BOND FUTURES. 1. Terminology... 2 2. Application... 11. FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 1 of 12



Similar documents
MONEY MARKET FUTURES. FINANCE TRAINER International Money Market Futures / Page 1 of 22

Futures on Notional Bonds André Farber (Revised Version September 2005)

Learning Curve Using Bond Futures Contracts for Trading and Hedging Moorad Choudhry

INTEREST RATE SWAP (IRS)

Treasury Bond Futures

Introduction to Financial Derivatives

Derivatives Interest Rate Futures. Professor André Farber Solvay Brussels School of Economics and Management Université Libre de Bruxelles

Delivery options. Originally, delivery options refer to the options available to the seller of a bond

Learning Curve Forward Rate Agreements Anuk Teasdale

Interest Rate Futures. Chapter 6

In this chapter we will learn about. Treasury Notes and Bonds, Treasury Inflation Protected Securities,

FORWARD RATE AGREEMENT (FRA)

Interest Rate Derivatives Fixed Income Trading Strategies. eurex

2 Basis Trading and the Implied

Learning Curve Interest Rate Futures Contracts Moorad Choudhry

2 Stock Price. Figure S1.1 Profit from long position in Problem 1.13

Solutions For the benchmark maturity sectors in the United States Treasury bill markets,

FIXED-INCOME SECURITIES. Chapter 10. Swaps

FIXED-INCOME SECURITIES. Chapter 11. Forwards and Futures

Bond futures and options. Enhance returns Manage risk effectively

Detailed Trading Rules of China Financial Futures Exchange for. 5-year Treasury Bond Futures Contract

Trading the Yield Curve. Copyright Investment Analytics

Trading in Treasury Bond Futures Contracts and Bonds in Australia

In almost all literature in option theory, the Black-Scholes formula (without dividends) for a call option is given by:

FINANCIAL MATHEMATICS MONEY MARKET

OUTRIGHTS / FX SWAPS. FINANCE TRAINER International Outrights / FX swaps / Page 1 of 43

Welcome to ORB. Website tutorial for retail investors

FIXED INCOME. FINANCE TRAINER International Fixed Income / Page 1 of 48

Introduction to Fixed Income (IFI) Course Syllabus

Credit Derivatives. Southeastern Actuaries Conference. Fall Meeting. November 18, Credit Derivatives. What are they? How are they priced?

Eurodollar Futures, and Forwards

Security Bank Treasury FX and Rates Hedging Division Gearing Up for External Competitiveness November 19, Treasury FXRH

Product Descriptions Credit Derivatives. Credit Derivatives Product Descriptions

Measurement Concepts for Banking, Trading, and Investing

NEW TO FOREX? FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATE SYSTEMS There are basically two types of exchange rate systems:

Ch. 6 The Foreign Exchange Market. Foreign Exchange Markets. Functions of the FOREX Market

CFA Level -2 Derivatives - I

Interest Rate Derivatives Complete Your Picture in Fixed Income Investment Management. eurex

CDS IndexCo. LCDX Primer

Fixed Income: Practice Problems with Solutions

Brief Overview of Futures and Options in Risk Management

Assumptions: No transaction cost, same rate for borrowing/lending, no default/counterparty risk

Fixed Income Portfolio Management. Interest rate sensitivity, duration, and convexity

Bonds - Pricing and Commodity Trading

ACI THE FINANCIAL MARKETS ASSOCIATION

Interest Rate Options

INTEREST RATE FUTURES. "Safeguard your interest in the future. Page 1

Currency Derivatives Guide

Chapter 4 - The Foreign Exchange Market. Functions of the FX Market

Understanding Futures on the DTCC GCF Repo Index

RULES AND REGULATIONS OF NASDAQ OMX DERIVATIVES MARKETS

CHAPTER 22: FUTURES MARKETS

General Forex Glossary

Single Name Credit Derivatives:

ANALYSIS OF FIXED INCOME SECURITIES

Settlement Procedures for Futures and Options Contracts

5. Foreign Currency Futures

Chapter 3 Fixed Income Securities

J. Gaspar: Adapted from Jeff Madura, International Financial Management

19. Interest Rate Swaps

Chapter. Bond Prices and Yields. McGraw-Hill/Irwin. Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

The Market for Foreign Exchange

THE STOCK MARKET GAME GLOSSARY

Chapter 1 - Introduction

ACI Dealing Certificate (012)

Futures Contracts. Futures. Forward Contracts. Futures Contracts. Delivery or final cash settlement usually takes place

Options on 10-Year U.S. Treasury Note & Euro Bund Futures in Fixed Income Portfolio Analysis

CBOT U.S. Treasury Futures and Options. Reference Guide

Obligatory transactions on a specified date at a predetermined price

3. The Foreign Exchange Market

Zero-Coupon Bonds (Pure Discount Bonds)

GENERAL CONDITIONS FUTURES CONTRACT ON THE 10 YEAR GOVERNMENT BOND. Underlying Financial Assets Contract Group

Chapter 5. The Foreign Exchange Market. Foreign Exchange Markets: Learning Objectives. Foreign Exchange Markets. Foreign Exchange Markets

FIN 684 Fixed-Income Analysis From Repos to Monetary Policy. Funding Positions

CGF Five-Year Government. OGB Options on Ten-Year Government

Chapter 10 Forwards and Futures

Derivative Users Traders of derivatives can be categorized as hedgers, speculators, or arbitrageurs.

CFD Trading Guide Instrument Information Section 2 May 2010

Coupon Bonds and Zeroes

THE USE OF FIXED INCOME DERIVATIVES AT TAL GLOBAL ASSET MANAGEMENT

The Markit CDS Converter Guide

The new ACI Diploma. Unit 2 Fixed Income & Money Markets. Effective October 2014

Chapter Five: Risk Management and Commodity Markets

Practice set #4 and solutions

Bond Price Arithmetic

1. HOW DOES FOREIGN EXCHANGE TRADING WORK?

Fixed Income Arbitrage

Guidance Note Capital Requirements Directive Market Risk

ONIA Swap Index. The derivatives market reference rate for the Euro

FIN 472 Fixed-Income Securities Forward Rates

NASDAQ OMX NLX PRODUCT TERMS German Government Bond Futures

Exam 1 Morning Session

Lecture 09: Multi-period Model Fixed Income, Futures, Swaps

MONEY MARKET SUBCOMMITEE(MMS) FLOATING RATE NOTE PRICING SPECIFICATION

The Repo Market. Outline Repurchase Agreements (Repos) The Repo Market Uses of Repos in Practice

Guidance for Bespoke Stress Calculation for assessing investment risk

Fixed-Income Securities. Assignment

CHAPTER 11 INTRODUCTION TO SECURITY VALUATION TRUE/FALSE QUESTIONS

How To Clear Of Sek Denominated Repos

Number of bond futures. Number of bond futures =

Transcription:

BOND FUTURES 1. Terminology... 2 2. Application... 11 FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 1 of 12

1. Terminology A future is a contract to either sell or buy a certain underlying on a specified future date at a fixed rate. It is traded on the exchange. For the long-term, usually the underlyings are one (or more) specific government bonds. Since different futures on the different markets have different names (-Bund future, US treasury bond future, etc.) we will use bund future as a synonym for a future on a medium- / long-term bond. Underlying The underlying of a bond future is a synthetic bond with a defined term and defined coupon. The advantage of this synthetic bond over an actual bond is that the futures price can be better compared over time. The underlying of a -Bund future is a synthetic Bund with a 10- year term and a 6 % coupon. The T-bond (note) futures underlying specification is 30 (10) years and 6 % coupon. Contract size The contract size is determined individually by the futures exchange. In case of a Euro-Bund future the contract size is. FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 2 of 12

Table: Contract sizes and Conventions Currency Exchange Future Contract size Underlying Deliverable bonds (TOM in years) *) Bund-Future Bund, 10y. 6 % 8.5 10.5 Schatz-Future Bund, 5y., 6 % 3.5 5 Long-Gilt Future Bund, 2y., 6 % 1,75 2,25 LIFFE BOBL-Future Bund, 10y., 6 % 8,5 10,5 GBP LIFFE Bund-Future Long Gilt, 7 % 8,75 13 JPY TSE JGB - Future JGB, 20y., 6 % 15 21 JPY TSE JGB - Future JGB, 10y., 6 7 11 JPY TSE JGB - Future JGB, 5 y., 6 % 4-5,25 CHF CONF Future Swiss Gvt. Bond, 10y., 6 % 8 13 10-y T-Note T-note, 10 y.,6 % 6,5 10 5-y T-Note T-note, 5 y.,6 % 1,75 5,25 2-y T-Note 200,000 T-note, 2 y., 6 % 4,25 5,15 T-Bond Future T-bond, 30 y., 6 % min. 15 *) TOM = term to maturity Futures purchase The buyer of a Bund future is obliged to buy the underlying bond at a fixed price on an agreed date. Because the prices of bonds rise when interest rates fall, a purchased future can be used to speculate on falling interest rates. Futures sell The seller of a bund future is obliged to deliver the underlying bond at a fixed price on an agreed date. Because the prices of bonds fall when interest rates rise, a sold future can be used to speculate on rising interest rates or to secure existing short positions against rising interest rates. Tick As with MM Futures, a tick is the minimum price movement of a futures contract. In contrast to Money Market Futures where a tick is typically one hundredth of 1 % or at least in decimals, long-term futures sometimes move in 1/32 of 1 % (i.e. 0,0003125 or 3,125 BP), FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 3 of 12

e.g. T-bond futures. The tick size is typically defined according to the quoting conventions of the underlying bond. For example, -Bunds are quoted in decimals on, thus the tick value of the Bund-Future is. A tick has always an exactly defined value in relation to the contract, the tick value is the product of the contract value times the basis points of a tick (=tick size). The tick value of a Bund Future and a 10-y T-note Future respectively are: -Bund Future: x 0.0001 = 10 10-year T-note Future: x 0.00015625 = 15.625 Tick table: Currency Exchange Future Tick size Tick value O Bund-Future 10 O BOBL-Future 10 O Schatz-Future 10 O LIFFE Bund-Future 10 GBP LIFFE Long-Gilt Future GBP 10 JPY TSE JGB - Futures JPY 10,000 CHF CONF Future CHF 10 10-y T-Note Future 1 / 64 BP 15.625 5-y T-Note Future 1 / 64 BP 15.625 2-y T-Note Future 1 / 128 BP 15.625 T-Bond Future 1 / 32 BP 31.25 Exchange Delivery Settlement Price (EDSP) Usually, the EDSP is a volume-weighted average of a certain number of prices that have been ultimately dealt at the end of the trading day. The EDSP of a Bund-Future is the volume-weighted average of the latest 10 trading prices quoted during the last 30 minutes of the trading day. If the number of trades in the last minute of the trading day exceeds the number of 10, the EDSP is calculated as weighted average of all deals undertaken during the last minute. FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 4 of 12

Delivery dates and last trading day In contrast to MM-Futures the delivery of bond futures is not standardised across the markets. The delivery months of bond futures are March, June, September and December (such as with MM-Futures). For the delivery day, futures exchanges set the following rules: Currency Exchange Future Delivery day Bund-Future 10 th day in the delivery month BOBL-Future 10 th day in the delivery month Schatz-Future 10 th day in the delivery month LIFFE Bund-Future 10 th day in the delivery month GBP LIFFE Long-Gilt Future Any business day in delivery month (at seller s choice) JPY TSE JGB - Futures 20 th day in the delivery month *) CHF CONF Future 10 th day in the delivery month 10-y T-Note Future Last business day of the month *) 5-y T-Note Future Last business day of the month *) 2-y T-Note Future Third business day following the last trading day +) T-Bond Future Last business day of the month *) *) The last trading day is 7 days before the last delivery day +) The last trading day is the earlier of the second business day prior to the issue day of the 2-year note auctioned in the current month or the last business day of the calendar month If not mentioned otherwise, the last trading day is two days prior to delivery date. If the last trading day is a holiday the following business day is the last trading day. Delivery Contrary to MM-Futures, bond futures are delivered physically if they have not been closed out prior to delivery date. The delivery of the futures contract must tackle the problem that the underlying bond is a synthetic instrument. Therefore, the seller can deliver from a basket of bonds. The settlement price is determined by means of a conversion factor (or price factor) that makes the price of the synthetic bond comparable to the price of the deliverable bond. The conversion factor is calculated on the basis of the clean price of the bond. The present value of the deliverable bond is divided by the present value of the synthetic bond (= 100). The present value of the deliverable bond is calculated with a yield equal to the coupon of FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 5 of 12

the synthetic bond, e.g. 6 % for the Bund Future. The price is determined with the classic bond formula, assuming a flat yield curve. PVD C = 100 C = Conversion factor PV D = Present value of the deliverable bond if the yield = coupon of synthetic bond If the conversion factor is determined, the price of the deliverable bond for a yield equal to the coupon of the synthetic bond is related to the par price of the synthetic bond (= 100). Therefore, the Conversion factor is bigger 1 if the coupon of the deliverable bond is higher than the coupon of the synthetic bond Conversion factor is smaller 1 if the coupon of the deliverable bond is lower than the coupon of the synthetic bond The conversion factor is mainly used in order to calculate the cash amount payable on the delivery day by the buyer of the future to the seller. The cash amount is determined on basis of the trading unit and calculated with the following formula: Calculation of cash: P = (EDSP/ 100 x C x V) + AI P = Cash amount payable for the delivered bond volume EDSP = Exchange Delivery Settlement Price C = Conversion factor V = Contract size AI = Accrued Interest FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 6 of 12

The March Bund-Futures contract expires at 107.72. You can choose between the following two bonds for settling the future Bond A Bond B Term to maturity: 10 years Term to maturity: 10 years Coupon: 5.375 % Coupon: 7.000 % Price: 102.90 Price: 115.44 Conversion factor: 0.9539995 Conversion factor: 1.0736009 Coupon days: 0 Coupon days: 0 Calculation Bond A You deliver a notional of of the Bund and receive P = 1.0772 x 0.9539995 x P = 102,764 You need 102,900 in order to purchase notional of Bunds. Thus, you make a loss of 136 ( = 102,764 102,900) Calculation Bond B P = 1.0772 x 1.0736009 x P = 115,648 You need 115,440 in order to purchase notional of Bunds. Thus, you make a profit of 208 (= 115,648 115,440) Consequently, you will deliver Bond B to the buyer. Note: The example shows profit or loss on the delivery day, which can result by the choice of the deliverable bond from basket. The profit/ loss determined in the example gives no information about the total position because all previous profits/ losses have been settled through the margin account. Cheapest-To-Deliver The cheapest-to-deliver is that bond of the basket of deliverable bonds that has the lowest cost for the seller (in our example Bond B). As a rule of thumb, the cheapest-to-deliver can be determined by dividing the spot price of the bond by the conversion factor and choosing the bond with the smallest ratio. FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 7 of 12

Spot CTD= min C CTD = Cheapest-to-deliver Spot = Spot price of the bond C = Conversion factor The CTD-ratio estimates the no arbitrage futures price for a bond with a deliverable grade. A correct futures price is a price where the cash settlement of the future and the repurchase of the required bond notional at the current market price produce neither a profit nor a loss. It is only an estimation because the accrued interest and the funding costs are neglected. Delivery date, March Bund-Future; Price: 107.72 Bond A Bond B Term to maturity: 10 years Term to maturity: 10 years Coupon: 5.375 % Coupon: 7.000 % Price: 102.90 Price: 115.44 Conversion factor: 0.9539995 Conversion factor: 1.0736009 Coupon days: 0 Coupon days: 0 Spot CTD = K Spot CTD = K CTD = 102.90 0.9539995 CTD = 115.44 1.0736009 CTD = 107.86 CTD = 107.53 Bond B is the cheapest-to-deliver because the theoretical futures price is 19 basis point below the current futures market price. ( = 107.72 107.53) FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 8 of 12

Check: Suppose that the March-Future is quoted at 107.53 and you deliver Bond B. You receive 115,444, i.e. exactly the amount that you need to repurchase Bond B in the market. In our example we could determine an exact futures price because we do not need to consider accrued interest and funding costs. Quotation / Pricing The pricing of bond futures is based on the no arbitrage assumption. The seller of the future must buy the bond and fund the purchase in the money market. Since the seller will always choose the cheapest bond for delivery the futures price is based on the cheapest-to-deliver. The funding costs increase the futures price. The coupons outstanding until the delivery day of the future reduce the futures price because this share of the coupon is an income for the seller. If there is a coupon date during the futures term the revenues from reinvesting the coupons are deducted from the futures price. Therefore, the price of a bond future is influenced by the current CTD bond price the accrued interest the remaining coupon days until the futures delivery date the funding costs of the bond purchase possible coupon payments possible reinvestment revenues The theoretical futures price excluding interim coupon payments on the bond is CP FP= CTD + FC C CTD CTD E CTD FP CPCTD FCCTD ECTD CCTD = Futures price = Clean price of cheapest-to-deliver = Funding costs of cheapest-to-deliver = Coupon from cheapest-to-deliver from trading day till futures delivery day = Conversion factor of cheapest-to-deliver FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 9 of 12

The funding costs of the cheapest-to-deliver are calculated from the Dirty Price of the bond. The funding rate is supposed to be the repo rate. You should calculate the futures price for a future with a remaining term of 150 days. There is no coupon date until delivery day and the cheapest-to-deliver is currently traded at a Clean price: Euro 104 with Accrued interest: Euro 3 Coupon until delivery date: Euro 2.25 Coupon: 5.25 % Conversion factor: 0.948594 Funding rate: 4 % p.a. The funding costs are: 107 x 0.04 x 150 / 360 = 1.78 The futures price for a term of 150 days is: 104 + 1.78 2.25 0.948594 = 109.14 The example shows that prices of bond futures can exceed 100 (contrary to money market futures). Note: If you calculate the theoretical futures price on delivery day and if the delivery day is a coupon day (i.e. accrued interest = 0), the pricing formula is reduced to the CTD-ratio formula. FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 10 of 12

2. Application Hedging a fixed rate bond portfolio against rising rates By selling futures a bond portfolio or a single bond can be hedged against an expected rate hike. This can make sense especially if the bond market is not very liquid and thus, wide bid offer spreads have to be paid if the hedge is supposed to be only for a short period if there is no way to go short the bond As a bond portfolio mostly consists of a mixture of bonds with different terms and different coupons, this hedge cannot be perfect. By using risk measuring concepts like duration or Present Value of a Basis Point" a relatively exact hedge volume can be determined and thus, the remaining risk can be reduced. Hedging a planned fixed rate bond issue against rising rates A company (or bank) which already knows the issue s timing can hedge the risk of possibly rising rates by selling futures. If rates really rise, on the one hand the bond has to be issued with a higher coupon resp. a lower issue price, on the other hand the futures position will create a profit (or vice versa). Intraday-hedging of interest rate risks Long-term futures are commonly used in order to hedge open interest rate risks of other instruments (e.g. IRS) during the term. E.g. a market maker who has bought a 10-years IRS (fixed rate payer swap) can hedge his interest rate risk by buying futures for the meantime. Consequently, as being market maker the trader can change his IRS quotation according to his position. If he is now fixed rate receiver in an IRS he was hedged against interest rate changes to a large extent in the meantime. Now, he only has to sell the future and the two IRS compensate each other in the position. This is especially interesting because the bid offer spread for futures is smaller than for swaps the liquidity for futures is higher there is no credit risk when trading futures for futures no credit lines are necessary FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 11 of 12

Note: In practice, however, there is still a remaining risk for all shown examples which is called basis risk. This means that even when trying to calculate the exact hedge ratio, the futures result will not completely compensate the profits or losses of the spot position. This is possible as in the futures market specific contracts are traded whereas in the spot market terms, coupons and ratings will vary. There is a spread risk among the different products. FINANCE TRAINER International Bond Futures / Page 12 of 12