1 / 26

2012 Windy city summit INTEREST RATE SWAPS PRESENTATION

2012 Windy city summit INTEREST RATE SWAPS PRESENTATION. Interest Rate Swaps . Table of Contents Derivatives Overview Derivatives and Interest Rate Risk The Interest Rate Swap What is it? Purpose and Functionality Swaps and Me… Why should today’s borrower consider it?

pelham
Télécharger la présentation

2012 Windy city summit INTEREST RATE SWAPS PRESENTATION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2012 Windy city summitINTEREST RATE SWAPSPRESENTATION

  2. Interest Rate Swaps Table of Contents • Derivatives Overview • Derivatives and Interest Rate Risk • The Interest Rate Swap • What is it? • Purpose and Functionality • Swaps and Me… • Why should today’s borrower consider it? • Other Types of Protection • Caps and Collars • Where’s the Crystal Ball? • Historical and expected rates • Q & A

  3. Derivatives Overview

  4. Interest Rate Swaps Derivatives—What are They? • Derivatives are financial instruments whose value is derived from another "underlying" financial security. • An interest rate derivative gains or loses value based on the movements of a specific interest rate index (U.S. Dollar Prime, LIBOR, Fed Funds, Treasury yields, etc.). • There are two broad categories of derivative products: • Exchange-traded products • Often used by traders & speculators (and dealers looking to balance their books) • Standardized contract sizes & terms • Not typically used for customized hedging solutions • Over-the-counter (OTC) products • Developed to meet hedging demand by companies & investors • Customized contracts between 2 counterparties

  5. Interest Rate Swaps Derivatives—Growth in the OTC Market Source: BIS

  6. Interest Rate Swaps Derivatives—Why? One word—RISK! • Example of interest rate exposure on a $100 million, 10-year financing. The present value of every basis point change in interest rates prior to locking the rate is worth about $82,000! Increase of $10.4mm in interest cost in six weeks (127bps * $82k) Decrease of $12.1mm in interest cost in four months (148bps * $82k) Source: Chatham Financial 10-Year UST

  7. Interest Rate Swaps Interest Rate Markets Term Structure of Interest Rates: • When you hear “interest rates moved lower today” – which rates are being discussed?? • Short-term deposit rates? • Intermediate maturity rates? • Long-term mortgage rates? • Interest rates differ across the maturity spectrum due to: • Liquidity • Market expectations • Concept known as the “Yield Curve”

  8. Interest Rate Swaps Source: Wintrust Financial

  9. The InterestRate Swap

  10. Fixed Rate Party B Party A LIBOR Interest Rate Swaps What is an OTC Interest Rate Swap? • An agreement between two parties in which one party agrees to pay a fixed rate of interest and the other agrees to pay a floating rate of interest on an agreed upon notional amount • No principal changes hands, simply an exchange (“swap”) of interest payments for a set period of time • Swap rate is derived from market expectations • The FIXED rate is the Present Value of Expected Future FLOATING rates • LIBOR is the foundation of the swap market

  11. Interest Rate Swaps How Does an Interest Rate Swap Work? • Overview: Interest rate swaps allow borrowers to effectively lock-in an interest rate on an existing or future variable rate financing • Method: Separate contract from the loan that effectively fixes the rate by creating a stream of cash flows that perfectly offsets any rise in rates • Cost: There are no incremental fees associated with the interest rate swap Fixed Rate Borrower Bank Floating Rate Floating Rate Loan

  12. Interest Rate Swaps How are Swap Rates Determined? • How does the market demand what the proper fixed rate is for an interest rate swap? • A swap is simply an exchange of cash flows: therefore, the party paying a fixed rate should demand a rate that is, on a present value basis, the average of the market’s expected floating rate settings over the term of a particular swap contract. • One mechanism for predicting the future path of rates is by observing the interest rate futures market. • In general, 3-month LIBOR serves as a baseline rate for calculating an interest rate swap’s fixed rate.

  13. Interest Rate Swaps LIBOR is the Foundation of the Swap Market London Inter-Bank Offered Rate: • Rate at which banks lend to one another for various terms • Resets each day at 11:00 a.m. (London time) based on average of 16 contributor banks • 3-Month LIBOR = Fed Funds + 0.25%* (historical avg.) • Prime = 3-Month LIBOR + 2.75%* (historical avg.) • Any variations in OTC structures (1-month LIBOR, Prime, etc.) are taken into account by calculating a specific spread, or “basis”, to the 3-month LIBOR futures market

  14. Interest Rate Swaps • How is the Fixed Swap Rate Determined? • Fixed rates are derived from the present value average of the market’s expectation of future floating rates over a given term • If the market’s prediction of rates is CORRECT, there is no difference between paying fixed or paying floating on the same notional • If the market’s prediction of rates is NOT CORRECT, the swap will gain or lose value

  15. Interest Rate Swaps • Valuation of an Interest Rate Swap • At inception, the swap has no value because the swap rate represents the average of what the market believes variable rates will be over the life of the swap • As rates change, the swap will begin to take on or lose value • If the swap holder needs to break the contract before maturity, it may be subject to breakage provisions: • Rates Rise: Replacement Swap Rate > Actual Swap Rate, swap is an asset to the swap holder. The swap holder will receive payment from the Counterparty for the value of the swap. • Rates Fall: Replacement Swap Rate < Actual Swap Rate, swap is a liability to swap holder. The swap holder will make a payment to the Counterparty for the value of the swap.

  16. Swaps and Me…

  17. Interest Rate Swaps • What are the Benefits of an Interest Rate Swap? • Flexibility: • All or a portion of the term • All or a portion of the notional • Duration: • Longer term financing available • Certainty: • Known debt service costs • Bi-lateral Prepayment: • Retain benefit if rates rise • Prepayment often less than traditional yield maintenance if rates fall • Core-Competency: • Swaps allow borrowers to focus on their “line of business” and not fluctuations in the interest rate markets • Current Rate Environment: • Swaps allow borrowers to take advantage of below-market rates when compared to traditional fixed loan rates

  18. Interest Rate Swaps • What Types of Debt can be Hedged? • Over-the-counter Interest Rate hedging products are customized contracts • Provide great flexibility to borrower • Loan amortization characteristics can be matched in a derivative hedge contract: • Construction loans • Forward Starting • Irregular/ uncertain draw schedule • Permanent financing • Monthly, quarterly, or semi-annual payments • Mortgage, Hybrid, Straight-line, I/O, Custom amortization

  19. Other Types of Protection

  20. Interest Rate Swaps • Other Types of Hedging Products • An interest rate CAP will: • Guarantee the borrower a maximum fixed rate, yet allow the borrower to retain the properties of a floating rate loan under a specific strike rate • Cost the borrower a premium to purchase, paid upfront • Be most cost-effective for terms under 5 years and/or when providing “worst case” disaster protection at a high cap strike rate • An interest rate COLLAR will: • Guarantee the borrower a maximum fixed rate, yet also require the borrower to pay a certain minimum rate (even if market rates fall below this pre-determined floor strike rate) • Help or fully offset the cost of a cap by borrower selling a floor to Bank

  21. Interest Rate Swaps • What is an Interest Rate Cap? • Example of a $5MM Cap struck at 1.25%

  22. Where’s the Crystal Ball?

  23. Interest Rate Swaps Source: WSJ Historical Average (since 1989) = 3.9219%

  24. Interest Rate Swaps Source: Wintrust Financial

  25. Interest Rate Swaps Source: FRB Historical Average (since 2000) = 3.8737%

  26. Questions?

More Related