Chapter 6: Derivatives Flashcards
What are Futures contracts?
A set price at which a stated amount of a commodity would be delivered between counterparties at a pre-specified future date.
What is a Commodity?
A raw material or agricultural product (e.g. sugar, wheat, oil, copper) that can be bought and sold. Derivatives of commodities are traded on exchanges (e.g. oil futures on ICE futures).
Which 4 forms can derivatives take?
- Forwards
- Futures
- Options
- Swaps
What is a Derivative?
A financial instrument whose price is based on the price of another asset (known as an underlying asset).
What could ‘the underlying’ be?
Could be a financial asset (e.g. bonds, shares, stock market indices and interest rates) or commodity (e.g. oil, silver, wheat).
What are Derivatives used for?
- Hedging
- Anticipating future cash flows
- Asset allocation change
- Arbitrage
What is Hedging?
Techniques employed by a portfolio manager to reduce impact of adverse price movements on a portfolio’s value; this could be achieved by selling a sufficient number of futures contracts or buying put options.
What is Anticipating future cash flows?
(Closely linked to the idea of hedging) if a portfolio manager expects to receive a large inflow of cash to be invested in a particular asset, then futures can be used to fix the price at which it will be bought and offset the risk that prices will have risen by the time the cash flow is received.
What is Asset allocation changes?
Changes to the asset allocation of a fund, whether to take advantage of anticipated short-term directional market movements or to implement a change in strategy, can be made more swiftly and less expensively using derivatives such as futures than by actually buying and selling securities within the underlying portfolio.
What is Arbitrage?
Process of deriving a risk-free profit from simultaneously buying and selling the same asset in two different markets, when a price difference between the two exists. If the price of a derivative and its underlying asset are mismatched, then the portfolio manager may be able to profit from this price anomaly.
What are the legally binding obligation between two parties in a futures contract?
Future is an agreement between the buyer and seller:
* Buyer agrees to pay prespecified amount for delivery of a particular prespecified quantity of an asset at a prespecified future date.
* Seller agrees to deliver the asset at a future date, in exchange for the prespecified amount of money.
What are the two distinct features of a futures contract?
- Exchange traded - on derivatives exchanges such as ICE Europe (London) or Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) (US).
- Dealt on standardised terms - exchange specifies the quality of the underlying asset, the quantity underlying each contract, the future date and delivery location - only the process is open to negotiation.
What does Long mean?
Position taken by the buyer of the future. The contract is committed to buying the underlying asset at the pre-agreed price on the specified future date.
What does Short mean?
Position taken by the seller of the future. Seller is committed to delivering the underlying asset in exchange for the pre-agreed price on the specified future date.
What does Open mean?
The initial trade. A market participant opens a trade when it first enters into a future. It could be buying a future (opening a long position), or selling a future (opening a short position).
What does Close mean?
Physical assets underlying most futures that are opened don’t end up being delivered:
they’re closed out instead. e.g. an opening buyer will almost invariably avoid delivery by making a closing sale before the delivery date. If the buyer doesn’t close out, they will pay the agreed sum and receive the underlying asset. This might be something the buyer is keen to avoid, e.g. because the buyer is actually a financial institution simply speculating the price of the underlying asset using futures.
What does Covered mean?
When the seller of the future has the underlying asset that will be needed if physical delivery takes place.
What does Naked mean?
When the seller of the future does not have the asset that will be needed if physical delivery of the underlying commodity is required (risk could be unlimited).
What is an Option?
Gives buyer the right (not obligation) to buy or sell a specified quantity if an underlying asset at a pre-agreed exercise price, on or before prespecified future date or between two specified dates. The seller, in exchange for the payment of a premium, grants the option to a buyer.
What’s a key difference between a future and an option?
Option gives the right to buy or sell, whereas future is legally binding obligation between counterparties.
Where can options be traded?
- Exchanges - here will be in standardised sizes and terms.
- OTC - not standardised terms, thus contracts spec by the parties is bespoke.
What are the two main classes of options?
- Call option - when the buyer has right to buy asset at the exercise price, if they choose to. Seller is obliged to deliver if the buyer exercises the option.
- Put option - when buyer has the right to sell underlying asset at the exercise price. The seller of the put is obliged to take delivery and pay the exercise price, if the buyer exercises the option.
What is a Holder?
Buyers of options are owners of options.
For exchange-traded contracts, who do buyers and sellers settle the contract with?
With a clearing house that’s part of an exchange, rather than each other.
Why are contracts settled with a clearing house?
The exchange needs to be able to settle bargains if holders choose to exercise their rights to buy or sell. Since the exchange doesn’t want to be a buyer or seller of the underlying asset, it matches these transactions with deals placed by option writers who have agreed to deliver or receive the matching underlying asset, if called upon to do so.
Who’s the premium paid by?
Premium is money paid by buyer/holder to the exchange (and then by the exchange to the seller/writer) at the beginning of the option contract ; it’s not refundable.
What’s an Interest Rate swap?
Agreement to exchange one set of cash flows for another.