©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin 26-1 26 Chapter Swaps.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction To Credit Derivatives Stephen P. D Arcy and Xinyan Zhao.
Advertisements

1 CHAPTER 15 Interest Rate Derivative Markets. 2 CHAPTER 15 OVERVIEW This chapter will: A. Describe the plain vanilla interest rate swaps B. Explain the.
Interest Rate & Currency Swaps. Swaps Swaps are introduced in the over the counter market 1981, and 1982 in order to: restructure assets, obligations.
©2007, The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter Ten Derivative Securities Markets.
Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill /Irwin Chapter Ten Derivative Securities Markets Dr. Ahmed Y Dashti.
Interest Rate Swaps and Agreements Chapter 28. Swaps CBs and IBs are major participants  dealers  traders  users regulatory concerns regarding credit.
CHAPTER 9 Interest Rate Risk II Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill 1 Futures and Forwards Chapter 24 Financial Institutions Management, 3/e By Anthony Saunders.
Chapter7 Swaps.
D. M. ChanceAn Introduction to Derivatives and Risk Management, 6th ed.Ch. 12: 1 Chapter 12: Swaps I once had to explain to my father that the bank didn’t.
2.1 Swaps Lecture Types of Rates Treasury rates LIBOR rates Euribor rates.
FRM Zvi Wiener Swaps.
© 2002 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 14 Swap Pricing.
17-Swaps and Credit Derivatives
©2009, The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved 8-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter Twenty-Three Managing Risk off the Balance Sheet with Derivative Securities.
© 2002 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 14 Swap Pricing.
Swaps and Interest Rate Derivatives
Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill /Irwin Chapter Ten Derivative Securities Markets.
© 2004 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 14 Swap Pricing.
Risk Management Hedging with Swaps 1 Copyright 2014 Diane Scott Docking.
Currency Swaps 1. Currency Swap: Definition  A currency swap is an exchange of a liability in one currency for a liability in another currency.  Nature:
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EUN / RESNICK Second Edition 10 Chapter Ten Currency & Interest Rate Swaps Chapter Objective: This chapter discusses.
Swap’s Pricing Group 5 Rafael Vides Aminur Roshid Youmbi Etien Kalame.
SWAPS.  Forward or futures contracts settle on a single date  However, many transactions occur repeatedly  If a manager seeking to reduce risk confronts.
Using Options and Swaps to Hedge Risk
Swaps Copyright 2014 Diane Scott Docking 1. Learning Objectives Describe an interest rate swap Understand swap terminology Be able to set up a simple.
Swaps An agreement between two parties to exchange a series of future cash flows. It’s a series of payments. At initiation, neither party pays any amount.
Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives 6 th Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull Swaps Chapter 7.
1 Topic 8. Swaps 8.1Over-the-counter (OTC) Derivatives 8.2 Interest Rate Swap 8.3 Zero Curve 8.4 Forward Curve 8.5 Zero Delta 8.6 Forward Delta 8.7 DV01.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EUN / RESNICK Fourth Edition.
Interest Rate and Currency Swaps
Futures and Forwards Chapter 23 © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter 8 Swaps. Chapter 8Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 8-2 Introduction to Swaps A swap is a contract calling for an.
©David Dubofsky and 12-1 Thomas W. Miller, Jr. Chapter 12 Using Swaps to Manage Risk Swaps can be used to lower borrowing costs and generate higher investment.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill 1 Swaps Chapter 26 Financial Institutions Management, 3/e By Anthony Saunders.
Introduction to swaps Steven C. Mann M.J. Neeley School of Business Texas Christian University incorporating ideas from “Teaching interest rate and currency.
6.1 Swaps. 6.2 Nature of Swaps A swap is an agreement to exchange cash flows at specified future times according to certain specified rules.
7.1 Swaps Chapter Nature of Swaps A swap is an agreement to exchange cash flows at specified future times according to certain specified rules.
Swaps Chapter 26. Swaps  CBs and IBs are major participants –dealers –traders –users  regulatory concerns regarding credit risk exposure  five generic.
Swap Contracts, Convertible Securities, and Other Embedded Derivatives Innovative Financial Instruments Dr. A. DeMaskey Chapter 25.
6.1 Swaps. 6.2 Nature of Swaps A swap is an agreement to exchange cash flows at specified future times according to certain specified rules.
Introduction to Derivatives
Chapter 10 Swaps FIXED-INCOME SECURITIES. Outline Terminology Convention Quotation Uses of Swaps Pricing of Swaps Non Plain Vanilla Swaps.
Swaps Chapter 25 © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
6.1 Swaps. 6.2 Nature of Swaps A swap is an agreement to exchange cash flows at specified future times according to certain specified rules.
CHAPTER SEVEN Using Financial Futures, Options, Swaps, and Other Hedging Tools in Asset-Liability Management The purpose of this chapter is to examine.
Introduction to Interest rate swaps Structure Motivation Interest rate risk Finance 30233, Fall 2004 Advanced Investments The Neeley School at TCU Associate.
Copyright  2003 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPT Slides t/a Financial Institutions, Instruments and Markets 4/e by Christopher Viney Slides prepared.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter Eight Using Financial Futures, Options, Swaps, and Other Hedging Tools in.
Lecture 9: Derivatives and Hedging. Futures and forwards 2.
McGraw-Hill /Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter Twenty-four Managing Risk with Derivative Securities.
Interest Rate Risk II Chapter 9 © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Interest Rate Risk II Chapter 9 © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. K. R. Stanton.
© 2004 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 14 Swap Pricing.
Copyright © 2012 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Interest Rate & Currency Swaps Chapter Fourteen.
© 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
SWAPS: Total Return Swap, Asset Swap and Swaption
Financial Risk Management of Insurance Enterprises Swaps.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.9-1 Interest Rate Swaps Companies use interest rate swaps to modify their.
Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill /Irwin 10-1 Chapter Ten Derivative Securities Markets.
Swaps : A Primer By A.V. Vedpuriswar. .  Swaps are agreements to exchange a series of cash flows on periodic settlement dates over a certain time period.
Swaps Chapter 26 © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. K. R. Stanton.
SWAPS.
Chapter 14 Swap Pricing © 2004 South-Western Publishing.
Chapter 20 Swaps.
Swaps Interest Rate Swaps Mechanics
Professor Chris Droussiotis
Chapter 12 Using Swaps to Manage Risk
Presentation transcript:

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Chapter Swaps

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin 26-2 Overview The market for swaps has grown enormously and this has raised serious regulatory concerns regarding credit risk exposures. Such concerns motivated the BIS risk-based capital reforms. At the same time, the growth in exotic swaps such as inverse floater have also generated controversy (e.g., Orange County, CA). Generic swaps in order of quantitative importance: interest rate, currency, credit, commodity and equity swaps.

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin 26-3 Interest Rate Swaps u Interest rate swap as succession of forwards. Swap buyer agrees to pay fixed-rate Swap seller agrees to pay floating-rate. u Purpose of swap Allows FIs to economically convert variable-rate instruments into fixed-rate (or vice versa) in order to better match the duration of assets and liabilities. Off-balance-sheet transaction.

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin 26-4 Plain Vanilla Interest Rate Swap Example Consider money center bank that has raised $100 million by issuing 4-year notes with 10% fixed coupons. On asset side: C&I loans linked to LIBOR. Duration gap is negative. D A - kD L < 0 Second party is savings bank with $100 million in fixed-rate mortgages of long duration funded with CDs having duration of 1 year. D A - kD L > 0

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin 26-5 Example (continued) Savings bank can reduce duration gap by buying a swap (taking fixed-payment side). Notional value of the swap is $100 million. Maturity is 4 years with 10% fixed-payments. Suppose that LIBOR currently equals 8% and bank agrees to pay LIBOR + 2%.

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin 26-6 Realized Cash Flows on Swap u Suppose realized rates are as follows End of YearLIBOR 1 9% 2 9% 3 7% 4 6%

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin 26-7 Swap Payments End of LIBORMCBSavings Year+ 2%PaymentBank Net 111%$11$ Total

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin 26-8 Off-market Swaps u Swaps can be molded to suit needs Special interest terms Varying notional value »Increasing or decreasing over life of swap. Structured-note inverse floater »Example: Government agency issues note with coupon equal to 7 percent minus LIBOR and converts it into a LIBOR liability through a swap.

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin 26-9 Macrohedging with Swaps u Assume a thrift has positive gap such that  E = -(D A - kD L )A [  R/(1+R)] >0 if rates rise. Suppose choose to hedge with 10-year swaps. Fixed- rate payments are equivalent to payments on a 10- year T-bond. Floating-rate payments repriced to LIBOR every year. Changes in swap value DS, depend on duration difference (D 10 - D 1 ).  S = -(D Fixed - D Float ) × N S × [  R/(1+R)]

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Macrohedging (continued) u Optimal notional value requires  S =  E -(D Fixed - D Float ) × N S × [  R/(1+R)] = -(D A - kD L ) × A × [  R/(1+R)] N S = [(D A - kD L ) × A]/(D Fixed - D Float )

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Pricing an Interest Rate Swap u Example: Assume 4-year swap with fixed payments at end of year. We derive expected one-year rates from the on-the- run Treasury yield curve treating the individual payments as separate zero-coupon bonds and iterating forward.

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Solving the Discount Yield Curve P 1 = 108/(1+R 1 ) = 100 ==> R 1 = 8% ==> d 1 = 8% P 2 = 9/(1+R 2 ) + 109/(1+R 2 ) 2 = 100 ==> R 2 = 9% 9/(1+d 1 ) + 109/(1+d 2 ) 2 = 100 ==> d 2 = 9.045% Similarly, d 3 = 9.58% and d 4 = %

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Solving Implied Forward Rates d 1 = 8% ==> E(r 1 ) = 8% 1+ E(r 2 ) = (1+d 2 ) 2 /(1+d 1 ) ==> E(r 2 ) = 10.1% 1+ E(r 3 ) = (1+d 3 ) 3 /(1+d 2 ) 2 ==> E(r 3 ) = % 1+ E(r 4 ) = (1+d 4 ) 4 /(1+d 3 ) 3 ==> E(r 4 ) = %

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Currency Swaps u Fixed-Fixed Example: U.S. bank with fixed-rate assets denominated in dollars, partly financed with £50 million in 4-year 10 percent (fixed) notes. By comparison, U.K. bank has assets partly funded by $100 million 4-year 10 percent notes. Solution: Enter into currency swap.

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Cash Flows from Swap

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Fixed-Floating + Currency u Fixed-Floating currency swaps. Allows hedging of interest rate and currency exposures simultaneously

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Credit Swaps u Credit swaps designed to hedge credit risk. u Total return swap u Pure credit swap Interest-rate sensitive element stripped out leaving only the credit risk.

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Credit Risk Concerns u Credit risk concerns partly mitigated by netting of swap payments. u Netting by novation When there are many contracts between parties. u Payment flows are interest and not principal. u Standby letters of credit may be required.

©2003 McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved Slides by Kenneth StantonMcGraw Hill / Irwin Pertinent Websites Visit: American Banker BIS Web Surf