Title: Interest Rates Futures
1Interest Rates Futures
- Fin 288
- Futures Options and Swaps
2Interest Rate Future Contracts
- Traded on the CBOT
- 30 Year Treasury Bond 30 Yr Mini
- 10, 5, 2 year Treasury note futures
- 30 Day Fed Funds
- 5 10 year Swap
- German Debt
- Traded on CME
- Eurodollar Futures
3A quick look at contract Specifications
- Treasury Bonds and Notes-
- Range of delivery dates
- Fed Funds Futures
- Price
- Swaps
- Delivery
- Muni
- Underlying Asset
4Treasury Securities
- Since a majority of the interest rate instruments
we will use are related to treasury securities,
we need to discuss some basics relating to the
pricing of Treasury securities.
5Some Pricing Issues
- Day Count Conventions
- Used to determine the interest earned between two
points in time - Useful in calculating accrued interest
- Specified as X/Y
- X the number of days between the two dates
- Y The total number of days in the reference
period
6Day Count Conventions
Day Count Convention Market Used
US Treasury Bonds
Corporate and Municipal Bonds
US T-Bills money Market Instruments
7Price Quotes for Treasury Bills
- Let Yd annualized yield, D Dollar Discount F
Face Value, t number of days until maturity - Price F -D
8Price Quotes on T- Bills
- Note Return was based on face value invested,
not the actual amount invested. - 360 day convention makes it difficult to compare
to notes and bonds. - CD equivalent yield makes the measure comparable
to other money market instruments
9Accrued Interest
- When purchasing a bond between coupon payments
the purchaser must compensate the owner for for
interest earned, but not received, since the last
coupon payment
10Price Quotations
- QuotationsThe quoted and cash price are not the
same due to interest that accrues on the bond.
In general
11Example
- Assume that today is March 5, 2002 and that the
bond matures on July 10, 2004 - Assume we have an 11 coupon bond with a face
value of 100. The quoted price is 90-05 (or 90
5/32 or 90.15625) - Bonds with a total face value of 100,000 would
sell for 90,156.25.
12Example continued
- Coupons on treasuries are semiannual. Assume that
the next coupon date would be July 10, 2000 or 54
days from March 5. - The number of days between interest payments is
181 so using the actual/actual method we have
accrued interest of - (54/181)(5.50) 1.64
- The cash price is then
- 91.79625 90.15625 1.64
13Conversion Factors
- Since there are a range of bonds that can be
delivered, the quoted futures price is adjusted
by a conversion factor.
14Price based upon 6 YTM
- The conversion factor is based off an assumption
of a flat yield curve of 6 (that interest rates
for all maturities equals 6). - By comparing the value of the bond to the face
value, the CBOT produces a table of conversion
factors.
15Conversion Factor Continued
- The maturity of the bond is rounded down to the
nearest three months. - If the bond lasts for a period divisible by 6
months the first coupon payment is assumed to be
paid in six months. (A bond with 10 years and 2
months would be assumed to have 10 years left to
maturity)
16Conversion Factor continued
- If the bond does not round to an exact six months
the first coupon is assumed to be paid in three
months and accrued interest is subtracted. - A bond with 14 years and 4 months to maturity
would be treated as if it had 14 years and three
months left to maturity
17Example 1
- 14 coupon bond with 20 years and two months to
maturity - Assuming a 100 face value the value of the bond
would equal the price valued at 6 -
- The conversion factor is then
- 1.92459/100 1.92459
18Example 2
- What if the bond had 18 years and four months
left to maturity? The bond would be considered
to have 18 years and three months left to
maturity with the first payment due in three
months.Finding the value of the bond three
months from today
19Example 2 continued
- Assume the rate for three months is
- (1r)2 1.03 r .014889
- Using this rate it is easy to find the PV of the
bond - 187.329/1.014889 184.581
- There is one half of a coupon in accrued interest
- so we need to subtract 7/23.50
- 184.581 - 3.50 181.081
- resulting in a conversion factor of
- 181.081/100 1.81081
20Price Quote on T-Bills
- Quotes on T- Bills utilize the actual /360 day
count convention. - The quoted price of the treasury bill is an
annualized rate of return expressed as a
percentage of the face value.
21T- Bills continued
- The quote price is given by (360/n)(100-Y)
- where Y is the cash price of the bill
- with n days until maturity
- 90 day T- Bill Y 98
- (360/90)(100-98) 8.00
22Rate of Return
- The quote is not the same as the rate of return
earned by the treasury bill. - The rate of interest needs to be converted to a
quarterly compounding annual rate. - 2/98(365/90) .0828
23Quoted Price
- The price quote on a Treasury bill is then given
by 100 - Corresponding Treasury bill price quote
- (quoted price 8 so futures quote 92)
- Given Z the quoted futures priceY the
corresponding price paid for delivery of 100 of
90 day treasury bills then Z 100-4(100-Y) or
Y 100-0.25(100-Z) Z 100-4(100-98) 92
24Cheapest to Deliver Bond
- There are a large number of bonds that could be
delivered on the CBOT for a given futures
contract. - The party holding a short position gets to decide
which bond to deliver and therefore has incentive
to deliver the cheapest.
25Cheapest to Deliver
- Upon delivery the short position receives
-
- The cost of purchasing a bond is
- Quoted bond price accrued interestBy
minimizing the difference between the cost and
the amount received, the party effectively
delivers the cheapest bond
26Cheapest to deliver
- The bond for which
-
-
- is minimized is the one that is cheapest to
deliver.
27Example Cheapest to Deliver
- Consider 3 bonds all of which could be delivered
- Quoted Conversion
- Bond Price Factor
- 1 99.5 1.0382 99.5-(93.25(1.0382))
2.69 - 2 143.5 1.5188 143.5-(93.25(1.5188))
1.87 - 3 119.75 1.2615 119.75-(93.25(1.2615)
)2.12
28Impact of yield changes on CTD
- As yield increases bonds with a low coupons and
longer maturities become relatively cheaper to
deliver. As rates increase all bond prices
decrease, but the price decrease for the longer
maturity bonds is greater - As yields decrease high coupon, short maturity
bonds become relatively cheaper to deliver.
29Wild Card Play
- Trading at the CBOT closes at 2p.m. however
treasury bonds continue to trade until 400pm and
a party with a short position has until 8pm to
file a notice of intention to deliver. - Since the price is calculated on the closing
price in the CBOT the party with a short position
sometimes has the opportunity to profit from
price movements after the closing of the CBOT. - If the Bond Prices decrease after 2 pm it
improves the short position.
30Eurodollar Futures
- Eurodollar dollar deposited in a foreign bank
outside of the US. Eurodollar interest rate is
the interest earned on Eurodollars deposited by
one bank with another bank. - London Interbank Offer Rate (LIBOR) Rate at
which banks loan to each other in the London
Interbank Market.
31Simple Hedge Example
- Assume you know that you will owe at rate equal
to the LIBOR 100 basis points in three months
on a notional amount of 100 Million. The
interest expenses will be set at the LIBOR rate
in three months. - Current three month LIBOR is 7, Eurodollar
futures contract is selling at 92.90.
32Simple Hedge Example
- 100 - 92.90 7.10
- The futures contract is paying 7.10
- Assume the interest rate may either
- increase to 8 or decrease to 6
33A Short Hedge
- Agree to sell 10 Eurodollar future contracts
(each with an underlying value of 1 Million). - We want to look at two results the spot market
and the futures market. Assume you close out the
futures position and that the futures price will
converge to the spot at the end of the three
months.
34Rates increase to 8
- Spot position
- Need to pay 8 1 9 on 10 Million 10
Million(.09/4) 225,000 - Futures Position
- Fut Price 92 interest rates increased by .9
- Close out futures position
- profit (10 million)(.009/4) 22,500
35Rates Increase to 8
- Net interest paid
- 225,000 - 22,500 202,500
- 10 million(.0810/4) 202,500
36Rates decrease to 6
- Spot position
- Need to pay 6 1 7 on 10 Million 10
Million(.07/4) 175,000 - Futures Position
- Fut Price 94 interest rates decreased by 1.1
- Close out futures position
- loss (10 million)(.011/4) 27,500
37Rates Decrease to 8
- Net interest paid
- 175,000 27,500 202,500
- 10 million(.0810/4) 202,500
38Results of Hedge
- Either way the final interest rate expense was
equal to 8.10 or 100 basis points above the
initial futures rate of 7.10 - Should the position be hedged?
- It locks in the interest rate, but if rates had
declined you were better off without the hedge.
39Simple Example 2
- On January 2 the treasurer of Ajax Enterprises
knows that the firm will need to borrow in June
to cover seasonal variation in sales. She
anticipates borrowing 1million. - The contractual rate on the loan will be the
LIBOR rate plus 1 - The current 3 month LIBOR rate is 3.75 and the
Eurodollar futures contract is 4.25
40Simple Example 2 Continued
- To hedge the position assume the treasurer sells
one June futures contract. - Assume interest rates increase to 5.5 on June
13. - Assume that the expiration of the contract is
June 13, the same day that the loan will be taken
out. The futures price will be - 100-5.50 94.50
41Rates increase to 5.5
- Spot position
- Need to pay 5.51 6.5 on 1 Million 1
Million(.065/4) 16,250 - Futures Position
- Fut Price 94.50 interest rates
- increased by 1.25
- Close out futures position
- profit (1million)(.0125/4) 3,125
42Rates Increase to 5.5
- Net interest paid
- 16,250 - 3,125 13,125
- 1 million(.0525/4) 13,125
- which is the interest rate implied by the
Eurodollar futures contract - 4.25 1 5.25
43Assumptions
- The hedge worked because of three assumptions
- The underlying exposure is to the three month
LIBOR which is the same as the loan - The end of the exposure matches the delivery date
exactly - The margin account did not change since the rate
changed on the last day of trading.
44Basis Risk revisited
- The basis is a hedging situation is defined as
the Spot price of the asset to be hedged minus
the futures price of the contract used. When the
asset that is being hedged is the same as the
asset underlying the futures contract the basis
should be zero at the expiration of the contract.
- Basis Spot - Futures
45Basis Risk
- On what types of contracts would you expect the
basis to be negative? Positive? Why?(-) Low
interest rates assets such as currencies or gold
or silver (investment type assets with little or
zero convenience yield. F S(1r)T()
Commodities and investments with high interest
rates (high convenience yield) - F S(1ru)T Implies it is more likely that
- F lt S(1ru)T
46Mismatch of Maturities 1
- Assume that the maturity of the contract does not
match the timing of the underlying commitment. - Assume that the loan is anticipated to be needed
on June 1 instead of June 13.
47Simple Example Redone
- On January 2 the treasurer of Ajax Enterprises
knows that the firm will need to borrow in June
to cover seasonal variation in sales. She
anticipates borrowing 1million. - The contractual rate on the loan will be the
LIBOR rate plus 1 - The current 3 month LIBOR rate is 3.75 and the
Eurodollar futures contract is 4.25
48Simple Example 2 Continued
- To hedge the position assume the treasurer sells
one June futures contract. - Assume interest rates increase to 5.5 on June 1.
- Assume that the futures price has decreased to
94.75 (before it had decreased to 94.50) implying
a 5.25 rate (a 25 bp basis)
49Rates increase to 5.5
- Spot position
- Need to pay 5.51 6.5 on 1 Million 1
Million(.065/4) 16,250 - Futures Position
- Fut Price 94.75 interest rates
- increased by 1.00
- Close out futures position
- profit (1million)(.0100/4) 2,500
50Rates Increase to 5.5
- Net interest paid
- 16,250 - 2,500 13,750
- 1 million(.055/4) 13,750
- which is more than the interest rate implied by
the Eurodollar futures contract - 4.25 1 5.25
51Minimizing Basis Risk
- Given that the actual timing of the loan may also
be uncertain the standard practice is to use a
futures contract slightly longer than the
anticipated spot position. - The futures price is often more volatile during
the delivery month also increasing the
uncertainty of the hedge - Also the short hedger could be forced to accept
delivery instead of closing out.
52Mismatch in Maturities 2
- Assume that instead of our original problem the
treasurer is faced with a stream of expected
borrowing. - Anticipated borrowing at 3 month LIBOR
- Date Amount
- Mach 1 15 Million
- June 1 45 Million
- September 1 20 million
- December 1 10 Million
53Strip Hedge
- To hedge this risk, it to hedge each position
individually. - On January 1 the firm should
- enter into 15 short March contracts
- enter into 45 short June contracts
- enter into 20 short Sept contracts
- enter into 10 short December contracts
54Strip Hedge continued
- On each borrowing date the respective hedge
should be closed out. - The effectiveness of the hedge will depend upon
the basis at the time each contract is closed out.
55Rolling Hedge
- Another possibility is to Roll the Hedge
- January 2 enter into 90 short March contracts
- March 1 enter into 90 long March contracts
- enter into 75 short June contracts
- June 1 enter into 75 long June contracts
- enter into 30 short Sept contracts
- Sept 1 enter into 30 long Sept contracts
- enter into 10 short Dec contracts
- Dec 1 enter into 10 long Dec contracts
56Rolling the Hedge
- Again the effectiveness of the hedge will depend
upon the basis at each point in time that the
contracts are rolled over. - This opens the from to risk from the resulting
rollover basis.
57Example
- Now assume that the treasury has decided to
borrow it the commercial paper market instead of
from a financial institution. - There is not a commercial paper futures contract
so it must be decided what contract to use to
hedge the possible interest rate change in the
commercial paper market. - Assume that the treasure wants to borrow 36
million in June with a one month commercial paper
issue.
58Number of contracts part 1
- You must choose what underlying contract best
matches the 30 day commercial paper return. - 90 Day T-Bill. 90 day LIBOR Eurodollar, 10 year
treasury bond. - Assume 90 day LIBOR Eurodollar has the highest
correlation so it is chosen. - Assume now that the treasurer for Ajax has ran
the regression and that the beta is .75
59Number of contracts part 2
- We also need to consider the asset underlying the
three month LIBOR futures contract and one month
commercial paper rate have different maturities. - A 1 basis point movement in 1,000,000 of
borrowing is 1,000,000(.0001)(30/360) 8.33 - A one basis point change in 1,000,000 of the
future contract is equal to - 1,000,000(.0001)(90/360) 25
60Number of contracts part 2
- The change in the three month contract is three
times the size of the change in the one month
this would imply a hedge ratio of 1/3 IF the
assets underlying both positions was the same. - Both sources of basis risk need to be considered.
61Number of Contracts
- The treasurer will need to enter into
- 36(.75)(.33) 9 million
- Of short futures contracts
62The Cross Hedge
- On January 2
- 3 month LIBOR 3.75
- June Eurodollar Future price is 95.75 implying
4.24 rate - Spread between spot LIBOR rate and 1 month
commercial paper rate is 60 basis points - This implies a 4.35 commercial paper rate.
63Expectations
- Previously Ajax hoped to lock in a 4.25 3 month
LIBOR rate or an increase of 50 basis points form
the current 3.75 - Keeping the 50 basis point increase constant and
using our hedge ratio of .75 the goal becomes
locking in a .75 (50) 37.5 basis point increase
in the commercial paper rate. - This implies a one month rate of 4.35 37.5BP
4.725
64Results Futures
- Assume that on June 1 the 3 month LIBOR rate
increases to 5.5 (as it did in our previous
example), also assume that the futures contract
price falls to 94.75. - Closing out the Futures contract resulted in a
profit of 2,500 per 1million. Since we have 9
1 million contracts our profit is - 9(2,500)22,500
65Results Spot
- LIBOR increased by 1.75 or 175 basis points,
assuming our hedge ratio is correct this implies
a .75(175) 131.25 basis point increase in the
one month commercial paper rate. - So the new expected one month commercial paper
rate is 4.351.3125 5.6625 - However assume that the relationship was not
perfect ant the actual one month rate is 5.75
66Results
- Given the 5.75 commercial paper rate the cost of
borrowing has increased by - 36,000,00(.0575-.0435)(30/360) 42,000
- Subtracting our profit of 22,500 in futures
market the net increase in borrowing cost is - 42,000 - 22,500 19,200
- This is equivalent to an increase of
- 36,000,000(X)(30.360) 19,500 X 65 BP
67Results
- Using the 65 BP increase Ajax ended up paying 5
for its borrowing. - The treasurer was attempting to lock in 4.725 or
27.5BP less than what she ended up paying. - The 27.5 BP difference is the result of basis
risk.
68Basis Risk
- Source 1
- June 1 spot LIBOR was 5.5 the LIBOR rate implied
by the futures contract was 5.25 a 25 BP
difference - Given the hedge ratio of .75 this should be a
25(.75) 18.75 BP difference for commercial
paper - Source 2
- Expected 1 month commercial paper rate is
5.6625, actual is 5.75 a 8.75 BP difference
69Basis Risk
- The result of the two sources of risk
- 18.75 8.75 27.5 basis points
70Duration The Big Picture
- Calculation Given the PV relationships, we need
to weight the Cash Flows based on the time until
they are received. In other words we are looking
for a weighted maturity of the cash flows where
the weight is a combination of timing and
magnitude of the cash flows
71Calculating Duration
- One way to measure the sensitivity of the price
to a change in discount rate would be finding the
price elasticity of the bond (the change in
price for a change in the discount rate)
72Duration MathematicsMacaulay Duration
- Macaulay Duration is the price elasticity of the
bond (the change in price for a percentage
change in yield). - Formally this would be
73Duration Mathematics
- Taking the first derivative of the bond value
equation with respect to the yield will produce
the approximate price change for a small change
in yield.
74Duration Mathematics
The approximate price change for a small change
in r
75Duration MathematicsMacaulay Duration
substitute
76Macaulay Duration of a bond
77Duration Example
- 10 30 year coupon bond, current rates 12, semi
annual payments
78Example continued
- Since the bond makes semi annual coupon payments,
the duration of 17.3895 periods must be divided
by 2 to find the number of years. - 17.3895 / 2 8.69475 years
- Another interpretation of duration is shown here
Duration indicates the average time taken by the
bond, on a discounted basis, to pay back the
original investment.
79Using Duration to estimate price changes
Rearrange
Change in Price
Estimate the price change for a 1 basis point
increase in the yearly yield
Multiply by original price for the price change
-0.000820257(838.8357)-.688061
80Using Duration Continued
- Using our 10 semiannual coupon bond, with 30
years to maturity and YTM 12 - Original Price of the bond 838.3857
- If YTM 12.01 the price is 837.6986
- This implies a price change of -0.6871
- Our duration estimate was -0.6881 a difference of
.0010
81Note
- Previously yield increased from 12 a year to
12.01. - We used the Duration represented in years,
8.69475 - We could have also used duration represented in
semiannual periods, 17.3895. The change in yield
needs to be adjusted to .0001/2 .00005 however,
the original yield (1r) stays at 1.06.
The estimated price change is then the same as
before -0.000820257(838.8357)-.688061
82Modified Duration
The Change in price was given above as
Substitute DMOD
83Modified vs Macaulay Duration
84Duration - Continuous Time
- Using continuous compounding the bond value
formula becomes - And the Duration equation becomes
85Change in Bond Price Continuous Time
- The estimated percentage change in the price of
the bond is then given by letting value (V)
price (P) - By rearranging the actual price change is then
86Duration Hedging
- You can also estimate the hedge ratio using
duration. - We know that the change in price can be estimated
using duration. Assume that we have a bond
portfolio with duration equal to DP - DP-PDPDy
- Likewise the change in the asset underlying a
futures contract should be estimated by - DF-FDFDy
87Duration Hedging
- You can combine the two to produce a position
with a duration of zero. - The optimal number of contracts is
- Must assume a bond to be delivered
88Tailing the Hedge
- Adjustments to the margin account will also
impact the hedge and need to be made. - The idea is to make the PV of the hedge equal the
underlying exposure to adjust for any interest
and reinvestment in the margin account. - For N contracts this becomes Ne-rT contracts
where r is the risk free rate and T is the time
to maturity.
89Duration Hedging
- You can also estimate the hedge ratio using
duration. - We know that the change in price can be estimated
using duration. Assume that we have a bond
portfolio with duration equal to DP - DP-PDPDy
- Likewise the change in the asset underlying a
futures contract should be estimated by - DF-FDFDy