Derivatives Flashcards
Derivative Markets: Derivatives
- A derivative security derives its value from the price of another (underlying) asset or an interest rate
- Futures and some options are traded on organized exhanges
- Forward contracts, swaps, and some options are custom instruments created by dealers
Derivative Markets: Forward Commitments and Contingent Claims

Derivative Markets: Forward Contracts
- Customized: No active secondary market
- Lond obligated to buy; short obligated to sell
- Specified asset (currency, stock, index, bond)
- Specified date in the future
- Long gains if asset price is above forward price
- Short gains if asset price is below forward price
Derivative Markets: Futures Contracts
- Like forward constract but standardized
- Exchange-traded, active secondary market
- Require margin deposit
- No defauly (counterparty) risk
Derivative Markets: Swaps
- Equivalent to a series of forward constracts
- Simple interest rate swap
- One party pays a fized rate of interest
- One party pays a variable (floating) rate of interest
- Payments can be based on interest rates or stock/portfolio/index returns
- Can involve 2 different currencies
Derivative Markets: Purpose and Criticism of Derivative
- Derivatives are criticized as being risky and likened to gambling
- Benefits of derivatives markets
- Provide price information
- Lower transaction costs
- Allow the transfer of risk
Derivative Markets: Role of Arbitrage
- Arbitrage is possible when two securities or portfolio have identical future payoffs but different marker prices
- Trading by arbitrageurs will continue until they affect supply and demand enough to bring asset price to efficient (no-arbitrage) levels
- Arbitrage relations are used to value derivatives
Forwards: Forward Contract Positions
Long position (will buy)
The party to the forward constract that agreees to buy the underlying or physical asset
Short position (will sell)
The party to the forward contract that agrees to sell/deliver the asset
Neither party pays at contract initiation
Forwards: Forward Contract Settlement
- Delivery: Short delivers underlying to long for payment of the forward price
- Cash settlement: Negative side of contract pays the positive side
Forwards: Early Termination of Forward
- One party pays the other cash (buys their way out)
- Enter into an offsetting contract
- With a different coutnerparty (Default risk still exists)
- With same (origianl) counterparty (no default risk)
Forwards: Dealers and End Users of Forwards
- A dealer creates a derivative contract and will quote a price to take a long or short position
- An end user is typically a corporation or institution seeking to transfer an existing risk
Forwards: Equity Forward Contracts

Forwards: Equity Index Forward - Problem


Forwards: Forward on Zero-Coupon Bonds - Example

Forwards: LIBOR-Based Loan Example

Forwards: FRA
Forward Rate Agreement (FRA)
Exchange fixed-rate for floating-rate payment
- Notional amount
- Fixed rate = forward (contract) rate
- Floating rate (LIBOR) is underlying rate
- Long gains when LIBOR > contract rate
Long position can be viewed as the obligation to take a (hypothetical) loan at the contract rate(i.e. borrow at the fized rate); gains when reference rate increases
Short position can be views as the obligation to make a (hypothetical) loan at the contract rate (i.e. lend at the contract rate; gains when reference rate decreases
Forwards: FRA - Example

Forwards: FRA Settlement Payment to Long

Forwards: Currency Forward Contracts
- Currency forward contracts are committment to buy or sell a certain amount of a foreign currency for a fixed amount of another currency in the future
- As with other forwards, cash settlements is the amount necessary to compensate the party who would be disadvantaged by the actual change in market rate as of the settlement date
Futures: Chacteristics

Futures: Forwards vs. Futures

Futures: Margin Terms

Futures: Trade - Example

Futures: Price Limits

Futures: Marking-to-Market

Futures: Margin Calculation Example

Futures: Methods to Terminate a Futures Position at Expiration

Futures: Closing a Futures Trade by Offset

Futures: Contract Delivery Options

Futures: Eurodollar Futures

Futures: Treasury Bond Futures

Futures: Stock Index Futures

Futures: Currency Futures

Options: Basics

Options: Terminology

Options: Moneyness

Options: Call Option - Example

Options: Put Option - Example

Options: Exchange-Traded vs. OTC Options

Options: Underlying Assets

Options: Interest Rate Options

Options: Two Interest Rate Option = One FRA - Graph

Options: Interest Rate Caps and Floors

Options: Cap and Floor Payoffs

Options: Interest Rate Option - Problem

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Options: Value

Options: Notation

Options: Minimum and Maximum Values

Options: Differ by Exercise Price

Options: Deriving Put-Call Parity (European Options)

Options: Parity Conditions and Synthetic Options

Options: Put-Call Parity - Problem


Options: Time, Volatility, RFR, and Stock Price

Options: Cash Flows on the Underlying Asset

Swaps: Overview

Swaps: Characteristics

Swaps: Terminology

Swaps: Termination

Swaps: Currency Swaps - Example

Swaps: Plain Vanilla Interest Rate Swap

Swaps: Plain Vanilla Interest Rate Swap - Formula

Swaps: Fixed-for-Floating Swap Example

Swaps: Equity Swaps

Swaps: Equity Swaps - Example


Swaps: Equity Swaps - Problem


Risk Management: Call Intrinsic Value/Payoff at Expiration

Risk Management: Profit and Loss: Call Options

Risk Management: Put Intrinsic Value/Payoff at Expiration

Risk Management: Profit and Loss: Put Options

Risk Management: Call Profit and Loss - Problem


Risk Management: Covered Call Strategy

Risk Management: Covered Call - Problem


Risk Management: Payoffs and Profits - Covered Call

Risk Management: Protective Put Strategy (Position)

Risk Management: Protective Put - Example

Risk Management: Profit and Payoff - Protective Put
