Futures 1
Futures 1
Futures 1
• Forward Contracts
– Definition: a contract between two parties for
one party to buy something from the other at
a later date at a price agreed upon today
– Exclusively over-the-counter
1 Sells 1 Buys 1 1 1
2 Buys 1 Sells 1 1 1
3 Sells 1 Buys 1 1 0
Open Interest And Volume
• Ex-2
Open Interest And Volume
• On November 10th
– reliance spot price is 1200 and futures price is 1275
• Because One contract is for 600 shares. Your profit or loss gets
multiplied by 600 times.
Futures Market
Futures( December
Date Spot contract)
Calculate the mark-to-market cash flows and the daily closing balances in
Accounts of.
A) An investor who has gone long at 4600 on day ‘0’.
B) An investor who has gone short at 4600 on day ‘0’.
C) Calculate the net profit/loss on each of the contracts.
Investor Who has gone long at 4600 (initial margin =10,000 and Maintenance margin = 8,000)
620
600
580
Futures_Price
560
STOCKPRICE
540
520
500
T 28 27 24 23 22 21 20 17 16 15 14 13 10 9 8 7 6 2 1
Time to Maturity
Behavior of Basis
• When the futures price is at expiration, the
futures price of reliance and spot price of
reliance must be same.
• You have either positive or negative basis at start and if you hold
the contract until maturity basis will become zero
• Implies Basis rarely will be constant during the holding period of the
contract.
Basis Risk
Nature Of
hedge Basis At the start
Positive Negative
BUY (Futures)
and Hold until
maturity Favorable Adverse
SELL (Futures)
Hold Until
Maturity Adverse Favorable
When Basis is negative at start
Hedge 1; Long in spot and sell in futures
Futures
Spot Price Price Basis Total P/L
before mat. 10 15 -5
At maturity 20 20 0
Profit/Loss 10 -5 5
Hedge 2; Short in spot and buy in futures
Futures
Spot Price Price Basis
Before Mat. 10 15 -5
At Maturity 20 20 0
Profit/Loss -10 5 -5
When Basis is Positive at start
Hedge 1; Long in spot and sell in futures
Futures
Spot Price Price Basis Total P/L
20 15 5
At maturity 20 20 0
Profit/Loss 0 -5 -5
Hedge 2; Short in spot and buy in futures
Futures
Spot Price Price Basis
20 15 5
At maturity 20 20 0
Profit/Loss 0 5 5
Basis Risk
Nature Of
hedge Basis At the start
Positive Negative
• So, if gold costs $400 per ounce and the financing rate is 1 percent
per month (ignoring other costs),
• the financing charge for carrying the gold forward is $ 4 per month
(1%X$400)
• Since Futures price is always more than spot price: Basis is always negative
according to cost of carry model.
• Anybody who has use of an asset for consumption can derive “Convenience Yield”.
• Ex: Food processor might Derive a convenience yield by holding on to commodity.
• When Futures price is below cash price or spot price then you need to do reverse
cash and carry arbitrage to exploit it.
• But because (say soya beans) has convenience yield there will be no one willing to
lend. Hence short selling of beans will not be possible.
Backwardation
• When basis is positive then the market is said to be in
backwardation.
• Backwardation is the opposite of contango.
• Backwardation says that as the contract approaches
expiration, the futures contract will trade at a higher price
compared to when the contract was further away from
expiration. This is said to occur due to the convenience
yield being higher than the prevailing risk free rate.
• Expectation Model
– The price of the Futures price is the expected Futures
Spot Price.
Role of Speculators and
Expectation Model
• If the Futures price were $15 , exceeding
the expected Futures spot price of $10.
Then speculators would sell futures at $
15 and on maturity they would buy back
the futures at $10 and make a profit.
2) Invest- Speculating
3) Arbitrage
4) Leverage
Currency Futures- Hedging
Example – Hedging (Futures)
– Company A must Pay £1 Million in September for imports from Britain.
– Company B will receive £3 Million in September from exports to Britain
At maturity 71 71 0
Say you are holding $10,000 in foreign equity, which exposes you to
currency risk. If you hedge $5,000 worth of the equity with a
currency position, your hedge ratio is 0.5 (50 / 100). This means that
50% of your equity position is sheltered from exchange rate risk.
Scenario 2
Pay off = sell price – buy price
=45.6-45.4 = .2 * 1 million = profit of 2 lakhs