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Lecture 10: Derivatives III Currency & interest rate swaps Galina A Schwartz Department of Finance University of Michigan Business School
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Plan of today’s lecture n Midterm follow-up n Levich, Chapter 13 Swaps are derivative securities redundant securities Main types of swap agreements Why do we have them? [who could gain from them] What drives the demand for swaps?
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Players & Terminology n Players: Industry & Financial Companies, Re [ – `The Usual suspects`] n What drives the demand for swaps? Capital controls Transaction costs Differences in parties’ comparative advantage [Market segmentation & asymmetric information] n Terms [Jargon]: Plain vanilla swaps Exotic swaps
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Swaps: market characteristics Main types of swap agreements currency or interest rate fixed-rate or floating rate or fixed-floating interest rate swaps Why do we have them? [who could gain from using them] To hedge [hedgers] [reducing risks] To speculate [speculators] [capturing arbitrage opportunities]
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Pricing the Swaps How do we price them? Net present value approach Through calculating the expected discounted cash flow Swap associated risks: Asymmetric Time varying
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Regulatory requirements n Bank for International Settlements (BIS) imposed capital requirements – A major development! n BIS capital requirements: Advantageous: Simple and easy to implement Transparent Drawbacks [disadvantages]: No fine tuning regulatory costs
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Summary of the Lecture Main subject: swap agreements: [currency or interest rate] Swaps are used for: Cheap [& Quick] currency and interest rate risks management Why do we have them? Who uses them? How do we price them?
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What is next (Lecture 11): n A follow-up of Prof. Honeyman’s lecture: International financial markets adjustment to the coming technical innovations: Market power & efficiency scale: up or down? Efficiency: market completeness & pricing mechanisms
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What is next (continued) Generalized transaction costs up or down? [Generalized transaction costs: -- overhead (par example infrastructure related) costs -- the costs resulting from the risk of default [direct and indirect (such as legal)]] Globalization: standard versus segmentation Scope for government intervention up or down?
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