+ All Categories
Home > Documents > A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Date post: 31-Mar-2015
Category:
Upload: stone-dobie
View: 230 times
Download: 6 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
21
A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting
Transcript
Page 1: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

A Tale of Two Futures:$ versus ¥ Nikkei 225

Index Futures

1

Christopher Ting

Page 2: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Learning Objectives

• Define quanto

• Understand inter-market spread trading strategy

• Analyze the P&L of a short quanto position

2

Page 3: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Quanto

• Quantos are derivatives where the payoff is defined using variables measured in one currency but paid in another currency

• Example: futures contract providing a payoff of NT – K dollars ($) to the counterparty holding the long position.– Here, NT is the Nikkei 225 index value

at maturity T and K is the futures price

3

Page 4: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Nikkei 225 Futures in USD and JPY

• Contract Multiplier USD 5 for NKD; JPY 500 for NIY

• Minimum Price Change (Tick) 5 index points

• Final Settlement: Cash-settled to Special Opening Quotation of the Nikkei 225 Index on 2nd Friday of the contract expiry month

• Last Trading Day 3:15 p.m. Central Time on the day preceding final settlement – usually the Thursday prior to 2nd Friday of the contract expiry month

• Contract Months: Quarterlies for NKD; Quarterlies and Serials for NIY

4

Page 5: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Trading Hours (before 2011)• At 3:30 p.m. Singapore Time, T+1

session for Nikkei index futures opens– Simex: (multiplier 5, tick size 5 index

points)– Osaka: Big (multiplier 5, tick size 10

index points) and Mini (multiplier 1, tick size 5 index points)

• At 4 p.m. Singapore Time, NKD futures market opens

• At 7 p.m. Singapore Time, NIY futures market opens

5

Page 6: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

NKD: Dollar-Denominated Futures

6

Page 7: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

NIY: Yen-Denominated Futures

7

Page 8: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Arbitrage Opportunity?

8

At 14:02, NKD @ 10,800

Page 9: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Arbitrage Opportunity?

9

At 14:02, NIY @ 10,735

Page 10: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Motivating Questions

• Why was the market price of NKD 65 points higher than that of NIY on Jan 5?

• Risk-free arbitrage opportunity?– Short NKD and long NIY?

• The exchange rate on Jan 5, 2010 at 14:00 Central Time – Cash Market: ¥91.71 per $1– Futures Market: front quarter JPY/USD

futures (6J) price was 109,040, which was equivalent to ¥91.71 per dollar.

10

Page 11: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Follow-up Question

• What should the futures price of NKD be relative to the futures price of NIY?

• What should be the spread between these two futures prices?

11

Page 12: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

NKD – NIY Spread

• At time t=0, let N0 be the cash Nikkei index value, and the futures prices F$ and F¥ are

• So the fair-value spread is12

F¥ = N0 (1+ r T )F$ = N0 (1+ (r + ns)T) = F¥ + N0 nsT

F$ – F¥ = N0 ns T

Page 13: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Behavior of the NKD – NIY Spread• When cash market N goes up, dollar tends

to strengthen (S increases)• In other words, when dollar strengthens (S

increases), cash market N tends to go up.– Why?– Dollar strengthening means Yen depreciating,

which will be helpful to export-oriented companies in Nikkei 225 index N, so N tends to go up.

• Thus the correlation between the (percentage) change in N and the (percentage) change in S is positive.

13

Page 14: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Illustration

• Suppose the correlation is 30%, the volatility of Nikkei 225 index return is 50%, and the volatility of the yen-per-dollar exchange rate is 15%. The index level is at 10,680 and the time to maturity is 3 months.

• The spread is about 60 index points:10,680 0.3 0.5 0.15 3/12 = 60.1

14

Page 15: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Money-Making Opportunity?

• At maturity, T = 0, the NKD – NIY spread is zero. This is the time decay effect.

• Since the NKD – NIY spread is positive, one can take a short position in this spread (i.e. sell NKD and buy NIY), and hold this spread position until maturity to benefit from the time decay.

• Is it a good money-making opportunity?

15

Page 16: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Profit and Loss

• At time t=0, sell short one NKD contract at a price of F$, and buy R number of NIY contracts at a price of F¥.

• At maturity T, ST is the spot yen per dollar exchange rate

• Let NT be the settlement price of the futures contract, which is based on the SOQ of cash Nikkei 225 index value. The position’s payoff at maturity is, in dollars

16

–5 (NT – F$) + R 500 (NT – F¥) / ST

Page 17: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Profit and Loss (cont)

• Suppose the ratio R is chosen to be

• Then the payoff is

which is

17

100= 0S

R

–5 (NT – F$) + 5 S0 (NT – F¥) / ST

)(515 $0 FFFN

SS

TT

¥¥

TNFNS

SsnT

T

00 515L&P

¥

Page 18: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

P&L Example: Normal

• Same parameters as in the illustration, the spread is 60 points. Thus, gain from time decay is $5 60 = $300.

• Suppose S0 = 90 yens per dollar.• So the ratio R is short NKD contracts and

long 9 NIY contracts.• Suppose ST is 87 yens per dollar, i.e., dollar

weakens, and the settlement is 800 points lower, i.e., NT – F¥ = –800 at maturity.

• Then 5 (90 – 87)/87 = 15/87, and the P&L per NKD contract is

–$15 800/87 + $300 = $116.0918

Page 19: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

P&L Example: Market Crashes• Suppose the market crashes, and ST

is 85 yens per dollar, i.e., dollar weakens substantially, and the settlement is 2,000 points lower, i.e., NT – F¥ = –2,000.

• Then 5 (90 – 85)/85 = 25/85, and the P&L at maturity is, for every NKD contract, –$25 2,000/85 + $300 = –$288.24

19

Page 20: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

P&L Example: Market Rallies

• Suppose the market rallies, and ST is 95 yens per dollar, i.e., dollar strengthens, and the settlement is 2,000 points higher, i.e., NT – F¥ = 2,000.

• Then 5 (90 – 95)/95 = –25/95, and the P&L at maturity per NKD contract is

–$25 2,000/95 + $300 = –$226.3220

Page 21: A Tale of Two Futures: $ versus ¥ Nikkei 225 Index Futures 1 Christopher Ting.

Bottom Line

• When market is quiet, i,e., the markets neither crash nor rally, short quanto position will make money

• But it will lose money if extreme conditions (either up or down) prevail. – Don’t be the next Nick Leeson!

21


Recommended