily: avoids default risk
4. Don’t have to deliver: cash netting
of positions
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-22
The Hunt Brothers and the
Silver Crash
 In the early 1980s, the Hunt brothers tried to
corner the silver market by buying 300 million
ounces of silver. The silver price rose from $6 to
$50 an ounce.
 The exchanges steps in, taking action to eliminate
the corner. Silver dropped back to under $10 an
ounce.
 The Hunt brothers lost about $1 billion, a high
price for an excursion in to the silver market.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-23
Hedging FX Risk
 Example: A manufacturer expects to be
paid 10 million euros in two months for the
sale of equipment in Europe. Currently,
1 euro = $1, and the manufacturer would
like to lock-in that exchange rate.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-24
Hedging FX Risk
 The manufacturer can use the FX futures market
to accomplish this:
1. The manufacturer sells 10 million euros of futures
contracts. Assuming that 1 contract is for $125,000 in
euros, the manufacturer takes as short position in 40
contracts.
2. The exchange will require the manufacturer to deposit
cash into a margin account. For example, the
exchange may require $2,000 per contract, or
$80,000.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-25
Hedging FX Risk
3. As the exchange rate fluctuates during the two
months, the value of the margin account will fluctuate.
If the value in the margin account falls too low,
additional funds may be required. This is how the
market is marked to market. If additional funds are
not deposited when required, the position will be
closed by the exchange.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-26
Hedging FX Risk
4. Assume that actual exchange rate is 1 euro = $0.96 at
the end of the two months. The manufacturer receives
the 10 million euros and exchanges them in the spot
market for $9,600,000.
5. The manufacturer also closes the margin account,
which has $480,000 in it—$400,000 for the changes
in exchange rates plus the original $80,000 required
by the exchange (assumes no margin calls).
6. In the end, the manufacturer has the $10,000,000
desired from the sale.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-27
Hedging FX Risk
Of course, the exchange rate could have gone the
other way. For example, if the actual exchange rate
is 1 euro = $1.04 at the end of the two months, the
manufacturer will exchange the 10 million euros for
$10,400,000. At the same time, losses in futures
market amount to $400,000, netting the same
$10,000,000. Just as happy? Probably not. Even
though the hedge worked exactly as needed.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-28
Stock Index Futures
 Financial institution managers, particularly
those that manage mutual funds, pension
funds, and insurance companies, also need
to assess their stock market risk, the risk
that occurs due to fluctuations in equity
market prices.
 One instrument to hedge this risk is stock
index futures.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-29
Stock Index Futures
 Stock index futures are a contract to buy or sell
a particular stock index, starting at a given level.
Contacts exist for most major indexes, including
the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrials, Russell
2000, etc.
 The “best” stock futures contract to use is
generally determined by the highest correlation
between returns to a portfolio and returns to a
particular index.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-30
Following the News
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-31
Hedging with Stock Index
Futures
 Example: Rock Solid has a stock portfolio
worth $100 million, which tracks closely
with the S&P 500. The portfolio manager
fears that a decline is coming and what to
completely hedge the value of the portfolio
over the next year. If the S&P is currently at
1,000, how is this accomplished?
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-32
Hedging with Stock Index
Futures
 Value of the S&P 500 Futures Contract =
250  index
─ currently 250  1,000 = $250,000
 To hedge $100 million of stocks that move
1 for 1 (perfect correlation) with S&P
currently selling at 1000, you would:
─ sell $100 million of index futures =
400 contracts
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-33
Hedging with Stock Index
Futures
 Suppose after the year, the S&P 500 is at
900 and the portfolio is worth $90 million.
─ futures position is up $10 million
 If instead, the S&P 500 is at 1100 and the
portfolio is worth $110 million.
─ futures position is down $10 million
 Either way, net position is $100 million
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-34
Hedging with Stock Index
Futures
 Note that the portfolio is protected from downside
risk, the risk that the value in the portfolio will fall.
However, to accomplish this, the manager has
also eliminated any upside potential.
 Now we will examine a hedging strategy that
protects again downside risk, but does not
sacrifice the upside. Of course, this comes at a
price!
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-35
MINI-CASE: Program Trading
and the Market Crash of 1987
 In the aftermath of the Black Monday crash on
October 19, 1987, stock price index futures
markets have been accused of being culprits in
the market collapse.
 Program trading between futures and stock prices
creates a downward spiral. Other experts blame
portfolio insurance, which can have the same
affect.
 Limits on program trading have been implements
to reduce this problem in the future.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-36
Options
 Options Contract
─ Right to buy (call option) or sell (put option) an
instrument at the exercise (strike) price up until
expiration date (American) or on expiration
date (European).
 Options are available on a number of
financial instruments, including individual
stocks, stock indexes, etc.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-37
Options
 Hedging with Options
─ Buy same number of put option contracts as would sell
of futures
─ Disadvantage: pay premium
─ Advantage: protected if i increases, gain on contract
─ if i falls, additional advantage if macro hedge: avoids
accounting problems, no losses on option
 The next slide highlights these differences
between futures and options
Options
vs
Futures
24-38
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-39
Factors Affecting Premium
1. Higher strike price, lower premium
on call options and higher premium on
put options.
2. Greater term to expiration, higher
premiums for both call and put options.
3. Greater price volatility of underlying
instrument, higher premiums for both call
and put options.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-40
Hedging with Options
 Example: Rock Solid has a stock portfolio
worth $100 million, which tracks closely with
the S&P 500. The portfolio manager fears
that a decline is coming and what to
completely hedge the value of the portfolio
against any downside risk. If the S&P is
currently at 1,000, how is this accomplished?
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-41
Hedging with Options
 Value of the S&P 500 Option Contract =
100  index
─ currently 100  1,000 = $100,000
 To hedge $100 million of stocks that move
1 for 1 (perfect correlation) with S&P
currently selling at 1000, you would:
─ buy $100 million of S&P put options =
1,000 contracts
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-42
Hedging with Options
 The premium would depend on the strike price.
For example, a strike price of 950 might have a
premium of $200 / contract, while a strike price of
900 might have a strike price of only $100.
 Let’s assume Rock Solid chooses a strike price of
950. Then Rock Solid must pay $200,000 for the
position. This is non-refundable and comes out of
the portfolio value (now only $99.8 million).
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-43
Hedging with Options
 Suppose after the year, the S&P 500 is at
900 and the portfolio is worth $89.8 million.
─ options position is up $5 million (since 950
strike price)
─ in net, portfolio is worth $94.8 million
 If instead, the S&P 500 is at 1100 and the
portfolio is worth $109.8 million.
─ options position expires worthless, and
portfolio is worth $109.8 million
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-44
Hedging with Options
 Note that the portfolio is protected from any
downside risk (the risk that the value in the
portfolio will fall ) in excess of $5 million.
However, to accomplish this, the manager
has to pay a premium upfront of $200,000.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-45
Interest-Rate Swaps
 Interest-rate swaps involve the exchange
of one set of interest payments for another
set of interest payments, all denominated in
the same currency.
 Simplest type, called a plain vanilla swap,
specifies (1) the rates being exchanged,
(2) type of payments, and (3) notional
amount.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-46
Interest-Rate Swap
Contract Example
 Midwest Savings Bank wishes to hedge rate
changes by entering into variable-rate contracts.
 Friendly Finance Company wishes to hedge some
of its variable-rate debt with some fixed-rate debt.
 Notional principle of $1 million
 Term of 10 years
 Midwest SB swaps 7% payment for T-bill + 1%
from Friendly Finance Company.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-47
Interest-Rate Swap
Contract Example
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-48
Hedging with Interest-Rate
Swaps
 Reduce interest-rate risk for both parties
1. Midwest converts $1m of fixed rate assets to
rate-sensitive assets, RSA, lowers GAP
2. Friendly Finance RSA, lowers GAP
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-49
Hedging with Interest-Rate
Swaps
 Advantages of swaps
1. Reduce risk, no change in balance-sheet
2. Longer term than futures or options
 Disadvantages of swaps
1. Lack of liquidity
2. Subject to default risk
 Financial intermediaries help reduce
disadvantages of swaps (but at a cost!)
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-50
Credit Derivatives
 Credit derivatives are a relatively new
derivative offering payoffs based on
changes in credit conditions along a variety
of dimensions. Almost nonexistent twenty
years ago, the notional amount of credit
derivatives today is in the trillions.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-51
Credit Derivatives
 Credit derivatives can be generally
categorized as credit options, credit swaps,
and credit-linked notes. We will look at each
of these in turn.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-52
Credit Derivatives
 Credit options are like other options, but
payoffs are tied to changes in credit
conditions.
─ Credit options on debt are tied to changes in
credit ratings.
─ Credit options can also be tied to credit
spreads. For example, the strike price can be
a predetermined spread between AAA-rated
and BBB-rated corporate debt.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-53
Credit Derivatives
 Credit options are like other options, but
payoffs are tied to changes in credit
conditions.
─ Credit options on debt are tied to changes in
credit ratings.
─ Credit options can also be tied to credit
spreads. For example, the strike price can be
a predetermined spread between BBB-rated
corporate debt and T-bonds.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-54
Credit Derivatives
 For example, suppose you wanted to issue
$100,000,000 in debt in six months, and
your debt is expected to be rated single-A.
Currently, A-rated debt is trading at 100
basis points above the Treasury. You could
enter into a credit option on the spread, with
a strike price of 100 basis points.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-55
Credit Derivatives
 If the spread widens, you will, of course,
have to issue the debt at a higher-than-
expected interest rate. But the additional
cost will be offset by the payoff from the
option. Like any option, you will have to pay
a premium upfront for this protection.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-56
Credit Derivatives
 Credit swaps involve, for example,
swapping actual payments on similar-sized
loan portfolios. This allows financial
institutions to diversify portfolios while still
allowing the lenders to specialize in local
markets or particular industries.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-57
Credit Derivatives
 Another form of a credit swap, called a
credit default swap, involves option-like
payoffs when a basket of loans defaults.
For example, the swap may payoff only
after the 5th bond in a bond portfolio
defaults (or has some other bad credit
event).
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-58
Credit Derivatives
 Credit-linked notes combine a bond and a
credit option. Like any bond, it makes
regular interest payments and a final
payment including the face value. But the
issuer has an option tied to a key variable.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-59
Credit Derivatives
 For example, GM might issue a bond with a
5% coupon rate. However, the covenants
would stipulate that if an index of SUV sales
falls by more than 10%, the coupon rate
drops to 3%. This would be especially
useful if GM was using the bond proceeds
to build a new SUV plant.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-60
Are derivatives a time bomb?
 In the 2002 annual report for Berkshire
Hathaway, Warren Buffett referred to
derivatives (bought for speculation) as
“…weapons of mass destruction.” (although
also noting that Berkshire uses derivatives).
Is he right?
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-61
Are derivatives a time bomb?
 There are three major concerns with the
use of financial derivatives:
─ Derivatives allow financial institutions to
increase their leverage (effectively changing
their capital), possibly to take on more risk
─ Derivatives are too complicated
─ The derivative positions of some banks
exceed their capital—the probability of failure
has greatly increased
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-62
Are derivatives a time bomb?
 As usual, the blanket comments are usually
not accurate. For example, although the
notional amount of derivatives exceeds
capital, often these are offsetting positions
on behalf of clients—the bank has no
exposure. In other words, you have to look
at each situation individually. Further, actual
derivative losses by banks is small, despite
a few news-worthy exceptions.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-63
Are derivatives a time bomb?
 Of course, the 2007-2009 financial crisis
only further illustrates the problem of
speculative derivatives. AIG, for example,
sought fee revenue from taking the short
side of credit default swaps. Unfortunately,
when housing prices collapsed, they have
to payout on those positions, resulting in
billions in losses (to you me in the end!).
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-64
Are derivatives a time bomb?
 In the end, derivatives do have their
dangers. But so does hiring crooks to run a
bank (Lincoln S&L ring a bell). But
derivatives have changed the sophistication
needed by both managers and regulators to
understand the whole picture.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-65
Chapter Summary
 Hedging: the basic idea of entering into an
offsetting contract to reduce or eliminate
some type of risk was presented.
 Forward Markets: the basic idea of
contracts in this highly specialized market,
as well as a simple example of eliminating
risk was presented.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-66
Chapter Summary (cont.)
 Financial Futures Markets: these exchange
traded markets were presented, as well as
their advantages over forward contacts.
 Stock Index Futures: the specific
application of stock index futures was
presented, exploring their ability to reduce
or eliminate risk for equity portfolios.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-67
Chapter Summary (cont.)
 Options: these contracts, which give the
buyer the right but not the obligation to act,
were presented, as well as an example
showing their costs.
 Interest-Rate Swaps: the idea of trading
fixed-rate interest payments for floating-rate
payments was presented, as well as the
pros and cons of such contracts.
© 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-68
Chapter Summary (cont.)
 Credit Derivatives: we examine this
relatively new market for hedging the credit
risk of portfolios and the dangers involved.

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24. Hedging with Financial Derivatives.ppt

  • 1. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 24 Hedging with Financial Derivatives
  • 2. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-1 Chapter Preview Starting in the 1970s, the world became a riskier place for financial institutions. Interest rate volatility increased, as did the stock and bond markets. Financial innovation helped with the development of derivatives. But if improperly used, derivatives can dramatically increase the risk institutions face.
  • 3. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-2 Chapter Preview  In this chapter, we look at the most important derivatives that managers of financial institution use to manage risk. We examine how the markets for these derivatives work and how the products are used by financial managers to reduce risk. Topics include: ─ Hedging ─ Forward Markets ─ Financial Futures Markets
  • 4. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-3 Chapter Preview (cont.) ─ Stock Index Futures ─ Options ─ Interest-Rate Swaps ─ Credit Derivatives
  • 5. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-4 Hedging  Hedging involves engaging in a financial transaction that reduces or eliminates risk.  Definitions ─ long position: an asset which is purchased or owned ─ short position: an asset which must be delivered to a third party as a future date, or an asset which is borrowed and sold, but must be replaced in the future
  • 6. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-5 Hedging  Hedging risk involves engaging in a financial transaction that offsets a long position by taking an additional short position, or offsets a short position by taking an additional long position.  We will examine how this is specifically accomplished in different financial markets.
  • 7. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-6 Forward Markets  Forward contracts are agreements by two parties to engage in a financial transaction at a future point in time. Although the contract can be written however the parties want, the contact usually includes: ─ The exact assets to be delivered by one party, including the location of delivery ─ The price paid for the assets by the other party ─ The date when the assets and cash will be exchanged
  • 8. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-7 Forward Markets  An Example of an Interest-Rate Contract ─ First National Bank agrees to deliver $5 million in face value of 6% Treasury bonds maturing in 2023 ─ Rock Solid Insurance Company agrees to pay $5 million for the bonds ─ FNB and Rock Solid agree to complete the transaction one year from today at the FNB headquarters in town
  • 9. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-8 Forward Markets  Long Position ─ Agree to buy securities at future date ─ Hedges by locking in future interest rate of funds coming in future, avoiding rate decreases  Short Position ─ Agree to sell securities at future date ─ Hedges by reducing price risk from increases in interest rates if holding bonds
  • 10. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-9 Forward Markets  Pros 1. Flexible  Cons 1. Lack of liquidity: hard to find a counter-party and thin or non-existent secondary market 2. Subject to default risk—requires information to screen good from bad risk
  • 11. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-10 The Practicing Manager: Hedging Interest Rate Risk with Forwards  First National Bank owns $5 million of T-bonds that mature in 2029. Because these are long-term bonds, you are exposed to interest-rate risk. How do you hedge this risk?  Enter into a forward contract with Rock Solid Insurance company, where Rock Solid agrees to buy the bonds for $5m.
  • 12. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-11 The Practicing Manager: Hedging Interest Rate Risk with Forwards  First National Bank is hedged against interest-rate increases  Rock Solid, on the other hand, has protected itself against rate declines.  Both parties can gain or lose, since we don’t know which way rates will actually go in one year. But both are better off. We’ll review the details a bit more…
  • 13. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-12 Financial Futures Markets  Financial futures contracts are similar to forward contracts in that they are an agreement by two parties to engage in a financial transaction at a future point in time. However, they differ from forward contracts in several significant ways.
  • 14. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-13 Financial Futures Markets  Financial Futures Contract ─ Specifies delivery of type of security at future date ─ Arbitrage: at expiration date, price of contract = price of the underlying asset delivered ─ i , long contract has loss, short contract has profit ─ Hedging similar to forwards: micro versus macro hedge  Traded on Exchanges ─ Global competition regulated by CFTC Commodity Futures Options Trading, Inc. home page http://www.usafutures.com/
  • 15. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-14 Example: Hedging Interest Rate Risk Revisited  A manager has a long position in Treasury bonds. She wishes to hedge again interest rate increases, and uses T-bond futures to do this: ─ Her portfolio is worth $5,000,000 ─ Futures contracts have an underlying value of $100,000, so she must short 50 contracts.
  • 16. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-15 Example: Hedging Interest Rate Risk ─ As interest rates increase over the next 12 months, the value of the bond portfolio drops by almost $1,000,000. ─ However, the T-bond contract also dropped almost $1,000,000 in value, and the short position means the contact pays off that amount. ─ Losses in the spot T-bond market are offset by gains in the T-bond futures market. ─ You can see all of the details of this example in the book, on page 636.
  • 17. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-16 Financial Futures Markets  The previous example is a micro hedge— hedging the value of a specific asset. Macro hedges involve hedging, for example, the entire value of a portfolio, or general prices for production inputs.
  • 18. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-17 Financial Futures Markets  In the U.S., futures are traded on the CBOT and the CME in Chicago, the NY Futures Exchange, and others.  They are regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The most widely traded are listed in the Wall Street Journal, as we see on the next slide.
  • 19. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-18 Following the News
  • 20. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-19 Financial Futures Markets  The U.S. exchanges dominated the market for years. However, this isn’t true anymore.  The London Int’l Financial Futures Exchange trades Eurodollar futures  The Tokyo Stock Exchange trades Euroyen and gov’t bond futures  Several others as well, as seen next.
  • 21. 24-20 © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved.
  • 22. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-21 Financial Futures Markets  Success of Futures Over Forwards 1. Futures are more liquid: standardized contracts that can be traded 2. Delivery of range of securities reduces the chance that a trader can corner the market 3. Mark to market daily: avoids default risk 4. Don’t have to deliver: cash netting of positions
  • 23. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-22 The Hunt Brothers and the Silver Crash  In the early 1980s, the Hunt brothers tried to corner the silver market by buying 300 million ounces of silver. The silver price rose from $6 to $50 an ounce.  The exchanges steps in, taking action to eliminate the corner. Silver dropped back to under $10 an ounce.  The Hunt brothers lost about $1 billion, a high price for an excursion in to the silver market.
  • 24. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-23 Hedging FX Risk  Example: A manufacturer expects to be paid 10 million euros in two months for the sale of equipment in Europe. Currently, 1 euro = $1, and the manufacturer would like to lock-in that exchange rate.
  • 25. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-24 Hedging FX Risk  The manufacturer can use the FX futures market to accomplish this: 1. The manufacturer sells 10 million euros of futures contracts. Assuming that 1 contract is for $125,000 in euros, the manufacturer takes as short position in 40 contracts. 2. The exchange will require the manufacturer to deposit cash into a margin account. For example, the exchange may require $2,000 per contract, or $80,000.
  • 26. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-25 Hedging FX Risk 3. As the exchange rate fluctuates during the two months, the value of the margin account will fluctuate. If the value in the margin account falls too low, additional funds may be required. This is how the market is marked to market. If additional funds are not deposited when required, the position will be closed by the exchange.
  • 27. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-26 Hedging FX Risk 4. Assume that actual exchange rate is 1 euro = $0.96 at the end of the two months. The manufacturer receives the 10 million euros and exchanges them in the spot market for $9,600,000. 5. The manufacturer also closes the margin account, which has $480,000 in it—$400,000 for the changes in exchange rates plus the original $80,000 required by the exchange (assumes no margin calls). 6. In the end, the manufacturer has the $10,000,000 desired from the sale.
  • 28. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-27 Hedging FX Risk Of course, the exchange rate could have gone the other way. For example, if the actual exchange rate is 1 euro = $1.04 at the end of the two months, the manufacturer will exchange the 10 million euros for $10,400,000. At the same time, losses in futures market amount to $400,000, netting the same $10,000,000. Just as happy? Probably not. Even though the hedge worked exactly as needed.
  • 29. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-28 Stock Index Futures  Financial institution managers, particularly those that manage mutual funds, pension funds, and insurance companies, also need to assess their stock market risk, the risk that occurs due to fluctuations in equity market prices.  One instrument to hedge this risk is stock index futures.
  • 30. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-29 Stock Index Futures  Stock index futures are a contract to buy or sell a particular stock index, starting at a given level. Contacts exist for most major indexes, including the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrials, Russell 2000, etc.  The “best” stock futures contract to use is generally determined by the highest correlation between returns to a portfolio and returns to a particular index.
  • 31. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-30 Following the News
  • 32. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-31 Hedging with Stock Index Futures  Example: Rock Solid has a stock portfolio worth $100 million, which tracks closely with the S&P 500. The portfolio manager fears that a decline is coming and what to completely hedge the value of the portfolio over the next year. If the S&P is currently at 1,000, how is this accomplished?
  • 33. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-32 Hedging with Stock Index Futures  Value of the S&P 500 Futures Contract = 250  index ─ currently 250  1,000 = $250,000  To hedge $100 million of stocks that move 1 for 1 (perfect correlation) with S&P currently selling at 1000, you would: ─ sell $100 million of index futures = 400 contracts
  • 34. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-33 Hedging with Stock Index Futures  Suppose after the year, the S&P 500 is at 900 and the portfolio is worth $90 million. ─ futures position is up $10 million  If instead, the S&P 500 is at 1100 and the portfolio is worth $110 million. ─ futures position is down $10 million  Either way, net position is $100 million
  • 35. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-34 Hedging with Stock Index Futures  Note that the portfolio is protected from downside risk, the risk that the value in the portfolio will fall. However, to accomplish this, the manager has also eliminated any upside potential.  Now we will examine a hedging strategy that protects again downside risk, but does not sacrifice the upside. Of course, this comes at a price!
  • 36. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-35 MINI-CASE: Program Trading and the Market Crash of 1987  In the aftermath of the Black Monday crash on October 19, 1987, stock price index futures markets have been accused of being culprits in the market collapse.  Program trading between futures and stock prices creates a downward spiral. Other experts blame portfolio insurance, which can have the same affect.  Limits on program trading have been implements to reduce this problem in the future.
  • 37. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-36 Options  Options Contract ─ Right to buy (call option) or sell (put option) an instrument at the exercise (strike) price up until expiration date (American) or on expiration date (European).  Options are available on a number of financial instruments, including individual stocks, stock indexes, etc.
  • 38. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-37 Options  Hedging with Options ─ Buy same number of put option contracts as would sell of futures ─ Disadvantage: pay premium ─ Advantage: protected if i increases, gain on contract ─ if i falls, additional advantage if macro hedge: avoids accounting problems, no losses on option  The next slide highlights these differences between futures and options
  • 39. Options vs Futures 24-38 © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved.
  • 40. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-39 Factors Affecting Premium 1. Higher strike price, lower premium on call options and higher premium on put options. 2. Greater term to expiration, higher premiums for both call and put options. 3. Greater price volatility of underlying instrument, higher premiums for both call and put options.
  • 41. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-40 Hedging with Options  Example: Rock Solid has a stock portfolio worth $100 million, which tracks closely with the S&P 500. The portfolio manager fears that a decline is coming and what to completely hedge the value of the portfolio against any downside risk. If the S&P is currently at 1,000, how is this accomplished?
  • 42. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-41 Hedging with Options  Value of the S&P 500 Option Contract = 100  index ─ currently 100  1,000 = $100,000  To hedge $100 million of stocks that move 1 for 1 (perfect correlation) with S&P currently selling at 1000, you would: ─ buy $100 million of S&P put options = 1,000 contracts
  • 43. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-42 Hedging with Options  The premium would depend on the strike price. For example, a strike price of 950 might have a premium of $200 / contract, while a strike price of 900 might have a strike price of only $100.  Let’s assume Rock Solid chooses a strike price of 950. Then Rock Solid must pay $200,000 for the position. This is non-refundable and comes out of the portfolio value (now only $99.8 million).
  • 44. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-43 Hedging with Options  Suppose after the year, the S&P 500 is at 900 and the portfolio is worth $89.8 million. ─ options position is up $5 million (since 950 strike price) ─ in net, portfolio is worth $94.8 million  If instead, the S&P 500 is at 1100 and the portfolio is worth $109.8 million. ─ options position expires worthless, and portfolio is worth $109.8 million
  • 45. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-44 Hedging with Options  Note that the portfolio is protected from any downside risk (the risk that the value in the portfolio will fall ) in excess of $5 million. However, to accomplish this, the manager has to pay a premium upfront of $200,000.
  • 46. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-45 Interest-Rate Swaps  Interest-rate swaps involve the exchange of one set of interest payments for another set of interest payments, all denominated in the same currency.  Simplest type, called a plain vanilla swap, specifies (1) the rates being exchanged, (2) type of payments, and (3) notional amount.
  • 47. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-46 Interest-Rate Swap Contract Example  Midwest Savings Bank wishes to hedge rate changes by entering into variable-rate contracts.  Friendly Finance Company wishes to hedge some of its variable-rate debt with some fixed-rate debt.  Notional principle of $1 million  Term of 10 years  Midwest SB swaps 7% payment for T-bill + 1% from Friendly Finance Company.
  • 48. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-47 Interest-Rate Swap Contract Example
  • 49. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-48 Hedging with Interest-Rate Swaps  Reduce interest-rate risk for both parties 1. Midwest converts $1m of fixed rate assets to rate-sensitive assets, RSA, lowers GAP 2. Friendly Finance RSA, lowers GAP
  • 50. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-49 Hedging with Interest-Rate Swaps  Advantages of swaps 1. Reduce risk, no change in balance-sheet 2. Longer term than futures or options  Disadvantages of swaps 1. Lack of liquidity 2. Subject to default risk  Financial intermediaries help reduce disadvantages of swaps (but at a cost!)
  • 51. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-50 Credit Derivatives  Credit derivatives are a relatively new derivative offering payoffs based on changes in credit conditions along a variety of dimensions. Almost nonexistent twenty years ago, the notional amount of credit derivatives today is in the trillions.
  • 52. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-51 Credit Derivatives  Credit derivatives can be generally categorized as credit options, credit swaps, and credit-linked notes. We will look at each of these in turn.
  • 53. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-52 Credit Derivatives  Credit options are like other options, but payoffs are tied to changes in credit conditions. ─ Credit options on debt are tied to changes in credit ratings. ─ Credit options can also be tied to credit spreads. For example, the strike price can be a predetermined spread between AAA-rated and BBB-rated corporate debt.
  • 54. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-53 Credit Derivatives  Credit options are like other options, but payoffs are tied to changes in credit conditions. ─ Credit options on debt are tied to changes in credit ratings. ─ Credit options can also be tied to credit spreads. For example, the strike price can be a predetermined spread between BBB-rated corporate debt and T-bonds.
  • 55. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-54 Credit Derivatives  For example, suppose you wanted to issue $100,000,000 in debt in six months, and your debt is expected to be rated single-A. Currently, A-rated debt is trading at 100 basis points above the Treasury. You could enter into a credit option on the spread, with a strike price of 100 basis points.
  • 56. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-55 Credit Derivatives  If the spread widens, you will, of course, have to issue the debt at a higher-than- expected interest rate. But the additional cost will be offset by the payoff from the option. Like any option, you will have to pay a premium upfront for this protection.
  • 57. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-56 Credit Derivatives  Credit swaps involve, for example, swapping actual payments on similar-sized loan portfolios. This allows financial institutions to diversify portfolios while still allowing the lenders to specialize in local markets or particular industries.
  • 58. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-57 Credit Derivatives  Another form of a credit swap, called a credit default swap, involves option-like payoffs when a basket of loans defaults. For example, the swap may payoff only after the 5th bond in a bond portfolio defaults (or has some other bad credit event).
  • 59. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-58 Credit Derivatives  Credit-linked notes combine a bond and a credit option. Like any bond, it makes regular interest payments and a final payment including the face value. But the issuer has an option tied to a key variable.
  • 60. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-59 Credit Derivatives  For example, GM might issue a bond with a 5% coupon rate. However, the covenants would stipulate that if an index of SUV sales falls by more than 10%, the coupon rate drops to 3%. This would be especially useful if GM was using the bond proceeds to build a new SUV plant.
  • 61. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-60 Are derivatives a time bomb?  In the 2002 annual report for Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett referred to derivatives (bought for speculation) as “…weapons of mass destruction.” (although also noting that Berkshire uses derivatives). Is he right?
  • 62. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-61 Are derivatives a time bomb?  There are three major concerns with the use of financial derivatives: ─ Derivatives allow financial institutions to increase their leverage (effectively changing their capital), possibly to take on more risk ─ Derivatives are too complicated ─ The derivative positions of some banks exceed their capital—the probability of failure has greatly increased
  • 63. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-62 Are derivatives a time bomb?  As usual, the blanket comments are usually not accurate. For example, although the notional amount of derivatives exceeds capital, often these are offsetting positions on behalf of clients—the bank has no exposure. In other words, you have to look at each situation individually. Further, actual derivative losses by banks is small, despite a few news-worthy exceptions.
  • 64. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-63 Are derivatives a time bomb?  Of course, the 2007-2009 financial crisis only further illustrates the problem of speculative derivatives. AIG, for example, sought fee revenue from taking the short side of credit default swaps. Unfortunately, when housing prices collapsed, they have to payout on those positions, resulting in billions in losses (to you me in the end!).
  • 65. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-64 Are derivatives a time bomb?  In the end, derivatives do have their dangers. But so does hiring crooks to run a bank (Lincoln S&L ring a bell). But derivatives have changed the sophistication needed by both managers and regulators to understand the whole picture.
  • 66. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-65 Chapter Summary  Hedging: the basic idea of entering into an offsetting contract to reduce or eliminate some type of risk was presented.  Forward Markets: the basic idea of contracts in this highly specialized market, as well as a simple example of eliminating risk was presented.
  • 67. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-66 Chapter Summary (cont.)  Financial Futures Markets: these exchange traded markets were presented, as well as their advantages over forward contacts.  Stock Index Futures: the specific application of stock index futures was presented, exploring their ability to reduce or eliminate risk for equity portfolios.
  • 68. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-67 Chapter Summary (cont.)  Options: these contracts, which give the buyer the right but not the obligation to act, were presented, as well as an example showing their costs.  Interest-Rate Swaps: the idea of trading fixed-rate interest payments for floating-rate payments was presented, as well as the pros and cons of such contracts.
  • 69. © 2012 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. 24-68 Chapter Summary (cont.)  Credit Derivatives: we examine this relatively new market for hedging the credit risk of portfolios and the dangers involved.