ACI Diploma
ACI Diploma
ACI Diploma
Syllabus
Examination delivered in
English and German
The ACI Diploma builds on the ACI Dealing Certificate and the ACI Operation Certificate and is
designed to ensure that candidates acquire a superior theoretical and practical knowledge of
the foreign exchange and money markets, their related instruments, and the linkages that
exist between those markets and the practice of risk management. Candidates are expected to
have acquired a solid grounding in the core subject areas and have the requisite skills in
financial mathematics prior to matriculating for the Diploma.
In order to be eligible to register for the ACI Diploma examination, candidates must have
passed either the ACI Dealing Certificate or the ACI Operations Certificate examination.
Overall Objectives: The objective of the foreign exchange section is to understand the
historical evolution and central functions of the foreign exchange market and its related
financial instruments and to acquire a broad range of practical skills such as: how to apply FX
swaps in exploiting interest arbitrage opportunities and manage spot and forward FX positions,
how to apply forward-forward FX swaps in managing interest rate risk and how to value
forward FX positions. In addition, candidates are taught to exploit foreign exchange related
instruments and understand their interrelationships. They will learn the relevant pricing
mechanisms, and display a good working knowledge and understanding of the rationale for
NDFs. Finally, they will become proficient in pricing time options.
• explain the conventions for fixing the spot rate in both matched and mismatched
principal FX swaps and describe the cost or benefit of different choices to the
counterparties
• analyse the impact of a change in the spot rate on an FX swap
• describe how interest is managed in matched-principal FX swaps
• calculate the cost of borrowing or lending through FX swaps and identify interest
arbitrage opportunities
• describe how to roll over a spot FX position with tom/next FX swaps; calculate the profit
or loss, and identify the risks involved
• roll-over a forward FX position at a historic rate
• extend or reduce the term of an outright forward FX using FX swaps
• define a time option and price one from outright forward rates
• describe forward-forward FX swaps, explain the strategies underlying their use and
calculate profits or losses
• calculate both sides of the theoretical swap points from a two-way spot and the bid and
offered interest rates
• calculate a FX cross-rate swap
• calculate a FX swap over today and over tom
• calculate the spot-risk hedge necessary for a forward FX position
• outline the construction of FRAs and calculate synthetic FRAs using forward-forward FX
swaps
• outline the hedging of a forward-forward position using FRAs and / or futures
• define an NDF and explain its rationale
• describe the structure and the features of NDFs as well as their pricing and valuation
• calculate the profit or loss on a spot FX position on T+1 for given revaluation rates
• calculate the profit or loss on an FX swap position for given revaluation rates
• calculate the profit or loss on an outright forward FX position at given revaluation rates
Overall Objective: Candidates will understand and be able to describe the central features
and functions of the money market and its relationship to other financial markets. Candidates
will learn about the cash instruments involved, their relative value and how they are traded;
they will demonstrate a good working knowledge of repos and their market, and be able to
describe the relationship of repos to the bond market, explain the related cashflows and
understand the roles played by various market participants.
• describe the principal comparative advantages and disadvantages of each of the main
types of cash money market instruments for typical borrowers/issuers and
lenders/investors
• explain the features and conventions of CPs, CDs and T-Bills and perform the related
calculations
• calculate the holding period yield between the purchase and the sale of a CD or a T-Bill
• explain the benefits of the programmed issuance of money market securities
• explain the principal reasons for the spreads between the yields on the different types
of instruments
• distinguish and understand the credit ratings used by the main agencies for short-term
instruments from longer-term ratings
• describe the precise specifications of the most commonly used overnight indexes (OI)
• explain the main reasons why initial margin is taken in repo, define margin threshold
and minimum transfer amounts
• calculate the start proceeds of a repo using the concept of the Margin Ratio in ICMA
(formerly ISMA) repo documentation and a variety of collateral
• explain the purpose of margin maintenance and calculate the margin call on a repo
• describe the ‘early termination and repricing’ method used in sell/buy backs as an
alternative to margining and calculate the payments or transfers due using this method
• explain why counterparty risk is the primary concern in repo and understand the risks
introduced by the use of collateral
• describe the working of tri-party repo
• explain how rights of substitution work in repo
• explain the main reasons why collateral goes on special and calculate the implied
securities lending fee from the repo rate on specials
• explain the importance of the GMRA and list its main features
• identify GC from the ICMA (formerly ISMA) list
• calculate the forward price of a sell/buy-back and recognise this as the forward price of
the collateral
• list the standard forms of documentation for cross-border transactions in cash money
market instruments and demonstrate familiarity with the key terms of the TBMA/ISMA
GMRA 2000
• define an ‘open’ repo, ‘repo-to-maturity’ and ‘forward’ repo
• explain how to construct a synthetic repo and recognise the difference in price levels
between real and synthetic repos
• calculate the break-even on a forward interest rate position partly derived from covered
interest rate arbitrage using a US T-Bill
• convert from the discount rate to the true yield
Overall Objective: Candidates will be able to put the bond markets in perspective by
understanding what distinguishes fixed-income instruments as financing and investment tools
from money market, equity and credit (loan) instruments. Participants will understand how a
fixed-income instrument works, how it is quoted, how to calculate its fair value and how to
measure the interest rate risk. Candidates will learn to use yield-to-maturity, par yields and
zero coupon yields in calculating the fair value of a fixed-income instrument, and learn when
and how to use each type of yield and how to calculate these yields. The basic focus is on
domestic government bonds, but candidates are also expected to be able to derive a
Eurobond, understand why non-government bonds have credit spreads and how this affects
the price behaviour of these bonds.
• distinguish capital markets from money markets, and debt capital markets from equity
and credit (loan) capital markets, and understand how these markets are a source of
financing, a home for investment and a tool for trading
• distinguish domestic, foreign and eurobond markets
• understand and distinguish different bond types such as ABS and covered bonds, index-
linked bonds, bonds with puts, calls, etc.
• explain the importance of government bond markets
• explain the impact of credit risk on bond prices and swap rates
• understand bond quotations in both price and yield terms, including clean and dirty
prices, and calculate the accrued interest and dirty price of a bond
• identify the day count, annual basis and compounding frequency conventions that apply
to bond and swap markets in major currencies, and be able to convert among these
conventions, and between bond and money market conventions
• understand bond quotes against benchmark yields, swaps and on an asset-swap basis
• calculate the fair value of plain vanilla and zero-coupon bonds from yield-to-maturity,
the fair value on non-coupon dates, as well as quarterly and semi-annual coupon
frequencies
• explain the relationships between price, coupon and yield on fixed-income instruments
• explain the interest rate risk profile of fixed rate bonds and measure this risk on a plain
vanilla bond by calculating its duration (on a coupon date)
• calculate the expected change in portfolio value for a given change in yield out of a
given modified duration
• understand the relationship between yield volatility and price volatility
• understand the concepts of and distinguish the relationship between “yield-to-
maturity”, “zero-coupon-yield” and “par-yield”, and explain the shortcomings of yield-
to-maturity as a measure of the rate of return and the assumptions underlying its use
in bond quotations
• calculate a zero-coupon yield from a series of yields-to-maturity using the
“bootstrapping” method and calculate a par yield from zero-coupon yields
Overall Objective: Candidates will understand the principles underlying basic option pricing
theories, and be able to explain the applications of options and describe option trading
strategies. They will learn the pricing and application of money market futures and forward
rate agreements, as well as money market swaps in hedging, risk-taking and arbitrage, and
their interrelationships, and be able to use these instruments as a source of trading
information.
Overall Objective: Candidates will understand how the foreign exchange and money markets
operate within the constraints set by the international and domestic policies of governments,
and how they are generally implemented by central banks. They will be able to understand and
explain the role of fundamental forecasting and the principles and methodology of technical
analysis.
• outline the roles of the IMF, the BIS and the OECD
• distinguish between fixed and floating rate regimes, recognise the graduated nature of
floating regimes, and explain the basic economic rationale for each type of regime
• distinguish between sterilised and unsterilised currency intervention
• explain why and how central banks intervene in the foreign exchange market and in
their domestic money market, and understand their targets of monetary policy
• outline the main factors affecting money market liquidity
• list the main tools of central bank money market intervention
• explain the purpose of reserve requirements
• explain the purpose of exchange controls
• distinguish between fundamental and technical analysis
• outline the main items in the balance of payments
• outline the main items in the national income accounts
• explain the links between the balance of payments and national income accounts
• identify the economic and financial indicators that are proxies for the main items in the
national income accounts and explain the connection
• outline the principal methods of technical analysis, including charting, moving averages,
relative strength and momentum indicators, oscillators, Fibonacci numbers, Elliott
Waves and Gann Analysis
Overall Objective: The objective of the risk management area is to understand the risk
governance arrangements and the risk management organisational structure of banks as well
as their main functions. Candidates will be able to describe the role of risk capital and the
structure of international capital adequacy requirements. Their understanding will extend to
the principal methods of risk measurement that are covered elsewhere in the syllabus and in
the ACI Dealing Certificate, including the concept of value-at-risk (VaR). Candidates will also
achieve a greater understanding of risk mitigation by means of netting positions through the
comparison of alternative netting methods.
• describe the exclusive roles of the front office, middle office (risk management function)
and back office, and explain the need for the segregation of their duties
• describe the role of the ALCO
• describe the role of the credit committee
• describe the role of audits
• define risk capital, explain its role in covering unexpected losses, distinguish between
economic and regulatory risk capital, and outline how capital is raised and re-invested
• explain the purpose of the Basel Committee and outline the architecture of the Basel II
Accord
• explain the reason for the Market Risk Amendment originally released in 1996, modified
in 1997 and revised in 2005 by the Basel Committee
• calculate capital requirements for spot and forward foreign exchange, cash money
market instruments, FRAs, and money market futures and swaps transacted with OECD
central governments, OECD banks and corporates under the Basel II Accord and, in the
case of repo, under the EU Capital Adequacy Directive (CAD)
• explain the purpose of the EU Capital Adequacy Directive (CAD) and understand the BIS
/ CEBS capital adequacy recommendations
• distinguish between parametric (statistical) and non-parametric measures of risk, and
between the main non-parametric methods, and explain when each approach is
appropriate
• define value-at-risk (VaR)
• explain the key assumptions in a VaR calculation (holding period, observation period
and confidence interval)
• explain the key assumptions underlying VaR (randomness, linearity and normal market
conditions) calculate the VaR of a single future cashflow
• distinguish between undiversified and diversified VaR
• explain the roles of stress testing and back testing
• distinguish between payment netting, netting by novation and close-out & set-off
• explain the working of a central clearing counterparty (CCP)
• volatility calculations: convert volatility between an annualised basis and higher
frequencies, etc.
Format: The ACI examination covers material from the 6 core subject areas and consists of a
single exam of 3 hours duration, subdivided into the following 9 topics and 18 topic baskets:
Scoring
One mark is given for each correctly answered question, two marks for each correctly
answered calculation, for a maximum total of 145 marks.
There is a 50% minimum score level for each of the 9 topics and a minimum overall score
level of 60 %.
• For a pass, a candidate, having achieved the required minimum 50% scores in each
topic basket, would need a score of between 60.00% and 69.99% (87 – 101 marks).
• For a pass with merit, a candidate, having achieved the required minimum 50%
scores in each topic basket, would need a score of between 70.00% and 79.99% (102 –
115 marks).
• For a pass with distinction, a candidate, having achieved the required minimum 50%
scores in each topic basket, would need a score of 80.00% (116 marks or higher).
Examination Fee