Hull Chapter 7 - Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives Flashcards
2003 Q9.a Define an interest rate swap
An interest rate swap is a deal whereby one exchanges a series of fixed interest rate payments for a series of floating interest rate payments or vise versa.
2003 Q9.b Assume that an intermediary is involved in an interest rate swap. Briefly describe the obligations of each of the three parties involved.
One party borrows at a fixed rate, and pays the intermediary at a floating rate. The other party borrows money at a floating rate, and pays the intermediary at a fixed rate. The intermediary receives the payments then pays fixed/floating rates to the appropriate party, and keeps a commission. The only risk to the intermediary is the default risk of one party.
2003 Q9.c Cite and explain one example of how an interest rate swap could be used by a fixed income portfolio manager to control risk or improve returns.
A fixed income portfolio manager receives fixed schedule interest rate payments. This leaves the value of the portfolio vulnerable to rise interest rates. A fixed for floating swap will lower the risk of a decline in portfolio value.
Driefly describe what a swap rate means
A swap rate for a particular maturity is the average of bid and offer fixed rates that a market maker is prepared to exchange for LIBOR in a standard plain vanilla swap with that maturity.
Foreign exchange swap: Principal is exchanged at the maturity!!
Principal is exchanged at the maturity!!
Criticism of the Comparative-Advantage Argument
The spread differentials exist due to the nature of the contracts involved:
- fixed-rates are usually issued for long term (e.g. 5-years)
- floating-rates are usually for 6-month
- If the creditworthiness of the company declines, the lender has the option of increasing the spread over LIBOR that is charged. The providers of fixed-rate financing do not have the option to change the terms of to loan in this way.
- The spreads between the rates offered to AAACorp and BBBCorp are a reflection of the extent to which BBBCorp is more likely to default than AAACorp.
- BBBCorp’s spread over 6-month is likely to rise than fall
Two types of varied interest rate swaps
a. A constant maturity swap (CMS swap) is an agreement to exchange a LIBOR rate for a swap rate.
An example: exchange 6-month LIBOR applied to a certain principal for the 10-year swap rate applied to the same principal every 6 months for the next 5 years
b. A constant maturity Treasury swap (CMT swap): exchange a LIBOR rate for a particular Treasury rate (e.g., the 10-year Treasury rate).