Futures market - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 81
About This Presentation
Title:

Futures market

Description:

... it must be good topmaking merino fleece with average fibre diameter of ... 2,600 clean weight kilograms of merino fleece wool, of good topmaking style or ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:89
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 82
Provided by: efgro
Category:
Tags: futures | market | merino

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Futures market


1
Futures market
2
Forwards
  • Forward contract - an agreement between two
    parties involving the future delivery of a
    particular quantity of an asset at a price agreed
    upon today.
  • Buyers and sellers are obliged to deliver or take
    delivery.
  • No money is exchanged until settlement.
  • This may introduce default risk for some forward
    contracts.

3
Example
  • Example You buy a forward contract to receive
    delivery of Euros at an exchange rate of 1 / in
    three months.
  • If in three months the spot rate is 1.2 /, you
    gain, since you get 1 Euro for each dollar
    through your forward contract, but the Euros are
    currently worth more 1.2 dollars for each Euro.
  • To think about it another way, you get one Euro
    for each dollar, whereas if you had waited, your
    dollar would have bought only 0.83 Euros.

4
Futures
  • Futures contract - similar to a forward contract
    but it is entered into on an organized exchange
    and has standardized features (contract size,
    delivery date, acceptable grade of the commodity,
    etc.)
  • They have very low transactions costs.
    Commissions can run as low as .05 of the value
    of the contract.

5
History
  • Rice contracts - 17th Century Japan
  • 1848 CBOT established
  • Financial Futures
  • 1972 foreign currencies at CME
  • 1975 interest rate futures at CBOT
  • 1982 stock index futures at KBT, CME, NYFE

6
Foreign Exchange Futures
  • Futures markets
  • Chicago Mercantile (International Monetary
    Market)
  • London International Financial Futures Exchange
  • MidAmerica Commodity Exchange
  • Active forward market

7
Types of Contracts
  • Agricultural commodities
  • Metals and minerals (including energy contracts)
  • Foreign currencies
  • Financial futures
  • Interest rate futures
  • Stock index futures
  • futures contract specifications can be found on
  • http//www.duke.edu/charvey/options/futures/f_idx
    .htm

8
  • Frozen Pork Bellies Futures Ticker Symbol PB
  • Trading Unit' 40,000 lbs. USDA-inspected 12-14,
    14-16 pound or 16-18 pound (at a 21/2c discount)
    Pork Bellies
  • Price Quote per hundred pounds (or
    cents/pound)
  • Min Price Fluct .025 10.00/tick
  • Daily Price Limit 2.00 800.00/contract
  • Contract Months Feb, Mar, May, Jul, Aug
  • Trading Hours 910 am-100 pm (Chicago Time)
  • Last day 910 am-1200 pm
  • Last Day of Trading The business day immediately
    preceding the last 5 business days of the
    contract month.
  • Delivery Days Any business day of the contract
    month.
  • Delivery Points The CME Clearing House or a
    current list of approved warehouses.

9
Key Terms for Futures Contracts
  • Futures price - agreed-upon price at maturity
  • Note that this is different than the price of a
    security, which is the price paid today for the
    security. A futures contract involves no exchange
    of money at the outset.
  • Long position - agree to purchase
  • Short position - agree to sell
  • Profits on positions at maturity
  • Long future spot price minus futures price
  • Short futures price minus future spot price

10
Key Difference in Futures
  • Secondary trading - liquidity.
  • Standardized contract units.
  • Clearinghouse warrants performance.
  • Unlike forwards, there is no default risk with
    futures.
  • Sellers do not have to be concerned about
    evaluating the credit risk of every different
    buyer, since the clearing house guarantees all
    transactions.

11
Trading Mechanics
  • Clearinghouse - acts as the counterparty to all
    buyers and sellers.
  • Obligated to deliver or supply delivery
  • Stands in the middle of the transaction between
    the long and short position



Long Position
Short Position
Clearinghouse
commodity ?
commodity ?
12
Margin Accounts
  • When buying a contract, the buyer must post a
    performance bond that is, deposit money in a
    margin account, usually 20 percent of the value
    of the contract.
  • Note that this margin account is NOT the same as
    a stock margin account in which a buyer is making
    a down payment and borrowing funds from the
    broker to complete the sale.
  • Since the account earns interest, there is no
    cost to you, the buyer, of posting the
    performance bond.

13
Margin and Trading Arrangements
  • Initial Margin - funds deposited to provide
    capital to absorb losses (more than one-day price
    moves)
  • Marking to Market - each day the profits or
    losses from the new futures price are reflected
    in the account (daily settlement.). This is
    calculated by taking the difference between the
    closing futures price at the end of the day minus
    the previous closing price.
  • Maintenance or variation margin - an established
    value below which a traders margin may not fall.

14
Clearinghouse
  • Bears any residual credit risk, that exists
    because
  • 1) futures prices move so dramatically that the
    amount required to mark to market is larger than
    the balance of an individual's margin account,
    and
  • 2) the individual defaults on payment of the
    balance.

15
Daily Settlement - an example
  • Suppose that the current futures price of gold
    for delivery 4 days from now is 293.50 per
    ounce.
  • Over the next 3 days, the price evolves as
    follows, and the daily settlements are calculated
    accordingly for a long positionDay
    Futures Price Profit (loss)/ounce 1
    295.20 1.70 2 294.60 -0.60 3
    293.00 -1.60Net Profit -0.50

16
  • Suppose an Australian futures speculator buys one
    SPI (share price index) futures contract on the
    Sydney Futures Exchange (SFE) at 1100am on June
    6. At that time, the futures price is 2300.
  • At the close of trading on June 6, the futures
    price has fallen to 2290 (what causes futures
    prices to move is discussed below).
  • Underlying one futures contract is 25 x Index,
    so the buyer's position has changed by
    25(2290-2300)-250.
  • Since the buyer has bought the futures contract
    and the price has gone down, he has lost money on
    the day and his broker will immediately take 250
    out of his account. This immediate reflection of
    the gain or loss is known as marking to market.

17
  • Where does the 250 go?
  • On the opposite side of the buyer's buy order,
    there was a seller, who has made a gain of 250
    (note that futures trading is a zero-sum game -
    whatever one party loses, the counterparty
    gains).
  • The 250 is credited to the seller's account.
  • Suppose that at the close of trading the
    following day, the futures price is 2310. Since
    the buyer has bought the futures and the price
    has gone up, he makes money.
  • In particular, 25(2310-2290)500 is credited
    to his account. This money, of course, comes from
    the seller's account.

18
Forwards and FuturesProfits and Losses
  • A futures contract can be considered a series of
    one-day forward contracts.
  • Its as if you close out your position each day
    and then open up a new position.
  • The price of a futures contract will approach the
    spot price as the futures contract nears its
    maturity date.
  • The capital gains and losses on the futures
    contract are realized over the life of the
    contract rather than at the end, which is the
    case with a forward.

19
Closing out Positions
  • Option One You can reverse the trade
  • Go long (enter into a contract to buy) if closing
    out a short position.
  • Go short (enter into a contract to sell) if
    closing out a long position.
  • The difference in the prices in the two contracts
    will be your profit.
  • Example you have been long corn futures for 5
    days. You want out. You enter into a short
    contract for the same amount. The long and short
    positions cancel at the clearinghouse.

20
Closing out Positions
  • Option Two You can take or make delivery.
  • Financial futures though are cash settled.
  • Most trades are reversed and do not involve
    actual delivery.

21
  • Deliverable quality Greasy wool futures.
  • Delivery must be made at approved warehouses in
    the major wool selling centres throughout
    Australia.
  • For wool to be deliverable, it must possess the
    relevant measurement certificates issued by the
    Australian Wool Testing Authority (AWTA) and
    appraisal certificates issued by the Australian
    Wool Exchange Limited (AWEX).
  • In particular, it must be good topmaking merino
    fleece with average fibre diameter of 21.0
    microns, with measured mean staple strength of 35
    n/ktx, mean staple length of 90mm, of good colour
    with less than 1.0 vegetable matter.

22
  • Because any particular bale of wool is unlikely
    to exactly match these specifications, wool
    within some prespecified tolerance is
    deliverable.
  • In particular, 2,400 to 2,600 clean weight
    kilograms of merino fleece wool, of good
    topmaking style or better, good colour, with
    average micron between 19.6 and 22.5 micron,
    measured staple length between 80mm and 100mm,
    measured staple strength greater than 30 n/ktx,
    less than 2.0 vegetable matter is deliverable.
  • Premiums and discounts for delivery that does not
    match the exact specifications of the underlying
    contract are fixed on the Friday prior to the
    last day of trading for all deliverable wools
    above and below the standard, quoted in cents per
    kilogram clean.

23
Trading Strategies
  • Speculation -
  • You go short if you believe price will fall.
  • You go long if you believe price will rise.
  • Hedging -
  • long hedge - protecting against a rise in price
  • e.g. for an input to production
  • short hedge - protecting against a fall in price
  • e.g. for an output commodity

24
Corn Example
  • You are a farmer who wants to sell your corn
    harvest in September. You would like to lock into
    a price now.
  • The current futures price is 2.26 ¼ per bushel,
    and you think that this is an acceptable lock-in
    price.
  • Contract size is 5000 bushels.
  • You go short 10 contracts and deposit
  • (.2)(105000)(2.26 1/4) 22,625 in a margin
    account.
  • This means you agree to sell 50,000 bushels of
    corn to the CBOT on September for 2.26 ¼ per
    bushel.

25
Corn Example
  • September comes around and the current corn price
    is 1.
  • You sell your corn to a buyer for 1.
  • But you make money on your futures contract.
  • Since the futures price equals the spot price
    when the contract comes due, the futures price is
    also 1.
  • At this point your margin account will have
    gained value by the amount (2.26 1/4 -
    1)(50,000).
  • So at this point you enter into a long contract.
    The two contracts (one long and one short) cancel
    out, you dont have to deliver any corn to the
    CBOT, and you pocket the gain to your margin
    account.

26
Forward and Futures Pricing
  • There are two ways to acquire an asset for some
    date in the future
  • Purchase it now and store it
  • Take a long position in futures
  • These two strategies must have the same market
    determined costs.
  • Otherwise we could do arbitrage.

27
Determining Forward Prices
  • Consider a perfect hedge
  • Hold an underlying asset and short a forward
    contract on that asset.
  • This combined position has no risk!
  • You knew the terms of the contract from the
    start.
  • At the maturity date, you deliver the underlying
    asset in exchange for the forward price.
  • Therefore, a perfect hedge should return the
    riskless rate of return.
  • This idea can be used to develop a relationship
    between forward (or futures) prices and spot
    prices.

28
Basis Convergence Property
  • On the delivery date, the futures price spot
    price or FT PT or FT - PT 0
  • gain or loss (marking to market) on a long
    position FT - FT-1
  • the sum of all daily settlements FT - F0
  • given convergence, this means sum of all daily
    settlements PT - F0

29
Futures prices versus expected future spot price
30
Futures Prices vs. Expected Spot
  • Expectations Hypothesis
  • Normal Backwardation
  • Contango
  • Modern Portfolio Theory

Suppliers are natural hedgers F lt EPT
Purchasers are the natural hedgers gt F gt EPT
P0 EPT/(1k)T P0 F/(1Rf)T EPT/(1k)T
F/(1Rf)T EPT (1Rf)T /(1k)T F
If beta gt 0, then k gt Rf F lt EPT
31
Are forward and future prices the same?
  • Marking to market complicates valuation for
    futures
  • However if interest rats do not change then
    forwards and futures should have the same price
  • We are going to assume that interest rates do not
    change.

32
Hedge Example
  • An investor owns an SP 500 fund that has a
    current value equal to the index level of 1000.
  • Assume dividends of 26 will be paid on the index
    at the end of the year.
  • Assume that the futures price for a contract that
    calls for delivery in one year is 1050.
  • The investor hedges by shorting one futures
    contract.

33
Rate of Return for the Hedge
  • If we denote the one-year futures price today in
    the market by F0, the dividend by D, and the spot
    price by S0, we can write the return on the
    strategy as
  • The way to understand this is to think about in
    and out.
  • He gets F0 when he delivers his SP fund. He gets
    D in dividends, and he pays S0 for the fund.
  • Plugging in the numbers from the example we get.

34
General Spot-Futures Parity
  • Since this strategy is risk-free, its return must
    be equal to the risk free rate.
  • Rearranging terms, we get
  • Continues compounding should be usedhow would
    the formula look then?

35
Intuition behind the Pricing Formula
  • One can interpret the formula
  • F0S0(1rf -d) as follows.
  • If the futures contract is priced correctly, you
    should be indifferent between
  • arranging today to buy the underlying asset at a
    cost of F0 one year from now and,
  • paying S0 to buy the asset today, foregoing
    interest of rfS0 on your money (over the next
    year), but receiving dS0 (at the end of the year)
    as a benefit to holding on to the asset for the
    year.

36
Arbitrage Opportunities
  • If spot-futures parity is not observed, then
    arbitrage is possible.
  • If the futures price is too high
  • Short the futures
  • Borrow the cost of the stocks at the risk free
    rate
  • Buy the index
  • For example, if F01055, this strategy would
    yield 105526-1000(1.076) 5.

37
Arbitrage Opportunities
  • If the futures price is too low, the reverse is
    true
  • Go long futures
  • Short the index
  • Invest the proceeds at the risk free rate.
  • For example, if F01045, this strategy would
    yield 1000(1.076)-1045-26 5.

38
Stock Index Contracts
  • Available on both domestic and international
    indexes.
  • Advantages over direct stock purchase
  • lower transaction costs
  • better for timing or allocation strategies
  • takes less time to acquire the portfolio

39
Using Stock Index Contracts to Create Synthetic
Positions
  • We have seen how to create a synthetic lending
    strategy by holding the index and taking a short
    position in index futures.
  • By playing with this relationship, we can see how
    to create a synthetic index purchase
  • Go long the index future and lend.
  • Also, we can see that being long a forward or
    futures contract is equivalent to buying the
    underlying stocks in the index and borrowing to
    finance this purchase.

40
Using Stock Index Futures as a Partial Hedge
  • We saw how to create a completely riskless
    portfolio by combining a long position in stocks
    with a short position in index futures.
  • A portfolio manager may also want to take a short
    position in an index futures contract to reduce
    temporarily the portfolio's exposure to the
    market (but not eliminate all exposure).
  • This allows the manager to take advantage of her
    superior stock-picking ability, and avoids the
    triggering of high transaction costs (from
    selling off stock and buying it again later) and
    of capital gains taxes.

41
Using Stock Index Futures as a Partial Hedge
  • The number of futures contracts to go long or
    short is determined by how much you want to
    change the portfolios level of risk.
  • You can measure the change in risk by the amount
    you want to change the portfolios beta or by the
    amount you want to change the portfolios level
    of total investment.
  • These two approaches are equivalent.

42
Using Stock Index Futures as a Partial Hedge
  • Changing beta
  • Changing value

43
Example
  • A portfolio manager whose 450 million portfolio
    currently has a beta of 1.2 believes that the
    market may fall in the next couple of months and
    wants to reduce the portfolio beta to 0.8.
  • How many contracts should she short?
  • Assume that the SP 500 is now at 1000.
  • If the market falls by 1, the SP index will
    fall by 10 points.

44
Example
  • Since SP futures contracts come in multiples of
    500 (per point), the drop translates into a
    change of 5,000 per contract.
  • The manager's portfolio would fall by
  • 5.4 million (1.24501) if the beta stayed at
    1.2,
  • 3.6 million (0.84501) if beta falls to 0.8.
  • Thus, to reduce the loss by 1.8 million (
    5.4-3.6), the manager should short 360 contracts
    (1,800,000/5,000).

45
Hedging Foreign Exchange Risk
  • A US firm wants to protect against a decline in
    profit that would result from a decline in the
    pound
  • Estimated profit loss of 200,000 if the pound
    declines by .10.
  • Short or sell pounds for future delivery to avoid
    the exposure.

46
Pricing on Foreign Exchange Futures
Interest rate parity theorem Developed using the
US Dollar and British Pound
where F0 is the forward price E0 is the current
exchange rate
47
Text Pricing Example
rus 5 ruk 6 E0 1.60 per pound T 1 yr
If the futures price varies from 1.58 per pound
arbitrage opportunities will be present.
48
Hedge Ratio for Foreign Exchange Example
Hedge Ratio in pounds ch. in value of
unprotected position / profit on 1 futures
position 200,000 per .10 change in the
pound/dollar exchange rate .10 profit per pound
delivered per .10 in exchange rate 2,000,000
pounds to be delivered
Hedge Ratio in contacts Each contract is for
62,500 pounds or 6,250 per a .10
change 200,000 / 6,250 32 contracts
49
Interest Rate Futures
  • Idea to separate security-specific decisions
    from bets on movements in the entire structure of
    interest rates
  • Domestic interest rate contracts
  • T-bills, notes and bonds
  • municipal bonds
  • International contracts
  • Eurodollar
  • Hedging
  • Underwriters
  • Firms issuing debt

50
Uses of Interest Rate Hedges
  • Owners of fixed-income portfolios protecting
    against a rise in rates.
  • Corporations planning to issue debt securities
    protecting against a rise in rates.
  • Investor hedging against a decline in rates for a
    planned future investment.
  • Exposure for a fixed-income portfolio is
    proportional to modified duration.

51
Hedging Interest Rate Risk Text Example
Portfolio value 10 million Modified
duration 9 years If rates rise by 10 basis
points (.1) Change in value ( 9 ) ( .1)
.9 or 90,000 Present value of a basis point
(PVBP) 90,000 / 10 9,000 per basis point
52
Hedge Ratio Text Example
PVBP for the portfolio PVBP for the hedge
vehicle (contract size is 1000) 9,000
90
H
100 contracts
53
Commodity Futures Pricing
General principles that apply to stock apply to
commodities. Carrying costs are more for
commodities. Spoilage is a concern.
Where F0 futures price P0 cash price of
the asset C Carrying cost c C/P0
54
Swaps
  • Interest rate swap
  • Variable for fixed
  • Foreign exchange swap
  • One currency for another
  • Credit risk on swaps
  • Exists but not very problematic
  • Why not?
  • Swap Variations
  • Interest rate cap
  • Interest rate floor
  • Collars combines caps and floors
  • Swaptions- an option on a swap

55
Pricing on Swap Contracts
  • Swaps are essentially a series of forward
    contracts.
  • One difference is that the swap is usually
    structured with the same payment each period
    while the forward rate would be different each
    period.
  • Using a foreign exchange swap as an example, the
    swap pricing would be described by the following
    formula.

56
Portfolio performance evaluation
57
Introduction
  • Complicated subject
  • Theoretically correct measures are difficult to
    construct
  • Different statistics or measures are appropriate
    for different types of investment decisions or
    portfolios
  • The nature of active management leads to
    measurement problems

58
Dollar- and Time-Weighted Returns
  • Dollar-weighted returns
  • Internal rate of return considering the cash flow
    from or to investment
  • Returns are weighted by the amount invested in
    each stock
  • Time-weighted returns
  • Not weighted by investment amount
  • Equal weighting

59
Text Example of Multiperiod Returns
  • Period Action
  • 0 Purchase 1 share at 50
  • 1 Purchase 1 share at 53
  • Stock pays a dividend of 2 per share
  • 2 Stock pays a dividend of 2 per share
  • Stock is sold at 108 per share

60
Dollar-Weighted Return
Period Cash Flow 0 -50 share purchase 1 2
dividend -53 share purchase 2 4 dividend
108 shares sold
Internal Rate of Return
61
Time-Weighted Return
Simple Average Return (10 5.66) / 2 7.83
62
Averaging Returns
Arithmetic Mean
Text Example Average (.10 .0566) / 2 7.83
Geometric Mean
Text Example Average
(1.1) (1.0566) 1/2 - 1 7.81
63
Comparison of Geometric and Arithmetic Means
  • Past Performance - generally the geometric mean
    is preferable to arithmetic
  • Predicting Future Returns- generally the
    arithmetic average is preferable to geometric
  • Geometric has downward bias

64
Abnormal Performance
  • What is abnormal?
  • Abnormal performance is measured
  • Benchmark portfolio
  • Market adjusted
  • Market model / index model adjusted
  • Reward to risk measures such as the Sharpe
    Measure
  • E (rp-rf) / ?p

65
Factors That Lead to Abnormal Performance
  • Market timing
  • Superior selection
  • Sectors or industries
  • Individual companies

66
Risk Adjusted Performance Sharpe
  • 1) Sharpe Index

rp - rf
?
p
?
67
M2 Measure
  • Developed by Modigliani and Modigliani
  • Equates the volatility of the managed portfolio
    with the market by creating a hypothetical
    portfolio made up of T-bills and the managed
    portfolio

68
M2 Measure Example
Managed Portfolio return 35 standard
deviation 42 Market Portfolio return
28 standard deviation 30 T-bill return
6 Hypothetical Portfolio 30/42 .714 in P
(1-.714) or .286 in T-bills (.714) (.35)
(.286) (.06) 26.7 How do we get the
weights? Since this return is less than the
market, the managed portfolio underperformed
69
Risk Adjusted Performance Treynor
  • 2) Treynor Measure

rp - rf ßp
70
Risk Adjusted Performance Jensen
3) Jensens Measure
rp - rf ßp ( rm - rf)
?
p
?
Alpha for the portfolio
p
rp Average return on the portfolio ßp
Weighted average Beta rf Average risk free
rate rm Avg. return on market index port.

71
Appraisal Ratio
Appraisal Ratio ap / s(ep)
  • Appraisal Ratio divides the alpha of the
    portfolio by the nonsystematic risk
  • Nonsystematic risk could, in theory, be
    eliminated by diversification

72
Which Measure is Appropriate?
  • It depends on investment assumptions
  • 1) If the portfolio represents the entire
    investment for an individual, Sharpe Index
    compared to the Sharpe Index for the market.
  • 2) If many alternatives are possible, use the
    Jensen ??or the Treynor measure
  • The Treynor measure is more complete because it
    adjusts for risk

73
Limitations
  • Assumptions underlying measures limit their
    usefulness
  • When the portfolio is being actively managed,
    basic stability requirements are not met
  • Practitioners often use benchmark portfolio
    comparisons to measure performance

74
Market Timing
  • Adjusting portfolio for up and down movements in
    the market
  • Low Market Return - low ßeta
  • High Market Return - high ßeta

75
Example of Market Timing
rp - rf




















rm - rf



Steadily Increasing the Beta
76
Performance Attribution
  • Decomposing overall performance into components
  • Components are related to specific elements of
    performance
  • Example components
  • Broad Allocation
  • Industry
  • Security Choice
  • Up and Down Markets

77
Process of Attributing Performance to Components
  • Set up a Benchmark or Bogey portfolio
  • Use indexes for each component (equity, fixed
    income, etc)
  • Use target weight structure

78
Process of Attributing Performance to Components
  • Calculate the return on the Bogey and on the
    managed portfolio
  • Explain the difference in return based on
    component weights or selection
  • Summarize the performance differences into
    appropriate categories

79
Formula for Attribution
Where B is the bogey portfolio and p is the
managed portfolio
80
Contributions for Performance
Contribution for asset allocation (wpi -
wBi) rBi Contribution for security selection
wpi (rpi - rBi) Total Contribution
from asset class wpirpi -wBirBi
81
Complications to Measuring Performance
  • Two major problems
  • Need many observations even when portfolio mean
    and variance are constant
  • Active management leads to shifts in parameters
    making measurement more difficult
  • To measure well
  • You need a lot of short intervals
  • For each period you need to specify the makeup of
    the portfolio
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com