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Interest rate swap

In finance, an interest rate swap (IRS) is an interest rate derivative (IRD). It involves exchange of interest rates between two parties. In particular it is a "linear" IRD and one of the most liquid, benchmark products. It has associations with forward rate agreements (FRAs), and with zero coupon swaps (ZCSs).[1]

In its December 2014 statistics release, the Bank for International Settlements reported that interest rate swaps were the largest component of the global OTC derivative market, representing 60%, with the notional amount outstanding in OTC interest rate swaps of $381 trillion, and the gross market value of $14 trillion.[2]

Interest rate swaps can be traded as an index through the FTSE MTIRS Index.

Interest rate swaps Edit

General description Edit

 
Graphical depiction of IRS cashflows between two counterparties based on a notional amount of EUR100mm for a single (i'th) period exchange, where the floating index   will typically be an -IBOR index.

An interest rate swap's (IRS's) effective description is a derivative contract, agreed between two counterparties, which specifies the nature of an exchange of payments benchmarked against an interest rate index. The most common IRS is a fixed for floating swap, whereby one party will make payments to the other based on an initially agreed fixed rate of interest, to receive back payments based on a floating interest rate index. Each of these series of payments is termed a "leg", so a typical IRS has both a fixed and a floating leg. The floating index is commonly an interbank offered rate (IBOR) of specific tenor in the appropriate currency of the IRS, for example LIBOR in GBP, EURIBOR in EUR, or STIBOR in SEK.

To completely determine any IRS a number of parameters must be specified for each leg: [3]

Each currency has its own standard market conventions regarding the frequency of payments, the day count conventions and the end-of-month rule.[4]

Extended description Edit

There are several types of IRS, typically:

As OTC instruments, interest rate swaps (IRSs) can be customised in a number of ways and can be structured to meet the specific needs of the counterparties. For example: payment dates could be irregular, the notional of the swap could be amortized over time, reset dates (or fixing dates) of the floating rate could be irregular, mandatory break clauses may be inserted into the contract, etc. A common form of customisation is often present in new issue swaps where the fixed leg cashflows are designed to replicate those cashflows received as the coupons on a purchased bond. The interbank market, however, only has a few standardised types.

There is no consensus on the scope of naming convention for different types of IRS. Even a wide description of IRS contracts only includes those whose legs are denominated in the same currency. It is generally accepted that swaps of similar nature whose legs are denominated in different currencies are called cross currency basis swaps. Swaps which are determined on a floating rate index in one currency but whose payments are denominated in another currency are called Quantos.

In traditional interest rate derivative terminology an IRS is a fixed leg versus floating leg derivative contract referencing an IBOR as the floating leg. If the floating leg is redefined to be an overnight index, such as EONIA, SONIA, FFOIS, etc. then this type of swap is generally referred to as an overnight indexed swap (OIS). Some financial literature may classify OISs as a subset of IRSs and other literature may recognise a distinct separation.

Fixed leg versus fixed leg swaps are rare, and generally constitute a form of specialised loan agreement.

Float leg versus float leg swaps are much more common. These are typically termed (single currency) basis swaps (SBSs). The legs on SBSs will necessarily be different interest indexes, such as 1M, LIBOR, 3M LIBOR, 6M LIBOR, SONIA, etc. The pricing of these swaps requires a spread often quoted in basis points to be added to one of the floating legs in order to satisfy value equivalence.

Uses Edit

Interest rate swaps are used to hedge against or speculate on changes in interest rates. They are also used to manage cashflows by converting floating to fixed interest payments, or vice versa.

Interest rate swaps are also used speculatively by hedge funds or other investors who expect a change in interest rates or the relationships between them. Traditionally, fixed income investors who expected rates to fall would purchase cash bonds, whose value increased as rates fell. Today, investors with a similar view could enter a floating-for-fixed interest rate swap; as rates fall, investors would pay a lower floating rate in exchange for the same fixed rate.

Interest rate swaps are also popular for the arbitrage opportunities they provide. Varying levels of creditworthiness means that there is often a positive quality spread differential that allows both parties to benefit from an interest rate swap.

The interest rate swap market in USD is closely linked to the Eurodollar futures market which trades among others at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

Valuation and pricing Edit

IRSs are bespoke financial products whose customisation can include changes to payment dates, notional changes (such as those in amortised IRSs), accrual period adjustment and calculation convention changes (such as a day count convention of 30/360E to ACT/360 or ACT/365).

A vanilla IRS is the term used for standardised IRSs. Typically these will have none of the above customisations, and instead exhibit constant notional throughout, implied payment and accrual dates and benchmark calculation conventions by currency.[3] A vanilla IRS is also characterised by one leg being "fixed" and the second leg "floating" referencing an -IBOR index. The net present value (PV) of a vanilla IRS can be computed by determining the PV of each fixed leg and floating leg separately and summing. For pricing a mid-market IRS the underlying principle is that the two legs must have the same value initially; see further under Rational pricing.

Calculating the fixed leg requires discounting all of the known cashflows by an appropriate discount factor:

 

where   is the notional,   is the fixed rate,   is the number of payments,   is the decimalised day count fraction of the accrual in the i'th period, and   is the discount factor associated with the payment date of the i'th period.

Calculating the floating leg is a similar process replacing the fixed rate with forecast index rates:

 

where   is the number of payments of the floating leg and   are the forecast -IBOR index rates of the appropriate currency.

The PV of the IRS from the perspective of receiving the fixed leg is then:

 

Historically IRSs were valued using discount factors derived from the same curve used to forecast the -IBOR rates. This has been called 'self-discounted'. Some early literature described some incoherence introduced by that approach and multiple banks were using different techniques to reduce them. It became more apparent with the 2007–2012 global financial crisis that the approach was not appropriate, and alignment towards discount factors associated with physical collateral of the IRSs was needed.

Post crisis, to accommodate credit risk, the now-standard pricing approach is the multi-curve framework where forecast -IBOR rates and discount factors exhibit disparity. Note that the economic pricing principle is unchanged: leg values are still identical at initiation. See Financial economics § Derivative pricing for further context. Here, overnight index swap (OIS) rates are typically used to derive discount factors, since that index is the standard inclusion on Credit Support Annexes (CSAs) to determine the rate of interest payable on collateral for IRS contracts. As regards the rates forecast, since the basis spread between LIBOR rates of different maturities widened during the crisis, forecast curves are generally constructed for each LIBOR tenor used in floating rate derivative legs.[5]

Regarding the curve build, see: [6][7][3] Under the old framework a single self discounted curve was "bootstrapped" for each tenor; i.e.: solved such that it exactly returned the observed prices of selected instruments—IRSs, with FRAs in the short end—with the build proceeding sequentially, date-wise, through these instruments. Under the new framework, the various curves are best fitted to observed market prices—as a "curve set"—one curve for discounting, one for each IBOR-tenor "forecast curve", and the build is then based on quotes for IRSs and OISs, with FRAs included as before. Here, since the observed average overnight rate is swapped for the -IBOR rate over the same period (the most liquid tenor in that market), and the -IBOR IRSs are in turn discounted on the OIS curve, the problem entails a nonlinear system, where all curve points are solved at once, and specialized iterative methods are usually employed—very often a modification of Newton's method. The forecast-curves for other tenors can be solved in a "second stage", bootstrap-style, with discounting on the now-solved OIS curve.

Under both frameworks, the following apply. (i) Maturities for which rates are solved directly are referred to as "pillar points", these correspond to the input-instrument maturities; other rates are interpolated, often using Hermitic splines. (ii) The objective function: prices must be "exactly" returned, as described. (iii) The penalty function will weigh: that forward rates are positive (to be arbitrage free) and curve "smoothness"; both, in turn, a function of the interpolation method. [8][9][10] (iv) The initial estimate: usually, the most recently solved curve set. ((v) All that need be stored are the solved spot rates for the pillars, and the interpolation rule.)

A CSA could allow for collateral, and hence interest payments on that collateral, in any currency.[11] To accommodate this, banks include in their curve-set a USD discount-curve to be used for discounting local-IBOR trades which have USD collateral; this curve is sometimes called the "basis-curve". It is built by solving for observed (mark-to-market) cross-currency swap rates, where the local -IBOR is swapped for USD LIBOR with USD collateral as underpin. The latest, pre-solved USD-LIBOR-curve is therefore an (external) element of the curve-set, and the basis-curve is then solved in the "third stage". Each currency's curve-set will thus include a local-currency discount-curve and its USD discounting basis-curve. As required, a third-currency discount curve — i.e. for local trades collateralized in a currency other than local or USD (or any other combination) — can then be constructed from the local-currency basis-curve and third-currency basis-curve, combined via an arbitrage relationship known here as "FX Forward Invariance".[12]

LIBOR is being phased out, with replacements including SOFR and TONAR. With the coexistence of "old" and "new" rates in the market, multi-curve and OIS curve "management" is necessary, with changes required to incorporate new discounting and compounding conventions, while the underlying logic is unaffected; see.[13][14][15]

The complexities of modern curvesets mean that there may not be discount factors available for a specific -IBOR index curve. These curves are known as 'forecast only' curves and only contain the information of a forecast -IBOR index rate for any future date. Some designs constructed with a discount based methodology mean forecast -IBOR index rates are implied by the discount factors inherent to that curve:

  where   and   are the start and end discount factors associated with the relevant forward curve of a particular -IBOR index in a given currency.

To price the mid-market or par rate,   of an IRS (defined by the value of fixed rate   that gives a net PV of zero), the above formula is re-arranged to:

 

In the event old methodologies are applied the discount factors   can be replaced with the self discounted values   and the above reduces to:

 

In both cases, the PV of a general swap can be expressed exactly with the following intuitive formula:

 

where   is the so-called Annuity factor   (or   for self-discounting). This shows that the PV of an IRS is roughly linear in the swap par rate (though small non-linearities arise from the co-dependency of the swap rate with the discount factors in the Annuity sum).

During the life of the swap the same valuation technique is used, but since, over time, both the discounting factors and the forward rates change, the PV of the swap will deviate from its initial value. Therefore, the swap will be an asset to one party and a liability to the other. The way these changes in value are reported is the subject of IAS 39 for jurisdictions following IFRS, and FAS 133 for U.S. GAAP. Swaps are marked to market by debt security traders to visualize their inventory at a certain time. As regards P&L Attribution, and hedging, the new framework adds complexity in that the trader's position is now potentially affected by numerous instruments not obviously related to the trade in question.

Risks Edit

Interest rate swaps expose users to many different types of financial risk.[3] Predominantly they expose the user to market risks and specifically interest rate risk. The value of an interest rate swap will change as market interest rates rise and fall. In market terminology this is often referred to as delta risk. Interest rate swaps also exhibit gamma risk whereby their delta risk increases or decreases as market interest rates fluctuate. (See Greeks (finance), Value at risk § Computation methods, Value at risk § VaR risk management.)

Other specific types of market risk that interest rate swaps have exposure to are basis risks—where various IBOR tenor indexes can deviate from one another—and reset risks - where the publication of specific tenor IBOR indexes are subject to daily fluctuation.

Uncollateralised interest rate swaps—those executed bilaterally without a CSA in place—expose the trading counterparties to funding risks and credit risks. Funding risks because the value of the swap might deviate to become so negative that it is unaffordable and cannot be funded. Credit risks because the respective counterparty, for whom the value of the swap is positive, will be concerned about the opposing counterparty defaulting on its obligations. Collateralised interest rate swaps, on the other hand, expose the users to collateral risks: here, depending upon the terms of the CSA, the type of posted collateral that is permitted might become more or less expensive due to other extraneous market movements.

Credit and funding risks still exist for collateralised trades but to a much lesser extent. Regardless, due to regulations set out in the Basel III Regulatory Frameworks, trading interest rate derivatives commands a capital usage. The consequence of this is that, dependent upon their specific nature, interest rate swaps might command more capital usage, and this can deviate with market movements. Thus capital risks are another concern for users.

Given these concerns, banks will typically calculate a credit valuation adjustment, as well as other x-valuation adjustments, which then incorporate these risks into the instrument value.

Reputation risks also exist. The mis-selling of swaps, over-exposure of municipalities to derivative contracts, and IBOR manipulation are examples of high-profile cases where trading interest rate swaps has led to a loss of reputation and fines by regulators.

Hedging interest rate swaps can be complicated and relies on numerical processes of well designed risk models to suggest reliable benchmark trades that mitigate all market risks; although, see the discussion above re hedging in a multi-curve environment. The other, aforementioned risks must be hedged using other systematic processes.

Quotation and market-making Edit

ICE Swap rate Edit

ICE Swap rate[16] replaced the rate formerly known as ISDAFIX in 2015. Swap Rate benchmark rates are calculated using eligible prices and volumes for specified interest rate derivative products. The prices are provided by trading venues in accordance with a “Waterfall” Methodology. The first level of the Waterfall (“Level 1”) uses eligible, executable prices and volumes provided by regulated, electronic, trading venues. Multiple, randomised snapshots of market data are taken during a short window before calculation. This enhances the benchmark's robustness and reliability by protecting against attempted manipulation and temporary aberrations in the underlying market.[citation needed]

Market-making Edit

The market-making of IRSs is an involved process involving multiple tasks; curve construction with reference to interbank markets, individual derivative contract pricing, risk management of credit, cash and capital. The cross disciplines required include quantitative analysis and mathematical expertise, disciplined and organized approach towards profits and losses, and coherent psychological and subjective assessment of financial market information and price-taker analysis. The time sensitive nature of markets also creates a pressurized environment. Many tools and techniques have been designed to improve efficiency of market-making in a drive to efficiency and consistency.[3]

Controversy Edit

In June 1988 the Audit Commission was tipped off by someone working on the swaps desk of Goldman Sachs that the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham had a massive exposure to interest rate swaps. When the commission contacted the council, the chief executive told them not to worry as "everybody knows that interest rates are going to fall"; the treasurer thought the interest rate swaps were a "nice little earner". The Commission's Controller, Howard Davies, realised that the council had put all of its positions on interest rates going down and ordered an investigation.[17]

By January 1989 the Commission obtained legal opinions from two Queen's Counsel. Although they did not agree, the commission preferred the opinion that it was ultra vires for councils to engage in interest rate swaps (ie. that they had no lawful power to do so). Moreover, interest rates had increased from 8% to 15%. The auditor and the commission then went to court and had the contracts declared void (appeals all the way up to the House of Lords failed in Hazell v Hammersmith and Fulham LBC); the five banks involved lost millions of pounds. Many other local authorities had been engaging in interest rate swaps in the 1980s.[17] This resulted in several cases in which the banks generally lost their claims for compound interest on debts to councils, finalised in Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale v Islington London Borough Council.[18] Banks did, however, recover some funds where the derivatives were "in the money" for the Councils (ie, an asset showing a profit for the council, which it now had to return to the bank, not a debt).[17]

The controversy surrounding interest rate swaps reached a peak in the UK during the financial crisis where banks sold unsuitable interest rate hedging products on a large scale to SMEs. The practice has been widely criticised[19] by the media and Parliament.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Choudhry, Moorad (2012). The Principles of Banking. Wiley. p. 273. ISBN 978-1119755647.
  2. ^ "OTC derivatives statistics at end-December 2014" (PDF). Bank for International Settlements.
  3. ^ a b c d e Pricing and Trading Interest Rate Derivatives: A Practical Guide to Swaps, J H M Darbyshire, 2017, ISBN 978-0995455528
  4. ^ "Interest Rate Instruments and Market Conventions Guide" Quantitative Research, OpenGamma, 2012.
  5. ^ Multi-Curve Valuation Approaches and their Application to Hedge Accounting according to IAS 39, Dr. Dirk Schubert, KPMG
  6. ^ M. Henrard (2014). Interest Rate Modelling in the Multi-Curve Framework: Foundations, Evolution and Implementation. Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978-1137374653
  7. ^ See section 3 of Marco Bianchetti and Mattia Carlicchi (2012). Interest Rates after The Credit Crunch: Multiple-Curve Vanilla Derivatives and SABR
  8. ^ P. Hagan and G. West (2006). Interpolation methods for curve construction. Applied Mathematical Finance, 13 (2):89—129, 2006.
  9. ^ P. Hagan and G. West (2008). Methods for Constructing a Yield Curve. Wilmott Magazine, May, 70-81.
  10. ^ P du Preez and E Maré (2013). Interpolating Yield Curve Data in a Manner That Ensures Positive and Continuous Forward Curves. SAJEMS 16 (2013) No 4:395-406
  11. ^ Fujii, Masaaki Fujii; Yasufumi Shimada; Akihiko Takahashi (26 January 2010). "A Note on Construction of Multiple Swap Curves with and without Collateral". CARF Working Paper Series No. CARF-F-154. SSRN 1440633.
  12. ^ Burgess, Nicholas (2017). FX Forward Invariance & Discounting with CSA Collateral
  13. ^ Fabio Mercurio (2018). SOFR So Far: Modeling the LIBOR Replacement
  14. ^ FINCAD (2020). Future-Proof Curve-Building for the End of Libor
  15. ^ Finastra (2020). Transitioning from LIBOR to alternative reference rates
  16. ^ ICE Swap Rate. [1]
  17. ^ a b c Duncan Campbell-Smith, "Follow the Money: The Audit Commission, Public Money, and the Management of Public Services 1983-2008", Allen Lane, 2008, chapter 6 passim.
  18. ^ [1996] UKHL 12, [1996] AC 669
  19. ^ "HM Parliament Condemns RBS GRG's Parasitic Treatment of SMEs Post date". 26 January 2018.

Further reading Edit

General:

  • Leif B.G. Andersen, Vladimir V. Piterbarg (2010). (1st ed. 2010 ed.). Atlantic Financial Press. ISBN 978-0-9844221-0-4. Archived from the original on 2011-02-08.
  • J H M Darbyshire (2017). Pricing and Trading Interest Rate Derivatives (2nd ed. 2017 ed.). Aitch and Dee Ltd. ISBN 978-0995455528.
  • Richard Flavell (2010). Swaps and other derivatives (2nd ed.) Wiley. ISBN 047072191X
  • Miron P. & Swannell P. (1991). Pricing and Hedging Swaps, Euromoney books. ISBN 185564052X

Early literature on the incoherence of the one curve pricing approach:

  • Boenkost W. and Schmidt W. (2004). Cross Currency Swap Valuation, Working Paper 2, HfB - Business School of Finance & Management SSRN preprint.
  • Tuckman B. and Porfirio P. (2003). Interest Rate Parity, Money Market Basis Swaps and Cross-Currency Basis Swaps, Fixed income liquid markets research, Lehman Brothers

Multi-curves framework:

  • Henrard M. (2007). The Irony in the Derivatives Discounting, Wilmott Magazine, pp. 92–98, July 2007. SSRN preprint.
  • Kijima M., Tanaka K., and Wong T. (2009). A Multi-Quality Model of Interest Rates, Quantitative Finance, pages 133-145, 2009.
  • Henrard M. (2010). The Irony in the Derivatives Discounting Part II: The Crisis, Wilmott Journal, Vol. 2, pp. 301–316, 2010. SSRN preprint.
  • Bianchetti M. (2010). Two Curves, One Price: Pricing & Hedging Interest Rate Derivatives Decoupling Forwarding and Discounting Yield Curves, Risk Magazine, August 2010. SSRN preprint.
  • Henrard M. (2014) Interest Rate Modelling in the Multi-curve Framework: Foundations, Evolution, and Implementation. Palgrave Macmillan. Applied Quantitative Finance series. June 2014. ISBN 978-1-137-37465-3.

External links Edit

  • Pricing and Trading Interest Rate Derivatives by J H M Darbyshire
  • Understanding Derivatives: Markets and Infrastructure Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, Financial Markets Group
  • Bank for International Settlements - Semiannual OTC derivatives statistics
  • Glossary - Interest rate swap glossary
  • Investopedia - Spreadlock - An interest rate swap future (not an option)
  • Basic Fixed Income Derivative Hedging - Article on Financial-edu.com.
  • Hussman Funds - Freight Trains and Steep Curves
  • Historical LIBOR Swaps data
  • , WorldwideInterestRates.com
  • Interest Rate Swap Calculators and Portfolio Management Tool
  • G4 LIBOR Swap Calculator

interest, rate, swap, finance, interest, rate, swap, interest, rate, derivative, involves, exchange, interest, rates, between, parties, particular, linear, most, liquid, benchmark, products, associations, with, forward, rate, agreements, fras, with, zero, coup. In finance an interest rate swap IRS is an interest rate derivative IRD It involves exchange of interest rates between two parties In particular it is a linear IRD and one of the most liquid benchmark products It has associations with forward rate agreements FRAs and with zero coupon swaps ZCSs 1 In its December 2014 statistics release the Bank for International Settlements reported that interest rate swaps were the largest component of the global OTC derivative market representing 60 with the notional amount outstanding in OTC interest rate swaps of 381 trillion and the gross market value of 14 trillion 2 Interest rate swaps can be traded as an index through the FTSE MTIRS Index Contents 1 Interest rate swaps 1 1 General description 1 2 Extended description 1 3 Uses 2 Valuation and pricing 3 Risks 4 Quotation and market making 4 1 ICE Swap rate 4 2 Market making 5 Controversy 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksInterest rate swaps EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Interest rate swap news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message General description Edit Graphical depiction of IRS cashflows between two counterparties based on a notional amount of EUR100mm for a single i th period exchange where the floating index r i displaystyle r i will typically be an IBOR index An interest rate swap s IRS s effective description is a derivative contract agreed between two counterparties which specifies the nature of an exchange of payments benchmarked against an interest rate index The most common IRS is a fixed for floating swap whereby one party will make payments to the other based on an initially agreed fixed rate of interest to receive back payments based on a floating interest rate index Each of these series of payments is termed a leg so a typical IRS has both a fixed and a floating leg The floating index is commonly an interbank offered rate IBOR of specific tenor in the appropriate currency of the IRS for example LIBOR in GBP EURIBOR in EUR or STIBOR in SEK To completely determine any IRS a number of parameters must be specified for each leg 3 the notional principal amount or varying notional schedule the start and end dates value trade and settlement dates and date scheduling date rolling the fixed rate i e swap rate sometimes quoted as a swap spread over a benchmark the chosen floating interest rate index tenor the day count conventions for interest calculations Each currency has its own standard market conventions regarding the frequency of payments the day count conventions and the end of month rule 4 Extended description Edit There are several types of IRS typically Vanilla fixed for floating Basis swap Cross currency basis swaps Amortising swap Zero coupon swap Constant maturity swap Overnight indexed swapAs OTC instruments interest rate swaps IRSs can be customised in a number of ways and can be structured to meet the specific needs of the counterparties For example payment dates could be irregular the notional of the swap could be amortized over time reset dates or fixing dates of the floating rate could be irregular mandatory break clauses may be inserted into the contract etc A common form of customisation is often present in new issue swaps where the fixed leg cashflows are designed to replicate those cashflows received as the coupons on a purchased bond The interbank market however only has a few standardised types There is no consensus on the scope of naming convention for different types of IRS Even a wide description of IRS contracts only includes those whose legs are denominated in the same currency It is generally accepted that swaps of similar nature whose legs are denominated in different currencies are called cross currency basis swaps Swaps which are determined on a floating rate index in one currency but whose payments are denominated in another currency are called Quantos In traditional interest rate derivative terminology an IRS is a fixed leg versus floating leg derivative contract referencing an IBOR as the floating leg If the floating leg is redefined to be an overnight index such as EONIA SONIA FFOIS etc then this type of swap is generally referred to as an overnight indexed swap OIS Some financial literature may classify OISs as a subset of IRSs and other literature may recognise a distinct separation Fixed leg versus fixed leg swaps are rare and generally constitute a form of specialised loan agreement Float leg versus float leg swaps are much more common These are typically termed single currency basis swaps SBSs The legs on SBSs will necessarily be different interest indexes such as 1M LIBOR 3M LIBOR 6M LIBOR SONIA etc The pricing of these swaps requires a spread often quoted in basis points to be added to one of the floating legs in order to satisfy value equivalence Uses Edit Interest rate swaps are used to hedge against or speculate on changes in interest rates They are also used to manage cashflows by converting floating to fixed interest payments or vice versa Interest rate swaps are also used speculatively by hedge funds or other investors who expect a change in interest rates or the relationships between them Traditionally fixed income investors who expected rates to fall would purchase cash bonds whose value increased as rates fell Today investors with a similar view could enter a floating for fixed interest rate swap as rates fall investors would pay a lower floating rate in exchange for the same fixed rate Interest rate swaps are also popular for the arbitrage opportunities they provide Varying levels of creditworthiness means that there is often a positive quality spread differential that allows both parties to benefit from an interest rate swap The interest rate swap market in USD is closely linked to the Eurodollar futures market which trades among others at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Valuation and pricing EditFurther information Rational pricing Swaps This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Interest rate swap news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message IRSs are bespoke financial products whose customisation can include changes to payment dates notional changes such as those in amortised IRSs accrual period adjustment and calculation convention changes such as a day count convention of 30 360E to ACT 360 or ACT 365 A vanilla IRS is the term used for standardised IRSs Typically these will have none of the above customisations and instead exhibit constant notional throughout implied payment and accrual dates and benchmark calculation conventions by currency 3 A vanilla IRS is also characterised by one leg being fixed and the second leg floating referencing an IBOR index The net present value PV of a vanilla IRS can be computed by determining the PV of each fixed leg and floating leg separately and summing For pricing a mid market IRS the underlying principle is that the two legs must have the same value initially see further under Rational pricing Calculating the fixed leg requires discounting all of the known cashflows by an appropriate discount factor P fixed N R i 1 n 1 d i v i displaystyle P text fixed NR sum i 1 n 1 d i v i where N displaystyle N is the notional R displaystyle R is the fixed rate n 1 displaystyle n 1 is the number of payments d i displaystyle d i is the decimalised day count fraction of the accrual in the i th period and v i displaystyle v i is the discount factor associated with the payment date of the i th period Calculating the floating leg is a similar process replacing the fixed rate with forecast index rates P float N j 1 n 2 r j d j v j displaystyle P text float N sum j 1 n 2 r j d j v j where n 2 displaystyle n 2 is the number of payments of the floating leg and r j displaystyle r j are the forecast IBOR index rates of the appropriate currency The PV of the IRS from the perspective of receiving the fixed leg is then P IRS P fixed P float displaystyle P text IRS P text fixed P text float Historically IRSs were valued using discount factors derived from the same curve used to forecast the IBOR rates This has been called self discounted Some early literature described some incoherence introduced by that approach and multiple banks were using different techniques to reduce them It became more apparent with the 2007 2012 global financial crisis that the approach was not appropriate and alignment towards discount factors associated with physical collateral of the IRSs was needed Post crisis to accommodate credit risk the now standard pricing approach is the multi curve framework where forecast IBOR rates and discount factors exhibit disparity Note that the economic pricing principle is unchanged leg values are still identical at initiation See Financial economics Derivative pricing for further context Here overnight index swap OIS rates are typically used to derive discount factors since that index is the standard inclusion on Credit Support Annexes CSAs to determine the rate of interest payable on collateral for IRS contracts As regards the rates forecast since the basis spread between LIBOR rates of different maturities widened during the crisis forecast curves are generally constructed for each LIBOR tenor used in floating rate derivative legs 5 Regarding the curve build see 6 7 3 Under the old framework a single self discounted curve was bootstrapped for each tenor i e solved such that it exactly returned the observed prices of selected instruments IRSs with FRAs in the short end with the build proceeding sequentially date wise through these instruments Under the new framework the various curves are best fitted to observed market prices as a curve set one curve for discounting one for each IBOR tenor forecast curve and the build is then based on quotes for IRSs and OISs with FRAs included as before Here since the observed average overnight rate is swapped for the IBOR rate over the same period the most liquid tenor in that market and the IBOR IRSs are in turn discounted on the OIS curve the problem entails a nonlinear system where all curve points are solved at once and specialized iterative methods are usually employed very often a modification of Newton s method The forecast curves for other tenors can be solved in a second stage bootstrap style with discounting on the now solved OIS curve Under both frameworks the following apply i Maturities for which rates are solved directly are referred to as pillar points these correspond to the input instrument maturities other rates are interpolated often using Hermitic splines ii The objective function prices must be exactly returned as described iii The penalty function will weigh that forward rates are positive to be arbitrage free and curve smoothness both in turn a function of the interpolation method 8 9 10 iv The initial estimate usually the most recently solved curve set v All that need be stored are the solved spot rates for the pillars and the interpolation rule A CSA could allow for collateral and hence interest payments on that collateral in any currency 11 To accommodate this banks include in their curve set a USD discount curve to be used for discounting local IBOR trades which have USD collateral this curve is sometimes called the basis curve It is built by solving for observed mark to market cross currency swap rates where the local IBOR is swapped for USD LIBOR with USD collateral as underpin The latest pre solved USD LIBOR curve is therefore an external element of the curve set and the basis curve is then solved in the third stage Each currency s curve set will thus include a local currency discount curve and its USD discounting basis curve As required a third currency discount curve i e for local trades collateralized in a currency other than local or USD or any other combination can then be constructed from the local currency basis curve and third currency basis curve combined via an arbitrage relationship known here as FX Forward Invariance 12 LIBOR is being phased out with replacements including SOFR and TONAR With the coexistence of old and new rates in the market multi curve and OIS curve management is necessary with changes required to incorporate new discounting and compounding conventions while the underlying logic is unaffected see 13 14 15 The complexities of modern curvesets mean that there may not be discount factors available for a specific IBOR index curve These curves are known as forecast only curves and only contain the information of a forecast IBOR index rate for any future date Some designs constructed with a discount based methodology mean forecast IBOR index rates are implied by the discount factors inherent to that curve r j 1 d j x j 1 x j 1 displaystyle r j frac 1 d j left frac x j 1 x j 1 right where x i 1 displaystyle x i 1 and x i displaystyle x i are the start and end discount factors associated with the relevant forward curve of a particular IBOR index in a given currency To price the mid market or par rate S displaystyle S of an IRS defined by the value of fixed rate R displaystyle R that gives a net PV of zero the above formula is re arranged to S j 1 n 2 r j d j v j i 1 n 1 d i v i displaystyle S frac sum j 1 n 2 r j d j v j sum i 1 n 1 d i v i In the event old methodologies are applied the discount factors v k displaystyle v k can be replaced with the self discounted values x k displaystyle x k and the above reduces to S x 0 x n 2 i 1 n 1 d i x i displaystyle S frac x 0 x n 2 sum i 1 n 1 d i x i In both cases the PV of a general swap can be expressed exactly with the following intuitive formula P IRS N R S A displaystyle P text IRS N R S A where A displaystyle A is the so called Annuity factor A i 1 n 1 d i v i displaystyle A sum i 1 n 1 d i v i or A i 1 n 1 d i x i displaystyle A sum i 1 n 1 d i x i for self discounting This shows that the PV of an IRS is roughly linear in the swap par rate though small non linearities arise from the co dependency of the swap rate with the discount factors in the Annuity sum During the life of the swap the same valuation technique is used but since over time both the discounting factors and the forward rates change the PV of the swap will deviate from its initial value Therefore the swap will be an asset to one party and a liability to the other The way these changes in value are reported is the subject of IAS 39 for jurisdictions following IFRS and FAS 133 for U S GAAP Swaps are marked to market by debt security traders to visualize their inventory at a certain time As regards P amp L Attribution and hedging the new framework adds complexity in that the trader s position is now potentially affected by numerous instruments not obviously related to the trade in question Risks EditFurther information Financial risk management Banking Interest rate swaps expose users to many different types of financial risk 3 Predominantly they expose the user to market risks and specifically interest rate risk The value of an interest rate swap will change as market interest rates rise and fall In market terminology this is often referred to as delta risk Interest rate swaps also exhibit gamma risk whereby their delta risk increases or decreases as market interest rates fluctuate See Greeks finance Value at risk Computation methods Value at risk VaR risk management Other specific types of market risk that interest rate swaps have exposure to are basis risks where various IBOR tenor indexes can deviate from one another and reset risks where the publication of specific tenor IBOR indexes are subject to daily fluctuation Uncollateralised interest rate swaps those executed bilaterally without a CSA in place expose the trading counterparties to funding risks and credit risks Funding risks because the value of the swap might deviate to become so negative that it is unaffordable and cannot be funded Credit risks because the respective counterparty for whom the value of the swap is positive will be concerned about the opposing counterparty defaulting on its obligations Collateralised interest rate swaps on the other hand expose the users to collateral risks here depending upon the terms of the CSA the type of posted collateral that is permitted might become more or less expensive due to other extraneous market movements Credit and funding risks still exist for collateralised trades but to a much lesser extent Regardless due to regulations set out in the Basel III Regulatory Frameworks trading interest rate derivatives commands a capital usage The consequence of this is that dependent upon their specific nature interest rate swaps might command more capital usage and this can deviate with market movements Thus capital risks are another concern for users Given these concerns banks will typically calculate a credit valuation adjustment as well as other x valuation adjustments which then incorporate these risks into the instrument value Reputation risks also exist The mis selling of swaps over exposure of municipalities to derivative contracts and IBOR manipulation are examples of high profile cases where trading interest rate swaps has led to a loss of reputation and fines by regulators Hedging interest rate swaps can be complicated and relies on numerical processes of well designed risk models to suggest reliable benchmark trades that mitigate all market risks although see the discussion above re hedging in a multi curve environment The other aforementioned risks must be hedged using other systematic processes Quotation and market making EditICE Swap rate Edit ICE Swap rate 16 replaced the rate formerly known as ISDAFIX in 2015 Swap Rate benchmark rates are calculated using eligible prices and volumes for specified interest rate derivative products The prices are provided by trading venues in accordance with a Waterfall Methodology The first level of the Waterfall Level 1 uses eligible executable prices and volumes provided by regulated electronic trading venues Multiple randomised snapshots of market data are taken during a short window before calculation This enhances the benchmark s robustness and reliability by protecting against attempted manipulation and temporary aberrations in the underlying market citation needed Market making Edit The market making of IRSs is an involved process involving multiple tasks curve construction with reference to interbank markets individual derivative contract pricing risk management of credit cash and capital The cross disciplines required include quantitative analysis and mathematical expertise disciplined and organized approach towards profits and losses and coherent psychological and subjective assessment of financial market information and price taker analysis The time sensitive nature of markets also creates a pressurized environment Many tools and techniques have been designed to improve efficiency of market making in a drive to efficiency and consistency 3 Controversy EditIn June 1988 the Audit Commission was tipped off by someone working on the swaps desk of Goldman Sachs that the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham had a massive exposure to interest rate swaps When the commission contacted the council the chief executive told them not to worry as everybody knows that interest rates are going to fall the treasurer thought the interest rate swaps were a nice little earner The Commission s Controller Howard Davies realised that the council had put all of its positions on interest rates going down and ordered an investigation 17 By January 1989 the Commission obtained legal opinions from two Queen s Counsel Although they did not agree the commission preferred the opinion that it was ultra vires for councils to engage in interest rate swaps ie that they had no lawful power to do so Moreover interest rates had increased from 8 to 15 The auditor and the commission then went to court and had the contracts declared void appeals all the way up to the House of Lords failed in Hazell v Hammersmith and Fulham LBC the five banks involved lost millions of pounds Many other local authorities had been engaging in interest rate swaps in the 1980s 17 This resulted in several cases in which the banks generally lost their claims for compound interest on debts to councils finalised in Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale v Islington London Borough Council 18 Banks did however recover some funds where the derivatives were in the money for the Councils ie an asset showing a profit for the council which it now had to return to the bank not a debt 17 The controversy surrounding interest rate swaps reached a peak in the UK during the financial crisis where banks sold unsuitable interest rate hedging products on a large scale to SMEs The practice has been widely criticised 19 by the media and Parliament See also EditConstant maturity swap Equity swap Eurodollar FTSE MTIRS Index Inflation derivative Interest rate cap and floor Swap rate Total return swapReferences Edit Choudhry Moorad 2012 The Principles of Banking Wiley p 273 ISBN 978 1119755647 OTC derivatives statistics at end December 2014 PDF Bank for International Settlements a b c d e Pricing and Trading Interest Rate Derivatives A Practical Guide to Swaps J H M Darbyshire 2017 ISBN 978 0995455528 Interest Rate Instruments and Market Conventions Guide Quantitative Research OpenGamma 2012 Multi Curve Valuation Approaches and their Application to Hedge Accounting according to IAS 39 Dr Dirk Schubert KPMG M Henrard 2014 Interest Rate Modelling in the Multi Curve Framework Foundations Evolution and Implementation Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1137374653 See section 3 of Marco Bianchetti and Mattia Carlicchi 2012 Interest Rates after The Credit Crunch Multiple Curve Vanilla Derivatives and SABR P Hagan and G West 2006 Interpolation methods for curve construction Applied Mathematical Finance 13 2 89 129 2006 P Hagan and G West 2008 Methods for Constructing a Yield Curve Wilmott Magazine May 70 81 P du Preez and E Mare 2013 Interpolating Yield Curve Data in a Manner That Ensures Positive and Continuous Forward Curves SAJEMS 16 2013 No 4 395 406 Fujii Masaaki Fujii Yasufumi Shimada Akihiko Takahashi 26 January 2010 A Note on Construction of Multiple Swap Curves with and without Collateral CARF Working Paper Series No CARF F 154 SSRN 1440633 Burgess Nicholas 2017 FX Forward Invariance amp Discounting with CSA Collateral Fabio Mercurio 2018 SOFR So Far Modeling the LIBOR Replacement FINCAD 2020 Future Proof Curve Building for the End of Libor Finastra 2020 Transitioning from LIBOR to alternative reference rates ICE Swap Rate 1 a b c Duncan Campbell Smith Follow the Money The Audit Commission Public Money and the Management of Public Services 1983 2008 Allen Lane 2008 chapter 6 passim 1996 UKHL 12 1996 AC 669 HM Parliament Condemns RBS GRG s Parasitic Treatment of SMEs Post date 26 January 2018 Further reading EditGeneral Leif B G Andersen Vladimir V Piterbarg 2010 Interest Rate Modeling in Three Volumes 1st ed 2010 ed Atlantic Financial Press ISBN 978 0 9844221 0 4 Archived from the original on 2011 02 08 J H M Darbyshire 2017 Pricing and Trading Interest Rate Derivatives 2nd ed 2017 ed Aitch and Dee Ltd ISBN 978 0995455528 Richard Flavell 2010 Swaps and other derivatives 2nd ed Wiley ISBN 047072191X Miron P amp Swannell P 1991 Pricing and Hedging Swaps Euromoney books ISBN 185564052XEarly literature on the incoherence of the one curve pricing approach Boenkost W and Schmidt W 2004 Cross Currency Swap Valuation Working Paper 2 HfB Business School of Finance amp Management SSRN preprint Tuckman B and Porfirio P 2003 Interest Rate Parity Money Market Basis Swaps and Cross Currency Basis Swaps Fixed income liquid markets research Lehman BrothersMulti curves framework Henrard M 2007 The Irony in the Derivatives Discounting Wilmott Magazine pp 92 98 July 2007 SSRN preprint Kijima M Tanaka K and Wong T 2009 A Multi Quality Model of Interest Rates Quantitative Finance pages 133 145 2009 Henrard M 2010 The Irony in the Derivatives Discounting Part II The Crisis Wilmott Journal Vol 2 pp 301 316 2010 SSRN preprint Bianchetti M 2010 Two Curves One Price Pricing amp Hedging Interest Rate Derivatives Decoupling Forwarding and Discounting Yield Curves Risk Magazine August 2010 SSRN preprint Henrard M 2014 Interest Rate Modelling in the Multi curve Framework Foundations Evolution and Implementation Palgrave Macmillan Applied Quantitative Finance series June 2014 ISBN 978 1 137 37465 3 External links EditPricing and Trading Interest Rate Derivatives by J H M Darbyshire Understanding Derivatives Markets and Infrastructure Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Financial Markets Group Bank for International Settlements Semiannual OTC derivatives statistics Glossary Interest rate swap glossary Investopedia Spreadlock An interest rate swap future not an option Basic Fixed Income Derivative Hedging Article on Financial edu com Hussman Funds Freight Trains and Steep Curves Historical LIBOR Swaps data All about money rates in the world Real estate interest rates WorldwideInterestRates com Interest Rate Swap Calculators and Portfolio Management Tool G4 LIBOR Swap Calculator Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interest rate swap amp oldid 1166449413 Valuation and pricing, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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