Techniques and instruments in the eurobond and euronote markets continue…

Posted on March 7th, 2008 in Balanced Funds, Bond Funds, Capital Funds, Consolidated Funds, Credit, Foreign Funds, Global Funds, Government Funds, Growth Funds, Hedge Funds, International Funds, Mutual Funds, Offshore Funds, Sector Funds, Stock Funds, Trust Funds, bond, interest rate, swap | 4 Comments »


Currency swap: Contract that commits two counterparties to exchange streams of interest payments in different currencies for an agreed period of time and to exchange principal amounts in different currencies at a pre-agreed exchange rate at maturity.

A currency swap has three stages:

An initial exchange of principal: the two counterparties exchange principal amounts at an agreed exchange rate. This can be a notional exchange since its purpose is to establish the principal amounts as a reference point for the calculation of interest payments and the re-exchange of the principal amounts.

Exchange of interest payments on agreed dates based on outstanding principal amounts and agreed fixed interest rates.

  1. Re-exchange of the principal amounts at a predetermined exchange rate so the parties end up with their original currencies.
  2. Again this may be done to hedge risk, to speculate on changes in exchange rates, or to attempt to lower the cost of borrowing by borrowing in the currency in which the most favourable interest rates are available and then swapping into the currency that the firm needs to carry out its business. Whether this will be cheaper will depend among other things on the bid—offer spread.

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Interest-Rate Swaps

Posted on February 13th, 2008 in Money Market Funds, bond, interest rate, swap | 4 Comments »

In an interest-rate swap, two parties (called counterparties) agree to exchange periodic interest payments. The dollar amount of the interest payments exchanged is based on a predetermined dollar principal, which is called the notional principal amount. The dollar amount that each counterparty pays to the other is the agreed-upon periodic interest rate times the notional principal amount. The only dollars that are exchanged between the parties are the interest payments, not the notional principal amount. In the most common type of swap, one party agrees to pay the other party fixed-interest payments at designated dates for the life of the contract. This party is referred to as the fixed-rate payer. The other party, who agrees to make interest rate payments that float with some reference rate, is referred to as the floating-rate payer. The frequency with which the interest rate that the floating-rate payer must pay is called the reset frequency. Read the rest of this entry »

Development of the Interest-Rate-Swap Market

Posted on February 12th, 2008 in Credit, Loan Funds, Mid Cap Funds, Stock Funds, interest rate | 4 Comments »

The interest-rate swap was developed in late 1981. By 1987, the market had grown to more than $500 billion (in terms of notional principal amount). What is behind this rapid growth? As our asset/liability application earlier demonstrated, an interest-rate swap is a quick way for institutional investors to change the nature of assets and liabilities or to exploit any perceived capital market imperfection. The same applies to borrowers such as corporations, sovereigns, and supranationals.

In fact, the initial motivation for the interest-rate-swap market was borrower exploitation of what were perceived to be “credit arbitrage” opportunities because of differences between the quality spread between lower- and higher-rated credits in the U.S. and Eurodollar bond fixed-rate market and the same spread in these two floating- rate markets. Basically, the argument for swaps was based on a well-known economic principle of comparative advantage in international economics. Read the rest of this entry »

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