Chapter 3: Specialist asset classes (1) Flashcards
Money market investments (6)
- Treasury bills
- Commercial paper
- Repos
- Government agency securities
- Bank time deposits
- Bankers’ acceptance and eligible bills
Treasury bills: (2)
- these are short-term investments, issued by the national government.
- they offer the lowest default risk amongst money market instruments
Commercial paper: (2)
- consists of unsecured notes issued directly by companies.
- the rate of interest on commercial paper will generally be slightly higher than that on an equivalent Treasury bill, the size of margin depending on the company’s credit rating.
Repos (Investment)
a repo (or repurchase agreement) is a form of secured lending whereby an investor buys treasury bills from a dealer who, in turn, agrees to buy them back again at a later date at a specified (higher) price.
Government agency securities
bills issued by a near government sector of the market.
Bank time deposits
bank deposits with a specified term.
If the investor wants to access their investment before the maturity date he may be allowed to do so, but a penalty will be imposed, e.g. the interest rate might be reduced.
Bankers’ acceptances and eligible bills
a form of tradable invoice that has been accepted by a bank.
Options for companies looking to borrow in the money markets. (6)
- issuing commercial paper
- issuing eligible bills
- arranging a term loan from a bank
- arranging a line of credit with the bank (evergreen or revolving)
- arranging a bridging loan from a bank
- arranging international bank loans
The excess yield on corporate bonds over government bonds is made up of: (4)
- compensation for expect defaults
- Investors may expect future defaults to exceed historical levels
- a credit risk premium
- a liquidity risk premium
Credit default swap
A credit default swap provides a payment if a particular credit event occurs, e.g. the issuer of a bond defaults
Credit spread option
A credit spread option is an option on the spread between the yields earned on two assets, which provides a payoff if the spread exceeds some level (the strike spread).
Swap
A swap is an agreement between two parties to exchange cashflows in the future.
Describe how an interest rate swap can be valued
An interest rate swap can be valued as a long position in one bond compared to a short position in another bond, or as a portfolio of forward rate agreements
Currency swap
A currency swap involves exchanging principal and interest payments in one currency for principal and interest payments in another currency.
Other types of swaps (12)
- amortising swaps
- step-up swaps
- deferred swaps or forward swaps
- constant maturity swaps
- RPI swaps and LPI sawps
- cross-currency swaps or currency coupon swaps
- extendable swaps
- puttable swaps
- equity swaps
- commodity swaps
- asset swaps
- volatility and variance swaps