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Swaps and their Applications

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Title: Swaps and their Applications


1
Swaps and their Applications
2
Overview of Swaps
  • Swaps Obligates two parties to exchange some
    specified cash flows at specified intervals over
    a specified time period. Like futures contracts,
    swaps can be viewed as a portfolio of forward
    contracts.
  • Key Features
  • Credit risk is two-sided but a swap is less risky
    than a forward (and more risky than futures)
    because a swap reduces the performance period
    (the time interval between cash payments) but
    does not require posting a margin.
  • Swaps can be tailored exactly to customer needs
    and can be arranged for longer time periods than
    futures and forwards (e.g., 1-5 years vs. 1-2
    years for forwards/futures).

3
Basic Components of a Swap Contract
  • Swaps can be created for all types of financial
    assets and commodities.
  • Swaps have experienced explosive growth since the
    early 1980s due to the ability to custom-tailor
    payoffs over relatively long time periods.
  • Notional Principal is used to define the
    magnitude of cash flows but this principal is
    never exchanged.
  • Payments are netted at pre-specified settlement
    dates over the life of the swap.
  • A difference check is sent to one of the two
    parties at each settlement date (reduces credit
    risk).

4
Types of Swaps
  • Interest Rate Swaps The most common swap is
    based on swapping fixed versus floating interest
    payments. Also, can create basis swaps and
    cross-currency swaps.
  • Currency Swaps Enables two parties to exchange
    currencies at pre-specified dates over the life
    of the swap.
  • Commodity Swaps Can receive or pay floating or
    fixed prices for commodities such as oil and
    natural gas.
  • Equity Swaps Can exchange the return on a stock
    (or stock index) for the return on another asset
    (e.g., LIBOR).
  • Credit Default Swaps Enables to exchange cash
    flows depending on changes in a borrowers credit
    rating.

5
Example of Motivation for Swaps
  • Swaps can allow both parties to achieve lower
    financing costs.
  • Example
  • AAA can borrow at fixed rate (10.8) and swap
    with BBB in order to pay floating rate (L-0.1).
    Both parties can then split the 70 bps savings
    (120-50 bps).

Borrower AAA BBB
Fixed Rate 10.8 12.0
Floating Rate LIBOR 0.25 LIBOR 0.75
6
Alternative Swap Example (Hi / AAA swaps
floating for fixed rate)
  • Reduce borrowing costs by using interest rate
    swaps.
  • Example Two firms with different credit
    ratings, Hi and Lo
  • Hi can borrow fixed at 11.0 and floating at
    LIBOR 1.0.
  • Lo can borrow fixed at 11.4 and floating at
    LIBOR 1.5.

7
Hi wants fixed rate, but it will issue floating
and swap with Lo. Lo wants floating rate, but
it will issue fixed and swap with Hi. Lo also
makes side payment of 0.45 to Hi.
Hi Lo
CF to lender -(LIBOR1) -11.40
CF Hi to Lo -11.40 11.40
CF Lo to Hi (LIBOR1) -(LIBOR1)
CF Lo to Hi 0.45 -0.45
Net CF -10.95 -(LIBOR1.45)
8
Rationales for why Swap Savings Exist
  • Comparative Advantage predicts savings should
    disappear (but they dont!).
  • Under-priced Credit Risk again, predicts
    savings disappear as market corrects
    under-pricing.
  • Different Cash Flows interest rate swaps dont
    have call provisions, so savings are really the
    cost of the issuers option to call fixed rate
    debt (most plausible reason).
  • Different Information Sets insiders can signal
    their beliefs about the true value of the firm.

9
Rationales for why Swap Savings Exist (cont.)
  • Different Taxation and Regulation can explain
    certain transactions but should disappear as
    governments close loopholes.
  • Exposure Management more firms are actively
    managing their financial price risks and
    therefore swaps have grown in line with this
    trend.
  • Synthetic Instruments as more issuers create
    synthetic instruments (or hybrids), more swaps
    are needed.
  • Liquidity lower B-A spreads attract more
    investors and improves the liquidity of the
    market.

10
Pricing and Valuing a Swap
  • A Swap can be decomposed into a portfolio of
    forward contracts (or short term loans).
  • At origination, both types of loans/forwards
    (fixed and floating rate) have an E(NPV) 0.
  • A swap is a combination of long position in one
    type of loan (e.g., long a fixed rate) and a
    short position in the other type (short a
    floating rate).
  • Three yield curves (spot zero-coupon, forward
    zero-coupon, and spot par bond) are used to price
    the expected cash flows from a swap.

11
Applications of Swaps
  • Types of Users
  • Non-financial Corporations
  • Financial Companies (CBs, IBs, Brokers,
    Insurance)
  • Institutional Investors (Pension funds, Mutual
    funds)
  • Governments (Federal and Municipal)
  • Usually used to Modify Debt Obligations
  • Match Interest Sensitivity of Assets
  • Reduce Funding Costs
  • Enhance Yield on Investments
  • Increase Debt Capacity
  • Protect Value of Investments from Interest Rate
    Risk

12
Applications of Swaps (cont.)
  • Also used to Modify Cash Flows
  • Reduce Volatility of CFs to IR, FX, Commodity,
    Equity Price Movements
  • Hedge on Inflows (Income, Receivables)
  • Hedge on Outflows (Cost of Goods Sold, Operating
    Expenses)
  • Macro Hedge of Both Inflows and Outflows (e.g.,
    A/L Mgmt.)
  • Can also be used to Create Synthetic Instruments
  • Inverse Floating Rate Notes
  • Adjustable-rate Preferred Stock
  • Synthesize Long-Dated Forward Contracts (can be
    cheaper)

13
FX Rate Risk and Swaps
  • Typical Usage
  • Firm borrows in one currency where interest rates
    are lower and then swaps cash flows into
    home/base currency.
  • Hedge transaction exposures rather than macro
    hedges.
  • Common Examples
  • Company managing Foreign Inflows or Outflows
    (e.g., Import/Export business).
  • Governments borrowing in international capital
    markets.
  • To access long-term fixed rate capital in
    exotic currencies (e.g., McDonalds borrowing in
    New Zealand).

14
Credit Default Swaps Infinite Leverage
  • Like an insurance contract that pays in the event
    of default.
  • FASB requires mark-to-market valuation.
  • Collateral Call - Protection Buyers can call for
    partial payment if default event is likely.
    Determined by mark-to-market value.

Protection Seller
Protection Buyer
Premium Payments
  • Does not usually own reference asset
  • Going long
  • Benefits when reference asset price INCREASES,
    max at Par
  • Tends to own reference asset
  • Hedging or going short
  • Benefits when reference asset price DECREASES

Payment upon Default of Reference Asset
Reference Asset can be a MBS, CDO, Bond, or Loan
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