Neftci Flashcards
Derivative securities are
financial contracts that ‘derive’ their value from cash market instruments such as stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities.
Derivative security (Ingersoll, 1987).
A financial con- tract is a derivative security, or a contingent claim, if its value at expiration date T is deter- mined exactly by the market price of the under- lying cash instrument at time T.
Types of derivative securities
- Futures and forwards.
- Options.
- Swaps.
Main groups of underlying assets
Stocks
- claims to “real” returns generated in the production sector for goods and services.
Currencies
- Liabilities of governments or, sometimes, banks.
- They are not direct claims on real assets.
Interest rates:
- Are not assets.
- A notional asset needs to be devised so that one can take a position on the direction of future interest rates.
- Futures on Eurodollars, Derivatives on bonds, notes, and T-bills.
Indexes
- These are not “assets” themselves.
- But derivative contracts can be written on notional amounts and a position taken with respect to the direction of the underlying index.
Commodities:
- Soft commodities: cocoa, coffee, and sugar.
- Grains and oilseeds: barley, corn, cotton, oats, palm oil, potato, soybean, winter wheat, spring wheat, and others.
- Metals: copper, nickel, tin, and others.
- Precious metals: gold, platinum, and silver.
- Livestock: cattle, hogs, pork bellies.
- Energy: crude oil, fuel oil, and others.
Cash and carry markets
One can therefore easily build an alternative to holding a forward or futures contract on these commodities.
- One can borrow at risk-free rates (by collateralizing the underlying physical asset),
- buy and store the product, and
- insure it until the expiration date of any derivative contract.
- Gold, silver, currencies, and T-bonds
Pure cash-and-carry markets
- Information about future demand and supplies of the underlying instrument should not influence the “spread” between cash and futures (forward) prices.
- This spread will depend mostly on the level of risk-free interest rates, storage, and insurance costs.
- Any relevant information concerning future supplies and demands of the underlying instrument is expected to make the cash price and the future price change by the same amount.
Price discovery markets
- It is physically impossible to buy the underlying instrument for cash and store it until some future expiration date.
- Goods either are too perishable to be stored or may not have a cash market at the time the derivative is trading.
- Contract on spring wheat. When the futures contract for this commodity is traded in the exchange, the corresponding cash market may not yet exist.
- Cash-and-carry market strategy is not applicable
- Any information about the future supply and demand of the underlying commodity cannot influence the corresponding cash price. Such information can be discovered in the futures market.
Expiration date
The relationship between F(t), the price of the derivative, and S(t), the value of the underlying is known exactly (or deterministically), only at the expiration date T.
Forward
A forward contract is an obligation to buy (sell) an underlying asset at a specified forward price on a known date.
Forwards vs Futures
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Futures are traded in formalized exchanges.
- The exchange designs a standard contract and sets some specific expiration dates.
- Futures exchanges are cleared through exchange clearing houses, and there is an intrincate mechanism designed to reduce the default risk.
- Marked to market. Every day the contract is settled and simultaneously a new contract is written. Any profit or loss during the day is recorded accord- ingly in the account of the contract holder.
- Forwards are custom-made and are traded over-the-counter.
Repo
Repurchase agreement
- is a transaction in which one party sells securities to another party in return for cash
- with an agreement to repurchase equivalent securities at an agreed price and on an agreed future date.
- The difference between the repurchase price and the original sale price is effectively interest which is referred to as the repo rate.
- The buyer of the security acts as a lender and the seller acts as a borrower.
- The security is used as collateral for a secured cash loan at a fixed rate of interest.
- A repo can be seen as a spot sale combined with a forward contract.
Types of repos
- Overnight. A one-day maturity transaction.
- Term. With a specified end date.
- Open repo. Has no end date.
Repo transactions occur in three forms…
- Specified delivery
- Tri-party
- Hold-in-custody. (wherein the selling party holds the security during the term of the repo). Hold-in- custody is used primarily when there is a risk that the seller will become insolvent prior to maturity of the repo and the buyer will be unable to recover the securities that were posted as collateral to secure the transaction.
Repo vs Reverse Repo
- Repo
- For the party selling the security and agreeing to repurchase it in the future.
- Reverse Repo
- For the party on the other end of the transaction, buying the security and agreeing to sell in the future.
Reverse Repo
Repos are usually used to raise short-term capital. They are classified as a money market instrument.