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CHAPTER 26: DERIVATIVES AND HEDGING RISK

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Title: CHAPTER 26: DERIVATIVES AND HEDGING RISK


1
CHAPTER 26 DERIVATIVES AND HEDGING RISK
  • TOPICS
  • 26.1 Forward Contracts
  • 26.2 Futures
  • 26.3 Hedging
  • 26.4 Interest Rate Futures Contracts
  • 26.5 Duration Hedging

2
Overview
  • Risks to be managed, and the methods used to
    finance them.
  • Commodity price risk (futures)
  • Interest rate exposure (duration hedging/swaps)
  • FX exposure (derivatives)
  • Hedging
  • Find two closely related assets
  • Buy one and sell the other in proportions to
    minimize the risk of your net position
  • If the assets are perfectly correlated, your net
    position is risk free

3
How risk is managed
  • Production costs 1.50/bu
  • Selling price in Sept. Unknown
  • What can the farmer do to reduce risk?
  • 1. Do nothing
  • 2. Buy Crop Insurance
  • 3. Buy a put option
  • 4. Enter a Forward/futures contract to sell

Plant
Harvest
May
Sept.
4
26.1 Forward Contracts
  • A forward contract is an agreement to buy / sell
    an asset at a particular future time for a
    specified price called the delivery price
  • Forward contracts are customized and not usually
    traded on an exchange
  • The long (short) position agrees to buy (sell)
    the asset on the specified date for the delivery
    price
  • When the contract is entered into, the delivery
    price is chosen so that the value of the contract
    is zero to each party.
  • the forward price is the delivery price which
    makes the contract value zero (so the forward
    price is equal to the delivery price at the
    inception of the contract)

5
Examples of a forward
  • Pizza forward contract.
  • Order pizza by phone. Specify topping (type),
    size, delivery time and location and price -
    fixed when contract is established. Pay on
    delivery.
  • Energy forward
  • You buy 50,000 cubic feet (50 Mcf) of heating gas
    in summer from your heating company for 10 per
    thousand cubic feet (Mcf), deliverable from Jan.
    March.
  • Long in forward You
  • Short Heating Co.

6
Payoffs From Forward Contracts
  • let ST denote the spot price of the asset at the
    delivery date T and let Ft be the delivery price
    (price set at t payable at T)
  • The payoffs on the delivery date are
  • long position payoff ST - Ft
  • short position payoff Ft - ST

7
Problems with hedging with forwards
  • Hedged with forwards is imperfect, since you do
    not know the quantity you will have to trade.
  • There is credit risk with forward contracts.
  • Bipartisan arrangement
  • In the previous example, if heating gas price
    increase sharply in the winter, your heating
    company will lose, and it might default.

8
26.2 Futures
  • Very similar to forwards in payoff profile, but
    addresses credit risk problem by
    marking-to-market every day.
  • Highly standardized contracts (delivery
    location, contract size etc.), which permit
    exchange trading.
  • The futures price is analogous to the forward
    price it is the delivery price for a futures
    contract
  • the futures price will converge to the spot price
    of the underlying asset when the contract matures
  • More institutional details
  • The exact delivery date is usually not specified
    in a futures contract rather it is some time
    interval within the delivery month
  • Actual delivery rarely occurs, instead parties
    close out positions by taking offsetting
    transactions prior to maturity. Cash settlement.
  • There are commodities futures and financial
    futures (stocks, bonds and currencies).

9
Example Corn Futures at CBOT
4 Digit Price Quote Fourth digit is 1/8 cent/bu
10
Futures/forward price can change everyday
  • In options, X does not change
  • In futures, your profit/loss is based on
    fluctuation of futures price
  • Your daily profit/loss for long futures is New
    futures price the futures price that you agreed
  • If an offsetting position is taken before the
    expiry for a long futures, then profit/loss is
    Fnew - Ft ,where Fnew is the new futures price
    at the offsetting time.
  • Likewise, if an offsetting position is taken
    before the expiry for a short futures, then
    profit/loss is Ft Fnew.

11
Example
  • Consider an investor who enters a futures
    contract expiring one month from now to purchase
    100 oz. of gold at the futures price of 275 per
    ounce.
  • If the spot price of gold is 290 on the expiry
    date, the profit/loss is _____.
  • If the investor closes out her position two week
    from now with a futures price of 280 on the same
    contract. The spot price is 290. Her profit/loss
    is ______.

12
Marking to market/Margin
  • Profit/loss is settled every day on a margin
    account
  • Minimize default risk
  • Details
  • Initial margin
  • If the value of the margin account falls below
    the maintenance margin, the contract holder
    receives a margin call.
  • You need to add to bring margin balance back to
    initial margin level (otherwise contract will be
    forced to close out.)

13
Example Marking-to-market Consider an investor
who enters a futures contract to purchase 100 oz.
of gold at the futures price of 875 per ounce.
Suppose that the initial margin is set at 6,000
and the maintenance margin is set at 4,500. The
contract is closed out after 6 days.
Day Futures Price Cash Flow Starting Margin Cash added to Margin Ending Margin
1 875 0 0 6,000 6,000
2 872
3 869
4 874
5 875 1,100 7,100 -1,100 6,000
6 884 900 6,900 -6,900 0
  • What is the profit and loss to the investor,
    e.g. at days 2 and 3?
  • (2) When does he receive a margin call? What to
    do when receiving a margin call?
  • (3) Whats his ultimate gain/loss?

14
Futures vs. Options
  • Similarities
  • Deferred delivery markets
  • Limited number of contracts
  • Standardized contracts
  • Exchange is middleman
  • Differences
  • Options
  • Longs have right, not obligation to buy/sell
  • Frequent exercise
  • Futures
  • Both longs and shorts have obligation to buy/sell
  • Daily price limits
  • Marked-to-market
  • Delivery seldom occurs

15
Hedging with futuresLocking in price
  • There are two types of investors who use
    futures/forward
  • Speculators try to profit from price movements
  • Hedgers try to protect against price movement
    and to reduce risk by making outcome less
    variable
  • Short hedge (take a short position in futures) is
    used when you have asset to sell in the future
  • Conversely, long hedge (take a long position in
    futures) is used when you have asset to purchase
    in the future

16
Short Hedge
  • Consider a firm which will be selling an asset at
    some future date T, and suppose there is a
    futures contract on that asset for delivery at T
  • The firm is exposed to the risk that the price of
    the asset might fall between now and T
  • If the firm takes a short position in a futures
    contract, its overall payoff is
  • futures payoff -(FT - F0) -(ST - F0)
  • payoff from selling asset at T ST
  • total F0
  • i.e. the price of F0 is locked in today
  • If the asset price falls, the firm loses on the
    asset sale but gains on the futures contract
  • If the asset price rises, the firm gains on the
    sale but loses on the futures contract

17
Example Short hedge
  • It is November 2003. The canola farmer is
    worried about the price of his crop (output). He
    sells canola futures say 50 tonnes Feb 2004 at
    300 per tonne. In February 2004, when the farmer
    harvests his crop, the market price of canola is
    250 per tonne.
  • The farmer's profits from futures _____________
    per tonne
  • The farmer's proceeds from sale of canola
    ___________ per tonne
  • Total _______ per tonne
  • Suppose in February 2004, when the farmer
    harvests his crop, the market price of canola is
    450 per tonne.
  • The farmer's profits from futures _____________
    per tonne
  • The farmer's proceeds from sale of canola
    ___________ per tonne
  • Total ___________ per tonne

18
Long Hedge
  • Suppose instead a firm wants to purchase an asset
    at some future date T
  • The firm is exposed to the risk that the price of
    the asset might rise between now and T
  • If the firm takes a long position in a futures
    contract, its overall payoff is
  • futures payoff FT - F0 ST - F0
  • payment from purchasing asset at T -ST
  • total F0
  • i.e. the price of F0 is locked in today
  • if the asset price falls, the firm gains on the
    asset purchase but loses on the futures contract
  • And vice versa
  • Note that futures hedging does not necessarily
    improve the overall outcome you can expect to
    lose on the futures contract roughly half of the
    time gt the objective of hedging is to reduce
    risk by making the outcome less variable

19
Interest Rate Futures Contracts
  • Futures contract whose underlying security is a
    debt obligation.
  • Well consider interest rate futures
  • Interest rate futures are used to lock into the
    forward term structure (lock into future interest
    rates).

20
Term Structure of Interest Rates
  • The text coverage of this material is in Appendix
    6A
  • Although in almost all cases in this course we
    consider a flat term structure ( interest rates
    of different maturities), it is important to keep
    in mind that this is a simplification
  • With a flat term structure, discount rates are
    the same for all maturities, but this is rarely
    (if ever) the case
  • For Oct. 31, 2007, the Bank of Canada reported
    government zero coupon government bond yields as
    follows
  • Maturity 1 yr 3 yr 5 yr 7 yr 10
    yr 15 yr
  • Yield 4.18 4.16 4.18 4.21 4.28
    4.37
  • This means, for example, that the price on Oct.
    31 of a one year zero coupon government bond
    paying 1,000 at maturity was 1,000/1.0418
    959.88, while the price of a ten year zero
    coupon government bond paying 1,000 at maturity
    was 1,000/1.042810 657.64
  • The rates above, which can be used to determine
    prices at which bonds may be currently traded,
    are known as spot rates

21
Pricing of Government Bonds
  • Consider a Government of Canada bond that pays a
    semi-annual coupon of C for the next T/2 years
    (Note that there is a total of T2(T/2) payments)

If the term structure is flat, i.e. r1 r2
rT r , then the above formula simplifies to
the familiar C ATr F/(1 r )T
22
Pricing of Interest Rate Forward Contracts
  • An N-period forward contract on that Government
    Bond

Can be valued as the present value of the forward
price
  • In the above, PV is the current value of the
    forward contract.
  • Pforward is the forward contract price (the
    price youll pay in the future). One implies the
    other.

23
Example
  • Consider a 5-year forward contract on a 20-year
    Government of Canada bond. The coupon rate is 6
    percent per annum and payments are made
    semiannually on a par value of 1,000. The quoted
    yield to maturity is 5. Assume that the term
    structure is flat. What is the value of the bond
    today? What is the forward price?

24
Interest rate futures contracts and hedging
  • In practice, futures contracts on bonds are
    typically used rather than forward contracts
  • Futures contracts on bonds are referred to as
    interest rate futures contracts
  • The pricing relationships derived above for
    forward contracts will only be an approximation
    in this context
  • The exact delivery date is determined by the
    short party in a futures contract

25
,84-165 equals 84 16.5/32
26
Use interest rate futures to lock into future
interest rate
  • Example You own 10 million worth of 20 year 10
    coupon bond (semiannual coupon payments). The
    term structure is flat at 5 (semi-annual).
    These bonds are therefore selling at 1,000.
  • If the term structure shifts up uniformly to
    5.5, the new price per bond is
  • Since you have 10,000 of these bonds, you have
    lost
  • You want to lock into the interest rates to
    prevent the loss. What should you do?

27
Example contd Opposite position in futures
  • Suppose government bond futures contract
    specifies 6-month delivery of 100,000 par value
    of 20 year 8 coupon bond. The current price
    (value) for this futures contract is
  • After the term structure shift, it is
  • Each short futures contract gains
  • Suppose you hedge by shorting K futures
    contracts
  • K Size of exposure/size of futures contract
  • Gain on futures
  • Overall Approximately you lock into the 5
    interest rate.

28
Reasons in practice why interest hedging using
futures may not work perfectly
  • Different maturities (bonds in portfolio vs.
    futures contract)
  • Different coupon rates
  • Different risk (e.g. corporate bonds in
    portfolio, government bonds in futures contract)

29
Interest rate risk
  • Interest rate risk impact of changing market
    yields on price
  • Assume for simplicity a flat term structure.
    Consider these four bonds, each with 1,000 par
    value and coupons paid annually
  • Note percentage price changes are calculated
    relative to the price when r 10, e.g.
    (877.93-875.66)/875.66 .2592.

30
Interest rate risk contd
  • Observations from the previous slide
  • Comparing A, B, and C low coupon bond prices are
    more sensitive (i.e. higher percentage price
    change) to changes in r , given the same T
  • Comparing C and D longer maturity bond prices
    are more sensitive to changes in r, given the
    same coupon
  • Rank bonds by their interest rate risk

31
Duration
  • How do we measure the sensitivity of bond prices
    to changes in interest rates?
  • This means that the percentage change in price
    for a given change in r is

32
Duration contd
  • Duration is defined as
  • Or
  • Duration measures how long, on average, a
    bondholder must wait to receive cash payments (a
    measure of the effective maturity of the bond
    given when its cash flows occur)

CFt cash flow at t
33
Example
Calculate the duration for a 3 year bond, P
1,026.25, 8 annual coupon, r 7
1 2 3
Payment or cash flow 80 80 1,080
PV of cash Flow 74.77 69.88 881.60
Relative value (Wt) 0.0729 0.0681 .8591
Weighted maturity (tWt)
Duration
34
Duration and Interest Rate Risk
A bit of algebra yields
  • Duration measures the sensitivity of bond
    prices to changes in interest rates
  • It is the first-order approximation of price
    sensitivity to interest rate
  • For a small change in interest rate, duration is
    quite an accurate estimate for percent price
    change
  • For a given change in yield, the larger a bond's
    duration the greater the impact on price
    (interest rate risk/sensitivity)

35
Example
  • Which bond has the higher duration (treat each
    column separately, assume everything else being
    equal)?

Bond Coupon Maturity Yield
A 10 10 years 10
B 5 5 years 5
36
Portfolio Duration
  • The duration of a portfolio P containing M bonds
    is
  • where wi is the percentage weight of bond i in P.


37
Examples
  • D 3.3, P1,000, r 10, if r drops to 9, what
    is the price change as measured by duration?
  • Portfolio duration
  • A bond mutual fund holds the following two
    zero-coupon bonds (1) 5-year maturity and 5
    yield with 40 of portfolio investment (2)
    10-year maturity and 6 yield with 60 portfolio
    investment. Whats the duration for the funds
    portfolio?

38
Immunization Balance sheet hedging based on
duration
  • Immunization is a hedging strategy based on
    duration
  • designed to protect against interest rate risk.
  • Match the value changes in both sides of balance
    sheet
  • The drop in the value of assets can be
    (partially) offset by the drop in the value of
    liabilities.
  • Immunization is accomplished by equating the
    interest rate exposure of assets and liabilities
  • Asset Duration assets Liability Duration
    liabilities

39
Example
  • You have just learned that your firm has a future
    liability of 1 million due at the end of two
    years. Suppose there are two different bonds
    available and r 10.
  • Duration of liability 2 years
  • Bond 1 7 annual coupon, T 1 year, 1,000 par
    value
  • P1
  • Duration (D1) 1 year
  • Bond 2 8 annual coupon, T 3 years, 1,000 par
    value
  • P2
  • duration (D2) 2.78 years after some calculation

40
Example contd Immunization strategies
  • If
  • Buy bond 1 and then another 1-year bond after a
    year - runs risk of lower rates available for
    second year - reinvestment risk
  • Buy bond 2 and sell after 2 years - If rates rise
    before then, bond prices fall, so investment may
    not be enough to cover liability - price risk
  • Invest in a combination of bonds 1 and 2 so that
    the exposure to interest rate risk will be the
    same between assets (your investment) and
    liability
  • Basic idea if rates rise, the portfolios losses
    on the 3 year bonds will be offset by gains on
    reinvested 1 year bonds.
  • And vice versa.
  • How much should you invest in each bond?

41
Example contd solution
  • w1 invested in 1 year bonds and (1 w1) in 3
    year bonds.
  • w1 D1 (1 w1 )D2
  • Total amount to be invested
  • Amount in 1-year bonds
  • Number of 1 year bonds
  • Amount in 3 year bonds
  • Number of 3 year bonds

42
Example contd Does the immunization strategy
work?
r after 1 year r after 1 year r after 1 year
9 10 11
Value at t 2 from reinvesting 1 year bond proceeds 438,197 442,181
Value at t 2 of 3 year bonds Value from reinvesting coupons received at t 1 Coupons received at t 2 Selling price at t 2 42,997 39,088 479,716 43,388 39,088 475,395
Total 999,998 1,000,052
43
Immunization contd
  • As can be seen from the table above, the
    immunization strategy appears to perform fairly
    well
  • However, there are a number of assumptions needed
    for this to work. Some possible problems include
  • the strategy assumes that there is no default
    risk or call risk for the bonds in the portfolio
  • The strategy assumes that the term structure is
    flat and any shifts in it are parallel
  • duration will change over time (even if r does
    not), so the manager may have to rebalance the
    portfolio (note that there is a tradeoff of
    accuracy from frequent rebalancing vs.
    transactions costs)
  • More complicated strategies exist to handle these
    types of problems, but immunization using
    duration is still a very widely used tool in
    practice

44
  • Assigned questions 26.1-5, 7-9, 12-14, 17
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