Interest Rate Options
Interest Rate Options
Interest Rate Options
In general, when yield-based options are purchased, a call buyer and a put
buyer have opposite expectations about interest rate movements. A call buyer
anticipates interest rates will go up, increasing the value of the call position. A
put buyer anticipates that rates will go down, increasing the value of the put
position.
Symbols:
13-Week Treasury Bill - IRX
5-Year Treasury Note - FVX
10-Year Treasury Note - TNX
30-Year Treasury Bond - TYX
Underlying:
IRX is based on the discount rate of the most recently auctioned 13-week
U.S. Treasury Bill. The new T-bill is substituted weekly on the trading day
following its auction, usually a Monday. FVX, TNX and TYX are based on 10
times the yield-to-maturity on the most recently auctioned 5-year Treasury note,
10-year Treasury note and 30-year Treasury bond, respectively.
Premium Quotation:
Stated in decimals. One point equals $100. The minimum tick for options
trading below 3.00 is 0.05 ($5.00) and for all other series, 0.10 ($10.00).
Expiration Date:
Saturday immediately following the third Friday of the expiration month.
Expiration Months:
IRX - Three near-term months plus two additional months from the
March quarterly cycle (March, June, September and December). FVX, TNX,
TYX - Three near-term months plus three additional months from the March
quarterly cycle. LEAPS expire in December of the expiration year.
Exercise Style:
European - Interest rate options may generally be exercised only on the
last business day before the expiration date.
Margin:
Purchases of puts or calls with 9 months or less until expiration must be
paid for in full. Writers of uncovered puts or calls must deposit / maintain 100%
of the option proceeds* plus 15% of the aggregate contract value (current index
level x $100) minus the amount by which the option is out-of-the-money, if any,
subject to a minimum for calls of option proceeds* plus 10% of the aggregate
contract value and a minimum for puts of option proceeds* plus 10% of the
aggregate exercise price amount.
CUSIP Numbers:
IRX - 124918, FVX - 124951, TNX - 124952, TYX - 124953
Trading Hours:
7:20 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Central Time (Chicago time).
The following contracts are available for trading at the Chicago Board Options
Exchange:
• Options on the short-term rate (ticker symbol IRX) are based on
the annualized discount rate on the most recently auctioned 13-week
Treasury bill. The 13-week T-bill yield is the recognized benchmark of
short-term interest rates. These bills are issued by the U.S. Treasury in
auctions conducted weekly by the Federal Reserve Bank.
• Options on the 5-year rate (ticker symbol FVX) are based on the
yield-to-maturity of the most recently auctioned 5-year Treasury note.
The notes are usually auctioned every month.
• Options on the 10-year rate (ticker symbol TNX) are based on the
yield-to-maturity of the most recently auctioned 10-year Treasury note.
The notes are usually auctioned every three months following the
refunding cycle: February, May, August and November.
• Options on the 30-year rate (ticker symbol TYX) are based on the
yield-to-maturity of the most recently auctioned 30-year Treasury
bond.Treasury bonds are auctioned every six months in a February and
August refunding cycle.
IRX, FVX, TNX, and TYX values are reported throughout the trading day by
Telerate Systems Incorporated, a leading international supplier of financial
services. These values are based on current market data from the Treasury
securities markets. Options prices, on the other hand, are disseminated by
CBOE. Both these values and option prices are available through most on-line
pricing services.
Options on interest rates and listed stock and stock index options have
similar benefits and risks. They are standardized contracts traded on an
exchange regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. There are two
types of contracts: puts and calls.
Underlying values for the option contracts are 10 times the underlying
Treasury yields (rates)— 13-week T-bill yield (for IRX), 5-year T-note yield
(for FVX), 10-year T-note yield (for TNX) and 30-year T-bond yield (for
TYX). An annualized discount rate of 5.5% on the newly auctioned 13-week
Treasury bills would place the underlying value for the option on short-term
rates (IRX) at 55.00.
A yield-to-maturity of 6% on the 30-year T-bond would place the
underlying value of the yield-based option on the 30-year T-bond (TYX) at
60.00.
A main difference between Interest Rate Options and listed equity options
is that the underlying values of Interest Rate Options are based on interest rates
and not on units of specific Treasury bills, notes or bonds. Individual equity
options’ underlying securities are shares of a specific stock.
To see why prices must fall when interest rates rise, consider a Treasury
bond held by an investor with a principal or par amount of $1,000, payable at
maturity, and a coupon interest rate of 7%. This means that the bond pays $70 a
year in interest until maturity, when the principal amount of $1,000 is paid to
the holder. These terms will not change over the life of the bond. Like a stock,
this bond has a value for which it can be sold in the market. That value reflects
the rate at which the marketplace discounts this bond’s payment stream.
There are formulas or algorithms that allow investors to find bond prices
given knowledge of their yields or their yields given knowledge of their prices.
The actual calculations, however, are complex. Desired numbers can be found
using specialized calculators and bond tables. They may also be available from
your financial advisor.
Cash Settlement.
Since Interest Rate Options are cash-settled, exercise of a put or call gives
the holder the cash difference between the exercise price and the exercise-
settlement value, times the $100 multiplier. The exercise-settlement value is
based on the spot-yield, as reported by Gov Px.
78 (exercise-settlement value)
-75 (strike price)
3 x $100 multiplier = $300
Interest Rate Options in many ways are like all other traded options. They
are affected by similar factors: e.g., volatility, time to expiration, and the price
level of the under-lying instrument. Nonetheless, there are certain
considerations regarding the structure of interest rates and the very nature of the
underlying instrument itself that investors must take into account to fully
understand the behavior of interest rate options and their differences from other
traded options.
Since these options will settle at a future expiration date, investors must
form expectations about the yield on the underlying instrument.The yield that
the market expects to prevail at expiration is called the forward yield or forward
rate.
The difference between the current spot yield and the forward yield can
be significant, even for short-dated options. In general, it will depend on the
segment of the U.S. Treasury yield curve considered. In the U.S., the yield
curve has been upward-sloping (normal) during most of modern U.S. financial
history, meaning that long-term Treasuries have a higher yield than short-term.
A downward-sloping (inverted) or flat yield curve illustrates short-term
Treasuries with a higher yield than long-term.
The curve has also been steeper at the short end with a tendency to flatten
out at longer maturities. A consequence of this type of yield curve is that the
shorter the maturity of the Treasury securities, the greater the divergence
between current spot and forward yields. There is likely to be less difference
between the yield of a Treasury bond with 30 years to maturity and the yield of
a Treasury bond with 29-3/4 years to maturity than there is between the yield of
a 13-week T-Bill with 3 months to maturity and the yield of a 13-week T-Bill
with one month to maturity.
If the difference in forward rates is large enough to offset the time value
associated with the longer expiration, then the premium on the longer expiration
could be below the premium on the nearby month with the same strike price.
The same but reverse phenomenon appears in puts when the market is
projecting higher forward rates relative to current interest rates.
The time premium in the far out months may be less than the near-term
months due to the market projecting a higher forward rate in the far month than
in the nearby month. Also, if the market revises its estimate of forward rates,
option prices may move sharply when current spot rates are unchanged.
Option buying involves a known and limited risk. Like any option, the
most an option buyer can lose if interest rates move against him is the premium
paid for the option. Unlike a Treasury security, however, an option can expire
worthless. Option selling involves limited profit and unlimited risk. Like any
option, the most a seller can make is the premium received and the risk
theoretically is unlimited if interest rates move against him.
The positions are shown being held to expiration. It should also be noted
that taxes, commissions and margin requirements have not been included in the
following examples to simplify the explanations. They are important and must
be taken into account when considering an actual trade, and when calculating
actual net returns on any option transaction. These charges and requirements
may vary, and should be discussed with your investment advisor.
Risk : Interest rate moves can adversely affect the value of their
investments.
Cash settled: Interest Rate Options are settled in cash. There is no need to
own or deliver any Treasury securities upon exercise.
Contract size : Interest Rate Options use the same $100 multiplier as
options on equities and stock indexes.