Title: Principles of Futures Contract Pricing
1Principles of Futures Contract Pricing
- The expectations hypothesis
- Normal backwardation
- A full carrying charge market
- Reconciling the three theories
2The Expectations Hypothesis
- The expectations hypothesis states that the
futures price for a commodity is what the
marketplace expects the cash price to be when the
delivery month arrives - Price discovery is an important function
performed by futures - There is considerable evidence that the
expectations hypothesis is a good predictor
3Normal Backwardation
- Basis is the difference between the future price
of a commodity and the current cash price - Normally, the futures price exceeds the cash
price (contango market) - The futures price may be less than the cash price
(backwardation or inverted market)
4Normal Backwardation (contd)
- John Maynard Keynes
- Locking in a future price that is acceptable
eliminates price risk for the hedger - The speculator must be rewarded for taking the
risk that the hedger was unwilling to bear - Thus, at delivery, the cash price will likely be
somewhat higher than the price predicated by the
futures market
5A Full Carrying Charge Market
- A full carrying charge market occurs when the
futures price reflects the cost of storing and
financing the commodity until the delivery month - The futures price is equal to the current spot
price plus the carrying charge
6A Full Carrying Charge Market (contd)
- Arbitrage exists if someone can buy a commodity,
store it at a known cost, and get someone to
promise to buy it later at a price that exceeds
the cost of storage - In a full carrying charge market, the basis
cannot weaken because that would produce an
arbitrage situation
7Reconciling the Three Theories
- The expectations hypothesis says that a futures
price is simply the expected cash price at the
delivery date of the futures contract - People know about storage costs and other costs
of carry (insurance, interest, etc.) and we would
not expect these costs to surprise the market - Because the hedger is really obtaining price
insurance with futures, it is logical that there
be some cost to the insurance
8Spreading with Futures
- Intercommodity spreads
- Intracommodity spreads
- Why spread in the first place?
9Intercommodity Spreads
- An intercommodity spread is a long and short
position in two related commodities - E.g., a speculator might feel that the price of
corn is too low relative to the price of live
cattle - Risky because there is no assurance that your
hunch will be correct - With an intermarket spread, a speculator takes
opposite positions in two different markets - E.g., trades on both the Chicago Board of Trade
and on the Kansas City Board of Trade
10Intracommodity Spreads
- An intracommodity spread (intermonth spread)
involves taking different positions in different
delivery months, but in the same commodity - E.g., a speculator bullish on what might buy
September and sell December
11Why Spread in the First Place?
- Most intracommodity spreads are basis plays
- Intercommodity spreads are closer to two separate
speculative positions than to a spread in the
stock option sense - Intermarket spreads are really arbitrage plays
based on discrepancies in transportation costs or
other administrative costs
12Pricing of Stock Index Futures
- Elements affecting the price of a futures
contract - Determining the fair value of a futures contract
- Synthetic index portfolios
13Elements Affecting the Price of A Futures Contract
- The SP 500 futures value depends on four
elements - The level of the spot index
- The dividend yield on the 500 stock in the index
- The current level of interest rates
- The time until final contract cash settlement
14Elements Affecting the Price of A Futures
Contract (contd)
SPX Dividend Yield
SPX Index
SP 500 Stock Index Futures
Time until Settlement
T-bill Rate
15Elements Affecting the Price of A Futures
Contract (contd)
- Stocks pay dividends, while futures do not pay
dividends - Shows up as a price differential in the futures
price/underlying asset relationship - Stocks do not accrue interest
- Posting margin for futures results in interest
- Shows up as a price differential in the futures
price/underlying asset relationship
16Determining the Fair Value of A Futures Contract
- The futures price should equal the index plus a
differential based on the short-term interest
rate minus the dividend yield
17Determining the Fair Value of A Futures Contract
(contd)
- Calculating the Fair Value of A Futures Contract
Example - Assume the following information for an SP 500
futures contract - Current level of the cash index (S) 1,484.43
- T-bill yield 6.07
- SP 500 dividend yield (D) 1.10
- Days until December settlement (T) 121 0.33
years
18Determining the Fair Value of A Futures Contract
(contd)
- Calculating the Fair Value of A Futures Contract
Example - The fair value of the SP 500 futures contract
is
19Synthetic Index Portfolios
- Large institutional investors can replicate a
well-diversified portfolio of common stock by
holding - A long position in the stock index futures
contract and - Satisfying the margin requirement with T-bills
- The resulting portfolio is a synthetic index
portfolio - The futures approach has the following advantages
over the purchase of individual stocks - Transaction costs will be much lower on the
futures contracts - The portfolio will be much easier to follow and
manage - Basic Convergence As time passes, the difference
between the cash index and the futures price will
narrow - At the end of the futures contract, the futures
price will equal the index (basic convergence)
20Interest Rate Futures
- Exist across the yield curve and on many
different types of interest rates - T-bond contracts
- Eurodollar (ED) futures contracts
- 30-day Federal funds contracts
- Other Treasury contracts
21Characteristics of U.S. Treasury Bills
- Sell at a discount from par using a 360-day year
and twelve 30-day months - 91-day (13-week) and 182-day (26-week) T-bills
are sold at a weekly auction
22Characteristics of U.S. Treasury Bills (contd)
- Treasury Bill Auction Results
-
23Characteristics of U.S. Treasury Bills (contd)
- The Discount Rate is the discount yield,
calculated as
24Characteristics of U.S. Treasury Bills (contd)
- Discount Yield Computation Example
- For the first T-bill in the table on slide 6,
the discount yield is
25Characteristics of U.S. Treasury Bills (contd)
- The discount yield relates the income to the par
value rather than to the price paid and uses a
360-day year rather than a 365-day year - Calculate the Investment Rate (bond
equivalent yield)
26Characteristics of U.S. Treasury Bills (contd)
- Bond Equivalent Yield Computation Example
- For the first T-bill in the table on slide 6,
the bond equivalent yield is
27The Treasury Bill Futures Contract
- Treasury bill futures contracts call for the
delivery of 1 million par value of 91-day
T-bills on the delivery date of the futures
contract - On the day the Treasury bills are delivered, they
mature in 91 days
28The Treasury Bill Futures Contract (contd)
- Futures position 91-day T-bill T-bill
- established delivered matures
- 91 days
- Time
29The Treasury Bill Futures Contract (contd)
- T-Bill Futures Quotations
- September 15, 2000
-
-
30Characteristics of Eurodollars
- Applies to any U.S. dollar deposited in a
commercial bank outside the jurisdiction of the
U.S. Federal Reserve Board - Banks may prefer eurodollar deposits to domestic
deposits because - They are not subject to reserve requirement
restrictions - Every ED received by a bank can be reinvested
somewhere else
31The Eurodollar Futures Contract
- The underlying asset with a eurodollar futures
contract is a three-month, 1 million face value
instrument - A non-transferable time deposit rather than a
security - The ED futures contract is cash settled with no
actual delivery
32The Eurodollar Futures Contract (contd)
- Treasury Bill vs Eurodollar Futures
-
33The Eurodollar Futures Contract (contd)
- The quoted yield with eurodollars is an add-on
yield - For a given discount, the add-on yield will
exceed the corresponding discount yield
34The Eurodollar Futures Contract (contd)
- Add-On Yield Computation Example
- An add-on yield of 1.24 corresponds to a
discount of 3,124.66
35The Eurodollar Futures Contract (contd)
- Add-On Yield Computation Example (contd)
- If a 1 million Treasury bill sold for a
discount of 3,124.66 we would determine a
discount yield of 1.236
36Speculating With Eurodollar Futures
- The price of a fixed income security moves
inversely with market interest rates - Industry practice is to compute futures price
changes by using 90 days until expiration
37Speculating With Eurodollar Futures (contd)
- Speculation Example
- Assume a speculator purchased a MAR 05 ED
futures contract at a price of 97.26. The ED
futures contract has a face value of 1 million.
Suppose the discount yield at the time of
purchase was 2.74. In the middle of March 2005,
interest rates have risen to 7.00. - What is the speculators dollar gain or loss?
38Speculating With Eurodollar Futures (contd)
- Speculation Example (contd)
- The initial price is
39Speculating With Eurodollar Futures (contd)
- Speculation Example (contd)
- The price with the new interest rate of 7.00 is
40Speculating With Eurodollar Futures (contd)
- Speculation Example (contd)
- The speculators dollar loss is therefore
41Hedging With Eurodollar Futures
- Using the futures market, hedgers can lock in the
current interest rate
42Hedging With Eurodollar Futures (contd)
- Hedging Example
- Assume you are a portfolio managers for a
universitys endowment fund which will receive
10 million in 3 months. You would like to invest
the money now, as you think interest rates are
going to decline. Because you want a money market
investment, you establish a long hedge in
eurodollar futures. Using the figures from the
earlier example, you are promising to pay
993,150.00 for 1 million in eurodollars if you
buy a futures contract at 98.76. Using the 10
million figure, you decide to buy 10 MAR ED
futures, promising to pay 9,969,000.
43Hedging With Eurodollar Futures (contd)
- Hedging Example (contd)
- When you receive the 10 million in three
months, assume interest rate have fallen to
1.00. 10 million in T-bills would then cost - This is 6,000 more than the price at the time
you established the hedge.
44Hedging With Eurodollar Futures (contd)
- Hedging Example (contd)
- In the futures market, you have a gain that will
offset the increased purchase price. When you
close out the futures positions, you will sell
your contracts for 6,000 more than you paid for
them.
45Treasury Bonds and Their Futures Contracts
- Characteristics of U.S. Treasury bonds
- Pricing of Treasury bonds
- The Treasury bond futures contract
- Dealing with coupon differences
- The matter of accrued interest
- Delivery procedures
- The invoice price
- Cheapest to deliver
46Characteristics of U.S. Treasury Bonds
- Very similar to corporate bonds
- Pay semiannual interest
- Have a maturity of up to 30 years
- Are readily traded in the capital markets
- Different from Treasury notes
- Notes have a life of less than ten years
- Some T-bonds may be callable fifteen years after
issuance
47Characteristics of U.S. Treasury Bonds (contd)
- Bonds are identified by
- The issuer
- The coupon
- The year of maturity
- E.g., U.S. government six and a quarters of 23
means Treasury bonds with a 6¼ coupon rate that
mature in 2023
48Dealing With Coupon Differences
- To standardize the 100,000 face value
T-bond contract traded on the Chicago Board of
Trade, a conversion factor is used to convert all
deliverable bonds to bonds yielding 6
49Dealing With Coupon Differences (contd)
50Cheapest to Deliver
- Normally, only one bond eligible for delivery
will be cheapest to deliver - A hedger will collect information on all the
deliverable bonds and select the one most
advantageous to deliver