Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMuriel Cobb Modified over 9 years ago
1
ECO 322 Nov 25, 2013 Dr. Watson
2
Cattleman wants less price volatility so he can plan for the future Meatpacker wants less price volatility so he can plan for the future Cattleman promise to sell you 100 cattle 6 months from now - $1.70/pound
3
Trader showed up and thought, “That’s a really low price. … There was a drought in another province and all their cattle died. The price is going up… Say, meatpacker, can I buy your contract?” Trader will pay the farmer $1.70 for the cattle 6 months from now The meatpacker earns some profit.
4
Another trader shows up, who thinks the price will be even higher. He will buy the contract from the first trader. The first trader makes money off of cattle he never owned. Suppose there was news – trade restrictions on cattle had been dropped, so we can get all the cattle we want from another country
5
What about death? That’s called the ultimate default risk
6
Long – bought Short – sold Hedge – Offset risk by buying another asset that will move differently Offset a long position with a short position in the same area. Airline – lose money when price of oil goes up, so they buy oil stocks. Micro hedge – hedge on one asset Macro hedge – hedge entire portfolio Counterparty – whoever you’re trading with
7
I own $5million in T-bills If the interest rate goes up, what happens to the value of my T-bills? I’m going to sell some futures contracts How much does it cost? $100,000 N = value of the asset / value of the contract 5 million / 100,000 = 50. Suppose the i was 6%, goes up 8% My 5 goes down to 4.1 Value of the sale makes up the loss.
8
In a forward contract, I am selling a very specific asset In a futures contract, I am selling something that looks like this Your bonds will expire in 15 years or more The Treasury cannot call on them $5 million Forward markets are going to be less liquid, more default risk; lower transaction costs
9
In a futures market, the seller is selling to a clearinghouse. The buyer is buying from the clearinghouse. Where does the clearinghouse get its money? The buyer and seller are both going to make a deposit: margin requirement If the price of your asset changes, you need to change your margin. Mark to market Margin call
10
Foreign exchange You buy $5 million at N155/$ one year from now You turn around and sell $5million at N165 Profit = N50million Price of a futures contract today depends on everyone’s expectations Forward contract - $1million Futures contract - $125,000
11
Time – Investment takes time, gambling is today? Risk – Hedging is there to reduce your risk; gambling is about increasing your risk When you invest, you own something With gambling, you are not creating anything Is arbitrage is gambling? Moving across distance – a diaper in my house vs a diaper in another country Moving across time
12
One way to pay your CEO – stock options You can buy X shares at today’s price … in the future American option – exercise anytime European option – exercise only when expires Call option – option to buy Put option – option to sell
13
Futures often more liquid than the original asset “in the money” – you could earn profits “out of the money” – the option is not profitable Lower the “strike price” – higher premium Longer time period (term) – higher premium More volatility – higher premium
14
Credit option – put (sell) bonds at the current price Total global GDP: $50 trillion Total value of credit derivative contracts: $1200 trillion
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.