Financial Derivatives

Financial Derivatives

Financial Derivatives

David Jaggi

David Jaggi

Set of flashcards Details

Flashcards 115
Language English
Category Finance
Level University
Created / Updated 06.04.2018 / 07.04.2018
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What are the different types of indices?

National indices; Sector indices; Ethnical Indices

For what reasons can options be used?

As portfolio insurance or for speculation purposes.

How is the Black-Scholes model used for FX calles?

It is called Garman-Kohlhagen model

What is the volatility smile?

Volatility increases as options become increasingly in the money or out of the money.

For what can the options skew be used?

It can be used as a measurement of fear in the market.

What is the payback rule?

How many periods management must wait before cumulative cash flows from a project exceed the cost of the investment.

What is the accounting rate of return?

The ratio of the average forecast profits over the project's lifetime.

What is the net present value?

Difference between the present value of projected inflows and the projected outflows.

What is a real option?

A real option is a choice made available with business investment opportunities, referred to as "real" because it typically references a tangible asset instead of financial instrument.

What are the problems with estimating real options?

Ovesrestimation of the value, to simplistic, hard to find good proxies, overvalue unpredictable projects, time period can be problematic, garbage in - garbage out problem.

What is the LIBOR?

The london interbank offered rate

What are repos?

Short-term agreements to sell and repurchase securities at a specified rate

Why are swaps valued at zero at inception?

In order to be valued at zero, the Present Value of the CFs of each of the two streams must be equal.

What are the reasons to use swaps?

Take benefit from comparative advantage. Transforming a fixed rate loand into a floating loan or vice versa.

What is a plain vanilla rate swap?

One party agrees to pay on a fixed notional principal for a number of years and the other agrees to pay floating.

How is a floating leg defined?

Usually referes to LIBOR or LIBOR + some fixed percentage.

Who are the actual counterparties?

Usually investment banks match counterparties and charge a fee. IB can make markets and charge a spread.

What is the purpose for currency swaps?

Transform borrowing currency.

What are the options embedded in swaps?

Extendable: One party can extend the life of the swap, Puttable: one party has their right to terminate the swap early if favourable to them, Swaptions: right in Future to enter into a sap where predetermined fixed rate is exchanged for floating.

For what are monte carlo simulations used?

Value and analyze complex instruments, portfolios and investments by simulating the various sources of uncertainty.

How does monte carlo work?

Simulates the underlaying physical process and then calculates the average result of the process.

What is risk?

The potential that a chosen action leads to an undesirable outcome.

What is the expected return?

Weighted average of the likely payoffs of an asset.

What is the risk?

Chance taht the actual return on an investment may be very different than the expected return.

What is the variance?

Is a measure of the dispersion of a set of data points around their mean value.

What is risk management?

Identification, assessment and prioritization of risks followed by the economical application of resources to minimize, monitor and control the probability/impact of unfortuante ecents.

Strategies to manage risk?

transfer risk to another party, avoid the risk activity/investment, reduce the negative effect, accepting some or all of the consequences.

What is the definition of VaR?

Predicted loss at a specific confidence level over a certain period of time.

What are the ceats of VaR?

It does not describe the worst loss and not the losses in the left tail. It is measured with some error. Furthermore, it assumes that the portfolio is static.

What are some critisism of VaR?

Claims to estimate the risk of rare events, which is impossible; Gives false confidence; Leads to excess risk taking.

What is GARCH?

Stands for generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity; weighted average of past squared returns.

What is a stop loss order?

An order placed with a broker to sell a security when it reaches a certain price. Limits the potential loss of an investor.

What is the expected shortfall (ES)?

Expected return on the portfolio in the worst q% of cases. Also known as conditional value at risk.

What is the definition of Operational Risk?

Loss from failure of ordinary business processes?

What is a credit?

The trust which allows one party to provide resources to another pyrty where that second party does not reimburse the first party immeduately but instead arranges either to repay or return those resources at a later date.

What is credit risk?

The risk of a loss arising from a borrower who does not make payments as promised; Event is called a default.

What is a credit derivative?

Payoff which depends on companies or countries bonds.

What is the definition of a CDS?

Financial swap agreement that the seller of the CDS will compensate the buyer in the event of a loan default or other credit event.

What are types of credit events?

Bankrupty, failure to pay, or restructuring.

What is the CDS Spread?

It is the price paid annually for protection on the bonds.