Other Interest Rate Contracts
Swaps are multiperiod forward contracts that trade over the counter. There are also
exchange-listed contracts that trade on interest rates. The biggest of these in terms of
trading activity is the Eurodollar contract, the listing for which we show in Figure 23.7 .
The profit on this contract is proportional to the difference between the LIBOR rate at
contract maturity and the contract rate entered into at contract inception. There are analogous
rates on interbank loans in other currencies. For example, one close cousin of LIBOR is
EURIBOR, which is the rate at which euro-denominated interbank loans within the euro
zone are offered by one prime bank to another.
The listing conventions for the Eurodollar contract are a bit peculiar. Consider, for
example, the first contract listed, which matures in February 2013. The settlement price
is presented as F
0
5 99.7075, or approximately 99.71. However, this value is not really
a price. In effect, participants in the contract negotiate over the contract interest rate, and
the so-called futures price is actually set equal to 100 2 contract rate. Because the futures
price is 99.71, the contract rate is 100 2 99.71, or .29%. Similarly, the final futures price
on contract maturity date will be marked to F
T
5 100 2 LIBOR
T
. Thus, profits to the
buyer of the contract will be proportional to
F
T
2 F
0
5 (100 2 LIBOR
T
) 2 (100 2 Contract rate) 5 Contract rate 2 LIBOR
T
Thus, the contract design allows participants to
trade directly on the LIBOR rate. The contract
multiplier is $1 million, but the LIBOR rate on
which the contract is written is a 3-month (quar-
terly) rate; for each basis point that the (annu-
alized) LIBOR increases, the quarterly interest
rate increases by only ¼ of a basis point, and the
profit to the buyer decreases by
.0001 3 ¼ 3 $1,000,000 5 $25
Examine the payoff on the contract, and you
will see that, in effect, the Eurodollar contract
allows traders to “swap” a fixed interest rate
(the contract rate) for a floating rate (LIBOR).
Company A
Swap Dealer
Company B
LIBOR
6.95%
7.05%
7% Coupon
LIBOR
LIBOR
Figure 23.6
Interest rate swap. Company B pays a fixed rate of 7.05% to the swap dealer
in return for LIBOR. Company A receives 6.95% from the dealer in return for LIBOR. The
swap dealer realizes a cash flow each period equal to .10% of notional principal.
Open
High
Settle
Chg
Open
interest
Contract
hi lo Low
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