3 Month USD Deposit Rates Outside the U.S.

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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

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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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Margin

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Understanding Margin

Securities margin is the money you borrow as a partial down payment, up to 50% of the purchase price, to buy and own a stock, bond, or ETF. This practice is often referred to as buying on margin.

Futures margin is the amount of money that you must deposit and keep on hand with your broker when you open a futures position. It is not a down payment and you do not own the underlying commodity.

Futures margin generally represents a smaller percentage of the notional value of the contract, typically 3-12% per futures contract as opposed to up to 50% of the face value of securities purchased on margin.

Margins Move with the Markets

When markets are changing rapidly and daily price moves become more volatile, market conditions and the clearinghouses’ margin methodology may result in higher margin requirements to account for increased risk.

When market conditions and the margin methodology warrant, margin requirements may be reduced.

Types of Futures Margin

Initial margin is the amount of funds required by CME Clearing to initiate a futures position. While CME Clearing sets the margin amount, your broker may be required to collect additional funds for deposit.

Maintenance margin is the minimum amount that must be maintained at any given time in your account.

If the funds in your account drop below the maintenance margin level, a few things can happen:

You may receive a margin call where you will be required to add more funds immediately to bring the account back up to the initial margin level.

If you do not or can not meet the margin call, you may be able to reduce your position in accordance with the amount of funds remaining in your account.

Your position may be liquidated automatically once it drops below the maintenance margin level.

Summary

Futures margin is the amount of money that you must deposit and keep on hand with your broker when you open a futures position. It is not a down payment, and you do not own the underlying commodity.

The term margin is used across multiple financial markets. However, there is difference between securities margins and futures margins. Understanding these differences is essential, prior to trading futures contracts.

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

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Peter Knight Advisor

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Futures Educational Videos & Links

Educational Videos & Resources

1 Futures General Information
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4 Stock Index Futures
5 Interest Rate Futures
6 Metals Futures
7 Energy Futures
8 CME Learning Center
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10 Education Material
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Introduction to Fed Fund Futures

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What are Fed Funds?

Federal Funds, Fed Funds for short, are generally a transaction of an unsecured loan of U.S. dollars to a borrower or purchaser that is a depository institution (DI) from a lender or seller that is a DI, foreign bank, government-sponsored enterprise or other eligible entity. These transactions are usually conducted on an overnight or next day (T + 1) basis.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY) gathers transactional data on Fed Funds daily from participating banks and broker dealers. Using a volume-weighted average, the FRBNY calculates the Effective Fed Funds Rate (EFFR) and publishes this number on its website.

Fed Funds and Overnight Interest Swap (OIS) rates are highly correlated and therefore, many IRS discounting models will use either Fed funds, OIS or both when building a forward discounting curve. In addition, Fed Fund futures are also used for trading and other funding curve risk management strategies.

Fed Fund Futures – Contract Specifications

Fed Fund futures contracts are based on the EFFR rate as reported by the FRBNY. The contract unit size is $5 million per contract. Contracts are listed monthly, extending 36 months or three years out on yield curve.

Fed Fund futures are traded in IMM index terms, that is, as a price rather than a rate. The price is simply the implied rate subtracted from 100. For example, if the average monthly Fed Funds rate for September is 1.20% the futures price would be 100 – 1.20 = 98.800.

At final settlement, Fed Fund futures are cash-settled, there is no physical delivery involved. The final settlement calculation at expiry is the total of all the daily rates published by the FRBNY divided by the total number of days in that month.

Fed Funds Example

For this example, we will use the September 2017 Fed Funds contract. There are 30 days in the month of September. When we calculate the total of all the reported EFFR rates from FRBNY = 34.600.

You would then divide that by the number of days in the month 34.600 ÷ 30 = 1.153.

Take this number and subtract from 100 you get 100 – 1.153 = 98.847. Therefore, 98.847 was final settlement for the September 2017 Fed Funds futures contract.

Backward Looking Futures Contract

To determine the final value of a Fed Funds futures contract, one must wait until the end of the contract month to determine its price. In other words, this contract is backward looking. Since the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) sets the Fed Fund target rate, the months when there is an FOMC meeting can be very important to contract pricing. But since most FOMC meetings occur mid-month, the first Fed Fund futures contract to be fully affected by a rate change would be the next deferred contract month, rather than the contract in which the meeting takes place.

Summary

Understanding the pricing mechanics of a futures contract is essential to understanding its trading behavior. While the contract construction of Fed Funds futures is simple the market forces that go into its pricing like, FOMC meetings, inflation expectations and employment statistics are sometimes complex and uncertain.

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

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Peter Knight Advisor

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A Look at FX Exchange For Physical (EFP)

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A Look at FX Exchange For Physical (EFP)

An FX Exchange For Physical (EFP), involves simultaneous transactions in the cash and futures markets. EFPs are one type of ex-pit transaction that is allowed to take place outside of the central limit order book under Rule 538.

FX EFP Trade Example

Assume a hedge fund is long a $125 million euro/U.S. dollar (EUR/USD) FX forward in the OTC FX market. He is concerned about counterparty A’s credit risk. One way to mitigate this risk is to utilize futures contracts that are centrally cleared and collateralized.

In this case the OTC FX EUR/USD position can easily be replicated using EUR/USD futures.

To initiate the transaction, the hedge fund contacts his broker to find another counterparty to execute an FX cash versus futures trade (EFP). The hedge fund wants to sell his EUR/USD FX forward position and buy an equivalent position in EUR/USD FX futures using the nearby futures contract. The broker confirms the agreement.

The hedge fund trader writes up his side of the transaction. This consists of two parts, the sell of the cash-side for $125 million EUR/USD FX forwards, and the buy-side of the futures is 1,000 EUR/USD FX contracts.

Why 1 thousand futures contracts? 

One euro/U.S. dollar FX futures contract has an equivalent notional value of 125,000 euros.

By dividing the futures contract’s notional value into the existing risk position of 125 million OTC euro/U.S. dollar forward, the result is 1,000 equivalent futures contracts.

The broker writes up the counterparty side of the transaction which is buying $125 million EUR/USD FX OTC forward and selling 1,000 EUR/USD FX futures.

Both parties report their side of the transaction to their respective clearing firms which in turn submit each trade to the clearinghouse. Once the trades are submitted to the clearinghouse, the long futures positions reside in the books of the hedge fund and the short position on the broker’s customer account. The transaction is complete and these new futures positions are just like any other open futures positions. They are subject to margining and can be offset at any time.

The hedge fund now has the euro/U.S. dollar position exposure it wants, and has also mitigated counterparty credit risk by using centrally cleared EUR/USD FX futures.

Immediately Offsetting FX EFP Example

This time assume there is a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) who manages money for their customers.

The CTA sees depth and liquidity in the FX OTC market and decides to negotiate a $50 million AUS/USD OTC forward on behalf of his accounts under management.

Immediately thereafter the CTA decides to convert the OTC exposure to futures.

The CTA and the counterparty decide to negotiate and execute an EFP, whereby the quantity of the $50 million AUS/USD OTC forward, originally executed, would cancel out with the $50 million AUS/USD OTC forward of the EFP.

The accounts under management would be left with AUS/USD futures.

In this scenario, because it is an immediately offsetting FX EFP executed by a CTA, the initiating and offsetting cash legs are not required to be passed through to the customer who received the exchange contract as part of the EFP. However, in a circumstance where the futures leg of the transaction fails to clear, the underlying accounts under management must receive the profit or loss of the offsetting cash leg.

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

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Peter Knight Advisor

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Hedging FX Risk

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Hedging with FX futures

Given the interconnectedness of today’s global economy, it is hard to imagine a medium-to-large size company that is not exposed to currency risk. Such risk can result from importing parts or components or from exporting finished products to foreign markets.

FX risk is not just for manufacturers, asset managers with large positions in foreign securities not only have exposure to the underlying asset value variability, but also face exposure to the currency in which that asset is priced.

In light of these considerations, risk managers are well aware of currency fluctuation risk to their business. One way to manage currency risk is with a currency overlay program.

The objective of a currency overlay program is to limit losses and maximize gains that arise from currency rate fluctuations. Strategies can be passive, active, or a combination of both.

FX Hedge Example

Consider a Brazilian asset manager who decides to allocate R$40 million into U.S. equities. By investing in U.S. equities, he has two risk exposures:

U.S. equity price risk exposure

U.S. dollar versus Brazilian real currency exposure

Currency Risk Exposure

For this example, we focus exclusively on the currency risk exposure. In order to invest in U.S. equities, the Brazilian asset manager must first convert his cash from Brazilian reais to U.S. dollars.

Starting position R$40,000,000

Brazilian reais to US dollars exchange rate = 4.00

         This is 4 Brazilian real for each U.S. dollar

         R$40,000,000 ÷ 4 = $10,000,00

The asset manager can now invest the $10 million into U.S. equities.

What is his currency risk?  

By converting from Brazilian real to a U.S. dollar, he is now exposed to a weaker U.S. dollar. If the dollar goes down in value versus the Brazilian real, when he converts back to his domestic currency, he will receive fewer reais, reducing the return on his investment.

 Creating the Currency Hedge 

Brazilian real futures are quoted and traded in American terms. When the terms currency weakens, in this case the U.S. dollar, then the futures price increases. Therefore, to hedge a weaker dollar exposure our manager would be a buyer of the BRL/USD futures (contract symbol 6L).

How many contracts would he buy?  

Hedge ratio = “value at risk” ÷ “notional contract value”

Hedge ratio = R$40,000,000 ÷ (BRL/USD contract notional = R$100,000)

Hedge ratio = 40,000,000 ÷ 100,000

Hedge ratio = 400 (6L) contracts

BRL/USD futures contract trade at the inverse price to the spot convention. The spot exchange rate was 4.0000, therefore the futures contract price would be 0.25000.

Spot USD BRL exchange rate = 4.0000

BRL/USD futures contract = 1 ÷ 4.0000 (or 0.25000)

This means our asset manager would buy 400 BRL/USD futures at a price of 0.25000.

Scenario: U.S. Dollar Weakens

New spot exchange rate = 3.5000

BRL/USD Futures price = 1 ÷ 3.5000 (0.28570)

Purchase price for BRL/USD contract = 0.25000

Price movement = 0.28570 – 0.25000 (3570 points)

If we multiply this increase by the 400 contracts we get a profit of $1,428,000.

Converting $1,428,000 amount back into Brazilian reais at the 3.5 exchange rate results in a gain of R$4,998,000 from the hedge.

If you subtract the gains from the hedge position from the loss resulting from the currency rate change results, we end up with a 2,000 reais loss for the asset manager.

Loss from exchange rate change = (R$5,000,000)

Gains from futures contract = R$4,988,000

Total hedge result = (R$2,000)

This small loss is certainly more acceptable than a R$5 million loss if left unhedged.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Understanding the FX Delivery & Settlement Process

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Understanding FX Settlement and Delivery

All futures contracts have a specified date on which they expire. Prior to expiration, traders have a number of options to either close out or extend their open positions without holding the trade to expiration.

For those traders who want to take their contract to expiration, there are two ways an FX contract can be settled: cash settlement or physical delivery of the currency. For many FX futures, the last trading day is generally the second business day prior to the third Wednesday of the contract month.

We will look at a how settlement happens using the March British pound futures, which expire on the third Wednesday of the contract month. This contract is physically-delivered.

Example

Assume on the Monday preceding expiration, the expiring March contract is trading at 1.2405, and the next deferred contract, which is June, is trading at 1.2395.

The price difference between these two contracts is known as a calendar spread.

The calendar spread level is important, because it is a factor in determining the final price of the expiring contract.

In this example the calendar spread would be 10 ticks, a difference of 0.0010. British pound futures stop trading at 9:16 a.m. Central Time (CT) on that Monday.

In the final 30 seconds of trading, between 9:15:30 and 9:16:00 a.m., CME Clearing calculates the volume-weighted average price, for the deferred contract. We will assume the VWAP for the deferred June contract is 1.2390.

The calendar spread is then added to the VWAP to arrive at the final settlement price of the expiring contract of 1.2400.

Now that we have calculated the final settlement price for a physically-delivered contract, we will look at how the actual delivery works.

In our example the short would deposit the notional value of 62,500 pounds per contract with an approved agent bank. The long position would have 1.2400 times 62,500, or $77,500, per contract deposited in an acceptable delivery bank.

The two banks agree to these terms per CME Group arrangement and cash versus currency are exchanged over the bank wire. All of this is completed by 10:00 a.m. CT on the settlement day, which is the third Wednesday of the contract month, two business days after last trading day.

For cash-settled FX futures, the process is much simpler. The final settlement price is determined by the clearinghouse. Any profit or loss is calculated by taking the difference between the final settlement price and the previous day’s mark-to-market

Summary

Like any other futures contract, a trader with an open position they may decide to offset or roll forward their position to avoid expiration and delivery. However, if they decide to go to expiration, they should understand the final settlement procedures for the specific contract they are trading.

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

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Peter Knight Advisor

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The Importance of FX Futures Pricing and Basis

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Understanding FX Basis

The difference between the futures price and spot price of a currency pair is referred to as the basis.

Basis can be either positive or negative. It will depend on the current relationship between the short-term interest rates of the base and terms currencies being considered.

The base currency is the first currency in a currency pair quotation, and the terms currency is the second half of the quotation.

FX Futures Pricing 

The price of an FX futures product is based on the currency pair’s spot rate and a short-term interest differential. The pricing formula is similar to how FX forwards are priced in the OTC market. In the following equation, R is the short-term interest rate of a currency and d is the number of days from trade settlement until expiration.

If the short-term interest rate of the terms currency rate is lower than the short-term interest rate of the base currency, futures should trade at a discount to the spot price of the currency pair. The basis (that is, futures minus spot) would be quoted as a negative number.

This negative number is the result of what is known as positive carry. It is referred to as positive because an investment in the base currency’s short-term interest rate generates more income than the income generated by the terms currency’s short-term interest rate.

Example

Consider Mexican peso/U.S. dollar futures, quoted in American terms as MXN/USD. The Mexican peso resides in the base currency position. Assume it has a short-term interest rate of roughly 4.25% for a term settlement to expiration of 82 days.

The USD resides in the terms position and has an equivalent-dated short-term interest rate of 0.70%.

Notice that the USD rate is lower than the Mexican rate. This implies positive carry, so the futures price should be lower than the spot. Using the inputs provided, along with a spot equivalent rate of 0.05158, results in an implied futures price of 0.05116 versus a quoted mid-market price of 0.05115. Futures are quoted at -43 points under spot due to positive carry.

Shorter time

Going one step further, we will change the time value to expiration from 82 days to 30 days. How does this effect the multiplier?

Using the same calculation, the new multiplier is 0.99705 which is higher than our multiplier at 82 days. This means the futures price, while still lower, will be closer to spot. This is because of the erosion of the time value of money, or time decay.

As a futures contract approaches expiration, the time value of money runs out and futures price converges toward spot.

The 30-day implied futures price comes to 0.05143 versus a spot of 0.05158. When we subtract the futures price from the spot we get a -15 points.

The basis has narrowed from -43 to -15. At expiration, futures and spot will converge to the same level.

Summary

For FX futures, basis is the difference between the futures price and spot price of a currency pairing.

There is a cost of carry consideration for FX futures products. This is a determining factor in whether the futures price trades at a discount or a premium to spot.

If the terms rate is greater than the base rate, futures should trade at a premium to the spot price of the currency. However, when the terms rate is less than the base rate, futures should trade at a discount to spot.

The basis, or difference in futures price versus spot, can be either positive or negative. What is important to remember, is that regardless of whether the basis is positive or negative, the futures price will converge to spot as it approaches expiration. In other words, as time runs out on the futures contract, the interest rate differential has less effect on the futures price and that futures price converges to the spot value.

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 FX Quote Conventions

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Identifying Currencies 

Ever wonder what it means when you see currency quotations like these?

EUR/USD

Currencies are quoted in relation to another currency. For example, when we refer to the exchange rate of the euro (the currency of the European Union) to the U.S. dollar we quote the relationship, or exchange rate, as EUR/USD.

The first currency in the quotation – in this case the euro – is represented by its three-letter symbol, EUR. This is known as the named or base currency.

The second currency – in this case the U.S. dollar, shown by its three-letter symbol, USD – is known as the terms or quote currency.

Currency Pairs

When trading FX, the trading action is applied to the base, or first, currency in the currency pair. So, if you purchase the EUR/USD at 1.1250, you would receive one unit of the euro (EUR) in exchange for a payment of 1.1250 U.S. dollars (USD).

American and European Terms

Currency pairs versus U.S. dollars tend to be quoted in one of two ways; in either American or European terms.

European terms do not limit or refer to just Europe-based currencies, but to any currency other than the USD. European terms mean the U.S. dollar sits in the base currency location and the other currency occupies the terms position.

For example, the Swiss franc trades in the spot market in European terms. It is quoted in USD/CHF convention. CHF is the three-letter symbol for the Swiss franc.

American terms are currency pairs where the quote convention places the USD in the terms location.

For example, the British pound trades in American terms in the futures market and is shown as GBP/USD. GBP is the three-letter symbol for the British pound.

It’s important for traders to understand that the quote convention for futures may be different than the spot for the currency pairs they wish to trade.

Trading Codes

On futures execution platforms, all currency futures will be listed using a trading code that includes the instrument, month and year.

For example, when trading euro FX futures on CME Globex, the contract code for March 2017 would be 6EH7; 6E is the product code, H is the month code and 7 is the year.

Summary

Traders looking to express an opinion in the FX futures market need to be aware of the quoting convention and the trading code symbols for each currency pair offered by the exchange.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Currency Educational Videos & Links

1) General Information on Future Contracts and Futures Options

1.1) Futures  Educational Videos (60)
1.2) Futures Options Educational Videos (34)

2) Forex Educational Videos

2.01) Basics of the Futures Markets
2.02) Basics of Futures Options
2.03) Fundamentals and FX Futures
2.04) Trading the FX Markets
2.05) Australian Dollar Futures
2.06) British Pound Futures
2.07) Canadian Dollar Futures
2.08) Japanese Yen Futures
2.09) Euro FX Futures
2.10) Introduction to Order Types
2.11) Detailed Description of Order Types With Examples
2.12) Understanding Futures Margin Requirements
2.13) Understanding Moving Averages
2.14) About Bollinger Bands & How to Set Them
2.15) Understanding Support and Resistance
2.16) Defining Trend, Trade Duration & Number of Contracts Traded
2.17) Explaining Call Options (Short and Long)
2.18) Explaining Put Options (Short and Long)
2.19) Option Collars
2.20) Working Examples of Collaring Positions
2.21) What is the European Central Bank?
2.22) Understanding FX Quote Conventions
2.23) FX Futures Pricing and Basis
2.24) Understanding the FX Delivery & Settlement Process
2.25) Hedging FX Risk
2.26) A Look at FX Exchange For Physical (EFP)
2.27) Futures versus forwards traded on the OTC
2.27)
FX Spot Markets vs. Currency Futures

If you have any questions, contact me.

Peter Knight
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