QUOTE AND NEWS
Banking Business Review  Oct 12  Comment 
Designed for IRS traders and risk managers looking for anonymous execution
Reuters  Oct 5  Comment 
The Reserve Bank of India said on Monday banks and primary dealers should report all interest rate swap transactions entered with their clients.
Investing School  Sep 28  Comment 
The effective date in the investment community has a number of meanings. The one on most investors’ mind is the date trading can commence on public shares as dictated by the Securities & Exchange Commission. This date is usually 20 days after...
Financial Times  Sep 9  Comment 
A year after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, which sparked chaos across derivatives markets, one striking dislocation persists; a negative 30-year interest rate swap spread
Business Standard  Sep 3  Comment 
Reserve Bank of India officials today met several banks and asked them to report interest rate swap (IRS) transactions made with customers on the platform of the Clearing Corporation of India (CCIL).
www.thedailytradingrisk.blogspot.com  Aug 6  Comment 
Derivatives Interest Rate Swaps, The Elephant In the Room from EconomicEdge I’d like to delve into the numbers, or math, showing how J.P. Morgan’s derivatives book cannot be ‘hedged’. As per their call reports filed with the Comptroller...
Clusterstock  Aug 4  Comment 
Civil unrest alert! A few years ago Jefferson County, Alabama bought 17 interest rate swaps from JP Morgan, Lehman Brothers and Bank of America with the intention of hedging interest rate risk. Today the county said it may need the National...
Financial Times  Jun 30  Comment 
BoNY Mellon has taken a minority investment in International Derivatives Clearing Group, which clears and settles interest rate swap contracts
Financial Times  Jun 5  Comment 
'People don't know the facts' about Mitchells & Butlers says Robert Tchenguiz as he vows to bounce back but be less aggressive in the future
MarketWatch  Jun 4  Comment 
Teekay Corp. on Thursday said it lost $660.8 million, or $9.12 a share in its fiscal fourth quarter, compared to a net loss of $114.8 million, or $1.55 a share. The Hamilton, Bermuda oil shipping company's adjusted net income doubled to 73 cents...
Suggest a News Source
Topic
Top news source/blog that we're missing
Why do you recommend this news source?
Close 
Thanks for your suggestion!
 
 
TOP CONTRIBUTORS

The chart on the left is the 3 month interest rate swap.

Interest rate swaps are a common type of derivative security, which simply means that their value is “derived” from underlying assets (in this case, loans and interest rates). In a swap, two parties agree to exchange two streams of cash flow; in an interest rate swap, these cash flows are the interest payments for some given amount of money. The underlying money, known in this context as the notional amount, doesn't necessarily change hands. The two parties just exchange the interest payments they would make if they had actually borrowed the notional amount.

There are three main types of interest rate swaps, as determined by the type of rates being swapped:

  • Fixed-for-fixed swaps involve the exchange of interest payments that both carry fixed rates determined before the contract takes effect. Since there's no variability in either of the two rates, the payments will remain the same over the life of the swap contract. Fixed-for-fixed swaps are used when each party uses a different currency.
    • For example, suppose there are two companies in different countries, each of which wants to borrow money to build facilities in the other country, and that both can borrow at a lower interest rate in their home country. In this case, the companies can borrow money in their respective countries and swap with each other, essentially borrowing for each other. Each saves money by taking advantage of the other firm's lower cost of borrowing while also dodging currency conversion costs.
  • Fixed-for-floating, or "vanilla" swaps, commonly used as a type of investment, involve the exchange of a fixed interest payment for a floating interest payment. The payment with the fixed rate (known as the swap rate) doesn't change, while the payment with the floating rate is linked to some outside index (such as the LIBOR) and rises and falls throughout the duration of the contract.
    • This type of swap can be used if a company wants to trade the floating rate on its debt for the stability of a fixed rate. In the example, Firm A has a floating rate loan but pays a fixed rate to Firm B. Firm B receives a fixed payment from Firm A and pays it a variable payment in return, which Firm A then pays to its lender. In this case, Firm A thinks that interest rates will rise and hopes to avoid higher payments by trading for a fixed rate. Firm B, on the other hand, probably thinks that rates will fall; if it's right, it will pay out less than the fixed amount it receives from Firm A, making a profit off the difference.
  • Floating-for-floating swaps, as the name implies, involve the trade of interest payments that both have floating rates. The rates are based on different indexes, so each party is betting that either their original rate will rise, the other party's original rate will fall, or some combination of the two.

Interest rate swaps are traded over the counter (OTC), most commonly on fixed income desks at investment banks. Because they are not traded on open exchanges, interest rate swaps are not regulated by any government agency, so parties have a great deal of flexibility when setting the terms of the swap. Globally, the total notional amount of interest rate swaps outstanding was $309.6 trillion USD as of December 2007, accounting for 52% of the total OTC market.[1]

Interest Rate Swaps on Wikinvest

References

  1. Semiannual OTC derivatives statistics at end-December 2007 - Bank for International Settlements
Wikinvest © 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009. Use of this site is subject to express Terms of Service, Privacy Policy, and Disclaimer. By continuing past this page, you agree to abide by these terms. Any information provided by Wikinvest, including but not limited to company data, competitors, business analysis, market share, sales revenues and other operating metrics, earnings call analysis, conference call transcripts, industry information, or price targets should not be construed as research, trading tips or recommendations, or investment advice and is provided with no warrants as to its accuracy. Stock market data, including US and International equity symbols, stock quotes, share prices, earnings ratios, and other fundamental data is provided by data partners. Stock market quotes delayed at least 15 minutes for NASDAQ, 20 mins for NYSE and AMEX. Market data by Xignite. See data providers for more details. Company names, products, services and branding cited herein may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The use of trademarks or service marks of another is not a representation that the other is affiliated with, sponsors, is sponsored by, endorses, or is endorsed by Wikinvest.
Powered by MediaWiki