Title: Commerce 4FJ3
1Commerce 4FJ3
- Fixed Income Analysis
- Week 10
- Interest Rate Futures
2Forward Contracts
- Any contract that legally binds two parties to
engage in a specific transaction at some point in
the future at a pre-specified price is a forward
contract - Can be negotiated individually
- Not usually transferable
- Subject to counterparty risk
3Forward Payoff
- A forward contract does not have a direct payoff,
the transaction that was negotiated takes place - Implied payoff or cost the company has agreed to
sell a bond forward for 1,160 and the bond is
selling at 1,200 at the time of delivery, there
is an opportunity cost of 40
4Futures
- Similar to a forward contract in the fact that it
binds both parties to a specific transaction in
the future but - A futures contract is standardized with respect
to the quantity, quality, time, and location - Contracts are traded on organized exchanges
- No specific link between the buyer and seller
- Gains or losses are realized on a daily basis
5Futures Trading
- When a futures contract is traded on an exchange
the price is recorded as well as the identities
of the two parties - The link between buyer and seller is broken
- The buyer now has a contract to buy the asset
from the clearinghouse and the seller has a
contract to sell to the clearinghouse
6Futures Trading
- If either party takes the opposite position later
that position is netted against their previous
contract and their position is reversed or closed
out - A trader that sells an asset is said to be short
in that asset while a buyer is referred to as
long in the asset
7Delivery
- If a contract is held to maturity (less than 1
on average are), the clearinghouse matches buyers
and sellers based on their stated preferences for
delivery options and informs each party of the
delivery details - Often closed out before maturity to allow the
investor to set their own details
8Marking to Market
- To protect against the credit risk, futures
contracts are marked to market at the end of each
trading day - This rewrites the contract so that the price is
set to the settlement price and any gain or loss
is paid in cash - The settlement price is usually the closing price
of that contract but may differ if a contract has
very low volume
9Marking to Market Example
- You enter a futures contract to buy a bond issued
by XYZ for 95.20/100 face value - The settlement price is 95.00 (FV1,000)
- your contract is rewritten to buying at 95.00
- you must pay the difference of 2.00 to the
clearinghouse - The next day price rise to 95.75 you will be
paid 7.50 by the clearinghouse
10Reason for Marking to Market
- Marking to market significantly reduces the
counter-party risk (one party being unable or
unwilling to fulfil their obligations) - To be able to meet the marking to market
requirements investors are required to maintain a
margin account - Margin requirements are typically 5-10
11Margins
- Initial margin how much you must deposit when
you open a position - Maintenance margin the lowest level that your
margin account can fall to before you are
required to deposit more - Variation margin the amount that you must
deposit within 24 hours or your position will be
closed out
12Leverage
- Consider two investment options
- buy 1 bond for 1,000, cost 1,000
- enter futures contracts for 20,000 face value of
those bonds, initial margin 1,000 - Return if price rises to 1,025
- 25 increase in market value 2.5 return
- 500 net marking to market 50 return
13Use of Leverage
- Can be used by speculators
- Can be used to offset price risk
- A portfolio has a potential large loss if
interest rates increase - The portfolio can be rebalanced to reduce the
price risk, at the cost of transaction costs - Selling a few bond futures could generate large
profits if interest rates increase
14Currently Traded Contracts
- A few of the most traded contracts are
- US T-Bill futures
- Eurodollar CD futures
- US treasury bond futures
- US treasury note futures
- US agency note futures
- CBOT 10-year municipal note index futures
15US T-Bill futures
- Traded on the International Money Market of the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange (IMM) - Underlying asset is a US T-bill with a face value
of 1,000,000 and a maturity of 13 weeks
(typically 91 days) from the delivery date - The delivered T-bill can either be newly issued
or seasoned - Delivery dates are synchronized with regularly
scheduled T-bill auctions
16Quoted Yields
- T-bills are quoted on the annualized yield on a
bank discount basis
17T-Bill Futures Prices
- Quoted on an index basisindex price 100 - (Yd
x 100) - Given a current quote of 3.75 for T-bills index
price 100 - (3.75) 96.25 - Given a futures price of 92.50 the yield is
18Invoice Price
- This is how much is paid for the t-bill if it is
delivered - Invoice price 1,000,000 - D
- Find the invoice price if the final settlement
price is 92.50
19Price of a Basis Point
- The change in price of the underlying bond for a
change of one basis point is - 0.0001 x 1,000,000 x 91/360 25.28
- Market participants often refer to the value of a
basis point as 25 in spite of the fact that the
typical T-Bill has a maturity of 91 days
20Eurodollar CD Futures
- Traded on both the IMM of the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange, and the London International Financial
Futures Exchange - Debt obligation tied to foreign banks instead of
US treasury - Discount is based LIBOR, London interbank offered
rate
21Eurodollar Futures
- Also 1,000,000 face value and quoted on an index
basis, but standardized at 90 days - Value of a basis point 25
- Cash settlement contract, no delivery if held to
maturity, parties settle in cash
22Treasury Bond Futures
- Underlying asset hypothetical 100,000 face
value, 20-year, 6 coupon bond - Physical settle The CME Group allows the seller
to deliver one of several Treasury bonds that the
CME Group declares is acceptable for delivery,
with adjustments - List is printed before trading begins
23Exhibit 26-1 Treasury Bonds Acceptable for
Delivery and Conversion Factors
Coupon Maturity Date Mar. 2011 Jun. 2011 Sep. 2011 Dec. 2011 Mar. 2012 Jun. 2012 Sep. 2012 Dec. 2012 Mar. 2013
6 3/4 08/15/26 1.0741 1.0735 ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- -----
6 1/2 11/15/26 1.0500 1.0494 1.0490 ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- -----
6 5/8 02/15/27 1.0630 1.0625 1.0618 1.0613 ----- ----- ----- ----- -----
6 3/8 08/15/27 1.0385 1.0382 1.0377 1.0375 1.0370 1.0368 ----- ----- -----
6 1/8 11/15/27 1.0130 1.0127 1.0127 1.0125 1.0125 1.0123 1.0123 ----- -----
5 1/2 08/15/28 0.9466 0.9472 0.9475 0.9481 0.9485 0.9490 0.9494 0.9500 0.9504
5 1/4 11/15/28 0.9194 0.9200 0.9208 0.9213 0.9221 0.9227 0.9235 0.9242 0.9250
5 1/4 02/15/29 0.9187 0.9194 0.9200 0.9208 0.9213 0.9221 0.9227 0.9235 0.9242
6 1/8 08/15/29 1.0136 1.0136 1.0134 1.0134 1.0132 1.0132 1.0130 1.0130 1.0127
6 1/4 05/15/30 1.0281 1.0278 1.0277 1.0274 1.0273 1.0270 1.0269 1.0265 1.0264
5 3/8 02/15/31 0.9281 0.9287 0.9291 0.9297 0.9301 0.9307 0.9311 0.9318 0.9322
4 1/2 02/15/36 0.8078 0.8087 0.8095 0.8105 0.8113 0.8123 0.8132 0.8142 0.8151
4 3/4 02/15/37 ----- ----- ----- ----- 0.8398 0.8406 0.8413 0.8421 0.8427
5 02/15/37 ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- 0.8718 0.8725 0.8730 0.8737
4 3/8 02/15/38 ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- 0.7918
24Treasury Bond Futures Details
- Price quoted per 100 of face value
- Price quoted in 1/3296-13 means (96 13/32)
96.40625 - Invoice price Contract size (face value) x
settlement price x conversion factor
accrued interest
25Treasury Bond Delivery Example
- Settlement price 102-12
- Conversion factor of delivered bond 1.157
- Invoice price 100,000 x 102.375 x 1.157
accrued interest 118,447.88 accrued
interest - The buyer does not know the exact price they have
to pay until the bond is delivered
26Treasury Bond Delivery Options
- The seller has a few options when actually
delivering the bond - Quality option (swap option) can deliver one of
the listed acceptable bonds - Timing option can deliver on any day of the
contract delivery month - Wild card option notice of intent to deliver,
must be given 1 day in advance, as late as 800
p.m. Chicago time
27Cheapest to Deliver
- Given a choice sellers will want to figure out
which issue is the cheapest to deliver - Face value of issue is set at 100,000 but actual
price is affected by conversion ratio - Find implied repo rate
- Highest repo rate is the cheapest to deliver
28US Treasury Note Futures
- 2, 5, and 10 year maturity contracts
- Underlying asset 100,000 face value or 200,000
for 2 year, 6 coupon rate - Smaller basket of acceptable bonds available due
to more restrictive definitions of an acceptable
issue
29US Agency Note Futures
- Traded on CBOT and CME (2006)
- Underlying asset is 100,000 debenture from
either Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac - Both exchanges have 5 10 year maturities
- Coupon rate 6 on CBOT, 6.5 on CME
30Municipal Index Futures
- CBOT 10-year municipal note index futures
- Mentioned on page 596, 8th Edition
- Underlying asset a basket of up to 250 municipal
bonds which meet certain rules, 10-40 years
remaining maturity, coupon rate between 3 and
9, etc. - Cash settlement contract
31Pricing of Futures Contracts
- Theoretical model based on carry cost pricing and
arbitrage arguments - Tactic
- buy the underlying asset using borrowed funds
- enter a futures contract to fix the selling price
- sell at delivery date and repay the loan
- if money can be made, there will be excess demand
for the bond and supply of the future
32Cash and Carry Trade Example
- 20-year, 12 coupon par bond, borrowing rate of
8, futures price of 107 for delivery in 3
months - No cost to establish borrow to buy bond
- Invoice price 107 3 (accrued interest)
- Bank loan 100 2 (interest)
- Net profit 110 - 102 8 per 100 of face
33Theoretical Price
- Assuming short sales, we can also do the reverse,
so we can get a theoretical price - profit 0 proceeds - outlay
- F P(1 t(r - c))F futures price P Current
bond pricet time to delivery r financing
costc current yield on underlying bond - (r - c) called cost of carry
34Theoretical Price Problems
- Interim cash flows from marking to market make
the strategy risky - Financing rate borrowing and lending rates may
be different - Multiple issues may be deliverable
- Delivery date unknown
- Underlying may be a basket of bonds, tracking
error may result
35Adjusted Model
- The simple model may be adjusted to handle some
of those problems - P(1 t(rb - c)) F P(1 t(rl - c))to
account for different rates - F P(1 t(r - c)) - delivery optionsto account
for delivery options
36Bond Portfolio Management
- The bond portfolio manager can use future
contracts to - Speculate on the movement of interest rates
- Control the interest risk of a portfolio
- Create synthetic securities for yield enhancement
- Create a temporary substitute for rebalancing or
switching from bonds to stocks
37Controlling the Duration of a Portfolio
- Instead of rebalancing a manager can use futures
to match duration - The contract size and duration must be known to
find the hedge ratio - Dollar duration Duration x value of portfolio
38Hedging
- Hedging is nothing more than a special case of
interest rate risk management where the target
duration is zero - In hedging an individual bond position with
futures, the hedger is taking a futures position
as a temporary substitute for transactions to be
made in the cash market at a later date
39Hedging Risks
- The difference between the cash price and the
futures price is the basis. The risk that the
basis will change in an unpredictable way is
called basis risk - Typically, the bond to be hedged is not identical
to the bond underlying the futures contract. This
type of hedging is referred to as cross hedging
40Bonds vs. Stocks
- A pension fund manager wanting to change the
allocation between stocks and bonds can - Buy bonds and sell stocks
- Use interest-rate futures and stock index futures
- transactions costs are lower
- market impact costs are avoided or reduced
- activities of the portfolio managers employed by
the pension fund manager are not disrupted