Introduces interest rate derivatives, covering floors, caps, and swaptions. Introduces floors, caps, and swaps by analogy to equity puts, calls, and stocks. As with calls and puts on equity, a put-call parity relationship is shown to exist between caps, floors, and swaps. Draws on students' knowledge of the put-call parity in an equity context.
Presents a simple interest hedging exercise. A hedge fund is considering an investment in a structured fixed--income product: an inverse floating-rate bond, or inverse floater, designed by a U.S. investment bank. The hedge fund's normal policy is to hedge interest rate risk, maintaining a duration and convexity-neutral portfolio. Because of the complicated nature of the structured product, the protagonist must figure out how to hedge this product.
Provides the basic underlying model for credit risk analysis, as well as covers basic credit risk derivatives, such as asset swaps, credit default swaps, total return of rate swaps, and credit spread options.
Ticonderoga is a small hedge fund that trades in mortgage-backed securities--securities created from pooled mortgage loans. They often appear as straightforward so-called "pass-throughs," but can also be pooled again to create collateral for a mortgage security known as a collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO). CMOs allow cash flows from the underlying pass-throughs to be directed, allowing the creation of different classes of securities--tranches--with different maturities, coupons, and risk profiles. In April 2005, the general managers of Ticonderoga are looking at the market data, trying to construct a trade given their view on the prepayment speed of mortgages vs. the implied prepayment speed they derive from CMOs in the market.
Introduces forward contracts and derives graphically through basic arbitrage principles the spot-forward parity. Introduces swap contracts as simply a portfolio of forward contracts. Also covers briefly the mathematics behind swaps as an extension of spot-forward parity calculations.
A client asks Luc Giraud, CEO of the structured finance solutions provider Nexgen Financial Solutions, to put together a solution that allows the client to add AAA-rated bonds to its portfolio. The client cannot find suitably priced top-rated bonds in the market and wonders whether Nexgen can use lower grade bonds to create AAA-equivalent instruments. The process of securitization packages together securities to create new securities with different risk and return profiles.
Options are contracts that give the right, but not the obligation, to either buy or sell a specific underlying security for a specified price on or before a specific date. Explains the basis of options, covering fundamentals such as option terminology, the payoff schemes of options, parameters that influence their value, the put-call parity, and the upper and lower bounds of options prices. Presents problems for students to solve.
For every option, a fair price has to be established. But how do you actually price an option? Assuming a basic knowledge of options, this note covers two pricing methods: the binominal tree and the Black-Scholes/Merton formula.
In March 2003, a client approached the Markets Advisory Group at ICICI Bank, India's second largest bank, about a hedging transaction. The hedge involved multiple interest rates and currencies. Shilpa Kumar, head of the Markets Advisory Group, has to put together a recommendation for the client. She can choose from a number of financial instruments, including swaps, options, and futures contracts on interest rates and currencies, in her recommendation.
The Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBEO) must decide how to respond to new competition in the market for financial options. Options have typically been a very liquid asset class, despite the fact that many single-name options are listed on the CBOE, the second largest options exchange in the world. In response to this illiquidity, new options exchanges have started offering electronic trading, with the hope of making the markets more liquid and capturing market share and profitability from the CBOE. The CBOE must now decide whether to ignore the competition and continue with its floor-based model of trading or switch to an all-electronic trading model or some type of hybrid model.
Covers the first international nonperforming loan securitization done in Korea. The CEO of KAMCO is trying to dispose of a portfolio of nonperforming commercial loans that the organization acquired from a number of banks. A group of investment bankers have proposed securitizing the loans and selling them to institutional investors. Securitization of loans (or any other type of assets) is not common in Korea, so the CEO must think through several factors as he decides whether to accept this proposal, the most important of which is the recovery price.