Title: Financial Futures Markets
1Financial Futures Markets
2Futures and Forward Contracts
- Forward - an agreement calling for a future
delivery of an asset at an agreed-upon price - Futures - similar to forward but feature
formalized and standardized characteristics - Size of contract
- Grade of deliverable asset
- Delivery date
- Delivery location
- Key difference in futures
- Standardization
- Secondary trading - liquidity
- Marked to market
- Clearinghouse warrants performance
3Key Terms for Futures Contracts
- Futures price - agreed-upon price at maturity
- Positions
- Long Position agrees to buy (take delivery)
- Short Position agrees to sell (make delivery)
- Profit on positions at maturity
- Profit to Long spot price at maturity -
original futures price (ST F0) - Profit to Short original futures price spot
price at maturity (F0 - ST ) - Zero Sum Game
4Futures and Forward Contracts
- Types of Contracts
- Agricultural commodities
- Metals and minerals (including energy contracts)
- Foreign currencies
- Financial futures
- Interest rate futures
- Stock index futures
5Types of Financial Futures
- Interest rate futures are on debt securities such
as T-bills, T-notes, T-bonds, and Eurodollar CDs - Stock index futures are on stock indexes
- Settlement dates are in March, June, September,
and December - Most financial futures are traded on the Chicago
Board of Trade or the Chicago Mercantile Exchange
6Purpose of Trading Financial Futures
- Speculation
- take positions to profit from expected changes in
the price of futures contract over time. - Hedge
- take positions to reduce the exposure to future
movements in interest rates or stock prices.
7Trading Strategies
- Speculation
- long - believe price will rise
- short - believe price will fall
- Hedging
- long hedge - protecting against a rise in price
- short hedge - protecting against a fall in price
8Interpreting Financial Futures Tables
- The Wall Street Journal provides a comprehensive
summary of trading activity on various financial
futures contracts - Example of Treasury bill futures quotations
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10Valuation of Financial Futures
- The price of a financial futures contract
generally reflects the expected price of the
underlying security as of the settlement date - As the market price of the financial asset
changes, so will the value of the contract - Factors that influence the expected price of the
asset influence the futures price - The current price of the asset
- Economic or market conditions
- Impact of the opportunity cost
- Investors who buy stock index futures instead of
the stock index do not receive any dividends - Investors who buy stock index futures put up a
much smaller investment
11Explaining Price Movements of Bond Futures
Contracts
- Participants in the Treasury bond futures market
closely monitor the same economic indicators
monitored by participants in the Treasury bond
market - Employment
- GDP
- Retail sales
- Industrial production
- Consumer confidence
- Inflation indicators
- Indicators that reflect the amount of long-term
financing
12Speculating with Interest Rate Futures
- Example T-bill futures
- The position taken depends on interest rate
expectations - If interest rates are expected to decline (market
value of t-bill is expected to increase),
purchase T-bill futures - If interest rates are expected to increase
(market value of t-bill is expected to decrease),
sell T-bill futures - The maximum possible loss when purchasing futures
is the amount to be paid for the securities
13Speculating with Interest Rate Futures (contd)
Payoff from Purchasing Futures
Payoff from Selling Futures
0
0
MV of Futures at Settlement
MV of Futures at Settlement
14Speculating on Increasing Interest Rates
- An investor anticipates that interest rates are
going to decrease. Consequently, she purchases a
T-bill futures contract for 94.20 in February. On
the March settlement date, the T-bill has a
market price of 94.70. What is the investors
nominal profit from this strategy?
15Speculating on Decreasing Interest Rates
- An investor anticipates that interest rates are
going to increase. Consequently, she sells a
T-bill futures contract for 94.20 in February. On
the March settlement date, the T-bill has a
market price of 93.50. What is the investors
nominal profit from this strategy?
16Closing out positions
- Take or make delivery
- Reversing the trade
- Rather than making or accepting delivery, most
buyers and sellers take offsetting positions to
close out the futures contract - e.g., speculators who purchased T-bond futures
contracts would sell similar futures contracts by
the settlement date - Only about 2 percent of all futures contracts
actually involve delivery
17Closing Out the Futures Position
- A speculator purchased a futures contract on
T-bonds at a price of 9012. Two months later,
the speculator sells the same futures contract in
order to close out the position. At that time,
the futures contract specifies 9314 of the par
value as the price. What is the nominal profit
from this futures transaction?
18Hedging with Interest Rate Futures
- Short hedge
- To reduce exposure to the possibility of rising
interest rate - Long hedge
- To reduce exposure to the possibility of
declining interest rate - Cross-hedge
- is the use of a futures contract on one financial
instrument to hedge a position in a different
financial instrument
19Bond Index Futures
- A bond index futures contract allows for the
buying or selling of a bond index for a specified
price at a specified date - The CBOT offers Municipal Bond Index (MBI)
futures - Based on the Bond Buyer Index of 40 actively
traded general obligation and revenue bonds
20Stock Index Futures
- A stock index futures contract allows for the
buying and selling of a stock index for a
specified price at a specified date - Available for various stock indexes (see next
slide) - Have four settlement dates on the third Friday in
March, June, September, and December - The securities underlying the stock index futures
are not deliverable settlement occurs through a
cash payment - The net gain or loss is the difference between
the futures price when the initial position was
created and the value of the contract on the
settlement date
21Stock Index Futures
22Stock Index Futures
- Valuing stock index futures contracts
- The value of a stock index futures contract is
highly correlated with the value of the
underlying stock index - The value of a stock index futures contract
commonly varies from the value of the underlying
index - The price of index futures contracts is driven by
the underlying asset and the cost of carry (the
net financing cost to buy the index) - In general, the underlying security changes by a
much greater degree than the cost of carry, so
changes in financial futures prices are primarily
attributed to changes in the values of the
underlying securities
23Stock Index Futures
- Speculating with stock index futures
- Stock index futures can be traded to capitalize
on expectations about stock market movements - If the market is expected to increase, buy stock
index futures - If the market is expected to decrease, sell stock
index futures
24Speculating with Stock Index Futures
- Jimmy Dean expects the SP 500 index to increase
in the near future. Thus, Jimmy decides to
purchase an SP 500 futures contract with a
December settlement date. The current futures
price is 1,200. If the futures price rises to
1,250 by the settlement date, what is Jimmys
nominal profit?
25Stock Index Futures
- Hedging with stock index futures
- Futures can be used to hedge the market risk of
an existing stock portfolio - Sell stock index futures if the existing
portfolio is expected to decline - Buy stock index futures if the existing portfolio
is expected to increase - The hedging is more effective when the investors
portfolio is diversified like the SP 500 index.
26Stock Index Futures
- Index Arbitrage
- Index arbitrage involves the buying or selling of
stock index futures with a simultaneous opposite
position in the stocks that the index comprise
27Risk of Trading Futures Contracts
- Market risk refers to fluctuations in the value
of the instrument as a result of market
conditions - Basis risk is the risk that the position being
hedged is not affected in the same manner as the
instrument underlying the futures contract - Liquidity risk refers to potential price
distortions due to a lack of liquidity - Credit risk is the risk that a loss will occur
because a counterparty defaults on the contract - Prepayment risk refers to the possibility that
the assets to be hedged may be prepaid earlier
than their designated maturity - Operational risk is the risk of losses as a
result of inadequate management or controls
28Institutional Use of Futures Markets
29Globalization of Futures Markets
- Non-U.S. participation in U.S. futures contracts
- U.S. futures are commonly traded by non-U.S.
financial institutions that maintain holdings of
U.S. securities - The CBOT has expanded trading hours to cover
various time zones - Foreign stock index futures
- Foreign stock index futures have been created to
speculate on or hedge against potential movements
in foreign stock markets - Futures exchange have been established in
Ireland, France, Spain, and Italy - Financial futures on debt instruments are offered
by the London International Financial Futures
Exchange (LIFFE), the Singapore International
Monetary Exchange (SEMEX), and Sydney Futures
Exchange (SFE)
30Globalization of Futures Markets
- Currency futures contracts
- A currency futures contract is a standardized
agreement to deliver or receive a specified
amount of a specified foreign currency at a
specified price (exchange rate) and date - Settlement months are March, June, September, and
December - Currency futures are used by companies to hedge
foreign payables or receivables