Derivatives

RECENT NEWS
New York Times  Nov 27  Comment 
The attempt to regulate derivatives is one part of the Obama administration’s financial reform package that is most in jeopardy.
Mondo Visione  Nov 26  Comment 
Derivative Instruments In October 2009, the volume of trading in all derivative instruments was 1.1 million instruments and the total number of open interest was 153.0 thousand at the end of October (the hi Structured Products
Mondo Visione  Nov 26  Comment 
Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited's (HKEx) Derivatives Market Transaction Survey 2008/09 (covering the period from July 2008 to June 2009) found that Exchange Participants' (EPs) principal trading supported half of the trading in HKEx's...
The Australian  Nov 26  Comment 
FUTURES traders are piling into gold futures markets around the world, lured by the lustre of record-high prices in the precious metal.
Bloomberg  Nov 25  Comment 
(Update1) Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the investment bank liquidating in bankruptcy, asked a judge for permission to pay $50 million to employees dealing with its derivative contracts, according to a court filing today.
Reuters  Nov 25  Comment 
U.S. regulators are increasingly looking beyond stocks in their insider trading investigations to examine derivatives and credit default swaps, a top Securities and Exchange Commission official said.
Financial Times  Nov 23  Comment 
China’s regulatory moves are in stark contrast to the slow pace of reform in derivatives markets in the US and Europe
Bloomberg  Nov 23  Comment 
(Update2) The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission will focus on financial instruments such as derivatives as it broadens a crackdown on insider trading by hedge funds, enforcement director Robert Khuzami said.
Business Standard  Nov 22  Comment 
In an article published earlier this month (For that perfect hedge, November 7), I had argued that all plain vanilla currency derivatives should be traded on exchanges to provide price transparency and guaranteed settlements; and that complex...
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Derivatives are investment vehicles whose price is dependent on an underlying asset. The most common form of derivatives include stock options, futures & swaps. Options are contracts that give the holder the right but not the obligation to buy or sell a specific security at a pre-determined price on a pre-determined date. The two kinds of options are call and put options. A call holder has the right but not the obligation to “call” stock away from the call writer. So as the price of the underlying security, in this case a stock moves up (or down) the call option becomes worth more (or less). Since derivatives are essentially a contract with an associated value there are many forms of derivatives. Some companies use derivatives to hedge against natural resource price swings or fluctuations in weather that may affect yields.

Example: A lease option to buy a house. The lease contract has terms that give you the right to buy the house at a specific price any time you want (until the lease contract expires). Suppose the terms stated that you could buy the house anytime within the first year of leasing from the owner for 100,000. If the price of the house (local real estate boom) increased to 150,000 you could buy the house for 100,000 and then sell it for 150,000 for a profit of 50,000. If the price of house price dropped (perhaps crime increase) you would have no incentive to exercise your option to buy, so you let that contract expire (worthless) and you do not buy the house. As illustrated here, the contract derives its value NOT from the paper on which it is written, but from the actual market price of another object (the house in this case). This is the basic premise for instruments of specualation known as derivatives.

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