Monday, October 28, 2019

Questions 5



                                                            Management of Derivatives
             Part A  (Marks –4 for each question) Answer any five questions.
1.Illustrate a synthetic derivative.
2.What is a credit default swap?
3.What is an inverse floater?
4.Distinguish between options and futures.
5.What are catastrophe bonds?
6.Describe convertible bonds.
7.What is an option Greek?
           Part B (Marks -  8 for each question) Answer any four questions.
1.You purchased an FRA (6M by 12M ) to pay 9% fixed interest against receipt of MIBOR + 4%
  On the settlement day, MIBOR was 6% p.a. How do you settle this FRA?
2.A portfolio consists of 3 scrips with weights of 0.25, 0.50 and 0.25. The betas respectively are 2, 1.2 and 0.8. What is portfolio’s beta?
3.If on a stock with market price Rs 270, a call option is purchased with premium Rs.29 and a strike price of Rs.270, what is the option’s time value?
4.If a put option is written with strike price Rs.160 when the market price is Rs.150, expiring in 3 months and premium Rs.12, what is the maximum loss on expiry for the writer?
5.An option has a delta of 0.5. If there is a Rs.4 change in the price of underlying asset, what is the change in price of option?
6.An investor has 2 option positions, one with delta of  minus 0.4 and the other with delta of 0.9. What is the delta of the portfolio?
               Part C (Marks – 8) Answer both C1 and C2.
C1.What are the five factors which determine option premium?
C2.You have bought a call option and a put option , both with strike price Rs.110. Premiums are Rs.8 and Rs.6 respectively. On the expiry day (common for both), market price is Rs.112. What is your profit or loss?                                                  

Questions 4



Derivatives
                                                                                                    Total Marks: 60
Part  A:  Answer any five questions out of seven. Each question carries 4 marks.
1)    Define a derivative. Why do we use derivatives?
2)    What is the difference between an European Option and an American Option?
3)    What is an option Greek? Define Rho.
4)     Distinguish between arbitrage and speculation.
5)    How is ‘in the money option’ different from ‘out of the money option’?
6)    What is the difference between a forward contract and a futures contract?
7)    What is an interest rate swap? 

Part  B : Answer any four questions out of six. Each question carries 8 marks.
1)    The beta of A’s portfolio vis-à-vis the BSE Sensex is 0.5. One month futures contract on the BSE Sensex is trading at Rs.33,000. Contract size is 50. A looks for perfect hedge and enters into two contracts in index futures. What is the size of A’s portfolio?
2)    What should be the approximate value of a 6 months forward contract of a share if it is quoting in the cash market at Rs.300? The share is expected to declare a dividend of Rs.10 after 3 months. Assume interest rate of 10% p.a.
3)    If on a stock with a market price of Rs.450, a call option is purchased with a premium of Rs.15 and a strike price of Rs.450, what is the intrinsic value of the option?
4)    A put option is written on a share when the market price is Rs.400. Strike price is Rs.420, expiry in 3 months and premium is Rs.8. What can be the maximum loss to the writer when the option expires?
5)    X has entered into a Futures Purchase contract (3 months) at Rs.400. He has also written a Call Option for the same asset with Strike Price Rs.450, expiry 3 months, premium Rs.30. After 3 months, the market price of the asset is Rs.440. What is X’s profit or loss?
6)    X has purchased 2 call options and 3 put options for the same asset. Strike price for each call option is Rs.400, expiry 3 months, premium for each call option Rs.10. Strike price for each put option is Rs.420, expiry 3 months, premium for each put option Rs.25. Market price after 3 months is Rs.410. What is X’s profit or loss?
Part  C: This is a compulsory question carrying 8 marks.
          C1: Name the five factors which affect the value of an option.
          C2: An option has a delta of 0.7. If the price of the underlying asset changes by Rs.30, what will be the change in option’s price?


Questions 3



                                                            Derivatives
                                                                                                      Total Marks: 60
Part A: Answer any five questions out of seven. Each question carries 4 marks.
          1)What is the difference between ‘out of the money option’ and ‘in the money option’?
          2)Define  vega and delta in GreekOptions.
          3)Distinguish an option contract from a forward contract.
          4)What is an ‘inverse floater’?
          5)Define ‘arbitrage’.
          6)What are the five factors which impact the value of an option?
          7)Differentiate between a bull and a bear.
Part B: Answer any four questions out of six. Each question carries 8 marks.
          1)If on a stock with a market price of Rs.300, a 30-day call option is purchased with a premium of Rs.30 and a strike price of Rs.300, what is the time value of the option?
          2)’A’ writes a put option with strike price Rs.200 and premium Rs.25. On the expiry date, the asset is quoting at Rs.210. What is the profit or loss for A?
         3)You have purchased a call and a put option , both at a strike price of Rs.150 each. Premiums are Rs.10 and Rs.8 respectively. On the common expiry date, the asset is ruling at Rs.160. What is your net profit or loss?
         4)Anticipating bullish tendency in the market, you entered into a 1-month futures purchase of 100 shares of a particular company at a price of Rs.80 per share. You also purchased 1-month call options for 200 shares of the same company with strike price of Rs.85. After one month the price of share was Rs.82 and you just broke even. So, what was the call option premium per share? Ignore margins for futures.
        5)You bought call options for 100 shares of A Ltd. with strike price of Rs.75 and premium Rs.2 per share. You also wrote put options for 100 shares of the same company for same strike period. On expiry of these contracts, you lost Rs.50. What was the put option premium per share? Market price on the date of expiry was Rs.74.
       6)You bought 100 shares of a company at Rs.150 each when the sensex was 25,000. Beta of the share is 1.5. After one month the sensex was at 22,500. How much did you gain or lose?
Part C: This compulsory question carries 8 marks (4 + 4)
      C1: Is speculation an unmitigated evil? Defend your answer.
      C2: You purchased a call with strike Rs.100 and went short on call with strike Rs.110 for the same period. Premiums were Rs.5 and Rs.2 respectively. The price at expiry of options was Rs.115. What is your net profit or loss?

Question 2


                                                             Derivatives
                                                                                                    Total Marks: 60
Part  A:  Answer any five questions out of seven. Each question carries 4 marks.
1)    Define a derivative.
2)    What is the difference between an American Option and an European Option?
3)    What do we mean by delta and theta in the field of options?
4)    Give an example of ‘interest rate swap’ and ‘interest rate future’.
5)    Distinguish between arbitrage and speculation.
6)    How is ‘in the money option’ different from ‘at the money option’?
7)    What is the difference between a forward contract and a futures contract?
Part  B: Answer any four questions out of six. Each question carries 8 marks.
1)    The beta of A’s portfolio vis-à-vis the BSE Sensex is 0.5. One month futures contract on the BSE Sensex is trading at 24,000. Contract size is 50. A looks for perfect hedge and enters into two contracts in index futures. What is the size of A’s portfolio?
2)    What should be the approximate value of a 6 months forward contract of a share if it is quoting in the cash market at Rs.200? The share is expected to declare a dividend of Rs.5 after 3 months. Assume interest rate of 10% p.a.
3)    If on a stock with a market price of Rs.350, a call option is purchased with a premium of Rs.15 and a strike price of Rs.350, what is the intrinsic value of the option?
4)    A put option is written on a share when the market price is Rs.200. Strike price is Rs.220, expiry in 3 months and premium is Rs.8. What can be the maximum loss to the writer when the option expires?
5)    X has entered into a Futures Purchase contract (3 months) at Rs.300. He has also written a Call Option for the same asset with Strike Price Rs.350, expiry 3 months, premium Rs.20. After 3 months, the market price of the asset is Rs.330. What is X’s profit or loss?
6)    X has purchased 3 call options and 2 put options for the same asset. Strike price for each call option is Rs.400, expiry 3 months, premium for each call option Rs.10. Strike price for each put option is Rs.420, expiry 3 months, premium for each put option Rs.25. Market price after 3 months is Rs.410. What is X’s profit or loss?
Part  C: This is a compulsory question carrying 8 marks.
          C1: Name the five factors which affect the value of an option.
          C2: An option has a delta of 0.8. If the price of the underlying asset changes by Rs.8, what will be the change in option’s price

Questions 1



Management of Derivatives                                                          Total Marks 60
Part A:  Answer any four questions out of six.  Each question carries 5 marks:
1)     Define the following OptionGreeks: (a) delta, (b)gamma and (c) rho

2)    Indicate whether value of a call option will go up or down when (a) strike price increases, other factors remaining the same and when( b) time to expiry of option decreases, other factors remaining constant.

3)    Illustrate Synthetic Derivative.

4)     Distinguish between a plain vanilla option and an exotic option.

5)    Distinguish between premium and margin.

6)    What is a Credit Default Swap?
Part B:  Answer any four questions out of six. Each question carries 8 marks:
1)    If a call option on a share is purchased at a strike price of Rs.205, when market price is Rs.198, expiry in 3 months and a premium of Rs.5, what will be the maximum possible gain for the purchaser of option on expiry of this position?
2)    In the above problem, what is the maximum possible gain for the option writer?
3)    If on a stock with a market price of Rs.410, a 3-month call option is purchased with a premium of Rs.35, and a strike price of Rs.400, what is the time value of the option?
4)    An option has a delta of 0.25; if there is a Rs.4 change in the price of the underlying share, what would be the change in price of the option?
5)    Explain Interest Rate Swap.
6)    What is the difference between a Forward and a Future transaction?
Part C: This compulsory question carries 8 marks: (please answer both a and b.)
a)   What are the five determinants of the value of an option?                        
b) Describe ‘Butterfly Spread’.


Sunday, September 20, 2015

Credit Derivatives

Following is a reproduction from fincad.com

TYPES OF CREDIT DERIVATIVES
credit derivative is a financial instrument that transfers credit risk related to an underlying entity or a portfolio of underlying entities from one party to another without transferring the underlying(s). The underlyings may or may not be owned by either party in the transaction. The common types of credit derivatives are Credit Default Swaps, Credit Default Index Swaps (CDS index), Collateralized Debt Obligations, Total Return Swaps, Credit Linked Notes, Asset Swaps, Credit Default Swap Options, Credit Default Index Swaps Options and Credit Spread Forwards/Options.
Credit Default Swaps
In a credit default swap the seller agrees, for an upfront or continuing premium or fee, to compensate the buyer when a specified event, such as default, restructuring of the issuer of the reference entity, or failure to pay, occurs. Buyers of credit default swaps can remove risky entities from their balance sheets without selling them. Sellers can gain higher returns from investments or diversify their portfolios by entering markets that are otherwise difficult to get into.
The value of a default swap depends not only on the credit quality of the underlying reference entity but also on the credit quality of the writer, also referred to as the counterparty. If the counterparty defaults, the buyer of a default swap will not receive any payment if a credit event occurs. We also note that if a counterparty defaults, the premium payments end. Hence, the value of a default swap depends on the probability of counterparty default, probability of entity default and the correlation between them.
Credit default swaps are composed of the following four types: credit default swaps on single entities, credit default swaps on a basket of entities, credit default index swaps, and first-loss and tranche-loss credit default swaps.
  • Credit Default Swaps on Single Entities: a credit default swap on a single entity. This is the most common type of credit default swaps.
  • Credit Default Swaps on Baskets of Entities: A basket default swap is similar to a single entity default swap except that the underlying is a basket of entities rather than one single entity.
  • First-Loss and Tranche-Loss Credit Default Swaps: Similar to a first-to-default or an nth-to-default credit default swap, a first-loss credit default swap (FLCDS) protects its buyer from losses of a reference pool as a result of credit events. Unlike a first-to-default credit default swap, in which only the loss from the first credit event is compensated, or an nth-to-default credit default swap, in which the losses from the nth default or the first n defaults are compensated, an FLCDS compensates its buyer for any losses from credit events of the reference assets up to a certain portion of the total notional of the asset pool.
  • Credit Default Index Swaps (CDS Index): A credit default index swap (CDIS) is a portfolio of single-entity credit default swaps (CDS). It can be seen as an extension of a CDS on a single-entity to a portfolio of entities. The basic difference is that in a CDS the notional is fixed during the life of the CDS and the protection buyer is compensated at most once, while in a CDIS the premium notional is variable. Whenever a default in the portfolio occurs, the premium notional is reduced by the loss amount of the defaulted entity and at the same time the protection buyer gets compensated by the lost amount. The most popular credit default index swaps are the so-called standardized credit default index swaps. In these standardized contracts the reference credit pool is homogeneous, that is, all the reference entities have the same notional and the same recovery rate. Typical examples of standardized CDISs are the CDX index and the ITRAXX index.

Total Return Swaps

A total return swap is a means to transfer the total economic exposure, including both market and credit risk, of the underlying asset. The payer of a total return swap can confidentially remove all the economic exposure of the asset without having to sell it. The receiver of a total return swap, on the other hand, can access the economic exposure of the asset without having to buy the asset. Typical reference assets of total return swaps are corporate bonds, loans and equities.

Credit-Linked Notes

credit-linked note, also known as a credit default note, is a fixed or floating rate note where the principal and/or coupon payments are referenced to a credit or a basket of credits. If there is no credit event of the reference credit(s), all the coupons and principals will be paid in full. However, if there is a credit event, the payments of the principal and, possibly, also the coupon of the note will be reduced.

Credit Default Swap Options

credit default swap option is also known as a credit default swaption. It is an option on a credit default swap (CDS). A CDS option gives its holder the right, but not the obligation, to buy (call) or sell (put) protection on a specified reference entity for a specified future time period for a certain spread. The option is knocked out if the reference entity defaults during the life of the option. This knock-out feature marks the fundamental difference between a CDS option and a vanilla option. Most commonly traded CDS options are European style options.
Similar to the credit default swaps, CDS options can be: CDS options on a single entity with a regular payoff for the default leg; CDS options on a single entity with a binary payoff for the default leg; CDS options on a basket of entities with regular payoff for the default leg; and CDS options on a basket of entities with a binary payoff for the default leg.

Credit Default Index Swap Options

A credit default index swap option (CD index swap option, or CD index swaption, or CDS index option) is an option to buy or sell the underlying CDIS at a specified date. A payer swaption gives the holder of the option the right to buy protection (pay premium) and a receiver swaption gives the holder of the option the right to sell protection (receive premium). Unlike a CD index swap, which is a natural extension of a CDS on a single-entity to a CDS on a portfolio of entities, a CD index swaption is significantly different from a CDS option, an option on a single-entity CDS. In the case of an option on a single-entity, if the reference entity defaults before the option's expiry, the option will be knocked out and become worthless. For an option on a CDIS, when a reference entity defaults before the option's expiry, the loss will be paid by the protection seller to the protection buyer when the option is exercised. Even if there is only one entity in the portfolio, a CD index swaption is still different from a single-entity CDS option: if the entity defaults before expiry, the option's seller will pay to the protection buyer the lost amount at expiry. Clearly, a CD index swaption is always more valuable than a single-entity CDS option.

Credit Spread Options and Forwards

Credit spread options are options where the payoffs are dependent on changes to credit spreads. The transaction may be either based on changes in a credit spread relative to a risk-free benchmark (e.g. LIBOR or US Treasury) or changes in the relative spread between two credit instruments. A credit spread option may be a vanilla option or an exotic option, such as an Asian option, a lookback option, etc. The option style may be European or American. Valuation of credit spread options can be based on modeling the two underlying instruments or modeling the credit spread only.

Asset Swaps

An asset swap is a combination of a defaultable bond with a fixed-for-floating interest rate swap that swaps the coupon of the bond into the cash flows of LIBOR plus a spread. In the case of a cross currency asset swap, the principal cash flow may also be swapped. In a typical asset swap, a dealer buys a bond from a customer at the market price and sells to the customer a floating rate note at par. The dealer then enters into a fixed-for-floating swap with another counterparty to offset the floating rate obligation and the bond cash flows. For a premium bond, the dealer pays to the customer the difference of the bond price and its par. For a discount bond, the customer pays to the dealer the difference of the par and the bond price. In the swap with the counterparty the dealer pays a fixed bond coupon and receives LIBOR + a spread. The spread can be determined from the cash that the dealer pays/receives and from the difference of the bond coupon and the par swap rate.

Synthetic Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs)

Synthetic CDOs are credit derivatives on a pool of reference entities that are "synthesized" through more basic credit derivatives, mostly, credit default swaps (CDSs) and credit linked notes (CLNs). A common structure of CDOs involves slicing the credit risk of the reference pool into a few different risk levels. The level with a higher credit risk supports the levels with lower credit risks. The risk range of two adjacent risk levels is called a tranche. The lower bound of the risk level of a tranche is often referred to as an attachment point and the upper bound a detachment point. The most common CDO credit derivatives are CDSs on CDO tranches and CDO notes (tranche-linked notes or CLN on tranches). The most popular synthetic CDOs are the so-called standardized CDOs (sometimes are simply called standardized tranches). For a standardized CDO its reference entities are homogenous, i.e., all the reference entities have the same notional and the same recovery rate. Due to the complexity and the large sizes of reference pools of synthetic CDOs, their valuation is much more complicated and resource intensive than the ordinary single-entity or basket CDSs and CLNs. Monte Carlo methods have been the most reliable methods in CDO valuation but they are not efficient in computation. Recently, thanks in part to the standardization of the synthetic CDO market, quasi-analytic methods, such as the fast Fourier transform (FFT), are gaining popularity. These methods are much more efficient than Monte Carlo simulation for CDOs whose reference entities have "good" homogeneity and, particularly, when the one-factor copula model is used for modeling credit correlation.

Monday, August 24, 2015

Derivatives - IX

Pricing of options, that is calculation of premium, can be done under various methods. Black-Scholes Model and the Binomial Model are the most commonly used methodologies for theoretical calculation. If actual premium is different, derivative traders become active enough to make the actual price converge with the model outputs. However, the assumptions regarding interest rate and volatility may be different for some traders. Such traders are normally more active.

Many calculators are available for finding the theoretical premium for call and put options. Here is one such:

http://www.fintools.com/resources/online-calculators/options-calcs/options-calculator/

It will be interesting to modify various assumptions and look at the impact on option prices.