LIBOR. 6 exp( 0:1 4=12) + 6 exp( 0:1 10=12) = $103:328 million. The value of the oating-rate bond underlying the swap is

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1 Exercises on swaps 1. Companies A and B have been o ered the following rates per annum on a $20 million 5-year loan : Fixed rate Floating rate Company A 5.0% +0.1% Company B 6.4% +0.6% Company A requires a oating rate loan ; company B requires a xed rate loan. Design a swap that will net a bank, acting as intermediary, 0.1% per annum and that will appear equally attractive to both companies. A has an apparent comparative advantage in xed-rate markets but wants to borrow oating. B has an apparent comparative advantage in oating rate markets but wants to borrow xed. This provides the basis for the swap. There is a 1:4% per annum di erential between the xed rates o ered to the two companies and a 0:5% per annum di erential between the oating rates o ered to the two companies. The total gain to all parties from the swap is therefore 1:4 0:5 = 0:9% per annum. Because the bank gets 0:1% per annum of this gain, the swap should make each of A and B 0:4% per annum better o. This means that it should lead to A borrowing at 0:3% and to B borrowing at 6%. The appropriate arrangement is therefore as shown in the following gure 5% A 5:3% 5:4% F.I. B +0:6% 2. A $100 million interest rate swap has a remaining life of 10 months. Under the terms of the swap ; 6-month is exchanged for 7% per annum (compounded semiannually). The average of the bid-o er rate being exchanged for 6-month in swaps of all maturities is currently 5% per annum with continuous compounding. The 6-month rate was 4.6% per annum 2 months ago. What is the current value of the swap to the party paying oating? What is its value to the party paying xed? In four months $6 million (= 0:50:12$100 million) will be received and $4.8 million (= 0:5 0:096 $100 million) will be paid. (We ignore day count issues.) In 10 months $6 million will be received, and the rate prevailing in four months time will be paid. The value of the xed-rate bond underlying the swap is 6 exp( 0:1 4=12) + 6 exp( 0:1 10=12) = $103:328 million The value of the oating-rate bond underlying the swap is (100 + 4:8) exp( 0:1 4=12) = $101:364 million The value of the swap to the party paying oating is $103:328 $101:364 = $1:964 million. The value of the swap to the party paying xed is $1:964 million. These

results can also be derived by decomposing the swap into forward contracts. Consider the party paying oating. The rst forward contract involves paying $4.8 million and receiving $6 million in four months. It has a value of 1:2e 0:14=12 = $1:161 million. To value the second forward contract, we note that the forward interest rate is 10% per annum with continuous compounding, or 10.254% per annum with semiannual compounding. The value of the forward contract is 100 (0:12 0:5 0:10254 0:5)e 0:110=12 = $0; 803 million: The total value of the forward contract is therefore $1:161 + $0=803 = $1; 964 million. 3. Companies A and B have been o ered the following rates per annum on a $5 million 10 year investment : Fixed rate Floating rate Company A 8% Company B 8.8% Company A requires a xed rate investment ; company B requires a oating rate investment. Design a swap that will net a bank, acting as intermediary, 0:2% per annum and will appear equally attractive to A and B: The spread between the interest rates o ered to A and B is 0:8% per annum on xed rate investments and 0:0% per annum on oating rate investments. This means that the total apparent bene t to all parties from the swap is 0:8% per annum. Of this 0:2% per annum will go to the bank. This leaves 0:3% per annum for each of A and B. In other words, company A should be able to get a xed-rate return of 8:3% per annum while company B should be able to get a oating-rate return +0:3% per annum. The bank earns 0:2%, company A earns 8:3%, and company B earns +0:3%. A 8:3% F.I. 8:5% B 8:8% 4. A nancial institution has entered into an interest rate swap with company A. Under the terms of the swap, it receives 10% per annum and pays 6 month on a principal of $10 million for 5 years. Payments are made every 6 months. Suppose that company A defaults on the sixth payment date (at the end of year 3) when the interest rate (with semiannual compounding) is 8% per annum for all maturities. What is the loss to the nancial institution? Assume that 6 month was 9% per annum halfway through year 3. Use discounting At the end of year 3 the nancial institution was due to receive $500,000 (% of $10 million) and pay $450,000 (% of $10 million). The immediate loss is therefore $50,000. To value the remaining swap we assume than forward rates are realized. All forward

rates are 8% per annum. The remaining cash ows are therefore valued on the assumption that the oating payment is and the net payment that would be received is. The total cost of default is therefore the cost of foregoing the following cash ows : 3 year : $50; 000 3.5 year : $100; 000 4 year : $100; 000 4.5 year : $100; 000 5 year : $100; 000 Discounting these cash ows to year 3 at 4% per six months, we obtain the cost of the default as $413,000. 5. Company A wishes to borrow US dollars at a xed rate of interest. Company B wishes to borrow Japanese yen at a xed rate of interest. The amounts required by the two companies are roughly the same at the current exchange rate. The companies are subject to the following interest rates, which have been adjusted to re ect the impact of taxes : Yen Dollars Company A 5.0% 9.6% Company B 6.5% 10.0% Design a swap that will net a bank, acting as intermediary, 50 basis points per annum. Make the swap equally attractive to the two companies and ensure that all foreign exchange risk is assumed by the bank. A has a comparative advantage in yen markets but wants to borrow dollars. B has a comparative advantage in dollar markets but wants to borrow yen. This provides the basis for the swap. There is a 1:5% per annum di erential between the yen rates and a 0:4% per annum di erential between the dollar rates. The total gain to all parties from the swap is therefore 1:5 0:4 = 1:1% per annum. The bank requires 0:5% per annum, leaving 0:3% per annum for each of A and B. The swap should lead to A borrowing dollars at 9:6 0:3 = 9:3% per annum and to B borrowing yen at 6:5 0:3 = 6:2% per annum. The appropriate arrangement is therefore as shown in the following diagram. All foreign exchange risk is born by the bank. YEN 5:0% A A currency swap motivated by comparative advantage YEN 5:0% US$ 9:3% F.I. YEN 6:2% US$ 10:0% B US$ 10:0% 6. A currency swap has a remaining life of 15 months. It involves exchanging interest at 10% on 20 million for interest at 6% on $30 million once a year. The term structure of interest rates in both the United Kingdom and the United States is currently at, and if the swap were negotiated today the interest rates exchanged would be 4% in dollars and-7% in sterling. All interest rates are quoted with annual compounding. The current exchange rate (dollars per pound sterling) is 1.8500. What is the value of the

swap to the party paying sterling? What is the value of the swap to the party paying dollars? The swap involves exchanging the sterling interest of 20 0:14 = 2:8 million for the dollar interest of 30 0:1 = $3 million. The principal amounts are also exchanged at the end of the life of the swap. The value of the sterling bond underlying the swap is 2:8(1:11) 1 4 + 22:8(1:11) 5 4 = 22:739 million pounds The value of the dollar bond underlying the swap is 3(1:08) 1 4 + 33(1:08) 5 4 = 32:916 million US$ The value of the swap to the party paying sterling is therefore 32:916 (22:739 1:65) = $4; 604 million The value of the swap to the party paying dollars is +$4,604 million. The results can also be obtained by viewing the swap as a portfolio of forward contracts. The continuously compounded interest rates in sterling and dollars are 10.436% per annum and 7.696% per annum. The 3-month and 15-month forward exchange rates are 1:65e (0:10436 0:07696)0:25 = 1:6387 and 1:65e (0:10436 0:07696)1:25 = 1:5944 The values of the two forward contracts corresponding to the exchange of interest for the party paying sterling are therefore and (3 2:8 1:6387) e 0:076960:25 = 2:558 million US$ (3 2:8 1:5944) e 0:076961:25 = 1:330 million US$ The value of the forward contract corresponding to the exchange of principals is (30 20 1:5944) e 0:076961:25 = 1:716 million US$ The total value of the swap is $1:558 $1:330 $1; 716 = $4:604 million. 7. Companies A and B face the following interest rates (adjusted for the di erential impact of taxes) : Canadian dollars ( xed rate) US dollars ( oating rate) Company A 5% +0:5% Company B 6:5% +1:0% Assume that A wants to borrow US dollars at a oating rate of interest and B wants to borrow Canadian dollars at a xed rate of interest. A nancial institution is planning to arrange a swap and requires a 50 basis point spread. If the swap is to appear equally attractive to A and B, what rates of interest will A and B end up paying?.

Company A has a comparative advantage in the Canadian dollar xed rate market. Company B has a comparative advantage in the U.S. dollar oating rate market. (This may be because of their tax positions.) However, company A wants to borrow in the U.S. dollar oating rate market and company B wants to borrow in the Canadian dollar xed rate market. This gives rise to the swap opportunity. The di erential between the U.S. dollar oating rates is 0:5% per annum, and the di erential between the Canadian dollar xed rates is 1:5% per annum. The di erence between the di erentials is 1% per annum. The total potential gain to all parties from the swap is therefore 1% per annum, or 100 basis points. If the nancial intermediary requires 50 basis points, each of A and B can be made 25 basis points better o. Thus a swap can be designed so that it provides A with U.S. dollars at +0:25% per annum, and B with Canadian dollars at 6:25% per annum. CAN$ 5% A CAN$ 5% $+0:25% F.I. CAN$ 6:25% $+1% B $+1% Payo (F.I.) = (6:25 5)% + (0:25 1)% = 0:5% If the notional for US$ is 12 million and notional for CAN$ is 15 million. The net payo of the FI for one year is CAN$ 15Millions (6:25 5)% plus US$12Millions (0:25 1)% If the payment are settled semi annually then the net payo for the F.I. in 3 years and 6 months is 3:5 CAN$ 15Millions (6:25 5)% plus 3:5 US$12Millions (0:25 1)% 8. A nancial institution has entered into a 10 year currency swap with company A. Under the terms of the swap, the nancial institution receives interest at 3% per annum in Swiss francs and pays interest at 8% per annum in US dollars. Interest payments are exchanged once a year. The principal amounts are 7 million dollars and 10 million francs. Suppose that company A declares bankruptcy at the end of year 6, when the exchange rate is $0.80 per franc. What is the cost to the nancial institution? Assume that, at the end of year 6, the interest rate is 3% per annum in Swiss francs and 8% per annum in US dollars for all maturities. All interest rates are quoted with annual compounding. When interest rates are compounded annually T 1 + r F 0 = S 0 1 + r f

where F 0 is the T year forward rate, S 0 is the spot rate, r is the domestic risk-free rate, and r f is the foreign risk-free rate. As r = 0:08 and r f = 0:03, the spot and forward exchange rates at the end of year 6 are Spot 0:8000 1 year forward : 0:8388 2 year forward : 0:8796 3 year forward : 0:9223 4 year forward : 0:9670 The value of the swap at the time of the default can be calculated on the assumption that forward rates are realized. The cash ows lost as a result of the default are therefore as follows : Year Dollar due Sw Fr due to Forward Dollar Equivalent. Cash ow to be paid be received rate for Sw. Fr Amount lost 6 560; 000 300; 000 0:8000 240; 000 (320; 000) 7 560; 000 300; 000 0:8388 251; 000 (308; 400) 8 560; 000 300; 000 0:8796 263; 900 (296; 100) 9 560; 000 300; 000 0:9223 276; 700 (283; 300) 10 7; 560; 000 10; 300; 000 0:9670 9; 960; 100 2; 400; 100 Discounting the numbers in the nal column to the end of year 6 at 8% per annum, the cost of the default is $679,800. Note that, if this were the only contract entered into by company B, it would make no sense for the company to default at the end of year six as the exchange of payments. at that time has a positive value to company B. In practice company B is likely to be defaulting and declaring bankruptcy for reasons unrelated to this particular contract and payments on the contract are likely to stop when bankruptcy is declared.