Derivatives Presentation
Derivatives Presentation
Derivatives Presentation
February 2000
Morgan Stanley fixed income research analysts produce proprietary research in conjunction with Morgan Stanley trading desks that
trade as principal in the instruments mentioned in this report. Morgan Stanley fixed income research is therefore not independent
from the proprietary interests of Morgan Stanley, which may conflict with your interests.
Morgan Stanley fixed income research analysts receive compensation based in part on Morgan Stanley’s trading and capital markets
revenues. Morgan Stanley and/or its affiliates may have a position in the debt of the Company or instruments discussed in this report.
Please see additional important disclosures at the end of this report.
Topics to be Covered
2
What are Interest
Rate Derivatives?
3
What Is a Swap?
Spot-Starting 5-Year Fixed/Floating Swap ($100MM Notional)
Fixed Payments
5.44% Semiannually on 30/360 Day Count
Party A Party B
3-Month LIBOR Quarterly on Act/360 Day Count
Floating Payments
• Swap: Contractual agreement to exchange fixed for floating cash flows over a specified
period of time
• Floating rate reference: USD LIBOR
• LIBOR: British Banker Association’s (BBA) fixing of the London Inter-Bank Offered Rate.
A contributor bank contributes the rate at which it could borrow funds, it it were to do so
by asking for and accepting inter-bank offers in reasonable market size just prior to 11 AM
London time. 16 banks contribute, the top and bottom 4 fixings are eliminated, and the
remaining 8 fixings are averaged.
4
A Swap is Different than a AA Bank Bond
An interest rate swap has different characteristics compared to a AA bank bond
5
What is a Swap?
Similar to a leveraged bond transaction
Swap Transaction Is Similar to a Bond Transaction
Combined with 3-Month Financing
Pay LIBOR
You
Pay Repo
6
What is a Swap?
Swap rate = average of expected LIBOR settings
Suppose You Pay Fixed on a 2-year Swap at a Rate of 4.42%
3M LIBOR in 6 months
3M LIBOR in 1 year
3M LIBOR in 1YR 6M
7
What is a Swap?
8
U.S. Interest Rate Swap Curve
From the Eurodollar Futures and Market Traded Swap Rates, a Swap Curve
is Generated
6.5
6.1
5.7
5.3
4.9
4.5
4.1
3.7
01Y 07Y 12Y 18Y 24Y 30Y
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Spreadlock Transaction
• Forward contract on a specific swap spread
• “Long” a spreadlock: Investor makes money if swap spread at expiry is higher
than strike
• Suppose you are long a spreadlock at 85 bps on the 10-year swap spread for
expiry 11/8/01
• Suppose on 11/8/01, the 10-year swap spread is at 100 bps
(100-85) x DVO1 of
10-Year Swap x Notional
Investor Dealer
10
Other Types of Swaps
11
Volatility Products
12
Example of a Payor Swaption
13
Example of a Payor Swaption
You
• Net gain on the option settlement: 14 bps per annum for 5 years
14
Users of Interest
Rate Derivatives
15
Major Players in the Swap Market
Web of Interdependence
New Issue Asset/Liability Loan Originations Asset Swaps
Asset Swaps
Hedging Management Hedging (Prepays)
Eurodollar Exchange
OAS
Corporates ABS/CMBS
Volatility
Global
Rate/FX/Credit Mortgages Asset
Arbitrage Swap Market (Residential) Swaps
Convexity
Hedging
Discount
Repo Treasuries Agencies Notes
Specials Mortgage
On-the-Run Off-the-Run Bullets Callables
GC Market
16
Corporate Hedging
Rate Lock New Issuance Asset/Liability Management Swap
UST +
Credit Spread
Investor
17
Investor Asset Swap
Fixed-Rate Asset
18
Dealer Inventory Hedging
19
Mortgage Convexity Hedging
Duration Profile Interest Rate Scenario
New
Swap
Mortgage
Mortgage Swap Portfolio Swap
Portfolio Hedge Hedge
– OR –
Unwind
Mortgage Swap Swap
Portfolio Hedge Mortgage Swap
Portfolio Hedge
20
Mortgage Convexity Hedging
21
Money Mangers Managing Portfolio Exposure
Treasury Bonds
Agency Bonds
Money Manager Swap Market
Mortgages
Pay or receive fixed in the swap market
Corporate Bonds
22
Investors Taking Long/Short Market Positions
Short the Market Long the Market
Investor
23
An Overview of
Recent Market
Activity
24
Three Wake Up Calls...
25
The Market Effects...
Primary effects on the swap and Treasury markets:
26
Budget Surplus and Treasury Supply
• The recent emergence of a budget surplus has led to a sharp drop in Treasury
supply in the U.S.
Budget Surplus/Deficit (-) Supply of Outstanding Treasuries1
$ Billions % of GDP
250 45
40
150
35
50 30
25
-50
20
-150 15
10
-250
5
-350 0
1981 1985 1989 1993 1997 2001E 1981 1985 1989 1993 1997 2001E
1
Excludes Federal Reserve holdings
27
Change in the Treasury Supply
Relationship Between Swap Spreads and Change in Treasury Borrowing
$ Billions bps
200 187 120
169 158 113.1
150
100 100
50 21 83.7 86.4
80
0
-50 63.4
60
-100
-109 -100 -113
-150 40.7 40
-200 36.8 38.4 36.0
-250 -213 20
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
28
Fed is Preparing to Adapt
29
Corporate Supply Increasing
$ Billions bps
600 120
511 524
498
500 113.1 457 100
400 366 83.7 86.4
80
293
300 253
224 63.4
60
200
40.7 40
100
36.8 38.4 36.0
0 20
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
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Increase in Credit Spread Volatility
10 Year Swap Spreads
(bp)
Volatility: 2.21 bps/day
140
120
100
Volatility: 0.85 bps/day
80
60
40
20
May-94 Feb-96 Nov-97 Aug-99 May-01
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Swap Spreads: A Benchmark for Credit Spreads
Swap spreads serve as an indicator of the general level of credit spreads
Historical 10-Year Spread Data
(1/2/98 to 5/10/01)
230
180
130
80
30
Jan-98 Nov-98 Sep-99 Jul-00 May-01
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New Swap Market Participants
We have observed increasing interest in the swap market by:
33
Dramatic Growth in Derivatives Usage
OTC Derivative Contracts
• Since the first wake-up call of 1998, the use of interest rate derivatives has increased
dramatically
Outstanding at Fiscal Year End – Notional Amounts
$ Trillion
80.0
62.4
52.3 9.4
8.0 2.4
2.3
29.0
25.5
4.7 4.9 50.6
17.7 1.8 42.0
1.6
3.7
1.2 19.2 22.3
12.8
34
OAS Mortgage Spreads1 vs. 5-Yr Swap Spreads
Strong correlation with other markets
bp
Correlation = 90%
120
100
80
60
40
20
Jan-97 Feb-98 Mar-99 Apr-00 May-01
35
Swap Spreads Versus FHLMC Credit Spreads
bp
Correlation = 99%
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
May-98 Feb-99 Nov-99 Aug-00 May-01
36
MSDW Industrial1 Spreads and Swap Spreads
bp
Correlation = 88%
140 230
120 200
100 170
80 140
60 110
40 80
May-98 Feb-99 Nov-99 Aug-00 May-01
37
The Benchmark
Issue
38
Treasury Market
• Advantages:
− Historical benchmark
− Large, liquid, transparent market
− Availability of research and analysis
− Comfort level
• Disadvantages:
− Technicals / Fundamental analysis put in question
− Scarcity premium
− On-the-run vs. off-the-run
− Repo discrepancies
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Swap Market
• Advantages:
− Can value almost any security
− Smooth, continuous curve
− Common hedging tool by the street
− Large, liquid market
• Disadvantages:
− Transparency
− Lack of market information and research
− Systems requirements
− Credit / Documentation
40
Agency Market
• Advantages:
− Effort by Agencies to become the benchmark
− Liquid, transparent market
− Accepted globally
− Existence of repo and futures market
• Disadvantages:
− Dependent upon ability to grow
− On-the-run vs. off-the-run
− Repo discrepancies
41
Greenspan’s Comments
Monetary Policy Report to Congress (February 13, 2001)
42
How to Execute and
Unwind a Swap
43
Long 10-Year Swap Spread Trade
Suppose you go long 10-year swap spreads at 80 bps
• Steps:
− 1. Buy 10-year notes
− 2. Pay fixed on a 10-year swap
− 3. Duration weight the notionals
− 4. Set initial LIBOR
− 5. Handle the repo
44
Unwind 10-Year Swap
45
Example Trades
46
Forward Curve View
As of August 2, 2001 Years Forward
%
7.0
6.5
6.0
5.5
5.0
4.5
4.0
3.5
1y 2y 3y 4y 5y 7y 10y 15y 30y
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Forward Curve View
As of close 2/1/00
Swap Curve
Spot 1 Year Forward
2yr Rate 4.415% 5.433%
10yr Rate 5.936% 6.282%
Differential 152.1 bps 84.9 bps
• Suppose you believe the 2s-10s swap curve will not flatten as much as implied by forward
swap curve
• You can enter into a 2s-10s steepener 1 year forward at flat (notionals are DV01 weighted)
• In 1-Year:
6.282% (10-Years)
LIBOR
Investor Dealer
5.433% (2-Years)
LIBOR
48
Hedging a Bond with Swaps
Suppose you buy $100mm FHLMC 7.0% 3/15/10 and we want to hedge this
position with swaps:
49
Hedging a Bond with Swaps
Yield: 5.783%
FHLMC 3/10
50
Hedging the Optionality in a Callable Bond
• You have sold the right to buy the bonds, so you need to
buy the right to be long the market. This requires buying an
American receiver swaption.
51
Accessing the Credit Markets in Other Countries
52
Following the
Market
53
Sources of Information
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Sources of Information
• Interest Rate Strategy Online
− Trade ideas / Market commentary
− Real time swap rates and swap spreads
− Historical data
• Telerate: 19901 and 19902
• Reuters: ICAP1
• Bloomberg:
− Current levels and historical data
• $$SWAP10 Index <GO>
• USSWAP5 Index <GO>
• IRSB <GO>
− Pricing:
• BCSW <GO>
• SWPL <GO>
55
Interest Rate Derivative Products Online
56
Interest Rate Derivative Products Online
Click
57
Telerate 19901
58
Bloomberg Historical Data
Swap Rate
59
Bloomberg Historical Data
Swap Spread
60
Bloomberg Swap Model
61
Disclaimer
This memorandum is based on information generally available to the public from sources believed to be reliable. No
Representation is made that it is accurate or complete. Certain assumptions may have been made in this analysis which have
resulted in any returns detailed herein. No representation is made that any returns indicated will be achieved. Changes to the
assumptions may have a material impact on any returns detailed. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future returns.
Price and availability are subject to change without notice. The forgoing has been prepared solely for informational purposes and
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