Currency Futures & Options Markets
Currency Futures & Options Markets
Currency Futures & Options Markets
Options Markets
Objectives: to Understand
How currency futures and options contracts
are used to manage currency risk & to
speculate on future currency movements
The nature of currency futures and options
contracts and
The difference between futures & options
contracts
The factors that determine the value of an
option
Futures
Fred Thompson
Currency Risk
Definition
Currency Risk = Variability in the value
of an exposure caused by uncertainty
about exchange rate changes.
Futures
Fred Thompson
Currency Risk
Degree of risk is a function of 2
variables
Volatility of exchange rates
Amount of exposure
Degree of Risk
Low = rate fixed, low exposure
High = rate volatile, high exposure
Futures
Fred Thompson
QuickTime and a
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are needed to see this picture.
Futures
Fred Thompson
Futures
Fred Thompson
What is an exposure?
Liabilities > assets = net exposure
(short)
If you are borrowing Yen to buy $
denominated assets? Are you short or
long?
Who is long?
Who is long on $? Who is short?
Futures
Fred Thompson
Hedging
To hedge a foreign exchange exposure, one
takes an equal and opposite position from
that of the exposure.
For example, if folks are long the pound, they
would have to take an offsetting short
position to hedge their exposure.
One who is long in a market is betting on an
increase in the value of the thing, whereas
with a short position they are betting on a fall
in its value.
Futures
Fred Thompson
Futures
Fred Thompson
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For example
Vanilla bond -- coupon and principal
First stage decomposition
Second stage decomposition
Options
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Currency Futures
Currency Futures
Traded on centralized exchanges (illustrated
in Figure 1 later)
Highly standardized contracts
Size [A&C$100K, 62.5k, 125k, 12.5m] &
maturity [delivery date]
Clearinghouse as counter-party
High leverage instrument
Daily settlement
Margin requirements
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Fred Thompson
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Currency Futures
Performance Bond or Initial Margin: The
customer must put up funds to guarantee the
fulfillment of the contract - cash, letter of credit,
Treasuries.
Maintenance Performance Bond or Margin: The
minimum amount the performance bond can fall
to before being fully replenished.
Mark-to-the-market: A daily settlement
procedure that marks profits or losses incurred
on the futures to the customers margin account.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Currency Futures
Australian Dollar
British Pound
Canadian Dollar
Deutsche Mark
Euro
Initial
Maintenance
$1,317
$975
$1,620
$1,200
$642
$475
$1,249
$925
$2,430
$1,800
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Example
A US manufacturing company has a division
that operates in Mexico. At the end of June
the parent company anticipates that the
foreign division will have profits of 4 million
Mexican pesos (P) to repatriate.
The parent company has a foreign exchange
exposure, as the dollar value of the profits will
rise and fall with changes in the exchange
value between the P and the dollar.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Example, continued
The firm is long the peso, so to hedge its
exposure it will go short [sell P] in the futures
market.
The face amount of each peso future contract is
P500,000, so the firm will go short 8 contracts.
If the peso depreciates, the dollar value of its
Mexican divisions profits falls, but the futures
account generates profits, at least partially
offsetting the loss. The opposite holds for an
appreciation of the peso.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Gain
Futures Position
Loss
Example, continued
The previous diagram can be used to illustrate
the effect of a change in the value of the peso.
An increase in the value of the peso increases
the dollar value of the underlying long position
and decreases the value of the futures position.
A decrease in the value of the peso decreases
the value of the underlying position and
increases the value of the futures position.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Example, continued
On the 25th, the spot rate opens at 0.10660
($/P) while the price on a P future opens at
0.10310.
The market closes at 0.10635 and 0.10258
respectively.
The loss on the underlying position is:
(0.10310-0.10258)8P500,000=$2,080
Futures
Fred Thompson
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P4 million
$2,080
-0.00025
-0.00052
$1,000
Futures Position
P500,000 x 8
Loss
Example, continued
On the 28th, the spot rate moves to
0.10670 ($/P) and the price on a P
future to 0.10285.
The gain on the underlying position is:
(0.10258-0.10285)8P500,000=-$1,080
Futures
Fred Thompson
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P4 million
$1,400
0.00032 Change
spot value
0.00035
$1,080
Futures Position
P500,000 x 8
Loss
Example, continued
On the 29th, the spot rate moves to
0.10680 ($/P) and the price on a P
future to 0.10290.
The gain on the underlying position is:
(0.10285-0.10290)8P500,000=-$200
Futures
Fred Thompson
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P4 million
$400
0.0001 Change
spot value
0.00005
$200
Futures Position
P500,000 x 8
Loss
Example, continued
For the three days considered, the underlying
position gained $800 in value and the futures
contracts yielded $800.
The hedge was not perfect as the daily losses
on the futures were less than the gains on the
underlying position (day 2 and 3), and the daily
gains on the futures exceeded the losses on
the underlying position (day 1).
In this example, the imperfect hedge yielded
additional gains.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Example, continued
Suppose you wanted to close the
futures position (without making delivery
of the currency).
The position is simply reversed. That is,
you would go long 8 P futures, reversing
your current position and closing out
your account. [offsetting trade]
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Additional Information
For additional information on currency
futures, visit the following sites:
The Chicago Mercantile exchange
The Futures Industry Institute
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Currency Options
Currency Options
A currency option is a contract that gives the
owner the right, but not the obligation, to buy or
sell a currency at a specified price at or during
a given time.
Call Option: An option that gives the owner
the right to buy a currency.
Put Option: An option that gives the owner the
right to sell a currency.
How are currency options simultaneously
both put & call options?
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Currency Options
American Option: An option that can
be exercised any time before or on the
expiration date.
European Option: An option that can
only be exercised on the expiration
date.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Currency Options
Exercise or Strike Price: The price (spot
exchange rate) at which the option may be
exercised.
Option Premium: The amount that must be
paid to purchase the option contract.
Break-Even: The point at which exercising
the option exactly matches the premium paid.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Currency Options
If the spot rate has not yet reached the
exercise price [S<X], the option cannot be
exercised and is said to be out of the
money.
If the spot rate equals the exercise price
[S=X], the option is said to be at the money.
If the spot rate has surpassed the exercise
price [S>X], the option is said to be in the
money.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Call Option
The holder of a call option expects the
underlying currency to appreciate in value.
Consider 4 call options on the euro, with a
strike price of 152 ($/) and a premium of
0.94 (both cents per ).
The face amount of a euro option is 62,500.
The total premium is:
$0.0094462,500=$2,350.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Payoff Profile
$1,400
152
148.15
-$1,100
152.5
152.94
Break-Even
-$2,350
Out-ofLoss
the-money At
In-the-money
153.5
Spot Rate
Put Option
The holder of a put option expects the
underlying currency to depreciate in value.
Consider 8 put options on the euro with a
strike of 150 ($/) and a premium of 1.95
(both cents per ).
The face amount of a euro option is 62,500.
The total premium is:
$0.0195862,500=$9,750.
Futures
Fred Thompson
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Profit
0
-$500
148.05
150
148.15
-$9,750
Loss
In-the-money At Out-of-the-money
Spot Rate
Fred Thompson
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Value
Zt,t+n
Futures
St+n
Value
Futures
St+n
Value
Futures
Fred Thompson
St+n
Value
Futures
St+n
Value
Futures
Fred Thompson
St+n
Swaps
Dell
SFr
Futures
Fred Thompson
Dell
Nestle
$
Futures
SFr
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Dell
Nestle
$
Futures
SFr
Fred Thompson
Dell
$
Futures
Nestle
I-Bank
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SFr
Dell
Nestle
$
$
Futures
Sfr
I-Bank
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SFr
Dell
Nestle
Sfr
$
$
Futures
Sfr
I-Bank
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SFr
Dell
Nestle
Sfr
$
$
Futures
Sfr
I-Bank
Fred Thompson
SFr
IRR
Futures
Fred Thompson
Key Points
1. A firm wishing to hedge foreign currency exposure has five
main financial hedging tools which facilitate doing so: forward
contracts, money market hedges, futures contracts, foreign
currency options, and currency swaps.
2. Forward contracts have the benefit of being tailor-made,
with quantities and timing matched to the needs of the firm.
Forward contracts are typically quite costly over longer
horizons, as the market becomes highly illiquid.
3. Money market hedges are equally flexible, but depend on a
firm having equal access to domestic and foreign credit
markets.
Futures
Fred Thompson
Key Points
4. Futures contracts, traded on highly liquid exchanges, have
the benefit that they can be sold on the market before the
maturity date. As a result, futures contracts are particularly
useful for hedging exposures whose maturity is uncertain.
5. On the other hand, futures contracts are standardized in
terms of timing and quantities, and therefore they rarely offer a
perfect hedge.
6. Options contracts allow a firm to hedge against movements
in one direction while retaining exposure in the other.
7. Options are particularly useful in hedging exposures that are
highly uncertain with respect to timing and magnitude.
Futures
Fred Thompson
Key Points
8. Currency swaps offer firms the ability to borrow against
long-term foreign currency exposures when access to foreign
debt markets is costly.
9. Currency swaps converts a domestic liability into a
foreign one via what are effectively a bundle of long-dated
forward contracts between two firms.
10. The effective cost of a currency swap is its all-in cost the effective rate of interest that the firm ends up paying on
the constructed foreign liability.
11. Currency swaps require only that firms have differential
relative - rather than absolute - advantage in accessing debt
markets.
Futures
Fred Thompson