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Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
Lesson
# 42
FUTURES
Contd...
Using
Futures Contracts:
Who
uses futures, and for what
purpose? Traditionally, participants in
the futures market
have
been classified as either ledgers or
speculators. Because both
groups are important
in
understanding
the role and functioning of
futures markets, we will consider
each in turn.
The
distinctions between these
two groups apply to
financial futures as well as to
the more
traditional
commodity futures.
Hedgers:
Hedgers
are parties at risk with a
commodity or an asset, which
means they are exposed
to
price
changes. They buy or sell
futures contracts in order to
offset their risk. In other
words,
hedgers
actually deal in the commodity or
financial instrument specified in
the futures
contract.
By taking a position opposite to that of
one already held, at a price
set today,
hedgers
plan to reduce the risk of
adverse price fluctuations--that
is, to hedge the risk
of
unexpected
price changes. In effect, this is a
form of insurance.
In a
sense, the real motivation
for all futures trading is
to reduce price risk. With
futures,
risk
is reduced by having the gain
(loss) in the futures
position offset the loss
(gain) on the
cash
position. A hedger is willing to forego
some profit potential in
exchange for having
someone
else assume part of the
risk.
How
to Hedge with
Futures:
The
key to any hedge is that a
futures position is taken opposite to
the position in the
cash
market.
That is, the nature of
the cash market position
determines the hedge futures
market.
A
commodity or financial instrument
held (in effect in
inventory) represents a long
position,
because
these items could be sold in
the cash market. On the
other hand, an investor
who
sells
a futures position not owned
has created a short
position. Since investors can
assume
two
basic positions with futures
contracts, long and short,
there are two basic
hedge
positions;
1.
The short (sell)
hedge:
A
cash market inventory holder
must sell (short) the
futures. Investors should
think of short
hedges
as a means of protecting the
value of their .portfolios. Since
they are holding
securities,
they are long on the
cash position and need to
protect themselves against a
decline
in prices. A short hedge reduces, or
possibly eliminates, the
risk taken in a long
position.
2.
The long (buy)
hedge:
An
investor who currently holds
no cash inventory (holds no
commodities or financial
instruments)
is, in effect, short on the
cash market; therefore, to
hedge with futures
requires
a
long position. Someone who
is not currently in the cash
market but who expects to be
in
the
future and who wants to lock
in current prices and yields until
cash is available to make
the
investment can use a long
hedge which reduces the
risk of a short
position.
237
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
Hedging
is not an automatic process. It
requires more than simply
taking a position.
Hedgers
must make timing decisions as to when to
initiate and end the process.
As
conditions
change, hedgers must adjust
their hedge strategy.
One
aspect of hedging that must
be considered is "basis" risk. The
basis for financial
futures
often
is defined as the difference
between the cash price and
the futures price of the
item
being
hedged:
Basis
= Cash price - Futures
price
The
basis must be zero on the
maturity date of the
contract. In the interim,
the basis
fluctuates
in an unpredictable manner and is not
constant during a hedge
period. Basis risk,
therefore,
is the risk hedgers face as a
result of unexpected changes in
the basis. Although
changes
in the basis will affect the
hedge position during its
life, a hedge will reduce
risk
as
long as the variability in
the basis is less than
the variability in the price
of the asset
being
hedged. At maturity the futures
price and the cash price
must be equal, resulting
in
a
zero basis.
The
significance of basis risk to
investors is that risk
cannot be entirely eliminated.
Hedging
a
cash position will involve
basis risk.
Speculators:
In
contrast to hedgers, speculators buy or
sell futures contracts in an
attempt to earn a
return.
They are willing to assume
the risk of price
fluctuations, hoping to profit
from
them.
Unlike hedgers, speculators typically do
not transact in the physical
commodity or
financial
instrument underlying the
futures contract. In other
words, they have no
prior
market
position. Some speculators are
professionals who do this
for a living; others
are
amateurs,
ranging from the very
sophisticated to the novice. Although
most speculators
are
not actually, present at the
futures markets, floor traders
(or locals) trade for their
own
accounts
as we'll as others and often take
very short-term (minutes or
hours) positions in
attempt
to exploit air short-lived
market anomalies.
Why speculate in
futures .markets? After all one
could speculate in the
underlying
instruments.
For example, an investor who
believed interest rates were
going to decline
could
buy Treasury bonds directly and
avoid the Treasury bond
futures market. The
potential
advantages of speculating in futures
markets include:
1.
Leverage: The magnification of gains
(and losses) can easily be 10 to
1.
2.
Ease of transacting: An investor
who thinks interest rates
will rise will have
difficulty
selling bonds short, but it is
very easy to take a short
position in a Treasury
bond
futures contract.
3.
Transaction costs: These are often
significantly smaller in futures
markets.
By
all accounts, an investor's
likelihood of success when
speculating in futures is not
very
good.
The small investor is up against
stiff odds when it comes to
speculating with
futures
contracts.
Futures should be used for
hedging purposes.
FINANCIAL
FUTURES:
This
section covers financials
futures mostly from a
speculator's perspective. The
following
two
chapters, dealing with the management of
equity portfolios and fixed
income portfolios,
238
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
show
other uses from the
hedger's point of view. The
chapters explain how
financials
futures
can logically be used to improve e a
portfolio's characteristics.
Stock
index futures:
As
with other futures
contracts, a stock index
future is a promise to buy or
sell the
standardized
units of a specific index
price at a predetermined future
date. Table 15-2
lists
the
characteristics of the S$P 500
stock index futures
contract. Unlike most
other
commodity
contracts, there is no actual
delivery mechanism at expiration of
the contract. Al
settlements
are in cash. It is not
practical to have speculators or hedgers
deliver 500
different
stock certificates in the appropriate
quantities to satisfy the
requirements of the
contract.
The value of the index is
known at delivery time, and
crediting or debiting
accounts
with accrued gains or losses is much
more convenient.
A
speculator might believe the
overall stock market is
about to advance and therefore
decide
to buy one S$P stock index
future contract. Suppose in
early may the S$P 500
index
is at 1415.70 and
the speculator buys a June
S$P 500 future contract at
settlement price of
1417.70.
The dollars value of the
futures contract is set at $250
times the settlement
price,
so
the purchaser of the
contract promises to pay 1417.50x$50, or
$354,425, at the
delivery
date.
Several weeks later the
stock market has advanced, and
the future contract now
trades
at
1420. the speculator might
decide to close out the
position and take her profit of
(1420-
1417.70)x$250,or
$575.note that only the
net gain or loss changes
hands; the speculator
never
actually needs to come up with
$354,425.large gains or losses are
possible with stock
index
futures, and the leverage
they provide is attractive to
many people.
Delivery
Procedures:
Suppose
someone wants to deliver a 5%
bond with 20 years, 11 months
remaining in its
life,
and that the settlement
price for the T-bond
futures contract on position
day is 91-00.
By
exchange policy, the
remaining maturity is rounded
down to the nearest quarter,
giving
20 years and
three quarters. The invoice
price is then
0.9100
Futures
settlement price
*
$100,000
Contract
size
*
0.8821
Conversion
factor
$80,271.10
Principal
due
+
2,083.33
Accrued
interest
$82,354.53
Total
due = invoice price
Note
the accrued interest calculation.
The bond matures in 20 years and 11
months,
meaning
it is 5 months into the
interest rate cycle. Accrued
interest on one bond is
therefore
5/6 *
$25, or 420.83. On $100,000 par,
the total is
$2,083.33.
At
any given time, several
dozen bonds are usually
eligible for delivery on the
T-bond
futures
contract. Normally one of these bonds
will be cheapest to deliver. The
cheapest to
deliver
bond is the deliverable bond
preferred by the sellers,
because it costs them the
least
to
use.
For
technical reasons, the
conversion factors make all bonds
equally attractive for
delivery
only
one when the bonds under
consideration yield 6%. If
they yield more or less
than this,
one
bond is going to have the
lowest adjusted price, and hence
the cheapest to
deliver.
An
investor who must buy bonds
to deliver against a futures contract
will want to get these
bonds as
cheaply as possible.
239
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
Foreign
Currency Futures:
Foreign
currency futures contracts trade at
the International Monetary
Market of the
Chicago
Mercantile Exchange. They
all call for delivery of
the foreign currency in
the
country
of issuance to a bank of the
clearing house's
choosing.
When
a U.S investor buys a
foreign security, there are
really two relevant purchases.
The
actual
purchase of the security is one of them,
but before the security can
be bought, the
investor
must exchange U.S. dollars
for the necessary foreign
currency. In essence,
the
investor
is buying the foreign
currency, and its price can change
daily. To the investor,
the
changing
relationships among currencies of
interest constitute foreign
exchange risk.
Modest
changes in exchange rates can
result in significant dollar
differences.
Foreign
currency futures were the
catalyst that caused the
rapid growth in the
financial
futures
market. These products were
immediately successful. Most
major corporations face
at least
some foreign exchange risk
and quickly discovered the
convenience of these
futures
as a
hedging vehicle. Speculators saw a
contract easy to understand and
use, and therefore,
foreign
currency futures were of
interest to both hedgers and
speculators. Their success
led
the
exchanges to spawn similar products to
hedge other types of
financial risk.
Hedging
With Stock-Index
Futures:
Common
stock investors hedge with
financial futures for the
same reasons that
fixed-
income
investors use them.
Investors, whether individuals or
institutions, may hold
a
substantial
stock portfolio that is
subject to the risk of the
overall market; that is,
systematic
risk.
A futures contract enables
the investor to transfer
part or all of the risk to
those willing
to
assume it. Stock-index
futures have opened up new,
and relatively inexpensive,
opportunities
for investors to manage
market risk through
hedging.
Investors
can use financial futures on
stock market indexes to
hedge against an overall
market
decline. That is, investors
can hedge against systematic or market
risk by selling the
appropriate
number of contracts against a stock
portfolio. In effect, stock-index
futures
contracts
give an investor the
opportunity to protect his or
her portfolio against
market
fluctuations.
To
hedge market risk, investors
must be able to take a position in the
hedging asset (in
this
case,
stock-index future) such
that profits or losses on
the hedging asset offset
changes in
the
value of the stock
portfolio. Stock-index futures
permit this action, because
changes in
the
futures prices themselves generally
are highly correlated with
changes in the value
of
the
stock portfolios that are
caused by market wide
events. The more diversified
the
portfolio,
and therefore the lower the
nonsystematic risk, the greater
the correlation
between
the
futures contract and the
stock positions.
Index
Arbitrage and Program
Trading:
A
force of considerable magnitude hit
Wall Street in the 1980s. It is called
program trading,
and it
has captured much attention
and generated considerable controversy. It
leads to
headlines
attributing market plunges at least in
part to program trading, as
happened on
October
19,1987, when the DJIA
fell over 500 points.
Because program trading
typically
involves
positions in both stocks and stock-index
futures contracts, we consider
the topic
within
the general discussion of
hedging.
240
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
The
terms program trading and
index arbitrage often are
used together. In general
terms,
index
arbitrage refers to attempts to
exploit the differences
between the prices of the
stock-
index
futures and the prices of the
index of stocks underlying the
futures contract. For
example,
if the S&P 500 futures price is
too high relative to the
S&P 500 Index, investors
could
short the futures contract
and buy the stocks in the
index. In theory,
arbitrageurs
should
be able to build a hedged portfolio
that earns arbitrage profits
equaling the
difference
between
the two positions. If the
price of the S&P 500 futures is
deemed too low,
investors
could
purchase the futures and short
the stocks, again exploiting the
differences between
the
two
prices.
If
investors are to be able to take advantage of
discrepancies between the futures
price and
the
underlying stock-index price,
they must be able to act quickly.
Program trading
involves
the
use of computer-generated orders to
coordinate buy and sell orders
for entire portfolios
based
on arbitrage opportunities. The
arbitrage occurs between
portfolios of common
stocks, on
the one hand, and index
futures and options on the
other. Large
institutional
investors
seek to exploit, differences
between the two sides.
Specifically, when
stock-index
futures
prices rise substantially above the
current value of the
stock-index itself (e.g.,
the
S&P
500), they sell the
futures and buy the
underlying stocks, typically in "baskets"
of
several
million dollars. Because the
futures price and the
stock-index value must be
equal
when
the futures contract
expires, these investors are
seeking to "capture the
premium"
between
the two,-thereby earning an
arbitrage profit. That is,
they seek high
risk-free
returns
by arbitraging the difference
between the cash value of
the underlying securities
and
the
prices of the futures contracts on
these securities. In effect,
they have a hedged
position
and
should profit regardless of
what happens to stock
prices.
Normally,
program traders and other speculators
"unwind" their positions
during the last
trading;
hour of the day the
futures expire. At this
time, the futures premium
goes to zero,
because,
as noted, the futures price
at expiration must equal the
stock-index value.
The
headlines about program
trading often reflect the
results of rapid selling by
the program
traders.
For whatever reason, traders'
decide-to sells the futures.
As the price falls,
stock
prices also
fall. When 'the futures
price drops below the price
of the stock index,
tremendous
selling orders can be unleashed. These
volume sell orders in stocks drive
the
futures
prices even lower.
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