04 TCHE414 L2 IFM ForexMarkets Forstudent3
04 TCHE414 L2 IFM ForexMarkets Forstudent3
g Exchange
g Market
Dr. Mai Thu Hien
Faculty of Banking and Finance
Foreign Trade University
1
Geography
• The foreign exchange market spans the globe, with
prices moving and currencies trading somewhere every
hour of every business day.
• As the next exhibit will illustrate, the volume of currency
transactions ebbs and flows across the globe as the
major
j currency ttrading
di centers t open and d close
l
throughout the day.
1
4
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
Greenwich Mean
Time
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
2
Market Participants
• The foreign exchange market consists of two tiers:
9 The interbank or wholesale market (multiples of
$1MM US or equivalent in transaction size)
9 The client or retail market (specific, smaller amounts)
Market Participants
3
Foreign Exchange Brokers
• Foreign exchange brokers are agents who facilitate
trading between dealers without themselves becoming
principals in the transaction.
• For this service, they charge a commission.
• It is a brokers business to know at any moment exactly
which dealers want to buy or sell any currency
currency.
• Dealers use brokers for their speed, and because they
want to remain anonymous since the identity of the
participants may influence short term quotes.
10
11
Source: www.econ.iastate.edu/classes/econ353/tesfatsion/mish2a.htm
12
4
Individuals and Firms
• Firms and individuals involved in international
commercial and financial transactions
9 Exporters receive foreign currency for the sale of their
goods and services
p
9 Exporters use the forex market to sell foreign
g
currency and buy AUD
9 Importers use the forex market to buy foreign
currency (sell AUD) to be used for purchasing imports
13
15
5
Speculators, Arbitragers and Hedgers
16
Transactions
in the Interbank Market
17
Transactions
in the Interbank Market
• An outright forward transaction (usually called just
“forward”) requires delivery at a future value date of a
specified amount of one currency for a specified amount
of another currency.
• The exchange rate is established at the time of the
agreement, t but
b t paymentt andd delivery
d li are nott required
i d
until maturity.
• Forward exchange rates are usually quoted for value
dates of one, two, three, six and twelve months.
• Buying Forward and Selling Forward describe the same
transaction (the only difference is the order in which
currencies are referenced.)
18
6
Transactions
in the Interbank Market
• A swap transaction in the interbank market is the
simultaneous purchase and sale of a given amount of
foreign exchange for two different value dates.
• Both purchase and sale are conducted with the same
counterparty.
• Some different types of swaps are:
9 Spot against forward
9 Forward-Forward
9 Nondeliverable Forwards (NDF)
19
Market Size
20
1000
900
Spot
800
Forwards
700 Swaps
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004
Source: Bank for International Settlements, “Triennial Central Bank Survey of Foreign Exchange and Derivatives Market Activity in April 2004,” September 2004, p. 9.
7
800
300
200
100
0
1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004
Source: Bank for International Settlements, “Triennial Central Bank Survoreign Exchange and Derivatives Market Activity in April 2004,” September 2004, p. 13.
30
20
10
0
1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004
Source: Bank for International Settlements, “Triennial Central Bank Survey of Foreign Exchange and Derivatives Market Activity in April 2004,” September 2004, p. 11.
24
8
Growth of Derivatives Markets
(Figure 5.1)
700
Size of
OTC
600 Market
($ trillion) Exchange
500
400
300
200
100
0
Jun-98 Jun-99 Jun-00 Jun-01 Jun-02 Jun-03 Jun-04 Jun-05 Jun-06 Jun-07 Jun-08
Foreign
g Currency
y Derivatives
Dr. Mai Thu Hien
Faculty of Banking and Finance
Foreign Trade University
26
9
Derivatives contracts
28
Derivatives contracts
Exchange-traded Over-the-counter
derivatives contracts derivatives contracts
• Traded in the exchange • Traded off the exchange
through dealers
• Have standardized terms • Do not have standard
(have public standardized terms (have a private and
transactions) customized transaction)
Derivatives contracts
30
10
Derivatives
Exchange
Exchange- Over the
Over-the- Exchange
Exchange- Over the
Over-the-
traded counter traded counter
31
32
11
Spot transaction
4-34
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
Inc. All rights reserved.
36
12
Delivery and settlement of
a forward contract
• When a forward contract expires, two possible
arrangements that can be used to settle the obligations
of the parties:
9 Delivery: the long will pay the agreed-upon price to the
short, who in turn will deliver the underlying asset to the
long (a deliverable forward contract).
9 Cash settlement: permits the long and the short to pay
the net cash value of the position (F-St) on the delivery
date (a cash-settled forward contract or nondeliverable
forwards NDFs).
F
Buyer (the long) Seller (the short)
Underlying 37
Forward rate
F 1+ i 1+ i
= ⇒F =S⋅ i, i* interest rate per annum
S 1 + i* 1 + i* n
⎛ 1+ i ⎞
If F is n-year forward rate F = S ⋅ ⎜⎜ ⎟
*⎟
⎝ 1+ i ⎠
1+ i m
If F is 12/m-month forward rate, F =S⋅
simple interest rate 1 + i* m
13
Forward margin
Forward (j/i) - Spot(j/i) 360
fi = ⋅ ⋅100%
Spot(j/i) n
40
Price of Price of
underlying underlying
at maturity ST at maturity ST
Bid Ask
Outright spot ¥118,27 ¥118,37
plus points (three months) -2,88 -2,87
Outright forward ¥115,39 ¥115,50
14
Forward point quotation for the Euro and
Japanese Yen
Euro: Spot & Forward ($/€) Yen: Spot & Forward (¥/$)
Term Mid rates Bid Ask Mid rates Bid Ask
Spot 1.0899 1.0897 1.0901 118.32 118.27 118.37
1w 1.0903 3 4 118.23 -10 -9
Cash 1 mo 1.0917 17 19 117.82 -51
51 -50
50
rates 6 mo 1.1012 112 113 115.45 -288 -287
1 yr 1.1143 242 245 112.50 -584 -581
Swap 2 yr 1.1401 481 522 106.93 -1150 -1129
rates 5 yr 1.2102 1129 1276 92.91 -2592 -2490
15
Foreign currency futures
• A foreign currency futures contract is an alternative to a
forward contract that calls for future delivery of a
standard amount of foreign exchange at a fixed time,
place and price.
• It is similar to futures contracts that exist for commodities
such h as cattle,
ttl llumber,
b iinterestbearing
t tb i d deposits,
it gold,
ld
etc.
• In the US, the most important market for foreign currency
futures is the International Monetary Market (IMM), a
division of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
46
47
16
Exchanges Trading Futures
49
17
Example
A GBP futures contract at the CME on 18 Dec 2003
• Opening price $1.6002/£
• Contract value £62,500
• Standard margin: $2,000
• Maintenance level/margin: $1,500
54
18
Foreign currency options
55
Example
57
19
Profit/loss for a call option
• Spot price > Strike price: the buyer would excercise the
option and possesses an unlimited profit potential.
• Spot price < Strike price: the buyer would choose not to
excercise the option and his total loss would be limited to
only what he paid for the option (limited loss potential).
• Strike price < Spot price < break
break-even
even price: the gross
profit earned on excercising the option and selling the
underlying currency covers part (but not all) of the
premium cost.
58
+C
0
-C
S
X X+C
59
60
20
X-P
P
0
-P
-(X-P)
S
X-P X
61
+ 0.50
Unlimited profit
0 Spot price
57.5 58.0 58.5 59.0 59.5 (US cents/SF)
Limited loss
- 0.50
Break-even price
- 1.00
Loss
The buyer of a call option on SF, with a strike price of 58.5 cents/SF, has a limited loss of 0.50 cents/SF at spot rates less
than 58.5 (“out of the money”), and an unlimited profit potential at spot rates above 58.5 cents/SF (“in the money”).
21
Exhibit 8.4 Buying a Call Option on
Swiss Francs (long call)
64
Profit = (Spot Rate – Strike Price) - Premium
+ 1.00
0 Spot price
57.5 58.0 58.5 59.0 59.5 (US cents/SF)
- 0.50 Unlimited loss
- 1.00
Loss
The writer of a call option on SF, with a strike price of 58.5 cents/SF, has a limited profit of 0.50 cents/SF at spot
rates less than 58.5, and an unlimited loss potential at spot rates above (to the right of) 59.0 cents/SF.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
22
Exhibit 8.5 Selling a Call Option on
Swiss Francs (short call)
67
Profit (loss) = Premium – (Spot Rate – Strike Price)
+ 0.50 Profit up
to 58.0
0 Spot price
57.5 58.0 58.5 59.0 59.5 (US cents/SF)
Limited loss
- 0.50
Break-even
price
- 1.00
Loss
The buyer of a put option on SF, with a strike price of 58.5 cents/SF, has a limited loss of 0.50 cents/SF at spot rates
greater than 58.5 (“out of the money”), and an unlimited profit potential at spot rates less than 58.5 cents/SF (“in the
money”) up to 58.0 cents.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
23
Exhibit 8.6 Buying a Put Option on
Swiss Francs (long put)
+ 1.00
Break-even
+ 0.50 price
Limited profit
0 Spot price
57.5 58.0 58.5 59.0 59.5 (US cents/SF)
Unlimited loss
- 0.50 up to 58.0
- 1.00
Loss
The writer of a put option on SF, with a strike price of 58.5 cents/SF, has a limited profit of 0.50 cents/SF at spot rates
greater than 58.5, and an unlimited loss potential at spot rates less than 58.5 cents/SF up to 58.0 cents.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
24
Exhibit 8.7 Selling a Put Option on
Swiss Francs (short put)
74
75
25
Intrinsic Value, Time Value & Total Value for a Call Option on British
Pounds with a Strike Price of $1.70/£
Option Premium
(US cents/£)
-- Valuation on first day of 90-day maturity --
6.0
5.67
Total value
5.0
4.0 4.00
3 30
3.30
3.0
2.0 1.67
Time value Intrinsic
1.0
value
0.0
1.66 1.67 1.68 1.69 1.70 1.71 1.72 1.73 1.74
Exhibit 8.8
Analysis of Call
Option on
British Pounds
with a Strike
Price = $1.70/£
$1 70/£
77
Intrinsic value
78
26
Exhibit 8.9 The Intrinsic, Time, and Total Value Components
of the 90-Day Call Option
on British Pounds at Varying Spot Exchange Rates
79
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
80
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
81
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
27
The option-pricing formula
⎛ F ⎞ ⎛σ ⎞
2
ln⎜ ⎟ + ⎜ ⎟ ⋅ T
⎝E⎠ ⎝ 2 ⎠
d1 =
σ⋅ T
d 2 = d1 − σ ⋅ T
P = [F ⋅ ( N (d1 ) − 1) − E ⋅ ( N (d 2 ) − 1)]⋅ e − rd ⋅T
82
83
Call Put
Strike price - +
Time to maturity + +
Interest differential - +
Volatility + +
Forward rates + -
Spot rates + -
84
28
Currency option pricing sensitivity
• Forward rate sensitivity:
9 Standard foreign currency options are priced
around the forward rate because the current spot
rate and both the domestic and foreign interest
rates are included in the option premium
calculation
9 The option-pricing formula calculates a subjective
probability distribution centered on the forward rate
9 This approach does not mean that the market
expects the forward rate to be equal to the future
spot rate, it is simply a result of the arbitrage-
pricing structure of options
9 The larger the difference between the forward rate
and the spot rate, the higher the call option
premium and the lower the put option premium.
85
87
29
Theta: Option Premium Time Value
Deterioration
Option Premium
(US cents/£) A Call Option on British Pounds: Spot Rate = $1.70/£
7.0
In-the-money (ITM)
6.0
call ($1.65 strike price)
5.0
4.0
At-the-money (ATM)
3.0
call ($1.70 strike price)
2.0
Out-of-the-money (OTM)
1.0 call ($1.75 strike price)
0.0
90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. Days remaining to maturity
All rights reserved. theta= (ct3,3/£-ct3,28)/(90-89)=0,02
89
30
Currency option pricing sensitivity
• Sensitivity to changing interest rate differentials (rho and
phi):
9 Currency option prices and values are focused on the
forward rate
9 The forward rate is in turn based on the theory of
Interest Rate Parity
9 Interest
I t t rate
t changes
h in
i either
ith currency will
ill alter
lt the
th
forward rate, which in turn will alter the option’s
premium or value
• A trader who is purchasing a call option on foreign
currency should do so before the domestic interest rate
rises. This timing will allow the trader to purchase the
option before its price increases.
91
92
5.0
4.0
ATM call ($1.70 strike price)
3.0
2.0
OTM call ($1.75 strike price)
1.0
0.0
-4.0 -3.0 -2.0 -1.0 0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
Interest differential: iUS$ - i £ (percentage)
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
All rights reserved.
31
Currency Option Pricing Sensitivity
6.0
5.0
OTM Strike rates
4.0
2.0
1.0
0.0
1.66 1.67 1.68 1.69 1.70 1.71 1.72 1.73 1.74 1.75
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
All rights reserved. Call strike price (U.S. dollars/£)
32
Foreign currency swaps
• A swap is an agreement between two parties to exchange a
series of future cash flows. It is an over-the-counter
transaction consisting of a series of forward contracts
(usually a spot transaction plus a forward transaction in the
reverse direction).
• A foreign currency swap is an agreement to buy and sell
foreign exchange at pre-specified exchange rates, where
the buying and selling are seperated in time
time.
9 A swap-in Canadian consists of an agreement to buy Canadian
dollars spot, and also an agreement to sell Canadian dollars
forward.
9 A swap-out Canadian consists of an agreement to sell Canadian
dollars spot and to buy Canadian dollars forward.
9 A forward-forward swap involves two forward transactions to buy
Canadian dollars for 1-month forward and sell Canadian dollars for
2-months forward.
9 A rollover swap is the one that the purchase and sale are seperated
by only one day.
97
98
33
A fixed-for-fixed curency swap
100
John Hull
34
Foreign currency speculation
• Speculation is an attempt to profit by trading on
expectations about prices in the future.
• Speculators can attempt to profit in the:
9 Spot market – when the speculator believes the
foreign currency will appreciate in value
9 Forward market – when the speculator believes the
spot price at some future date will differ from today’s
forward price for the same date
9 Futures market – if a speculator buys a futures
contract, they are locking in the price at which they
must buy that currency on the specified future date or
vice versa.
9 Options markets – extensive differences in risk
patterns produced depending on purchase or sale of
put and/or call. 103
Arbitrage
• Spatial/Two-point arbitrage
• Triangular/Three-point arbitrage
104
Spatial/Two-point arbitrage
h and f are any two currencies.
sh/f : the exchange rate of currency f with currency h in H
financial centre (price of currency f in terms of currency h).
sf/h : the exchange rate of currency h with currency f in F
financial centre
The consistency/neutrality condition: sh/f . Sf/h = 1
sh/f .sf/h ≠ 1: arbitrage opportunity
• Foreign exchange arbitrage is the act of profiting from
differences between the exchange rates of foreign exchange.
• Spatial arbitrage refers to an arbitrage transaction that is
conducted in two different markets, or seperated by space.
105
35
Three-point/triangular arbitrage
h, f and m are any three currencies.
sf/m : price of currency m in terms of currency f.
sh/f : price of currency f in terms of currency h.
sh/m: price of currency m in terms of currency h.
The cross rate: sf/m= sh/m/sh/f
With sh/f = 1/sf/n, we have sf/m= sh/m/sh/f = sf/h.sh/m
With sf/m= 1/sm/f, we have sf/m= sf/h.sh/m or 1/sm/f = sf/h .sh/m
Then sf/h . sh/m .sm/f= 1 or sh/m . sm/f . sf/h=1
The consistency/neutrality condition: sf/m= sf/h.sh/m
sf/m /sf/h ≠ sh/m: arbitrage opportunity
36