Understanding Packs and Bundles

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Understanding Eurodollar Packs and Bundles

Previously, we discussed how market participants can use Eurodollars to hedge floating rate loans by using strips of Eurodollar futures.  You might choose to hedge a one year loan (hedge against higher interest rates) with quarterly reset dates by selling four quarterly Eurodollar futures contracts in what is known as a strip hedge. The strip consists of quarterly ED futures strung together.

While strips solved the problem of interest rate risk for some, they came with another issue: creating the strips necessitated legging futures contracts individually. Moreover, longer-dated loans and other hedges would require even longer strips of Eurodollars. Legging each contract individually entailed some risk, as the market sometimes moved appreciably before you could get all the legs completed. There was also the risk of execution mistakes as well as unfilled orders. In response to the marketplace, CME Group developed the concept of packs and bundles to simplify transactions for the increasing number of traders using strips of Eurodollar contracts.

Packs and Bundles: A Logical Evolution

A pack or bundle may be thought of as the purchase or sale of a series of Eurodollar futures representing a particular segment along the yield curve. They may be used to create or liquidate positions along the yield curve. Packs and bundles offer the advantage of being transactable at a single price or value, eliminating the necessity of entering multiple orders in each contract and the further possibility that some orders may go unfilled.

The popularity of packs and bundles is reflected in Eurodollar volume and open interest patterns. Unlike most futures contracts, where virtually all volume and open interest is concentrated in the nearby or lead month, Eurodollar futures have significant volume and open interest in the deferred months going out 10 years along the yield curve. During the first half of 2013, some 14% of all Eurodollar futures contracts were transacted in the form of packs or bundles. In 2016, packs and bundles were approximately 20% of overall Eurodollar volume.

What are Bundles?

A Eurodollar bundle consists of the simultaneous sale or purchase of one each of a series of consecutive Eurodollar futures contracts. The first contract in any bundle is typically the first quarterly contract in the Eurodollar strip, but bundles may be constructed starting with any quarterly contract. CME Group lists bundles in 1-, 2-, 3-,4-, 5-, 6-, 7-, 8-, 9- and 10-year terms to maturity.

Eurodollars are sometimes color-coded to facilitate reference to individual contract months or to packs and bundles. Eurodollars have 40 expirations: four quarterlies going out 10 years. That means there is a March expiration for 2017 as well as 2018 and all the way until 2027. To avoid confusion, CME Group created color codes. White represents the first year, red the second and so on until coppers, which represents the quarterly expiration in the tenth year. The chart below illustrates how bundles are constructed along the entire Eurodollar yield curve.

You may buy a 1-year white bundle by purchasing the first four quarterly expiration Eurodollar futures contracts. This way the entire strip of four quarterly futures contracts are conveniently bundled, eliminating execution risk and promoting efficiencies. Another example, you may sell a 3-year green bundle, which would bundle the first 12 quarterly expiration together in one package. A 5-year gold bundle would involve 20 quarterly expirations all bundled in one transaction.

What are packs?

Packs are similar to bundles in that they represent an aggregation of several Eurodollar futures contracts traded simultaneously. They are designed to represent a series of four consecutive quarterly Eurodollar futures whereas some bundles represent multiples of four quarterly expirations.

For example, you may buy a white pack by buying the first four quarterly expiration Eurodollar futures contracts. Or, you may sell a red pack in the second year by selling the fifth through eighth quarterly cycle month contracts. Or you may buy a gold pack in the fifth year by buying the 17th through 20th quarterly cycle month contracts.

Notice the BPV (basis point value) remains at $100 per pack whereas the BPVs continually rise as you add more quarterly expirations.

Both packs and bundles transacted on the CME Globex electronic trading platform.

Quoting Packs and Bundles

The price of a pack or bundle is quoted by reference to the average change in the value of all Eurodollar futures contracts included in the pack or bundle since the prior day’s settlement price. They are quoted in increments of 1/4 of one basis point (0.01%). E.g., if the first four quarterly Eurodollar contracts have advanced two basis points for the day, while the next four quarterly Eurodollar contracts have advanced three basis points for the day, then a 2-year, or red bundle, may be quoted as +, or up, 2.5 basis points.

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review .

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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The Link Between Eurodollar Futures Pricing And The Forward Rate Market

Forward Rate Agreements (FRA)

A Forward Rate Agreement (FRA) is a forward contract on interest rates. While FRAs exist in most major currencies, the market is dominated by U.S. dollar contracts and is used mostly by money center banks.

An FRA is a cash-settled contract between two parties where the payout is linked to the future level of a designated interest rate, such as three-month LIBOR. The two parties agree on an interest rate to be paid on a hypothetical deposit that is to be initiated at a specific future date. The buyer of an FRA commits to pay interest on this hypothetical loan at a predetermined fixed rate and in return receive interest at the actual rate prevailing at the settlement date.

Example Trade

Assume that in December 2017, a June 2017 Eurodollar futures is priced at 99.10.  This price reflects the market’s perception that by the June 2017 expiration, three-month LIBOR rates will be .90% (IMM Price convention= 100 – 99.10 = .90%).  Eurodollars are really a forward-forward market and their prices are closely linked to the implied forward rates in the OTC market.

Eurodollars and FRAs

Just as stock index futures reflect the cash S&P 500 market and soybean futures reflect the spot soybean market, Eurodollar futures should price at levels that reflect rates or implied rates in the FRA market. In addition, Eurodollar futures prices directly reflect, and are a mirror of, the yield curve. This is intuitive if one considers that a Eurodollar futures contract represents a three-month investment entered into N days in the future. Certainly, if Eurodollar futures did not reflect IFRs, an arbitrage opportunity would present itself.

Example

Consider the following interest rate structure in the Eurodollar (Euro) futures and cash markets. Assume that it is now December. Which is the better investment for the next six months:

Invest for six months at 0.80%;

Invest for three months at 0.70% and buy March Euro futures at 99.10 (0.90%); or

Invest for nine months at 0.90% and sell June Euro futures at 98.96 (1.04%)? 

Assume that these investments have terms of 90- days (0.25 years), 180-days (0.50 years) or 270- days (0.75 years).

March Euro Futures 98.10 (0.90%)

June Euro Futures 98.96 (1.04%)

Three-month Investment 0.70%

Six-month Investment 0.80%

Nine-month Investment 0.90%

 

 

The return on the first investment option is simply the spot six-month rate of 0.800%. The second investment option implies that you invest at 0.700% for the first three months and lock in a rate of 0.900% by buying March Eurodollar futures covering the subsequent three-month period. This implies a return of 0.800% over the entire six-month period.

The third alternative means that you invest for the next 270 days at 0.90% and sell June Eurodollar futures at 1.04%, effectively committing to sell the spot investment 180 days hence when it has 90 days until maturity. This implies a return of 0.83% over the next six-months.

The third alternative provides a slightly greater return of 0.83% than does the first or second investment options with returns at 0.80%.

Eurodollar futures prices reflect IFRs in the FRA market because of the possibility that market participants may pursue arbitrage opportunities when prices become misaligned. Thus, one might consider an arbitrage transaction by investing in the third option at 0.83% and funding that investment by borrowing outright at the term six-month rate of 0.80%. This implies a three basis point arbitrage profit.

Conclusions

This module demonstrates the close linkage of the FRA and Eurodollar futures market. These contracts allow a firm to replace floating interest rates with fixed interest rates or vice-versa. FRAs are customized contracts that can be obtained through investment banks. These banks hedge the risk of these products by using Eurodollar futures. In hedging the sale of a forward contract with futures, the marking to market feature of futures must be considered. As a result, the pricing of FRAs is very competitive and bid-ask spreads are very narrow as arbitrage opportunities keep prices in the two markets very closely aligned.

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review .

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Understanding Eurodollar Strips

Understanding Eurodollar Strips

One of the key reasons the Eurodollar contract has become so liquid and successful is because of hedgers using the market to hedge against adverse interest rate fluctuations.

Because Eurodollar futures move inversely with interest rates, if you are concerned about rising rates, you can sell Eurodollar futures and if  you are concerned about declining rates, you might buy Eurodollar futures.

Many loans are structured such that the rate floats periodically (i.e. the interest rate is reset quarterly) as a function of LIBOR plus a fixed premium. This introduces a periodic risk that rates may fluctuate before the time of each periodic loan reset date. Eurodollar futures may be used to address this possibility to the extent that they are listed on a quarterly basis extending 10 years out into the future.

Eurodollar Strip Example

There exist various strategies for hedging with Eurodollars involve stacking and stripping futures contracts as well as products called packs and bundles, which are packaged strips.

Assume that it is March 2017 and a corporation assumes a two-year bank loan repayable in March 2019 for $100 million. The loan rate is reset every three months at LIBOR plus a fixed premium. As such, the loan may be deconstructed into a series, or strip, of eight successively deferred three-month periods. Note: If the loan is secured currently, the effective rate may be fixed at the current rate for the first three months. Thus, there is no risk over the first three-month period between March and June 2017. However, the corporation remains exposed to the risk that rates advance by each of the seven subsequent loan rate reset dates.

Considering that the floating rate loan may be decomposed into seven successively deferred 90-day loans. The BPV associated with each of those seven loans equals $2,500.

BPV = $100,000,000 x (90÷360) x 0.01% = $2,500

The corporation might sell 100 Eurodollar futures in successive quarterly contract months to match the seven successive quarterly loan reset dates. Therefore, one might effectively hedge each of the seven loan periods independently. This transaction is often referred to as a strip hedge, or a series of short (or long) Eurodollar futures in successively deferred contract months to hedge the risk of rising (or declining) rates, respectively.

Reset Date Action to Hedge Rate Reset
June 2017 Sell 100 Jun-17 futures
September 2017 Sell 100 Sep-17 futures
December 2017 Sell 100 Dec-17 futures
March 2018 Sell 100 Mar-18 futures
June 2018 Sell 100 Jun-18 futures
September 2018 Sell 100 Sep-18 futures
December 2018 Sell 100 Dec-18 futures

Conclusion

If rates climb higher over the term of the loan, the short Eurodollar futures contracts would be profitable as the futures decline as rates rise. The profit on the strip of Eurodollar futures would offset the increase borrowing costs effectively locking in a lower rate.

Corporate treasurers and bank asset liability mangers are particularly aware of fluctuations in interest rates as borrowing and lending rates directly influence profitability. They have many tools available to hedge their interest rate exposure and on the Eurodollar or LIBOR side of the business, there is no better instrument.

Indeed, the hedging community has embraced strip hedging so enthusiastically that CME Group has launched a variety of pre-packaged strips that are called packs and bundles.

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review .

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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How to Trade Eurodollar Spreads

Interest Rate Education Homepage

How to Trade Eurodollar Spreads

Arguably the most liquid futures contract in the world, the Eurodollar futures contract owes its success to a very large user base and an underlying market (3-mo LIBOR money market and forward rate agreement markets) that is staggering in size. That large user base consists of traders, asset liability managers, interest rate hedgers and spread traders.

This module will cover the basic spread strategies used in Eurodollar futures including calendar or yield curve spreads.

Review of the Yield Curve

The yield curve is simply a plot of yield versus maturity. Generally, as maturities increase, yields also increase due to the added risk of holding a fixed income security over a longer period.

For example, 3-month Treasury Bills currently yield .60% while the 2-Year Treasury Note yields 1.25%, the 5-Year Note yields 2.07 and the 10-Year Note yields 2.54%. If you plot yield versus maturity, you get a curve known as the yield curve.

You could also plot 3-month LIBOR, 6-month LIBOR, etc. and generate a similar yield curve across the 40 expirations of Eurodollar futures.

Changes in the Yield Curve

Sometimes yields rise at a greater pace in certain areas of the curve than others. For example, short-term rates might rise faster than long-term rates, contributing to a flattening of the yield curve. Or long-term rates might go up faster than short-term rates, contributing to a steepening of the yield curve.

Traders can take advantage of changes in the yield curve using spread strategies in Eurodollar futures. Spreading in Eurodollar futures is one of the most popular strategies among Eurodollar traders and involves the simultaneous purchase and sale of futures contracts of different maturities. The hope is your profitable leg of the spread makes more than the unprofitable leg loses. Spreading can reduce risk because you are simultaneously long and short. But remember, not all spread trades are profitable. They may reduce risk but they do not eliminate it.

Examples

Calendar, or Yield Curve, spreads are one of the most common Eurodollar trades at CME Group. Since the value of one basis point is $25 in all the quarterly Eurodollar futures, the ratios for Yield curve spreads are 1:1.

Steepening Yield Curve Strategy:  Buy the shorter maturity Eurodollar future; sell the longer maturity Eurodollar future

Flattening Yield Curve Strategy: Sell the shorter maturity Eurodollar future; buy the longer maturity Eurodollar future.

Remember: Prices move inversely with yields in Eurodollar futures.

Choosing a Spread Strategy

Choose a Steepening yield curve strategy when the market anticipates long-term interest rates will rise faster than short-term rates or long-term rates remain steady while short-term rates fall. The rationale: a perception is that the economy remains weak and the Federal Reserve is expected to do nothing or to lower interest rates. When the Fed does this, it usually affects short-term rates more.

Choose a flattening yield curve strategy when the market anticipates short-term interest rates will rise faster than longer-term interest rates. The rationale: economic news and events surprise market and economy is expected to strengthen further and the Federal Reserve is expected to raise short-term interest rates to head off potential rise in inflation.

Example using Eurodollar futures: 

Steepening Yield Curve Strategy

Buy the shorter maturity Eurodollar future and sell the longer maturity Eurodollar Future

 Date Buy Mar 2017

Eurodollar

IMM Price

Sell Mar ‘2020 Spread

Eurodollar

IMM Price

 

 

 

01/25/17 98.90 97.56 134 b.p.
03/30/17 98.06 96.20 186 b.p. (+52)

The trader in the example above bought the spread in January at a difference of 134 basis points from the March 2017 and March 2020 contracts. He wants the spread to widen by either longer rates going up more than shorter rates or shorter rates rallying relative to longer term rates.

By March of 2017, the spread widened to 186 basis points a gain of 52 basis points. To calculate his profit, each basis point = $25.00 in Eurodollar futures. Hence:  52 bps X $25.00/bp equates to a profit of $1,300.00.

There are many more types of futures spreads in Eurodollars including butterfly spreads, packs and bundles.

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review .

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Understanding Convexity Bias

Understanding Convexity Bias

To understand the convexity bias, you must understand the parallels between the Eurodollar futures market and the forward rate agreement (FRA) market. Both of these markets are large, liquid and have a vast influence on short-term interest rate pricing.

FRAs are an over the counter (OTC) bilateral agreement that allows the buyer/seller to notionally borrow/lend a specified amount at a LIBOR-based linked rate over a forward period.

What is Convexity Bias?

Convexity bias appears in short-term interest rate instruments because of the payoff differences in the futures market versus the OTC FRA market (aka forward market).

For example, as Eurodollar futures (the underlying interest rate for Eurodollar futures) moves up and down, the payoff for the Eurodollar futures contract remains the same. If rates move up one basis point, the futures will change by $25.00 per contract. If rates move down one basis point, futures will also change by $25.00 per contract. Whether you profit or book a loss depends on if you are long or short on the futures.

With FRA agreements there is a convex payoff. Increases and decreases in rates produce differing payoffs. Its market value rises more for a given decline in rates than it would for a decline for the same size in the forward rate.

As rates decrease 10 basis points from 2.00 to 1.90, notice the Eurodollar (ED) futures lose $250,000, but the FRA payoff is 250,062. The same thing happens for an increase in rates. ED futures gain $250,000 but the FRA loses $62.00 less.

Remember ED futures move inversely with interest rates.

The table shows the convexity bias between a position of short 1000 Eurodollar (ED) futures and an offsetting short $1005m 3-month FRA (slightly more than $1000m to compensate for discounting methodology), both instigated at a rate of 2%.

An increase in underlying rates from 2% to 2.10% would result in a credit to the variation margin account of short 1000 ED STIR position of $250,000 and a debit of slightly less than that in the discounted equivalent of $1005m-3M FRA collateral account (assuming zero threshold – zero threshold means every dollar of value change has to be made good.).

A decrease in underlying rates of 10 basis points to 1.9% would result in a debit to the variation margin account of a short 1000 ED STIR position of $250,000 and a credit of slightly more than in the $1005m 3-month FRA collateral account (assuming zero threshold).

Source:  STIR Futures—Trading Euribor and Eurodollar futures, by Stephen Aikin

The amount of the convexity is small at the short end of the curve. The example is using a three-month FRA and Eurodollar futures. Further out on the curve the convexity increases and sometimes dramatically.

Why is Convexity Important?

Although changes in the market have diminished the convexity phenomenon, fixed income traders have to be aware of the bias because of the effects on larger OTC transactions, like FRAs, that are further out on the yield curve. While the change might only be a few hundred dollars on a short term FRA, the changes in a 5-year FRA could be orders of magnitude higher, costing portfolio managers valuable capital.

Still the Eurodollar futures markets and the underlying FRA market closely track each other as spreading and arbitrage opportunities keep them from getting too far out of line.

What Contributes to Convexity Bias? 

It is thought that the Convexity bias is due to the following:

  • The way Eurodollar futures are margined versus an FRA instrument
  • The cash flows paid out over the life of a futures contract versus an FRA. Futures are marked-to-market each day by the clearinghouse, while cash flows in an FRA are paid off differently.
  • Volatility in the interest rate markets, generally increasing volatility could cause margin changes.

Final Considerations

Over the years since the financial crisis, the convexity bias has significantly declined.  Since many OTC swaps/FRAs etc. have migrated to central counterparty clearing models such as the exchanges, the margining similarities have contributed to a decline in the convexity bias.

Uncleared margin rules also have impacted funding on OTC trading such as swaps and forward rate agreements. Higher funding rates should, in theory, drive such transactions to the exchanges, such as CME Group, where margin benefits and margin offsets can be realized.

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review .

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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The Importance of Basis Point Value (BPV)

The Importance of Basis Point Value (BPV)

A basis point is a unit of measure used in finance to describe the percentage change in the value or rate of a financial instrument.

One basis point is equivalent to 0.01% (1/100 of a percent) or 0.0001 in decimal form. If interest rates rose from 2.00% to 2.50%, it would be said that rates rose 50 basis points. In many cases, basis point refers to changes in short-term interest rates, such as Eurodollars, but it is also important with longer-term bond yields.

Basis Point Value, also known as DV01 (the dollar value of a one basis point move) represents the change in the value of an asset due to a 0.01% change in the yield.

BPV or DV01 calculations are used in many ways, but primarily to show the dollar amount of change for each increase or decrease in interest rates. If the value of the Eurodollar futures contract moves by one basis point (.01%), it would equate into a $25.00 move in the contract value. If Eurodollar futures moved four basis points or .04%, it would equate to a $100 move in the value of the contract.

Show graphic calculating this BPV or DV01  for Eurodollars:

Basis Point Value Calculation

The face value of the Eurodollar futures contract is $ 1,000,000. The futures track three-month Eurodollar rates (three-month LIBOR) hence we use 90 days in the equation, and .01% in decimal form is .0001.

Basis Point Value (BPV)  =  Face Value x (#days ÷ 360) x .01%

BPV = 1,000,000 x (90 ÷ 360) x .0001

BPV = $25.00

Example

This example shows Eurodollars in terms of the IMM Price index. Assume Eurodollar interest rates rose from 1.00% to 1.05%, this would represent a .05% or five basis point rise in Eurodollar interest rates. But remember from the prior modules that Eurodollar futures are priced off the IMM price index.

IMM price index = 100 – Eurodollar rate (or three month LIBOR)

In the example above, Eurodollars were at 1.00%. The IMM price index, therefore, would be 100 – 1.00 = 99.00. Subsequently, interest rates rose to 1.05%. The IMM price index at that point would be 100 – 1.05   = 98.95.

As you can see, interest rate prices move inversely with interest rate yields. As rates rose five basis points, the Eurodollar IMM price index declined from 99.00 to 98.95.

To find out how much that means in terms of dollar value, we have to convert basis point movement into dollar movement. This requires knowing the DV01 (dollar Value of a .01 move)

The basis point value in Eurodollar futures from our calculation above is $25.00.  Therefore, a five basis point move equates to $125.00

5 basis points x $25.00/basis point = $125.00.

Basis Points and Tick Size in Eurodollar Futures

The minimum allowable price fluctuation, or tick size, is generally established at ½ basis point., or .005%. Based on a million-dollar face value 90-day instrument, this equates to $12.50. However, in the nearby expiring contract month, the minimum price fluctuation is set at 1/4 basis point, or .0025%, equating to $6.25 per contract.

Nearby Expiring Contract:

One Tick (.0025 basis pts) = $6.25

Tick Movement Quote
Starting price 99.0000
Increased one tick (.0025 basis points) 99.0025
Increased two ticks (.0050 basis points) 99.0050
Increased three ticks (.0075 basis points) 99.0075

All Other Expiring Contracts: 

One Tick (.005 basis pts) = $12.50

Tick Movement Quote
Starting price 99.000
Increased one tick (.005 basis points) 99.005
Increased two ticks (.010 basis points) 99.010
Increased three ticks (.015 basis points) 99.015

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review .

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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What is the Eurodollar Settlement Process (cash settled)

What is the Eurodollar Settlement Process?

Some futures contracts are cash-settled, others are settled via physical delivery.

Soybeans, for example, are physically-delivered as part of the contract terms. They settle with the exchange of actual physical soybeans or cash soybeans between buyer and seller.

Eurodollar futures however, are cash-settled. Buyers and sellers of Eurodollar futures contracts that hold their contracts through final settlement will be credited the difference, in cash, between what they paid for the contract and what they sold the contract at, if there is a profit. If there is a loss, their account will be debited cash.

It is CME Clearing, in conjunction with the FCMs (Futures commission merchant or broker), that makes sure trader accounts are debited and credited accordingly and that cash settlements are made in a timely and accurate fashion.

Eurodollar Settlement Process

Assume that in March, a trader bought March Eurodollar futures at a price of 98.75 when three-month LIBOR was trading at about 1.25 (using the IMM price quotation convention the Eurodollar futures price would be 98.75 (100.00 – 1.25 = 98.75).

The trader decides to hold onto the futures contract until the final settlement day (usually the third Monday of the expiration month). The final settlement is determined using the IMM price quote convention.

Final Settlement of an expiring contract shall be 100 minus the three-month Eurodollar interbank time deposit rate, determined by the ICE LIBOR setting administered by ICE Benchmark Administration Ltd, as first released on the second London bank business day immediately preceding the third Wednesday of the contract delivery month.

3 month LIBOR rate Eurodollar IMM price quote
1.00 99.00
1.25 98.75
2.50 97.50
3.15 96.85

Returning to our example, the three-month Eurodollar interbank time deposit rate according to the ICE LIBOR setting is 1.19. The final settlement is arrived at by subtracting the ICE LIBOR setting from 100.00.

100.00 – 1.19 = 98.81 = the final settlement price of the March Eurodollar settlement.

If the trader originally bought the futures at 98.750, and they settled at 98.810, the trader would make 12 ticks profit (a tick = .005 price points). Each tick is worth $12.50. So, the trader profits by $150.00 per contract.

The clearinghouse, working through the trader’s broker, will credit his account with $150.00 cash. And the losing side of the trade will have $150 cash debited from his account to finalize the cash settlement process.

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review .

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Peter Knight Advisor

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Understanding IMM Price and Date

Interest Rate Education Homepage

International Money Market (IMM) Index and Date

IMM stands for the International Monetary Market. Interest Rate products that have an original maturity of less than 366 days, trade in what is commonly referred to as the “Money Market”.

The IMM index is the pricing convention and the IMM date is the date of expiration for these products.

There are several features that distinguish money market products from longer dated interest rate products like notes and bonds.

Longer Date Interest Rates

Bonds and notes pay a periodic interest to their holders, these are known as coupon payments. For example, a U.S. Treasury ten-year note with a coupon of three percent (3%) will pay semi-annually roughly half of its coupon, about one and a half percent (1.50%), of the principal amount to the holder.

Bonds and notes also trade in price format.

Money Market Instruments

Money market instruments, like T-bills, CDs, commercial paper do not make periodic payments, and they trade in yield terms.

IMM Index Conversion

Eurodollars are an example of another money market instrument and they are traditionally quoted in yield terms referring to LIBOR rates.  When the Eurodollar future was introduced, futures brokers back-office operations could not handle contracts traded in yield terms.  A system was devised to take what was normally traded in yield terms and convert it into a price traded convention. This was the beginning of the IMM index or IMM quote convention.

IMM Index = 100 – Yield

If three-month LIBOR rate = 0.75%

IMM Index = 100 – 0.75

IMM Index = 99.25

The yield and IMM index act in an inverse or opposite relationship.  If yields are falling, the IMM index is rising and as yields rise, the IMM index falls

IMM Date

IMM dates refer to when quarterly Eurodollar, FX, and MAC Swap futures contracts at CME Group expire.

These contracts stop trading the Monday preceding the third Wednesday of a March quarterly cycle.  This means the third Wednesday of March, June, September, and December.

IMM dates have become significant in recent years beyond CME Group’s financial futures.  Many OTC arranged interest rate swaps are now pegging their float rate payment dates to the IMM date calendar.

This is to more closely align them with other contracts, in an effort to ease trade offset and neutralize open positions.

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review .

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Peter Knight Advisor

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3 Month USD Deposit Rates Outside the U.S.

Interest Rate Education Homepage

3 month rates or Eurodollar deposits, are time deposits denominated in U.S. dollars at banks outside the United States. (There is no connection with the euro currency or the Eurozone). The term was originally coined for U.S. dollars deposited in European banks, but its expanded over the years to its present definition—a U.S. dollar-denominated deposit in any non US bank for example Tokyo or Beijing would be deemed a Eurodollar deposit.

Each 0.01 move in this rate equals a $25 change in the contract’s value.
Example, a rate of 1.00% = a contract value of $2,500, at 1.10% the contract value would increase to $2,750.

Current chart

To capture the move you need to trade the underlying futures contract

1) Contract information and specifications
2) The Exchange this contract is traded on
3) Contract volume and open interest for all deliveries 2016 to 2026
4) Quotes for all deliveries from 2016 through 2026

To convert the contract price into the rate it represents
Take 100.0000 – the contract price = the rate, for example
100.0000 – a contract price of 99.7500 = a rate of 0.25%
100.0000 – a contract price of 99.5000 = a rate of 0.50%

To convert rate into contract value
Each 0.0100 change in price = $25,
1 full point 1.0000 = $2,500 for example
A rate of 0.25% X $2,500 = $625
A rate of 0.50% X $2,500 = $1,250

Trading this rate higher requires establishing a short position in the underlying futures contract, as the rate rises the futures contract falls in price to reflect the increase in rate/contract value, for example

99.7500 = a rate of 0.25%, contract value of $625
99.5000 = a rate of 0.50%, contract value of $1,250

Click here to enlarge the 1992-2014 monthly rate, price, valuation chart
Click here for a current chart

Screenshot_250

History of this rate

Gradually, after World War II, the quantity of U.S. dollars outside the United States increased enormously, as a result of both the Marshall Plan and imports into the U.S., which had become the largest consumer market after World War II.

As a result, enormous sums of U.S. dollars were in the custody of foreign banks outside the United States. Some foreign countries, including the Soviet Union, also had deposits in U.S. dollars in American banks, granted by certificates. Various history myths exist for the first Eurodollar creation, or booking, but most trace back to Communist governments keeping dollar deposits abroad.

In one version, the first booking traces back to Communist China, which, in 1949, managed to move almost all of its U.S. dollars to the Soviet-owned Banque Commerciale pour l’Europe du Nord in Paris before the United States froze the remaining assets during the Korean War.

In another version, the first booking traces back to the Soviet Union during the Cold War period, especially after the invasion of Hungary in 1956, as the Soviet Union feared that its deposits in North American banks would be frozen as a retaliation. It decided to move some of its holdings to the Moscow Narodny Bank, a Soviet-owned bank with a British charter. The British bank would then deposit that money in the US banks. There would be no chance of confiscating that money, because it belonged to the British bank and not directly to the Soviets. On 28 February 1957, the sum of $800,000 was transferred, creating the first eurodollars. Initially dubbed “Eurbank dollars” after the bank’s telex address, they eventually became known as “eurodollars” as such deposits were at first held mostly by European banks and financial institutions. A major role was played by City of London banks, as the Midland Bank, now HSBC, and their offshore holding companies.

In the mid-1950s, Eurodollar trading and its development into a dominant world currency began when the Soviet Union wanted better interest rates on their Eurodollars and convinced an Italian banking cartel to give them more interest than what could have been earned if the dollars were deposited in the U.S. The Italian bankers then had to find customers ready to borrow the Soviet dollars and pay above the U.S. legal interest-rate caps for their use, and were able to do so; thus, Eurodollars began to be used increasingly in global finance.

Eurodollars can have a higher interest rate attached to them because of the fact that they are out of reach from the Federal Reserve. U.S. banks hold an account at the Fed and can, ostensibly, receive unlimited liquidity from the Fed should any trouble arise. These required reserves and Fed backing make U.S. Dollar deposits in U.S. banks inherently less risky, and Eurodollar deposits slightly more risky, which requires a slightly higher interest rate.

By the end of 1970 385,000M eurodollars were booked offshore. These deposits were lent on as US dollar loans to businesses in other countries where interest rates on loans were perhaps much higher in the local currency, and where the businesses were exporting to the USA and being paid in dollars, thereby avoiding foreign exchange risk on their loans.

Several factors led Eurodollars to overtake certificates of deposit (CDs) issued by U.S. banks as the primary private short-term money market instruments by the 1980s, including:

  • The successive commercial deficits of the United States
  • The U.S. Federal Reserve’s ceiling on domestic deposits during the high inflation of the 1970s
  • Eurodollar deposits were a cheaper source of funds because they were free of reserve requirements and deposit insurance assessments

Market size

By December 1985 the Eurocurrency market was estimated by Morgan Guaranty bank to have a net size of 1,668B, of which 75% are likely eurodollars. However, since the markets are not responsible to any government agency its growth is hard to estimate. The Eurodollar market is by a wide margin the largest source of global finance. In 1997, nearly 90% of all international loans were made this way

Futures contracts

The Eurodollar futures contract refers to the financial futures contract based upon these deposits, traded at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME). More specifically, EuroDollar futures contracts are derivatives on the interest rate paid on those deposits. Eurodollars are cash settled futures contract whose price moves in response to the interest rate offered on US Dollar denominated deposits held in European banks. Eurodollar futures are a way for companies and banks to lock in an interest rate today, for money it intends to borrow or lend in the future. Each CME Eurodollar futures contract has a notional or “face value” of $1,000,000, though the leverage used in futures allows one contract to be traded with a margin of about one thousand dollars.

CME Eurodollar futures prices are determined by the market’s forecast of the 3-month USD LIBOR interest rate expected to prevail on the settlement date. A price of 95.00 implies an interest rate of 100.00 – 95.00, or 5%. The settlement price of a contract is defined to be 100.00 minus the official British Bankers’ Association fixing of 3-month LIBOR on the day the contract is settled.

How the Eurodollar futures contract works

For example, if on a particular day an investor buys a single three-month contract at 95.00 (implied settlement LIBOR of 5.00%):

  • if at the close of business on that day, the contract price has risen to 95.01 (implying a LIBOR decrease to 4.99%), US$25 will be paid into the investor’s margin account; or
  • if at the close of business on that day, the contract price has fallen to 94.99 (implying a LIBOR increase to 5.01%), US$25 will be deducted from the investor’s margin account.

On the settlement date, the settlement price is determined by the actual LIBOR fixing for that day rather than a market-determined contract price.

Futures Contract History

The Eurodollar futures contract was launched in 1981, as the first cash-settled futures contract. People reportedly camped out the night before the contract’s open, flooding the pit when the CME opened the doors. That trading pit was the largest pit ever, nearly the size of a football field, and quickly became one of the most active on the trading floor, with over 1500 traders and clerks coming to work every day on what was then known as the CME’s upper trading floor. That floor is no longer, with the CME having moved over to the CBOT’s trading floor and 98% of Eurodollar trading now done electronically.

Eurodollar futures contract as synthetic loan

A single Eurodollar future is similar to a forward rate agreement to borrow or lend US$1,000,000 for three months starting on the contract settlement date. Buying the contract is equivalent to lending money, and selling the contract short is equivalent to borrowing money.

Consider an investor who agreed to lend US$1,000,000 on a particular date for three months at 5.00% per annum (months are calculated on a 30/360 basis). Interest received in 3 months’ time would be US$1,000,000 × 5.00% × 90 / 360 = US$12,500.

  • If the following day, the investor is able to lend money from the same start date at 5.01%, s/he would be able to earn US$1,000,000 × 5.01% × 90 / 360 = US$12,525 of interest. Since the investor only is earning US$12,500 of interest, s/he has lost US$25 as a result of interest rate moves.
  • On the other hand, if the following day, the investor is able to lend money from the same start date only at 4.99%, s/he would be able to earn only US$1,000,000 × 4.99% × 90 / 360 = US$12,475 of interest. Since the investor is in fact earning US$12,500 of interest, s/he has gained US$25 as a result of interest rate moves.

This demonstrates the similarity. However, the contract is also different from a loan in several important respects:

  • In an actual loan, the US$25 per basis point is earned or lost at the end of the three-month loan, not up front. That means that the profit or loss per 0.01% change in interest rate as of the start date of the loan (i.e., its present value) is less than US$25. Moreover, the present value change per 0.01% change in interest rate is higher in low interest rate environments and lower in high interest rate environments. This is to say that an actual loan has convexity. A Eurodollar future pays US$25 per 0.01% change in interest rate no matter what the interest rate environment, which means it does not have convexity. This is one reason that Eurodollar futures are not a perfect proxy for expected interest rates. This difference can be adjusted for by reference to the implied volatility of options on Eurodollar futures.
  • In an actual loan, the lender takes credit risk to a borrower. In Eurodollar futures, the principal of the loan is never disbursed, so the credit risk is only on the margin account balance. Moreover, even that risk is the risk of the clearinghouse, which is considerably lower than even unsecured single-A credit risk.

Other features of Eurodollar futures

40 quarterly expirations and 4 serial expirations are listed in the Eurodollar contract. This means that on 1 January 2011, the exchange will list 40 quarterly expirations (March, June, September, December for 2011 through 2020), the exchange will also list another four serial (monthly) expirations (January, February, April, May 2011). This extends tradeable contracts over ten years, which provides an excellent picture of the shape of the yield curve. The front month contracts are among the most liquid futures contracts in the world, with liquidity decreasing for the further out contracts. Total open interest for all contracts is typically over 10 million.

The CME Eurodollar futures contract is used to hedge interest rate swaps. There is an arbitrage relationship between the interest rate swap market, the forward rate agreement market and the Eurodollar contract. CME Eurodollar futures can be traded by implementing a spread strategy among multiple contracts to take advantage of movements in the forward curve for future pricing of interest rates.

In United States banking, Eurodollars are a popular option for what are known as “sweeps“. Until July 21, 2011, banks were not allowed to pay interest on corporate checking accounts. To accommodate larger businesses, banks may automatically transfer, or sweep, funds from a corporation’s checking account into an overnight investment option to effectively earn interest on those funds. Banks usually allow these funds to be swept either into money market mutual funds, or alternately they may be used for bank funding by transferring to an offshore branch of a bank.

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review .

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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About Volume

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Volume

Volume is reported for all futures contracts. It is calculated by counting the number of contracts that have been bought and sold over a given time. You can track volume using different time intervals like daily or intraday.

When a futures contract is traded, whether bought or sold, it counts towards volume for that contract.

For example, a trader closes a short position in the E-mini S&P 500 (ES) futures contract by buying one contract in the ES, so volume will increase by 1.

Traders often use and interpret the rise or decline of volume in a futures contract to help make trading decisions.

Volume can give important information to traders such as:

Indicate the price levels at which traders are more or less interested in trading a futures contract

During the roll,  indicate to traders when to switch to trading the front month futures contract as volume decreases in the expiring contract

Identify the times of day when a futures contract is most liquid

Price Levels

When volume changes as price of a futures contract moves towards certain levels, this can indicate to a trader that a change in direction may occur. Some traders may use this information to indicate whether to buy or sell at those key levels.

­Contract Roll

During the futures rollover, traders pay attention to the contract that is taking the higher levels of volume. Traders use this information to determine when to start trading the next month contract. As volume decreases in the expiring contract, trading will shift to the next available month contract.

For example, say the June ES (E-mini S&P 500) futures contract is about to expire and September will become the new front month. On the Thursday of rollover week, watch how the June contract starts to lose volume and the September contract begins to pick up volme. When the September contract has more volume then the June contract,  it is time to switch to the September contract.

Active Periods

Traders typically prefer higher volume times to trade, as it means that more traders are actively interested in buying and selling. When volume is high, the bid-ask spread is typically smaller, orders are filled faster and less gaps may exist between ticks.

For example, markets can have lower volume between the hours of 12:00 p.m.-2:00 p.m. ET, before major economic releases; conversely, market often see higher volume around the open and close of the trading day.

Traders also can look at average daily volume over a longer time period, such as a few weeks or months, to see if the markets currently are in a lower or higher volume than is typical.

Summary

What volume can’t show however, is whether traders are buying or selling, or opening or closing a position.

For example, if the ES contract is trading at 2375 and suddenly pushes down to 2360 while volume increases, the volume that comes into the market could be from traders opening new long positions at key levels of support. That could indicate a bullish sentiment. Volume also can be generated by liquidation of exiting long positions or opening of new short positions, a possible bearish indication.

A spike in volume at 2360 doesn’t necessarily mean that buyers are  coming into the market and that the price will bounce.

Volume data is readily available for each futures contract and for the market as a whole.  Although traders may use volume in different ways to interpret how to trade, volume can be an important factor to help inform your trading decisions.

If you have questions send us a message or schedule an online review.

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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