Suppose that the systematic risk of orange juice were to increase, holding the expected time T price of
juice constant. If the expected spot price is unchanged, would the futures price change? In what direction?
this value imply an arbitrage opportunity. Empirical evidence, however, suggests that generally
Note that Equation 23.4 is perfectly consistent with the spot-futures parity relationship.
For example, apply Equation 23.4 to the futures price for a stock paying no dividends.
Because the entire return on the stock is in the form of capital gains, the expected rate
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P A R T V I
Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives
2. Futures contracts calling for cash settlement are traded on various stock market indexes.
The contracts may be mixed with Treasury bills to construct artificial equity positions,
which makes them potentially valuable tools for market timers. Market index contracts are
used also by arbitrageurs who attempt to profit from violations of the stock-futures parity
rela tionship.
3. Hedging requires investors to purchase assets that will offset the sensitivity of their portfolios to
particular sources of risk. A hedged position requires that the hedging vehicle provide profits that
vary inversely with the value of the position to be protected.
4. The hedge ratio is the number of hedging vehicles such as futures contracts required to offset
the risk of the unprotected position. The hedge ratio for systematic market risk is proportional
to the size and beta of the underlying stock portfolio. The hedge ratio for fixed-income portfolios
is proportional to the price value of a basis point, which in turn is proportional to modified dura-
tion and the size of the portfolio.
5. Many investors such as hedge funds use hedging strategies to create market-neutral bets on per-
ceived instances of relative mispricing between two or more securities. They are not arbitrage
strategies, but pure plays on a particular perceived profit opportunity.
6. Interest rate futures contracts may be written on the prices of debt securities (as in the case
of Treasury-bond futures contracts) or on interest rates directly (as in the case of Eurodollar
contracts).
7. Swaps, which call for the exchange of a series of cash flows, may be viewed as portfolios of
forward contracts. Each transaction may be viewed as a separate forward agreement. However,
instead of pricing each exchange independently, the swap sets one “forward price” that applies
to all of the transactions. Therefore, the swap price will be an average of the forward prices that
would prevail if each exchange were priced separately.
8. Commodity futures pricing is complicated by costs for storage of the underlying commodity.
When the asset is willingly stored by investors, the storage costs net of convenience yield enter
the futures pricing equation as follows:
F
0
5 P
0
(1 1 r
f
1 c)
T
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