Title: Futures, Options, and Swaps
 1Futures, Options, and Swaps
  2Derivatives
- Basic Definition 
- Any Asset whose value is based upon (or derived 
 from) an underlying asset.
- The performance of the derivative is dependent 
 upon the performance of the underlying asset.
3The Derivative Debate Positives
- Derivative securities have the potential to allow 
 both financial firms and non-financial firms to
 greatly decrease risk and increase the efficiency
 of markets. Example of possible benefits include
 the ability to decrease interest rate risk,
 decrease price risk, decrease transaction costs,
 increase the efficiency of markets, provide
 investors with new non replicatable products, and
 increase information availability.
4The Derivative Debate Negatives
- Use of derivatives has resulted in some dramatic 
 financial losses
- Financial Firms (loss)  Allied Irish Bank (700 
 Million), Barings Bank (1 Billion), Daiwa Bank
 (gt 1 Billion), Kidder Peabody (350 Million),
 LTCM (4 Billion), Midland Bank (50 Million),
 National Westminister Bank ( 130 Million)
- Non Financial Firms (Loss)  Allied Lyons (150 
 Million), Hammersmith and Fulham (600 million),
 MG (1.8 Billion), Orange County (2 Billion),
 Shell (1 Billion), Sumitomo (2 Billion)
5The Derivative DebateOverview
- Warren Buffett  
- We view them as time bombs, both for the parties 
 that deal in them and the economic system.
- Derivatives are financial weapons of mass 
 destruction, carrying dangers that while now
 latent, are potentially lethal.
- Alan Greenspan- 
- Although the benefits and costs of derivatives 
 remain the subject of great spirited debate, the
 performance of the economy and the financial
 system in recent years suggests that those
 benefits have materially exceeded the costs.
6The Derivative Debate
- To fully understand the benefits and risks of 
 using derivative requires an understanding of the
 products available and the markets in which they
 trade.
- In class we will focus on the most popular and 
 common forms of derivative products Futures,
 Options, and Swaps. We will also focus on the
 use of derivatives to manage risk and look at
 what caused the large individual losses outlined
 above.
7Two Myths Concerning Derivatives
- Derivative Securities are a recent development 
- The large losses associated with derivative 
 securities indicate that derivative securities
 are the equivalent of gambling.
8Myth 1
- Derivative Securities are a recent development 
- Truth 
- Derivative contracts can be traced back as far as 
 2000 B.C. in India and also appeared in Ancient
 Greece where contracts similar to options were
 traded on olives during the winter prior to the
 spring harvest.
9Brief History of Derivatives Markets
- 1100s Forward contracts were used by Flemish 
 traders who gathered -- a letter de faire-
 forward contract specifying delivery at a later
 date
- 1600s 
- Japan -- Cho-ai-mai (Rice Trade on Book) 
 Essentially futures contracts on rice designed to
 manage the volatility in rice prices caused by
 weather, warfare and other risks.
- Netherlands -- formal futures markets developed 
 to trade tulip bulbs in 1636
- Options also appeared in Amsterdam during the 
 1600s
10Brief History Continued
- 1700s  trading in options began in the US and 
 in England, but the exchanges were perceived as
 being dishonest
- 1863 -- Confederacy issued 20 year bonds 
 denominated in French francs and convertible to
 cotton (a dual currency cotton indexed bond)
11Brief History Continued.
- Organized Exchanges in US 
- Chicago Board of Trade 
-  Established in 1848 to bring farmers and 
 merchants together. Futures Contracts were first
 traded on the CBOT in 1865. Developed the first
 standard contract
- Chicago Mercantile Exchange 
-  Started as the Chicago Produce Exchange in 1874 
 for trade in perishable agricultural products.
 In 1919 it became the Chicago Mercantile Exchange
 (CME). Introduced a contract for SP 500 futures
 in 1982.
- NYMEX 1872 KCBOT 1876 
12Brief History Continued
- Early 1900s Put and Call Dealers Association 
 formed to bring together buyers and sellers of
 options, however the organization did not
 establish a secondary market and there were no
 contract guarantees.
- 1970s The uncertainty associate with the 
 economic environment created an increase in the
 design of new derivative products designed to
 manage risk, and interest in options increased.
13Brief History continued
- 1973 The Chicago Board of Trade forms the Chicago 
 Board of Options Exchange (CBOE).
- Early 1980s The daily volume of trading on 
 options exchanges is greater than the daily
 trading volume of the underlying assets. Options
 on major indexes and options on futures are
 developed.
14Myth 2
- The large losses associated with derivative 
 securities indicate that Derivative Securities
 are the equivalent of gambling.
- Truth 
- Many of the losses were the result of poor 
 operational oversight, excessive speculation, a
 lack of risk limits, and poor understanding of
 markets (especially liquidity risk).
15The Derivative DebateLarge Losses and Market 
Efficiency
- Alan Greenspan- 
- Even the largest corporate defaults in history 
 (WorldCom and Enron) and the largest sovereign
 default in history (Argentina) have not
 significantly impaired the capital of any major
 financial intermediary
- Warren Buffett- 
- In the energy and utility sectors, companies 
 used derivatives and trading activities to report
 great earnings  until the roof fell in when
 the actually tried to convert the derivatives
 related receivables on the balance sheets into
 cash. Mark to Market then turned out to truly
 be mark to myth
16Legitimate Questions about Derivatives
- What are the intended economic benefits and 
 risks?
- Has the rapid growth in use of derivatives 
 increased the possibility of systematic risk?
- Has there been a concentration of risk due to a 
 limited number of dealers?
- Does Regulation do a good job of monitoring and 
 limiting derivative related risk?
- What happened in the cases of the large losses?
17Economic Benefits of Derivatives
- Risk Management  given the link to the 
 underlying asset a derivative can be used to
 decrease or increase the risk of owning the
 underlying asset
- Price and Informational Discovery  since many 
 claims are contingent on future events derivative
 markets can provide information about the markets
 perception of the future.
18Economic Benefits Continued
- Operational Advantages  generally derivative 
 markets have lower transaction costs and greater
 liquidity compared to the spot market.
 Additionally they allow easier short sales
 helping to complete the market.
- Market Efficiency - Spot market prices are 
 sometimes not consistent with assets true
 economic value and arbitrage opportunities exist.
 Derivatives help eliminate arbitrage and
 increase price efficiency.
19Some Financial Risks
- Legal Risk 
- Default Risk 
- Liquidity Risk 
- Market Risk 
- However all financial assets bear most of these 
 risks.
20Other Risks
- Ability to increase leverage via use of 
 derivatives can cause increased risk when the
 derivative security is used incorrectly. Sources
 of this possible problem include
- Excess optimism about forecasting ability 
- Excessive speculation instead of risk management 
- Poor understanding of security being traded 
- Lack of liquidity in the market
21Growth of Derivative Use
- Has the rapid growth in use of derivatives 
 increased the possibility of systematic risk?
- This question is especially relevant for the 
 banking sector which of course spills over to the
 entire financial sector.
22Notional value
- Approximate Market Capitalization of the Wilshire 
 5000 (represents 98 of equities traded in US)
 13.6 Trillion
- Approximate size of outstanding debt in all fixed 
 income markets  23.5 Trillion
- The notional value of derivative securities held 
 by commercial banks in the US as of Sept 30, 2004
 84 Trillion
23Increase in Derivative use by Commercial banks 
Year Notional Value of Derivatives
1996 20 Trillion
1998 32.5 Trillion
2000 40.1 Trillion
2002 55.4 Trillion
2004 84 Trillion 
 24Concentration Risk 
- 5 banks account for 95 of the total notional 
 amount of derivatives with more than 99 of the
 total held by the largest 25 banks.
- Over-the-Counter contracts comprise 92 of the 
 total notional holding and only 8 are exchange
 traded  increasing credit risk and liquidity
 risk.
- During the third quarter of 2004 banks charged 
 off 91 million from derivatives and total past
 due contracts were at 41 million
25Size of the Market and Concentration Risk
- Notional value is a very misleading measure of 
 risk since the represent the value of the
 underlying security, not necessarily the value
 that may be lost in the event of a bad outcome.
- However, this also makes it very difficult if not 
 impossible to estimate the actual amount of risk
 that is present especially since such a large
 percentage are over the counter instruments.
26The Derivative DebateConcentration Risk
- Alan Greenspan  
- One development that gives me and others some 
 pause is the decline in the number of major
 derivative dealers and its potential implications
 for market liquidity and for concentration of
 counterparty risk
- Warren Buffett- 
- Large mounts of risk, particularly credit risk 
 have become concentrated in the hands of
 relatively few dealers, who in addition trade
 excessively with each other.
27Regulation
- Does Regulation do a good job of monitoring and 
 limiting derivative related risk?
- There has been increased reporting requirements 
 relating to derivative securities for both
 financial and non-financial firms, increasing
 transparency.
- The amount of off balance sheet securities has 
 come under increased scrutiny in the banking
 sector.
28The Derivative Debate Regulation
- Warren Buffett  
- There is no central bank assigned to the job of 
 preventing the dominoes from toppling in
 insurance or derivatives. (total return swaps )
 and other kinds of derivatives severely curtail
 the ability of regulators to curb leverage and
 get their arms around the risk profiles of banks,
 insurers and other financial institutions.
29The Derivative Debate Regulation
- Alan Greenspan  
- Except where market discipline is undermined by 
 moral hazard owing for example to federal
 guarantees of private debt, private regulation
 generally is far better at constraining excessive
 risk taking than is government regulation.
30This Class.
- Our goal is to explain the functioning of 
 derivative markets in detail and then introduce
 how they can be used by business to manage both
 financial and non-financial risk.
31Basic Types of Derivative Contracts
- Forward Contracts 
- Agreement between two parties to purchase and 
 sell something at a later date at a price agreed
 upon today
- Futures Contract 
- Same idea as a forward, but the contract trades 
 on an exchange and the counter party is not set.
32Basic Types of Derivative Contracts
- Options Contract - Agreement that gives the 
 holder the right, but not the obligation, to buy
 or sell a security in the future as a designated
 price. the
- Swaps Contract  An agreement between two 
 entities to exchange cash flow streams based upon
 a prearranged formula.
33Other Derivatives
- Options on futures The right to buy or sell a 
 futures contract at a later date
- Swaption The option to enter into a swap at a 
 future date
- Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO) A 
 mortgage backed security where investors are
 divided into classes and there are rules
 outlining the repayment of principal to each
 class.
- Indexed currency option notes Bonds where the 
 amount received but the holder at maturity varies
 with an exchange (usually a foreign
 exchange rate)
- Credit, Weather, Electricity and other derivative 
 classes
34Forward Contracts
- Agreement between two parties to purchase (and 
 sell) something at a later date at a price agreed
 upon today.
- Legal contract where both parties have the 
 obligation to either buy or sell a specific
 product in the future at the designated price.
 Largest risk is the risk of default.
35Payoff on Forward Contracts
- Long Position 
- Agreeing to buy a specified amount (The Contract 
 Size) of a given commodity or asset at a set
 point in time in the future (The Delivery Date)
 at a set price (The Delivery Price)
- Payoff 
- The payoff will depend upon the spot (Cash) price 
 at the delivery date.
- Payoff  Spot Price  Delivery Price 
36Example
- Assume you have agreed to buy 1,000,000 in 3 
 months at a rate of 1  1.6196
-  
- Spot Rate Spot  Delivery Price Payoff 
-  1.65 1.65-1.61960.0304 30,400 
-  1.6169 1.6196-1.61960 0 
-  1.55 1.55-1.61960.0696 -69,600 
-  
37Example Graphically
Payoff
.0304
1.6196
1.650
Spot Price
1.55
-.0696 
 38Payoff Short Position
- Agreeing to sell a specified amount (The Contract 
 Size) of a given commodity or asset at a point of
 time in the future (The Delivery Date) at a set
 price (The Delivery Price).
- Payoff on Short position 
- Since the position is profitable when the price 
 declines the payoff becomes
- Payoff  The Delivery Price  The Spot Price
39Long vs. Short
- For a long position to exist (someone agreeing to 
 buy) there must be an offsetting short position
 (someone agreeing to sell).
- Assume that you held the short position for the 
 previous example
- sell L 1,000,000 in 3 mos at a rate of L1  
 1.6196
-  Spot Rate Spot  Delivery Price Payoff 
-  1.65 1.6196-1.65-0.0304 -30,400 
-  1.6169 1.6196-1.61960 0 
-  1.55 1.6196-1.55 0.0696 69,600
40Example Graphically
Payoff
.0304
1.6196
1.650
Spot Price
1.55
-.0696 
 41Zero Sum Game
- The contract and many other derivative securities 
 are often referred to as a zero sum game
- In the contract above the combined profit of the 
 long and short position is zero. One party gains
 and the other looses by an equal amount.
42Contract Goals
-  The goal of the contract is to decrease risk, 
 assume that you had to pay L1,000,000 in 3 months
 for the shipment of an input. You are afraid
 that the  price will increase and you will pay a
 higher price.
- Similarly the other party may be afraid that the 
 price will decrease (maybe they are receiving a
 payment in 3 months).
- Both parties can hedge by entering into the 
 forward agreement  however after the 3 months,
 one party will actually be worse off compared
 to not hedging
43Determining the delivery price
- The delivery price will be determined by the 
 participants expectations about the future price
 and their willingness to enter into the contract.
 (Todays spot price most likely does not equal
 the delivery price).
- What else should be considered? 
- They should both also consider the time value of 
 money
- Storage costs especailly if the asset is a 
 commodity
44Future and Forward contracts
- Both Futures and Forward contracts are contracts 
 entered into by two parties who agree to buy and
 sell a given commodity or asset (for example a T-
 Bill) at a specified point of time in the future
 at a set price.
45Futures vs. Forwards
- Future contracts are traded on an exchange, 
 Forward contracts are privately negotiated
 over-the-counter arrangements between two
 parties.
- Both set a price to be paid in the future for a 
 specified contract.
- Forward Contracts are subject to counter party 
 default risk, The futures exchange attempts to
 limit or eliminate the amount of counter party
 default risk.
46Other Forward Contract Risks
- One goal of the negotiation is to specify exactly 
 the type, quantity, and means of delivery of the
 underlying asset.
- The chance that an asset different than 
 anticipated might be delivered should be
 eliminated by the contract.
- Futures contracts attempt to account for this 
 problem via standardization of the contract.
47Futures Contracts
- Long Position Agreeing to purchase a specified 
 amount of a given commodity or asset at a point
 in time in the future at a set price (the futures
 price)
- Short Position Agreeing to sell a specified 
 amount of a given commodity or asset at a point
 of time in the future for a set price (the
 futures price).
48Option Contracts
- The first difference between an option and a 
 future (or forward) contract is that the holder
 of the option has the right to buy or sell a
 product but is not obligated to do so. They have
 the choice to not exercise the option.
- The second main difference is that the holder of 
 the option pays an initial price for the right to
 buy or sell.
49Option Terminology
- Call Option  the right to buy an asset at some 
 point in the future for a designated price.
- Put Option  the right to sell an asset at some 
 point in the future at a given price
50Option Terminology
- Expiration Date The last day the option can be 
 exercised (American Option) also called
 the strike date, maturity, and exercise date
- Exercise Price The price specified in the 
 contract
- American Option Can be exercised at any time up 
 to the expiration date
- European Option Can be exercised only on the 
 expiration date
51Option Terminology
- Long position Buying an option 
- Long Call Bought the right to buy the asset 
- Long Put Bought the right to sell the asset 
- Short Position Writing or Selling the option 
- Short Call - Agreed to sell the other party the 
 right to buy the underlying asset, if the other
 party exercises the option you deliver the asset.
 
- Short Put - Agreed to buy the underlying asset 
 from the other party if they decide to exercise
 the option.
52Risk to the Writer of the Option 
- The writer of the call option accepts all of the 
 risk since the buyer will not exercise if there
 would be a loss.
53Call Option Profit
- Call option  as the price of the asset increases 
 the option is more profitable.
- Once the price is above the exercise price 
 (strike price) the option will be exercised
- If the price of the underlying asset is below the 
 exercise price it wont be exercised  you only
 loose the cost of the option.
- The Profit earned is equal to the gain or loss on 
 the option minus the initial cost.
54Profit Diagram Call Option(Long Call Position)
S-X-C
S
X 
 55Example Naked Call Option
- Assume that you can purchase a share of stock in 
 one month with an exercise price of 100.
- Assume that the option is currently at the money 
 (the current price of the stock is also 100) and
 selling for 3.
- What are the possible payoffs if you bought the 
 option and held it until maturity?
56Five possible results
- The price of the stock at maturity of the option 
 is 100. The buyer looses the entire purchase
 price, no reason to exercise.
- The price of the stock at maturity is less than 
 100. The buyer looses the 3 option price and
 does not exercise the option.
57Five Possible Results continued
- The price of the stock at maturity is greater 
 than 100, but less than 103. The buyer will
 exercise the option and recover a portion of the
 option cost.
- The price of the stock is equal to 103. The 
 buyer will exercise the option and recover the
 cost of the option.
- The price of the stock is greater than 103. The 
 buyer will make a profit of S-100-3.
58Profit Diagram Call Option(Long Call Position)
S-100-3
S
103
100 
 59Profit Diagram Call Option(Short Call Position)
S
X
CX-S 
 60Put option payoffs
- The writer of the put option will profit if the 
 option is not exercised or if it is exercised and
 the spot price is less than the exercise price
 plus cost of the option.
- In the previous example the writer will profit as 
 long as the spot price is less than 103.
- What if the spot price is equal to 103?
61Put Option Profits
- Put option  as the price of the asset decreases 
 the option is more profitable.
- Once the price is below the exercise price 
 (strike price) the option will be exercised
- If the price of the underlying asset is above the 
 exercise price it wont be exercised  you only
 loose the cost of the option.
62Profit Diagram Put Option
X-S-C
S
X 
 63More Terminology
- In - the - money options 
- when the spot price of the underlying asset for a 
 call (put) is greater (less) than the exercise
 price
- Out - of - the - money options 
- when the spot price of the underlying asset for a 
 call (put) is less (greater) than the exercise
 price
- At  the - money options 
- when the exercise price and spot price are equal.
64Swap Introduction
- An agreement between two parties to exchange cash 
 flows in the future.
-  The agreement specifies the dates that the cash 
 flows are to be paid and the way that they are to
 be calculated.
- A forward contract is an example of a simple 
 swap. With a forward contract, the result is an
 exchange of cash flows at a single given date in
 the future.
-  In the case of a swap the cash flows occur at 
 several dates in the future. In other words, you
 can think of a swap as a portfolio of forward
 contracts.
65Mechanics of Swaps
- The most common used swap agreement is an 
 exchange of cash flows based upon a fixed and
 floating rate.
- Often referred to a plain vanilla swap, the 
 agreement consists of one party paying a fixed
 interest rate on a notional principal amount in
 exchange for the other party paying a floating
 rate on the same notional principal amount for a
 set period of time.
- In this case the currency of the agreement is the 
 same for both parties.
66Notional Principal
- The term notional principal implies that the 
 principal itself is not exchanged. If it was
 exchanged at the end of the swap, the exact same
 cash flows would result.
67An Example
- Company B agrees to pay A 5 per annum on a 
 notional principal of 100 million
- Company A Agrees to pay B the 6 month LIBOR rate 
 prevailing 6 months prior to each payment date,
 on 100 million. (generally the floating rate is
 set at the beginning of the period for which it
 is to be paid)
68The Fixed Side
- We assume that the exchange of cash flows should 
 occur each six months (using a fixed rate of 5
 compounded semi annually).
- Company B will pay 
- (100M)(.025)  2.5 Million 
- to Firm A each 6 months.
69Summary of Cash Flows for Firm B
-  Cash Flow Cash Flow Net 
- Date LIBOR Received Paid Cash 
 Flow
- 3-1-98 4.2 
- 9-1-98 4.8 2.10 2.5 -0.4 
- 3-1-99 5.3 2.40 2.5 -0.1 
- 9-1-99 5.5 2.65 2.5 0.15 
- 3-1-00 5.6 2.75 2.5 0.25 
- 9-1-00 5.9 2.80 2.5 0.30 
- 3-1-01 6.4 2.95 2.5 0.45
70Swap Diagram
-  LIBOR 
-  Company A Company B 
-  5
71Offsetting Spot Position
Assume that A has a commitment to borrow at a 
fixed rate of 5.2 and that B has a commitment 
to borrow at a rate of LIBOR  .8
- Company A 
- Borrows (pays) 5.2 
- Pays LIBOR 
- Receives 5 
- Net LIBOR.2 
- Company B 
- Borrows (pays) LIBOR.8 
- Receives LIBOR 
- Pays 5 
- Net 5.8
72Swap Diagram
-  
-  Company A Company B 
-  
- The swap in effect transforms a fixed rate 
 liability or asset to a floating rate liability
 or asset (and vice versa) for the firms
 respectively.
LIBOR
LIBOR.8
5.2
5
5.8
LIBOR .2 
 73Options on Futures
- Options on futures are as popular or even more 
 popular than on the actual asset.
- Options on futures do not require payments for 
 accrued interest.
- The likelihood of delivery squeezes is less. 
- Current prices for futures are readily available, 
 they are more difficult to find for bonds.
74Useful Concepts / Terminology
- The language of derivative markets can be 
 confusing. Some basic principles apply to all of
 the markets and instruments that we will cover.
75Risk Preferences
- Risk Loving vs. Risk Neutral vs. Risk Adverse 
- Assume you are faced with two equally likely 
 outcomes
-  
-  A gain of 10 and a loss of 5. 
-  How much would you be willing to pay to accept 
 the risk of the possible loss?
76Risk Preferences
- Risk Neutral If you are willing to pay 2.50, 
 you are willing to pay a fair price to accept
 the risk. (If you repeated the event over and
 over on average you would receive your 2.50)
- Risk Averse If you are willing to pay less than 
 2.50 lets say 2.00, you are risk averse. The
 .50 represents a risk premium, the additional
 return you expect to earn for accepting the risk.
 The lower the amount you are willing to pay the
 more risk averse you are.
77Short Selling
- The investor is selling an asset that he / she 
 does not want.
- This is accomplished by borrowing an asset from a 
 broker and selling it. The anticipation is that
 the price of the asset will decline. The
 investor is obligated to buy back the asset in
 the future and return it to the broker.
- Short selling of derivatives is much simpler than 
 short selling stock. Often selling short can
 offset risk in other positions.
78Risk Preferences
- In pricing derivative products we often will 
 assume that the participants are risk neutral.
 In other words the value of the securities
 represent their fair price
79Risk and Return
- Generally, increased risk results in increase 
 return.
- Based on the idea of a risk free rate which is 
 the return you require on an investment with a
 guaranteed payoff.
- In derivative markets the value of the assets 
 will often be priced based on the use of a risk
 free rate. In a perfect world the derivative
 contract would eliminate the risk associated with
 the fluctuation in the underlying asset.
 Therefore the combination of the two provides a
 risk free return and provide a return comparable
 to the risk free rate.
80Market Efficiency
- Market efficiency occurs when the price of an 
 asset reflects it true economic value. You can
 think of this as the theoretical fair value of
 the asset (think about the CAPM providing a fair
 value).
- A good portion of the class is placed on valuing 
 derivatives, just like valuing of assets you have
 done in other classes. The value or price of the
 derivative will assume that markets are efficient.
81Types of Traders
- Hedger - A participant in a derivatives 
 transaction who is attempting to decrease the
 risk associate with a spot position by taking the
 opposite position in a derivatives market.
- Speculator- Unlike hedgers speculators are 
 attempting to profit from the future movement of
 the market.
82Arbitrageurs
- Participants who can lock in an immediate profit 
 by simultaneously entering into transactions in
 two or more markets.
- A basic assumption throughout the course is that 
 arbitrage opportunities do not exist. The basis
 for this argument is that if they did exist, the
 laws of supply and demand will quickly eliminate
 them as participants attempt to take advantage of
 the opportunity  the quicker arbitrage
 opportunities leave the market the more efficient
 the market is.
83Arbitrage and the Law of one price
- Assume you have two stocks A and B. There are 
 two possible outcomes one month from now.
- If the first outcome occurs Stock A is worth 100 
 and Stock B is worth 50
- If the second outcome occurs, Stock A is worth 
 80 and stock B is worth 40.
- From the example it looks like one share of stock 
 A is worth two shares of stock B. In other words
 by buying two shares of stock B today you should
 be able to get the same outcome as one share of
 stock A.
84Law of one Price
- What if stock A is selling for 85 today and B is 
 selling for 39
- You could sell short stock A and receive 85 use 
 the proceeds to buy two shares of B (total cost
 78) and have a positive cash flow of 7. In one
 month you could sell your two shares of B and buy
 one of A returning it to the broker -- You are
 ahead the 7 plus any interest you received.
85Market Reaction
- If this condition existed the price of stock B 
 would increase (everyone buys it) the price of A
 would decrease (everyone is short selling it).
- The two prices would move until the opportunity 
 no longer exists. This is sometimes referred to
 as the law of one price (the arbitrage
 opportunity must be eliminated quickly)
86The Law of One Price
- Assuming the law of one price is correct 
- Investors will prefer more wealth to less 
- If two investment opportunities have the same 
 outcome they must have the same price
- An investment that produces the same return in 
 all states is risk free and should earn the risk
 free rate.
- Investors will prefer an opportunity if it 
 produces a higher return in at least one state
 and equivalent returns in all other states.
87Storage, Delivery, and Settlement
- Storing an asset entails risk since the spot 
 price of the commodity fluctuates. This risk can
 be eliminated through the use of derivatives,
 implying that in the absence of storage costs the
 investment should earn the risk free rate.
- Similarly since at expiration the contract is 
 identical to a spot transaction the mechanism for
 delivery of a commodity and settlement of the
 contract (via delivery or cash) plays a key role
 in determining the price of the derivative.