Hedging With Financial Derivatives
Hedging With Financial Derivatives
Hedging with
Financial
Derivatives
Chapter Preview
We examine how markets for derivatives work
and how the products are used by financial
managers to reduce risk. Topics include:
Hedging
Forward Markets
Financial Futures Markets
Stock Index Futures
Predicting the Fed Funds Rate
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Hedging
Hedging involves engaging in a financial
transaction to offset an existing position to
reduces or eliminate risk.
Definitions
long position: an asset which is purchased
or owned
short position: an asset which must be delivered at a
future date, or an asset which is borrowed and sold,
but must be replaced in the future
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Forward Markets
Forward contracts are agreements by two
parties to engage in a financial transaction at a
future point in time.
The contract 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
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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 2027
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.
Copyright 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
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Forward Markets
Long Position
Agree to accept delivery of securities at future date
subject to terms of forward contract.
Hedges by locking in future interest rate of funds
coming in future, avoiding rate decreases.
Short Position
Agree to deliver securities at future date subject to
terms of forward contract
Hedges by reducing price risk from increases in
interest rates if holding bonds.
Copyright 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
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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 riskrequires information to screen
good from bad risk
3. Adverse selection and moral hazard problems.
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http://www.cbot.com
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Success of FFC
1. FFC are more liquid: standardized contracts that can be traded
2. Delivery of range of securities reduces the chance of corner.
3. Mark to market daily: avoids default risk
4. Don't have to deliver: cash netting of positions
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http://www.cbot.com
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One U.S. Treasury bond having a face value at maturity of $100,000 or multiple thereof.
Deliverable Grades
U.S. Treasury bonds that, if callable, are not callable for at least 15 years from the first day of the
delivery month or, if not callable, have a maturity of at least 15 years from the first day
of the delivery month. The invoice price based on 6% standard.
Price Quote
Points ($1,000) and thirty-seconds of a point; for example, 80-16 equals 80 16/32
Contract Months
Seventh business day preceding the last business day of the delivery month. Trading in expiring
contracts closes at noon, Chicago time, on the last trading day.
Trading Hours
Ticker Symbols
None
Margin Information
Find information on margins requirements for the 30 Year U.S. Treasury Bond
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Settlement
Price
Nov. 1
$90
Nov. 2
$96.0
Nov. 3
Deposit or
Withdrawl
Margin
Balance
$7,763
$7,763
6.0
$6,000
$13,763
$86.00
-10.0
-$10,000
+1,987
$3,763
$5,750
Nov. 29
$88.00
+2
$2,000
$7,750
Nov. 29
$88.00
Close with
short
-7,750
Mark to Market
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Contractfordeliveryof$100,000FaceValueofTreasurybondfromWSJ
11/30/00.Contractspecifies#ofyearstomaturityleftonthebond.
Openopeningprice,101*$1000+(25/32)*$1000=$101,781.25
High/Low,Settle=finalpriceofday.
OpenInterest=151,728*$100,000=$152billion
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esoteric futures
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$5 million.
Price Quote
100 minus the average daily effective fed funds rate for the delivery month.
Settlement
The contract is cash settled against the average daily effective
fed funds rate for the delivery month.
Contract Months
Ticker Symbols
Open Outcry: FF
None
Note that during an expiration month, the price for the current contract
reflects the weighted average of two key components:
1. The realized overnight effective fed funds rates experienced to date
2. The expected effective ffs rates to the end of the month.
Copyright 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
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Current
Fed Funds
Futures Rate
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If the Fed changes the target rate after markets close on Dec. 11-next FOMC meeting, then the first 11 days of Dec will have a rate
of, ffr = fft = 4.5%.
The last 20 days will have a rate of 4.0% with probability p, and a
rate of 4.5% (no change) with probability (1 - p).
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Where
ffre
= newfft x p + oldfft x(1- p)
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Prob
is aprox
=
=
=
http://stlouisfed.org/education/8fc/FC-econdata.html
Copyright 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
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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.
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