FD Lecture I
FD Lecture I
Feedback on IFS
Should we be more text book focussed? Any change required in the way the course is handled? Any thing else?
OTC Exchange
Source: Bank for International Settlements. Chart shows total principal amounts for OTC market and value of underlying assets for exchange market
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Bid Spot 1-month forward 3-month forward 6-month forward 2.0558 2.0547 2.0526 2.0483
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Example
On July 20, 2007 the treasurer of a corporation enters into a long forward contract to buy 1 million in six months at an exchange rate of 2.0489 This obligates the corporation to pay $2,048,900 for 1 million on January 20, 2008 What are the possible outcomes?
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Possible outcomes
A company might do better if it chooses not to hedge than if it chooses to hedge The purpose of hedging is to reduce risk There is no guarantee that the outcome with hedging will be better than the outcome without hedging
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Futures Contracts
Agreement to buy or sell an asset for a certain price at a certain time Similar to forward contract Whereas a forward contract is traded OTC, a futures contract is traded on an exchange
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- The spot price of gold is US$900 - The 1-year forward price of gold is US$900 - The 1-year US$ interest rate is 5% per
annum
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- The spot price of oil is US$95 - The quoted 1-year futures price of oil is US$125 The 1-year US$ interest rate is 5% per annum The storage costs of oil are 2% per annum
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Options
A call option is an option to buy a certain asset by a certain date for a certain price (the strike price) A put option is an option to sell a certain asset by a certain date for a certain price (the strike price)
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Options vs Futures/Forwards
A futures/forward contract gives the holder the obligation to buy or sell at a certain price An option gives the holder the right to buy or sell at a certain price
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Types of Traders
Hedgers Speculators Arbitrageurs Some of the largest trading losses in derivatives have occurred because individuals who had a mandate to be hedgers or arbitrageurs switched to being speculators
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Hedging Examples
A US company will pay 10 million for imports from Britain in 3 months and decides to hedge using a long position in a forward contract An investor owns 1,000 Microsoft shares currently worth $28 per share. A two-month put with a strike price of $27.50 costs $1. The investor decides to hedge by buying 10 contracts
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30,000
Hedging
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Speculation Example
An investor with $2,000 to invest feels that a stock price will increase over the next 2 months. The current stock price is $20 and the price of a 2-month call option with a strike of 22.50 is $1 What are the alternative strategies? What are the possible outcomes?
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Arbitrage Example
A stock price is quoted as 100 in London and $200 in New York The current exchange rate is 2.0300 What is the arbitrage opportunity?
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Hedge Funds
Hedge funds are not subject to the same rules as mutual funds and cannot offer their securities publicly. Mutual funds must
disclose investment policies, makes shares redeemable at any time, limit use of leverage take no short positions.
Hedge funds are not subject to these constraints. Hedge funds use complex trading strategies and are big users of derivatives for hedging, speculation and arbitrage
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