derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

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DERIVATIVES MARKETS PRESENTED BY:- BABASAB PATIL

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Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

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Page 1: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

DERIVATIVES MARKETS

PRESENTED BY:- BABASAB PATIL

Page 2: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Introduction

Futures, options, and swaps are complicated instruments

However, they have found their way into the risk management options of just about every major financial institution

Derivatives—A financial instrument/contract that derives its value from some other underlying asset

Page 3: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Futures Markets

Market in standardized contracts for future delivery of various goods.

Arose in the mid-1800s in Chicago and institutionalized an ancient form of contracting called forward contracting.

1842, Chicago Board of Trade 1871, Fire destroyed all records.

Page 4: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Futures Contracts vs. Forward Contracts

Futures Contract trade in an organized exchange. standardized contract terms. contract guaranteed by exchange (clearing

corporation) Forward Contract

transaction in which two parties agree in advance on the terms of a trade to be executed later.

Non standardized contract terms. More flexibility. Difficult to find a trading partner.

Page 5: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

An Overview of Financial Futures Future Contract is a contractual

agreement that calls for delivery of a specific underlying commodity or security at some future date at a currently agreed-upon price

There are contracts on interest-bearing securities (Treasury bonds, notes, etc), on stock indices (Standard & Poors’ and Japan’s Nikkei index), and on foreign currencies

Page 6: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

An Overview of Financial Futures Trading in these contracts is conducted

on the various commodity exchanges Financial futures were introduced about

30 years ago and volume now exceeds the more traditional agricultural commodities

Page 7: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Characteristics of Financial Futures Standardized agreement to buy/sell a particular

asset or commodity at a future date and a current agreed-upon price

Designed to promote liquidity—the ability to buy and sell quickly with low transactions costs

Promotes large trading volume which narrows the bid-asked spreads

Allows many individuals to trade the identical commodity

Page 8: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Characteristics of Financial Futures Terms specify the amount and type of

asset as well as the location and delivery period Financial futures—underlying asset is

either a specific security or cash value of a group of securities

Stock index futures—contract calls for the delivery of the cash value of a particular stock index

Page 9: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Characteristics of Financial Futures Precise terms of each contract are

established by the exchange that sponsors trading in the contracts

Seller of the contract has the obligation to deliver the securities at a specified time

In futures markets, the buyer of the contract is called long and the seller is called short

Page 10: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Price of the Contract

The price is determined by bidding and offering that occurs at the location (pit) of the exchange sponsoring the auction

The auction process insures that all orders are exposed to highest bid and lowest offer, guaranteeing execution at the best possible price

Page 11: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Market Structure

Open outcry Traders call out offers to buy or sell. Gives appearance of chaos. Gives all traders in the pit the opportunity

to accept the offer. Seat on the exchange Floor Traders

Page 12: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Clearing Corporation

The clearing corporation associated with the exchange acts as a middleman in the transaction Reduce the credit risk exposure associated with future

deliveries Longs and shorts do not have to worry that the other

party will not perform their contractual obligations Requires the short and long to place a deposit (Margin)

which is a performance bond for both the seller and buyer

Requires that gains and losses be settled each day in the mark-to-market operation

Page 13: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Settlement by Offset

To insure the obligations are met at the delivery date, most trades in futures market choose settlement by offset rather than delivery Both parties make offsetting sales/purchases to

cover the contract Permits hedgers, speculators, and arbitrageurs

to make legitimate use of the futures market without getting into technical details of making or taking delivery of assets

Page 14: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Using Financial Futures Contracts Provides the opportunity to hedge legitimate

commercial activities Allows participants to alter their risk exposure Hedgers—buy and sell futures contracts to

reduce their exposure to the risk of future price movement

Permits dealers to cover both the short and long position of a contract

Reduces risk since future prices move almost in lockstep with the price of the underlying asset

Page 15: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Hedging Vs. Speculating

“Short hedgers” offset inventory risk by selling futures while “long hedgers” offset anticipated purchases of securities by buying futures

Speculators Purposely take on risk of price movement Expect to make a profit on the risky transaction

Page 16: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Arbitrageurs

Arbitrageurs Determine the relationship between the

price in the “cash market” and the price in the futures market

During the delivery period of a futures contract, the rights and obligations of the contract force the price of the futures contract and the price of the underlying security to be identical

Page 17: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Arbitrageurs

If the arbitrageur senses the price relationship between the futures contract and the underlying asset is not correct, take actions in the market (buy or sell) to make a profit which forces the prices into proper relationship

The activities of arbitrageurs cause the prices to converge on the delivery date or be in proper alignment during periods prior to final delivery date

Page 18: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Liquidating a Position

Settlement dates Nearby contract Distant contract Cash settlement contracts Settlement by offset Open interest

number of contracts obligated for delivery. Each open transaction has a buyer and a seller,

but for calculation only one side of the contract is counted.

Page 19: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Futures Data

Wall Street Journal Chicago Board of Trade Chicago Mercantile Exchange

Page 20: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

An Overview of Options Contracts Options on individual stocks have been

traded in over-the-counter market since nineteenth century

Increased visibility in 1972 when the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) standardized terms of contracts and introduced futures-type pit trading

Page 21: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Stock Options

Prior to 1973, over-the-counter market fragmented high transaction costs no liquidity

CBOE established April 26, 1973 and begin trading options on 16 stocks creation of central market place introduction of a clearing corporation standardization secondary market

June 1, 1977, SEC allowed trading in puts

Page 22: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Options

Contractual Obligations Derive their value from some underlying

asset A specified number of shares of a particular

stock Stock Index Option—Basket of equities

represented by some overall stock index such as S&P 500

In options on future contracts, the contractual obligations call for delivery of one futures contract

Page 23: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Call Options

Buyer of a call option (long) has the right (not obligation) to buy a given quantity of the underlying asset at a predetermined price (exercise or strike) at any time prior to the expiration date

Page 24: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Call Options

Seller of the call option (short) has the obligation to deliver the asset at the agreed price

Therefore, rights and obligations of option buyers and sellers are not symmetrical

Buyer of the call option pays a price to the seller for the rights acquired (option premium)

Page 25: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Put Options

Buyer of a put option has the right (not obligation) to sell a given quantity of the underlying asset at a predetermined price before the expiration date

Seller of the option (short) has the obligation to buy the asset at the agreed price

The buyer of the put option pays a premium to the seller

Page 26: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Summary

Option buyers have rights; option sellers have obligations

Call buyers have the right to buy the underlying asset

Put buyers have the right to sell the asset

In both puts and calls the option buyer pays a premium to the option seller

Page 27: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Clearing Corporation

The exchange sponsoring the options trading established rules for trading

Standardization is designed to generate interest by potential traders, thereby contract liquidity

Clearing Corporation Guarantees the performance of contractual obligations Buyers and sellers do not have to be concerned with

creditworthiness of their trading partners Only matter up for negotiation is option

premium—price buyer pays to seller for rights

Page 28: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Using and Valuing Options

Investors who buy options (puts or calls) have rights, but no obligations

Therefore, option buyers will do whatever is in their best interest on expiration date

On expiration date, payoff on expiration of a long call position is either zero (price below exercise price) or stock price minus exercise price (intrinsic value) (price above the exercise price)

Page 29: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Using and Valuing Options

A long put position on expiration date has a value of zero if price is above the exercise price or a value equal to the exercise price minus the stock price if price is below the exercise price

Option Premium—The asymmetry payoff has the characteristic of insurance which is why the premium is charged on the transaction

Page 30: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Option Premiums - Calls

Option premiums are determined by supply and demand

Call options are worth more (higher premiums) the higher the price and the greater the volatility of the underlying asset, and the longer the time to expiration of the option

Page 31: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Option Premiums - Puts

Premiums on put options will be higher the lower the price of the underlying asset, greater volatility of asset and longer time to expiration

Options are an expensive way to hedge portfolio risks if those risks are substantial

Page 32: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Options Terminology

Option price (premium) (V) Exercise price (strike price) (E) Expiration date (maturity date) - Saturday

following the 3rd Friday of specified month. American vs. European Options

American option - may be exercised at any time up to maturity. European option - may be exercised only at the date of

maturity.

In-the-money Out-of-the money At-the-money

Page 33: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Pricing of Options

The Pricing of Call Options at Expiration:

If VS < E, the VC=0

If VS > E, the VC= VS-EThe prices of options on stocks without cash

dividends depend upon five factors: Stock price Exercise Price Time until Expiration Volatility of the Underlying Stock Risk-free Interest Rate

Page 34: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Options Investors Buy Hedges,Then Hunker Down and Wait NEW YORK -- Option trading was defensive but

noncommittal, mirroring investors' guarded ambivalence as they endured updates of the Iraq standoff, terrorism alerts and a reminder from the Federal Reserve about the precarious state of the economy.

Here is what one investor did: John Jacobs, who runs the Jacobs & Co. mutual fund in Charleston, W.V., this week bought 1,500 March 79 puts on the DJX, which has one-hundredth the value of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The puts provide downside insurance through mid-March, particularly if the Dow industrials remain below 7900. "We're being very defensive to protect the stock side, where we have been writing covered calls," he said, referring to the fund's approach of investing in blue-chip stocks and selling call options against the stocks for income.

Page 35: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

To help offset the cost of buying the puts, Mr. Jacobs sold 1,000 DJX February 77 puts Tuesday, essentially betting the blue-chip index will hold its ground in the immediate term. Mr. Jacobs said he believes blue-chip stocks are oversold and could get a small lift from Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's somewhat-encouraging comment that capital spending should improve once the Iraq situation is resolved. Also, he said, any terrorist attacks that would roil the markets are less likely to occur until after the hajj, the climax of the Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca later this week.

Mr. Jacobs plans to buy back the February 77 puts later this week, possibly at a cheaper price because the short-term puts lose their value rapidly as they approach expiration next week.

The Dow industrials fell 77 points to 7843.11. At the Chicago Board Options Exchange, the DJX March 79 puts gained 20 cents to $3.70. The DJX February 77 puts gained 20 cents to $1.40.

Page 36: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Caution remains the watchword. "In this market, you should be more concerned about protecting profits than giving up upside," says Elliot Spar, Ryan Beck & Co. option strategist.

One way investors protect profits, Mr. Spar said, is with so-called collars, where an investor sells a call to define a target price at which he is willing to sell stock while using the proceeds to buy a put for downside protection. "This puts a floor under the stock and caps the upside" at the strike price of the call, he said.

Page 37: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Options Data

Wall Street Journal Chicago Board Options Exchange

Page 38: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Swaps

The 1st major swap occurred in August of 1981. The World Bank issued $290 million in eurobonds and swapped the interest and principal on these bonds with IBM for Swiss francs and German marks.

Page 39: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

An Overview of Swaps

Two broad varieties—Interest rate swaps and currency swaps

Swaps are contractual agreement between two parties (counterparties) and customized to meet the requirements of both parties

Page 40: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Counter parties

Fixed-rate payer Party to a swap that makes fixed-rate

payments in exchange for floating-rate payments.

Floating-rate payer Party to a swap that makes floating-rate

payments in exchange for fixed-rate payments.

Page 41: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Obligations of payments every six months for the duration of the swap

Page 42: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Interest Rate Swap

The fixed-rate payer always pays the same amount while payments by the floating-rate payer varies according to the reference rate

The dollar amount of the payments is determined by multiplying the interest rate by an agreed-upon principal (notional principal amount)

Page 43: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

What determines the rates paid by both parties? Shape of the yield curve—expected rates

in the future Risk of default—possibility that

counterparties might default on scheduled interest payments

Financial institutions facilitate swaps Act as the Swap Dealer Bring the counterparties together Impose their own credit between the

counterparties

Page 44: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

The Swap Dealer

Commission compensates the dealer For matching parties in the swap. For risk of default by the counter parties.

Dealer can reduce risk by diversifying swaps across many unrelated counter parties.

Offers liquidity - willing to cancel contract in exchange for an appropriate payment.

Page 45: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Valuing a Swap

Contracts are traded in over-the-counter market It is possible for one of the counterparties to sell

their obligation to another party Changing market conditions may cause one party

to sell obligation The third party will purchase the swap if it is to

their advantage Therefore, swaps produce gains or losses which

will ultimate impact the value of the swap

Page 46: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

A Simple Interest Rate Swap

This Year

Bank One Bank Two

Two-year loans earn 9% fixed

Two-year loans earn 8% variable

Deposits cost 5% variable

Deposits cost 6% fixed

Page 47: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Next year – rates go up.

Bank One Bank Two

Loans earn 9%fixed

Loans earn 12% variable

Deposits cost 9% variable

Deposits cost 6% fixed

Page 48: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Next Year Rates Go Down

Bank One Bank Two

Loans earn 9% fixed

Loans earn 5% variable

Deposits cost 2% variable

Deposits cost 12% variable

Page 49: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Next Year Rates Go Up

They swap.

Bank One Bank Two

Loans earn 9% fixed

Loans earn 12% variable

Deposits cost 6% fixed

Deposits cost 9% variable

Page 50: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Next Year Rates Go Down

They swap.

Bank One Bank Two

Loans earn 9% fixed

Loans earn 5% variable

Deposits cost 6% fixed

Deposits cost 2% variable

Page 51: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Interest Rate Swap

Page 52: Derivatives markets ppt @ bec doms bagalkot mba

Currency Swaps

Two companies agree to exchange a specific amount of one currency for a specific amount of another at specific dates in the future.