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Chapter 14

Chapter 14. Interest Rate and Currency Swaps. Interest Rate and Currency Swaps. Interest rate risk management Interest rate swaps Use of interest rate swaps and cross-currency swaps to manage both foreign exchange and interest rate risk simultaneously. Interest Rate Risk.

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Chapter 14

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  1. Chapter 14 Interest Rate and Currency Swaps

  2. Interest Rate and Currency Swaps • Interest rate risk management • Interest rate swaps • Use of interest rate swaps and cross-currency swaps to manage both foreign exchange and interest rate risk simultaneously

  3. Interest Rate Risk • All firms are sensitive to interest rate movements • The largest interest rate risk of a non-financial firm is debt service (liability management) • For an MNE, differing currencies have differing interest rates thus making this risk a larger concern • The second most prevalent source of interest rate risk is its holding of interest sensitive securities (asset management) • Whether it is on the left or right hand side of the balance sheet, the reference rate of interest calculation is important • The reference rate is the rate of interest used in a standardized quotation, loan agreement, or financial derivative valuation • Most common reference rate is LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate)

  4. Management of Interest Rate Risk • The management dilemma is the balance between risk and return • Since most treasuries do not act as profit centers, their management practices are typically conservative • Before treasury can take any hedging strategy, it must first form an expectation or a directional and/or volatility view • Once management has formed its expectations about future interest rate levels and movements, it must then choose the appropriate implementation of a strategy

  5. Credit and Repricing Risk • Credit Risk or roll-over risk is the possibility that a borrower’s creditworthiness at the time of renewing a credit, is reclassified by the lender • This can result in higher borrowing rates, fees, or even denial • Repricing risk is the risk of changes in interest rates charged (earned) at the time a financial contract’s rate is being reset

  6. Floating-Rate Loans • If a firm wants to manage the interest rate risk associated with a loan, it would have a number of alternatives • Refinancing – The firm could go back to the lender and refinance the entire agreement • Forward Rate Agreements (FRAs) – The firm could lock in the future interest rate payment in much the same way that exchange rates are locked in with forward contracts • Interest Rate Futures • Interest Rate Swaps – The firm could swap the floating rate note for a fixed rate note with a swap dealer

  7. Forward Rate Agreements (FRAs) • A forward rate agreement is an interbank-traded contract to buy or sell interest rate payments on a notional principal • Example: If a firm wishes to lock in a debt payment which is currently floating (LIBOR + 0.50%) it can buy an FRA which locks in a total interest payment at 5.50% • If LIBOR rises above 5.00%, then the firm would receive a cash payment from the FRA seller reducing their LIBOR payment to 5.0% • If LIBOR falls below 5.00% then the firm would pay the FRA seller a cash amount increasing their LIBOR payment to 5.00%

  8. Interest Rate Futures • Interest Rate futures (Treasury bonds, notes, and bills futures): • high liquidity of interest rate futures markets • simplicity in use • standardized interest rate exposures • Traded on an exchange; two most common are the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) and the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) • The yield is calculated from the settlement price (Treasury Bills futures only, contract size is $1mil for 90-day Treasury Bills) • Example: March 2XX9 contract with settlement price of 97.36 gives an annual yield of 2.64% (100 – 97.36)

  9. Interest Rate Futures • If a firm wants to hedge a floating rate payment due in April 2XX9 it would sell a futures contract, or short the contract • If interest rates rise, the futures price will fall and the firm can offset its interest payment with the proceeds from the sale of the futures contracts • If interest rates fall, the futures price will rise and the savings from the interest payment due will offset the losses from the sale of the futures contracts

  10. Strategies Using Interest Rate Futures

  11. Interest Rate Swaps • Swaps are contractual agreements to exchange or swap a series of cash flows • If the agreement is for one party to swap its fixed interest payment for a floating rate payment, its is termed an interest rate swap • If the agreement is to swap currencies of debt service it is termed a currency swap • A single swap may combine elements of both interest rate and currency swap • The swap itself is not a source of capital but an alteration of the cash flows associated with payment

  12. Interest Rate Swaps • If firm thought that rates would rise it would enter into a swap agreement to pay fixed and receive floating in order to protect itself from rising debt-service payments • If firm thought that rates would fall it would enter into a swap agreement to pay floating and receive fixed in order to take advantage of lower debt-service payments • The cash flows of an interest rate swap are interest rates applied to a set amount of capital, no principal is swapped only the coupon payments

  13. Interest Rate Swaps

  14. Interest Rate Swaps

  15. Swapping Dollars and Swiss Francs

  16. Swapping Dollars and Swiss Francs

  17. Unwinding Swaps • As with the original loan agreement, a swap can be entered or unwound if viewpoints change or other developments occur • Assume that the three-year contract (creating the franc exposure for Chow Chemical) with the Swiss customer terminates after one year, the firm no longer needs the currency swap • Unwinding a currency swap requires the discounting of the remaining cash flows under the swap agreement at current interest rates then converting the target currency back to the home currency

  18. Unwinding Swaps • If Chow has one payment of Sfr50,327,500 (LIBOR + 0.125% where LIBOR is 5%) and another one of Sfr1,032,327,500 (interest plus principal in year three) remaining and the 2 year fixed rate for francs is now 6.50%, the PV of Chow’s commitment in francs is

  19. Unwinding Swaps • At the same time, the PV of the remaining cash flows on the dollar-side of the swap is determined using the current 2 year fixed dollar rate which is now 6.20%

  20. Unwinding Swaps • Chow’s currency swap, if unwound now, would yield a PV of net inflows of $204,753,494 and a PV of net outflows of Sfr957,416,991. If the current spot rate is Sfr4.8010/$ the net settlement of the swap is • Chow receives a cash payment of $5,333,167 from the swap dealer to terminate the swap

  21. Counterparty Risk • Counterparty Risk is the potential exposure any individual firm bears that the second party to any financial contract will be unable to fulfill its obligations • A firm entering into a swap agreement retains the ultimate responsibility for its debt-service • In the event that a swap counterpart defaults, the payments would cease and the losses associated with the failed swap would be mitigated • The real exposure in a swap is not the total notional principal but the mark-to-market value of the differentials

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