Download presentation
1
Chapter 5 Currency Derivatives
International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
2
Foreign Currency Derivatives
Financial management of the MNE in the 21st century involves financial derivatives. These derivatives, so named because their values are derived from underlying assets, are a powerful tool used in business today. These instruments can be used for two very distinct management objectives: Speculation – use of derivative instruments to take a position in the expectation of a profit Hedging – use of derivative instruments to reduce the risks associated with the everyday management of corporate cash flow
3
Foreign Currency Derivatives
In this chapter, we will look at the following important instruments Forwards Futures Swaps Currency options
4
Forward Market (1) A forward contract is an agreement between a firm and a commercial bank to exchange a specified amount of a currency at a specified exchange rate (called the forward rate) on a specified date in the future. International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
5
Forward Market A forward contract is an agreement between a firm and an intermediary to exchange a specified amount of a currency at a specified exchange rate (called the forward rate) on a specified date in the future. Let us assume that a UK company has a 6 month dollar receivable it wants to hedge. This raises the question of the price at which the intermediary should agree to buy the dollars and sell the customer sterling. The answer is based on the intermediary’s ability to hedge its exposure, a theory of forward pricing often referred to as the cost of carry model
6
Forward Market Let us assume at the $/£ spot rate is 1.5 and that the 6 m interest rate (per annum) for £ and $ is 10 % and 6 % resp. In order to eliminate its risk, the intermediary will need to undertake the following: borrow US dollars today; exchange these into sterling at the current spot rate; deposit these for six months in sterling At the maturity of the forward contract the customer will pay the bank US dollars, which can be used to repay the initial dollar loan and the maturing sterling deposit is used to pay the customer the contracted sterling amount
7
Forward Market Assume the contract is for $ 1 000 000
The bank will borrow /(1 + 0,06/2) = This amounts to /1,5 = £ Future value of £ deposit * (1+ 0,10/2) = Forward exchange rate / = $1.4714/£
8
Forward Market We saw that the forward rate is different from the spot rate, and this is normally the case. The % by which the forward rate (F ) differs from the spot rate (S ) is labelled p and is called the forward premium if p > 0 or discount if p < 0 and is normally expressed on an annual basis
9
Forward Market Janury
10
Foreign Currency Futures
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 price. It is similar to futures contracts that exist for commodities such as cattle, lumber, interest-bearing deposits, gold, the weather etc. Futures more or less eliminate credit risk as a clearing house is the contract party
11
Foreign Currency Futures
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 of one year or less) Trading on futures occurs on organized exchanges while forwards are traded between individuals and banks Futures have an initial margin that is market 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)
12
Currency futures 14 January 2013 http://markets. ft
13
Currency Futures Market
Speculators often sell currency futures when they expect the underlying currency to depreciate, and vice versa. 1. Contract to sell 500,000 pesos @ £.056/peso (£28,000) on June 17. April 4 2. Buy 500,000 pesos @ £.050/peso (£25,000) from the spot market. June 17 3. Sell the pesos to fulfill contract. Gain £3,000. International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
14
Currency Futures Market
MNCs may purchase currency futures to hedge their foreign currency payables, or sell currency futures to hedge their receivables. 1. Expect to receive 500,000 pesos. Contract to sell 500,000 pesos @ £.056/peso on June 17. April 4 2. Receive 500,000 pesos as expected. June 17 3. Sell the pesos at the locked-in rate. International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
15
Daily Resettlement: An Example
Consider a long position in the CME Euro/U.S. Dollar contract. It is written on €125,000 and quoted in $ per €. The strike price is $1.30 the maturity is 3 months. At initiation of the contract, the long posts an initial performance bond of $6,500. The maintenance performance bond is $4,000.
16
Daily Resettlement: An Example
An investor with a long position gains from increases in the price of the underlying asset. Our investor has agreed to BUY €125,000 at $1.30 per euro in three months time. With a forward contract, at the end of three months, if the euro was worth $1.24, he would lose $7,500 = ($1.24 – $1.30) × 125,000. If instead at maturity the euro was worth $1.35, the counterparty to his forward contract would pay him $6,250 = ($1.35 – $1.30) × 125,000.
17
Daily Resettlement: An Example
With futures, we have daily resettlement of gains an losses rather than one big settlement at maturity. Every trading day: if the price goes down, the long pays the short if the price goes up, the short pays the long After the daily resettlement, each party has a new contract at the new price with one-day-shorter maturity.
18
Performance Bond Money
Each day’s losses are subtracted from the investor’s account. Each day’s gains are added to the account. In this example, at initiation the long posts an initial performance bond of $6,500. The maintenance level is $4,000. If this investor loses more than $2,500 he has a decision to make: he can maintain his long position only by adding more funds—if he fails to do so, his position will be closed out with an offsetting short position.
19
Daily Resettlement: An Example
Over the first 3 days, the euro strengthens then depreciates in dollar terms: Settle Gain/Loss Account Balance $1.31 $1,250 = ($1.31 – $1.30)×125,000 $7,750 = $6,500 + $1,250 $1.30 –$1,250 $6,500 $1.27 –$3,750 $2,750 + $3,750 = $6,500 On third day suppose our investor keeps his long position open by posting an additional $3,750.
20
Daily Resettlement: An Example
Over the next 2 days, the long keeps losing money and closes out his position at the end of day five. Settle Gain/Loss Account Balance $1.31 $1,250 $7,750 $1.30 –$1,250 $6,500 $1.27 –$3,750 $2,750 + $3,750 = $6,500 $1.26 –$1,250 $5,250 = $6,500 – $1,250 $1.24 –$2,500 $2,750
21
Toting Up At the end of his adventures, our investor has three ways of computing his gains and losses: Sum of daily gains and losses – $7,500 = $1,250 – $1,250 – $3,750 – $1,250 – $2,500 Contract size times the difference between initial contract price and last settlement price. – $7,500 = ($1.24/€ – $1.30/€) × €125,000 Ending balance on account minus beginning balance on account, adjusted for deposits or withdrawals. – $7,500 = $2,750 – ($6,500 + $3,750)
22
Daily Resettlement: An Example
Gain/Loss Account Balance $1.30 –$– $6,500 $1.31 $1,250 $7,750 $1.30 –$1,250 $6,500 $1.27 –$3,750 $2,750 + $3,750 $1.26 –$1,250 $5,250 $1.24 –$2,500 $2,750 = ($1.24 – $1.30) × 125,000 Total loss = – $7,500 = $2,750 – ($6,500 + $3,750)
23
Currency swaps Swaps came to public knowledge in the early 1980s and is the newest member of the derivative product set Widely used swaps are interest rate swaps and currency swaps A currency swap involves the exchange of principal and interest in one currency for the same in another currency
24
The first swap
25
Interest rates and comparative advantage
AAACorp wants a floating interest rate BBBCorp wants a fixed interest rate Fixed Floating AAACorp 4.0% 6-month LIBOR % BBBCorp 5.2% 6-month LIBOR + 1.0%
26
Comparative advantage
AAA can borrow at better terms in both markets since it is more creditworthy 1.2 % lower in the market for fixed interest rates 0.7 % lower in the market for floating interest rates AAAs advantage is the highest in the market for fixed interest rates, hence AAA should borrow there according to comparative advantage BBBs disadvantage is lowest in the market for floating interest rates, and it borrows floating Both can gain by exploiting comparative advantage
27
A good deal for both AAA borrows fixed at 4 %, BBB floating at LIBOR + 1 %, men this is not the kind of finance the companies prefer AAA agrees to pay BBB LIBOR BBB agrees to pay AAA 3.95 % fixed Interest rate for AAA is 4 % % + LIBOR = LIBOR % (0.25 % lower than what they could have obtained on their own) Interest rate fo BBB now is LIBOR + 1 % - LIBOR % = 4.95 % (0.25 % lower)
28
Currency swap - example
DuPont, the US chemicals company, needs to raise sterling for its UK operations. At the same time ICI, the British chemicals company, needs US dollars for its North American operations. They agree to swap (that is, exchange) sterling for dollars for, say, five years. The terms are that ICI pays the five year US$ rate of 5 per cent on the US dollar amount of US$15 million and DuPont the five year sterling rate at 6 per cent on £10 million. Payments are usually made on a net basis (that is, the differences). The effective exchange rate is therefore US$1.50 = £1. At the end of the transaction, the principal amounts are reexchanged by both parties (at the contracted rate).
29
Du Pont – ICI swap
30
Cash flow from ICI`s perspective
31
Currency swaps At initiation, the present value of the swap is 0 for both parties Once the swap is active it may move away from the original valuation conditions. This means the swap will have a value to one party and be a liability to the other Assume that after 2 years, the USD interest rate fall to 4.5% and the GBP interest rate increase to 7 %. Moreover, the spot rate changes to $1.45/£. Is the swap an asset or a liability for ICI?
32
Conditions change ICI may now have incentive to walk away from the deal. Credit risk increases over time.
33
Currency Options Market
Currency options provide the right to purchase or sell currencies at specified prices. They are classified as calls or puts. Standardized options are traded on exchanges through brokers. Customized options offered by brokerage firms and commercial banks are traded in the over-the-counter market. International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
34
Foreign Currency Options
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. A European option can be exercised only on its expiration date, not before. Options are traded on exchanges as well as OTC
35
Currency Call Options A currency call option grants the holder the right to buy a specific currency at a specific price (called the exercise or strike price) within a specific period of time. A call option is in the money if exchange rate > strike price at the money if exchange rate = strike price out of the money if exchange rate < strike price. International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
36
Currency Call Options Speculators may purchase call options on a currency that they expect to appreciate. Profit = selling (spot) price – option premium – buying (strike) price At breakeven, profit = 0 They may also sell (write) call options on a currency that they expect to depreciate. Profit = option premium – buying (spot) price + selling (strike) price International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
37
Currency Put Options A currency put option grants the holder the right to sell a specific currency at a specific price (the strike price) within a specific period of time. A put option is in the money if exchange rate < strike price at the money if exchange rate = strike price out of the money if exchange rate > strike price. International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
38
Currency Put Options Speculators may purchase put options on a currency that they expect to depreciate. Profit = selling (strike) price – buying price – option premium They may also sell (write) put options on a currency that they expect to appreciate. Profit = option premium + selling price – buying (strike) price International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
39
Currency Put Options One possible speculative strategy for volatile currencies is to purchase both a put option and a call option at the same exercise price. This is called a straddle. By purchasing both options, the speculator may gain if the currency moves substantially in either direction, or if it moves in one direction followed by the other. International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
40
Efficiency of Currency Futures and Options
If foreign exchange markets are efficient, speculation in the currency futures and options markets should not consistently generate abnormally large profits. International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
41
Contingency Graphs for Currency Options
+$.02 +$.04 – $.02 – $.04 $1.46 $1.50 $1.54 Net Profit per Unit Future Spot Rate For Buyer of £ Call Option Strike price = £1.50 Premium = £ .02 +£.02 +£.04 – £.02 – £.04 £1.46 £1.50 £1.54 Net Profit per Unit Future Spot Rate For Seller of £ Call Option Strike price = £1.50 Premium = £ .02 International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
42
Contingency Graphs for Currency Options
+£.02 +£.04 – £.02 – £.04 £0.58 £0.60 £0.62 Net Profit per Unit Future Spot Rate For Buyer of $ Put Option Strike price = £1.50 Premium = £ .03 +£.02 +£.04 – £.02 – £.04 £0.58 £0.60 £0.62 Net Profit per Unit Future Spot Rate For Seller of $ Put Option Strike price = £1.50 Premium = £ .03 International Financial Management, 2nd edition Jeff Madura and Roland Fox ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA
43
Example – page 164 Jim is a speculator who buys a € call option from Linda with a strike price of £0.700 and a December settlement date. The current spot rate is about £0.682 and Jim pays a premium of £.005 per unit for the call option. Just before expiration, the spot rate reaches £0.724 What is the profit? One contract equals €
44
Profit and loss
45
Basic Option Pricing Relationships at Expiry
At expiry, an American call option is worth the same as a European option with the same characteristics. If the call is in-the-money, it is worth ST – X, where ST is the spot rate at time T and X the exercise rate. If the call is out-of-the-money, it is worthless. CaT = CeT = Max[ST - X, 0]
46
Basic Option Pricing Relationships at Expiry
At expiry, an American put option is worth the same as a European option with the same characteristics. If the put is in-the-money, it is worth X - ST. If the put is out-of-the-money, it is worthless. PaT = PeT = Max[X - ST, 0]
47
American Option Pricing Relationships
With an American option, you can do everything that you can do with a European option AND you can exercise prior to expiry—this option to exercise early has value, thus: CaT > CeT = Max[ST - X, 0] PaT > PeT = Max[X - ST, 0]
48
Option Pricing and Valuation
The pricing of any currency option combines six elements: Present spot rate Exercise price Time to maturity Home currency interest rate Foreign currency interest rate Volatility (standard deviation of daily spot price movements)
49
How can volatility be measured?
There are three ways of determining a value for volatility: the historical approach, the implied volatility approach and the forecast volatility method. The historical way involves calculating the volatility based on a series of historical price data The implied volatility is obtained by backing out of the pricing formula. The other variables can be observed – the only unknown is the volatility – so it can be implied from the values of the other variables. Forecast volatility is derived by means of an estimating technique, typically a time series method, that aims to predict what volatility will be over the option period.
50
Option Pricing and Valuation
The total value (premium) of an option is equal to the intrinsic value plus time value. Intrinsic value is the financial gain if the option is exercised immediately. For a call option, intrinsic value is zero when the strike price is above the market price When the spot price rises above the strike price, the intrinsic value become positive Put options behave in the opposite manner On the date of maturity, an option will have a value equal to its intrinsic value (zero time remaining means zero time value) The time value of an option exists because the price of the underlying currency, the spot rate, can potentially move further and further into the money between the present time and the option’s expiration date.
51
Options Contracts: Preliminaries
Intrinsic Value The difference between the exercise price of the option and the spot price of the underlying asset. Time Value The difference between the option premium and the intrinsic value of the option. Option Premium Intrinsic Value Time Value + =
52
Market Value, Time Value and Intrinsic Value for an American Call
Profit The red line shows the payoff at maturity, not profit, of a call option. Note that even an out-of-the-money option has value—time value. Long 1 call Market Value Intrinsic value ST Time value Out-of-the-money In-the-money loss X
53
Currency Option Pricing Sensitivity
If currency options are to be used effectively, either for the purposes of speculation or risk management, the individual trader needs to know how option values – premiums – react to their various components. We only need to know the signs – calculating the values (option greeks) is not covered in this course
54
Option Value Determinants
55
Option pricing The Black-Scholes option-pricing model applied to currencies often goes by the name of the Garman -Kohlhagen model as these authors were the first to publish a closed form model This model alleviates the restrictive assumption used in the Black Scholes model that borrowing and lending is performed at the same risk free rate. In the foreign exchange market there is no reason that the risk free rate should be identical in each country The risk free foreign interest rate in this case can be thought of as a continuous dividend yield being paid on the foreign currency
56
Garman - Kohlhagen Model assumptions include:
the option can only be exercised on the expiry date (European style); there are no taxes, margins or transaction costs; the risk free interest rates (domestic and foreign) are constant; the price volatility of the underlying instrument is constant; and the price movements of the underlying instrument follow a lognormal distribution.
57
Garman - Kohlhagen
58
Garman - Kohlhagen Suppose we have Spot exchange rate S = $1,49/€
Exercise rate X = $1,45/€ Standard deviation σ = 20 % Dollar interest rate r = 5 % Euro denominated interest rate r* = 3,7 % Time to expiration: 365 days (T = 1)
59
Garman - Kohlhagen
60
Currency option combinations
For various reasons, hedgers or speculators may own combinations of options Two of the most popular combinations are: Straddles (long stradde involves buying both call and put, and short straddle involves selling both call and put), exercise prices are identical in both cases Strangles are almost identical to straddles, but exercise prices are different
61
Long straddle When do you make money? What is the most you can lose?
62
Short straddle When do you make money? What is the most you can lose?
63
Long currency strangle
Call option premium on $ = £ 0.015 Put option premium on $ = £ 0.025 Call option strike price = £ 0.625/$ Put option strike price = £ 0,575/$ One option contract = A$ What is the profit or loss?
64
Long currency strangle
65
Currency spreads A spread involves buying and writing options for the same underlying currency Bull spread involves buying a call and at the same time selling a call with a higher exercise price. There will be a gain if the underlying currency appreciates somewhat A bull spread can also be constructed using puts A bear spread takes the opposite position, and there will be a gain if the underlying currency depreciates somewhat
66
Currency bull spread Two call options on A$ are available. One has a strike of £0,41 and a premium of £0,01. The next has a strike of £0,42 and premium of £0,005. One contract is A$ What is the profit or loss if the A$ is either £0,40 or £0,44 at expiry, and you have bought the 0,41 call and sold (written) the 0,42 call?
67
Currency bull spread
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.