Explaining Call Options (Short and Long)

Options Education Homepage

What is a Call Option?

A call option is the right to buy the underlying futures contract at a certain price.

Buying Calls

When traders buy a futures contract they profit when the market moves higher. The call option has a similar profit potential to a long futures contract. When prices move upward the call owner can exercise the option to buy the future at the original strike price. This is why the call will have the same profit potential as the underlying futures contract.

However, when prices move down you are not obligated to buy the future at the strike price, which is now higher than the futures price because that would create an immediate loss.

With this downside protection why would any trader buy a futures contract instead of call?

The potential to profit on a call option does not come without a cost. The seller or “writer” of the option will require compensation for the economic benefit given to the option owner. This payment is similar to an insurance policy premium and, is called the option premium. The buyer of a call option pays a premium to the seller of a call option.

As a result of the added cost of the premium, the profit potential for a call is less than the profit potential of a futures contract by the amount of premium paid. The price of the future must rise enough to cover the original premium for the trade to be profitable. Moreover, options premiums are impacted by time decay and  changes in volatility (futures are not).

The breakeven point for a call is the strike price plus the premium paid. So if you paid 4.50 points for a 100 call option, the breakeven is 104.50. The most you could lose is the premium or 4.50 points.

Selling Calls

For every long call option buyer, there is a corresponding call option “writer” or seller. If you sell the call option, then you receive the premium in return for the accepting the risk, that you may need to deliver a futures contract, at a price lower than the current market price for that future.

Option sellers have unlimited risk if the futures price continues to rise.

Call sellers will profit as long as the futures price does not increase beyond the value of the premium received from the buyer.

The breakeven point is exactly the same for the call seller as it is for the call buyer.

Summary

Call Buyers have protection in that their risk is limited to the premium they must pay for the call option.  The maximum risk of a call option is the premium paid. They can lock in the strike price and profit (should the underlying rise far enough) while risking only the upfront premium paid.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

What is Exercise Price (Strike)?

Options Education Homepage

Strike Price 

One key characteristic of an option contract is the agreed upon price, known as the strike price or exercise price.

The strike price is the predetermined price at which you buy (in the case of a call) or you sell (in the case of a put) an underlying futures contract when the option is exercised.

Strike Price Ranges

When trading options you can choose from a range of strike prices that are set at predefined intervals by the exchange. The interval range may vary depending on the underlying futures contract.

While futures can trade at prices in between these intervals, the exchange attempts to set the option strike intervals to meet the market’s need for liquidity and granularity.

Each option product will have a unique price interval rule that is based on the product structure and the needs of the market. Not only will products have varying intervals, but also within certain products, the intervals will change depending on the expiration month.

For example, options on corn futures have an interval of 5 cents for the two front months, of the expiring futures contract and then transition to 10 cent intervals for contracts 3 months and beyond.

The full range of strike prices, for many options products, will be determined by the previous day’s daily settlement price for the futures contract.

Over time the entire range may expand beyond the initial listed boundaries, due to large market movements. In addition, strike intervals can become more granular as options move closer to expiration.

Example Strike Price Range

In our example we are going to look at a fictional contract with a December expiration. At outset of the option contract, the price rule dictates a 10 point interval and a 40 point range. Assume the underlying futures contract is trading around 100 points, the option price range will be set at 80, 90, 100, 110, and 120.

As the price of the underlying futures contract moves, the exchange will monitor and adjust the range of strike prices.

After the first quarter the futures market fell to 83 points, therefore another strike price at 70 was made available.

In the third quarter the futures contract rallied higher. The option contracts are now much closer to expiration and have increasing trading activity. To meet demand, additional strike prices at one point intervals are made available between 80 and 100.

By the last quarter the market continued upward and additional one point intervals were needed between 100 and 110.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

What is Expiration Date (Expiry)?

Options Education Homepage

Option Expiration Dates

Options do not last forever.  They expire or terminate; they all have an ending date.

Options are tied to an underlying futures product and all futures products have a settlement date. If the futures contract no longer exists, then clearly an option on that contract can no longer exist either.

When do options expire?

When it comes to options on futures, there may be a variety of option expiration dates you could trade for the same futures contract.

You may find some option expirations align with the expiration of the underlying futures contract. In other cases a futures product could have a variety of shorter term options listed. These shorter term options offer traders greater precision and flexibility to expand their trading strategies.

Expiration Examples

Assume the E-mini S&P 500® futures contract (ES) has a settlement date in June.

Quarterly Options

Quarterly options contracts are offered on the E-mini S&P 500® futures contract. In this case the June quarterly option contract would expire at the same time as the futures contract.

Monthly Options

Monthly contracts are also offered for the same futures product. With a monthly option contract you can express a short term opinion on this longer dated futures contract.

For each listed month, such as May and April, you can trade an option that will expire within a month and settles into the same June ES futures contract.

Weekly Options

If your time horizon is even shorter, there are weekly options on the E-mini S&P 500 futures contract.

A rolling list of five weekly options that expire each Friday is offered on most products. After each weekly front-end contract expires, another back-end weekly is listed.

Physically Delivered Commodity Options

When it comes to physically-delivered commodities, option expirations will expire prior to the futures settlement. This happens so that traders have an opportunity to mitigate delivery of the physical product.

For example, when WTI Crude Oil futures settle in June, the WTI option will have a May expiration date. If the option is exercised into the active futures contract, the trader has time to adjust their futures position to either offset the position or make plans to take delivery.

Summary

Options can have a variety of option expiration dates, giving you the flexibility to find a product that meets your trading needs.

For more information on specific option expirations, visit the product specification pages on cmegroup.com.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

Get to Know Underlying (Options on Futures)

Options Education Homepage

Option contracts are written on a broad cross section of underlying futures contracts. Since 1982, when option contracts on futures were first introduced, the options market has grown significantly and now most major US futures contracts have companion option contracts. Very few new futures contracts are listed on major exchanges without an associated option contract. Hedgers and speculators alike spend a great deal of time examining price behavior unique to each underlying futures contract. Historic price data along with other statistics, such as open interest, volatility, delta, etc., are useful in choosing the strike price and time frame for an option contract.

CME Group is the world’s largest Derivatives Exchange. In 2016, average daily volume reached a record 15.6 million contracts and open interest exceeded a record 120 million contracts.

Both futures and options on futures are called derivatives because they “derive” their value from something other than themselves. For example, a corn futures contract derives its value from the actual underlying corn that can be delivered into the contract.

An option on a future is no different in this regard, but the underlier is another derivative, namely the corn future, which in turn has actual corn as its underlier.

Option contracts span a variety of asset classes, including Interest Rates, Equity Indexes, Foreign Exchange, and physical commodities.

Each option you hold is either the right to buy (call option) or the right to sell (put option) an underlying futures contract as defined by the name of the underlying commodity, index, or interest rate future on which the option is based.

For example; 

If you are holding a Gold option on a commodity future, you will have the opportunity to either buy, in the case of a call, or sell, in the case of a put, a Gold futures contract at a specific price on or before the expiration of that contract.

If you are holding an S&P 500® Equity Index option, then you have the opportunity to either buy or sell a future, at a specified price, on the S&P 500®-index level for a defined period of time.

When holding a Treasury option, you have the right to buy or sell a $100,000 US Treasury bond futures contract at a specific price during a certain period of time.

In each case, the underlying contract influences the value of the option: the strike range, the premium, and the timing for each option.

Doing your homework on the underlying futures contract, may help you identify opportunities in the associated options contracts.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

Understanding Option Contract Details

Options Education Homepage

Option Contract Details

Contract details refer to the terms of an option contract. How an option contract gains or loses value, and therefore creates a benefit to you as the holder of the option, is dependent on key option contract details. Understanding the key contract details is essential to determining how and when an option will meet your financial objectives. Choosing the right options contract for you is dependent on your objectives. For example, if you want to protect or hedge an asset, you will need to know the contract details to determine the best fit for your portfolio; when speculating, your trading strategy might be influenced by the contract details.

Key Option Elements

Underlying

The deliverable for every CME Group option is a futures contract. This is called the “underlying instrument” or the “underlier”.  Futures contracts also have an underlying product such as an interest rate, equity index, a foreign currency rate, or some other commodity.

Expiration/Maturity Date

Each option also has its own expiration or maturity date. This is the last day on which an option can be exercised into the underlying futures contract. After the expiration or maturity date, the option contract will cease to exist; the buyer cannot exercise and the seller has no obligation.

Strike Price

This is the agreed price at which a transaction will happen, if the option is worth exercising. The strike price for the option contract will determine the value at expiration.

Option Type

Option contracts fall into two categories, call options and put options.

A call option is the right to “buy” the underlying product at a predetermined price.

A put option is the right to “sell” the underlying product at a predetermined price.

Before establishing your option position, you will need to carefully consider your financial strategy and objectives. Whether you are hedging or pursuing a trading strategy, close alignment of the contract details are important to achieving desired results from your option position.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

Options Educational Videos & Links

1) Option Basics

1.01)  Explaining Call Options (Short and Long)
1.02)  Understanding Covered Calls
1.03)  Explaining Put Options (Short and Long)
1.04)  Get to Know Underlying (Options on Futures)

1.05)  Understanding Option Contract Details
1.06)  What is Exercise Price (Strike)?
1.07)  What is Expiration Date (Expiry)?
1.08)  Understanding Options Expiration (Profit and Loss)

1.09)  Understanding AM/PM Expirations
1.10)  Learn About Exercise and Assignment
1.11)  The Difference: European vs. American Style Options
1.12)  Calculating Options Moneyness & Intrinsic Value
1.13) 
Introduction to CVOL Skew

2) Option Strategies

2.01)   Option Collars
2.02)   Working Example of Collaring a Position
2.03)   Option Straddles
2.04)   Option Strangles
2.05)   Option Butterfly
2.06)   Option Ratio Spreads
2.07)   Option Calendar Spreads
2.08)   Option Bull Spread
2.09)   Option Bear Spread
2.10)   Trading PR’s using CVOL and SKEW

3) Pricing

3.1) Discover Options Volatility
3.2) Introduction to Options Theoretical Pricing
3.3) Put-Call Parity
3.4) Options Delta
3.5) Options Gamma
3.6) Options Theta
3.7) Options Vega
3.8) Options Premium and the Greeks

4) Application

4.1)   Options on Futures and Diversifying Risk
4.2)   Trading Options During Economic Events
4.3)   Trading Options on Stock Index Futures

4.4)   Influence of Pricing on the Option for Equity Traders
4.5)   Options on Futures vs ETFs

If you have any questions, contact me.

Peter Knight
Voice & Video Chats.
Message me

 


Disclosure

 

How Can You Measure Risk in Treasuries?

Interest Rate Education Homepage

How to Measure Risk in Treasuries

When it comes to measuring risk for fixed income (rates) traders and portfolio managers, they tend to use one or two yardsticks, value of a basis point and modified duration.

Value of a basis point (VBP), also known as basis point value (BPV), or, for U.S. dollar products, dollar-value of an 01 (DV01),is the financial effect of a 0.01% (one-basis point) change in that instrument’s yield.

For example, if a 10-Year note is current 1.30% yield to maturity with a DV01 of $859 per million par value and the yield goes up by 0.01 to 1.31%, we would expect the financial value of that note to drop by $859 per million par.

DV01

One can identify the DV01 of individual securities or an average DV01 of a whole portfolio. DV01s tend to get larger as you move out the yield curve.

For example, a 2-Year U.S. Treasury note may have a DV01 of $185 per million par while a 30-year Treasury bond may have a DV01 or $2,131 per million par.

Modified Duration

Modified duration represents the financial effect as a percentage gain or loss to a 1.0% (100 basis points) change in underlying yield.

For example, consider our previously mentioned 10-Year note: if its duration was 8.95 years and yields move higher from 1.30% to 2.30%, or by 1.0%, we would expect the value to fall by 8.95% in value.

Treasury DV01
Ultra 30-Year $289.34
30-Year $213.14
Ultra 10-Year $115.84
10-Year $76.55
5-Year $47.94
2-Year $36.97

In general, the longer the maturity, the greater the price sensitivity and risk. Duration measures this risk precisely.

Traders and portfolio managers routinely refer to your position or portfolio in basis point value and modified duration terms.

Implied Basis Point Value and Implied Duration

U.S. Treasury futures can also be referred to in implied duration and implied basis point value terms.

To look more closely at the BPV and modified duration of a futures contract, we must first go back to the concept of a U.S. Treasury futures contract’s cheapest-to-deliver (CTD) security. You may recall from previous modules a U.S. Treasury futures contract’s CTD security is the eligible bond or note that is most financially efficient for the short position to deliver to the long position at contract expiration. Very few market participants go all the way to delivery, in fact the number is quite low (usually less than 5% of open interest).

The reasons we want to know about the CTD security is two-fold: contracts trade like their CTD security and  we will use the CTD security and its conversion factor to arrive at that contracts implied BPV.

Once we know a U.S. Treasury’s CTD security we can determine that security’s BPV per $100,000 face value (or $200,000 face value in the case of 2-Year note futures). We use $100,000 because, with the exception of 2-year notes which have an underlying face value of $200,000 per contract, U.S. Treasury contracts have an underlying face value of $100,000 per contract.

Once we know a contract’s CTD we can determine its BPV; and using that security’s conversion factor (CF) and some simple mathematics, arrive at the implied BPV.

Assume we have a 5-Year Note futures contract and its CTD security is the 1.375% of May 31, 2021 with a BPV per $100,000 of $42.45 and a conversion factor of 0.8317.

To arrive at the BPV, we take the BPV of CTD and divide it by its conversion factor:

BPVcontract = BPV ctd ÷ CF

For our example, BPVcontract = 42.45 / 0.8317 = $51.04 per contract.

Once we have the implied BPVs for the U.S. Treasury futures contracts we can use them to calculate appropriate dollar-weighted hedge ratios versus a cash security of portfolio. We could also calculate the spread ratios between futures contracts so we can construct dollar-weighted yield curve trades.

Interest rate traders and managers of risk use basis point value and modified duration to measure their market risk. Futures contracts based on U.S. Treasury securities can also be referred to in implied basis point value and implied modified duration with a little knowledge of how the contracts price and behave and some simple math. Knowing the contract’s CTD is the starting point.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

Get to know Treasuries CTD

Interest Rate Education Homepage

Get to Know Treasuries CTD (Cheapest to Deliver)

Now that you have a deeper understanding of the U.S. Treasury basis, we need to delve a little deeper into what is known as the cheapest-to-deliver (CTD) security. While each U.S. Treasury futures contract has its own basket of eligible securities for delivery generally one, or sometimes two, price out to be most efficient for the short position to deliver to the long position. This security is most efficient because it is considered cheaper or cheapest to deliver versus the other alternative securities.

Knowing which security is the CTD is important because the futures contract tends to trade like the CTD security. It is also important when calculating hedge ratios because the futures contract’s theoretical basis point value is derived from the CTD security.

What Determines the CTD?

Before we dive deeper into how to ascertain which issue is the CTD some additional background on the market forces that go into the calculation might be useful. If we take a snapshot of a typical U.S. Treasury futures contract settlement prices of quarterly contracts currently listed for trading, we will see a discernable pricing pattern.

Example

On February 10, 2017 the following were the settlement prices for the listing quarterly futures for the 10-Year Note (ZN) futures:

March 2017 = 124-250

June 2017 = 124-075

September 2017 = 123-280

Notice that as the futures contract goes out further in time, the price goes lower in value. There is a very good reason for this. Remember that the underlying product of a U.S. Treasury futures contract is a U.S. Government security that pays interest twice per year based on its coupon value established when it was originally auctioned. This means the cash Treasury is an asset. Futures contracts are not assets. They represent a price point for future delivery. Because of this opportunity cost, or time value of money, the futures prices trade at a discount or premium to cash.

The Yield Curve

On February 10 when these prices were posted, the yield curve for U.S. Treasuries was positively sloped, that is, rates at the short end of the yield curve were lower than yields further out. Generally speaking, when the yield curve is positively sloped it results in what we call positive carry. If I borrow overnight funds (short-end) and buy a long dated (long-end) U.S. Treasury security with a higher paying rate I enjoy positive carry. To account for this revenue in the underlying physical note or bond the futures contract must price at a discount and gradually converge to cash by time of delivery.

Carry can be either positive or negative depending on the level of rates and the slope of the yield curve.

Example

It might be useful to walk through the financial calculation for carry to see why this works and why it is important regarding the CTD.

Assume we buy the 1-3/4% of November 30, 2021. This issue is eligible for delivery into the March 2017 5-Year Note (ZFH7) contract. We borrow funds through the repo market to purchase this security and will be charged an interest rate known as the repo rate every day we keep this borrowed position open. Carry is defined as the difference between the coupon income and the financing cost.

Carry = Coupon Income (CI) – Financing Cost (FC)

Assume the CI = $599.45 per million face value from original trade settlement date to futures contract last delivery date. Additionally, assume the FC = $206.54 for the same terms. Therefore, Carry = 599.45 – 206.54 = $392.91. Notice the carry number is positive.

If we were to calculate the carry for all the ZFH7 futures contracts eligible securities, we could then use that number along with each security’s basis to determine each eligible security’s net basis.

Net basis = Basis – Carry

This is important because the issue with the lowest net basis tends to be the CTD issue.

Implied Repo Rate (IRR)

There is another widely accepted method for determining the CTD issue. It is called the implied repo rate (IRR). It is a theoretical yield produced by buying the cash security, selling the futures contract, lending the cash security in the repo market and finally, delivering the security into the futures contract on last delivery day. The issue with the highest IRR is generally considered CTD. What you will find if you follow these methods is they arrive at the same result. Bloomberg, for example, has a function that calculates the CTD for U.S. Treasury futures using both methods.

The point of knowing the CTD is to understand how the futures contract will behave. U.S. Treasury futures contracts trade like their CTD securities. Knowing what goes into determining the CTD issue is useful to understanding U.S. Treasury futures valuation. It can also help understand how the CTD can shift or change.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

Understand Treasuries Contract Specifications

Interest Rate Education Homepage

Understand Treasury Contract Specifications

Futures markets trade standardized futures contracts, which means futures that share an underlying asset are interchangeable. They have certain terms that are clearly defined by the futures contract and are usually summed up the contract specifications.

Contract specifications can be thought of as the agreement between the buyer or seller of the futures contract and the exchange that lists and clears that futures contract. Knowing a futures contract’s specification is important because it outlines the contract’s terms and obligations. Additionally, it may provide insights into how the contract will price and behave versus the underlying physical product or index.

In this module, we will consider the contract specifications for U.S. Treasury futures. CME Group lists active futures on U.S. Treasuries at numerous points along yield curve. Each futures contract has its own contract specifications; some contracts have similar terms while other terms are specific to a unique contract.

Identifying Maturity Points

To begin, we will need to identify the maturity points of the actively traded U.S. Treasury futures curve. Be advised that the futures contract name may not perfectly reflect that contract’s true deliverable U.S. Treasury security maturity. Currently CME Group has  2-Year Note, 5-Year Note, 10-Year Note, Ultra 10-Year Note, U.S. Bond and Ultra Bond futures contracts.

Important Specifications

We will explore the following specifications that are necessary for you to understand the contract structure, pricing and quotation mechanism, and delivery grade securities that provide the underlying product and trading cycle:

Contract size
Contract factor
Delivery grade for final settlement
Price quotation
Minimum price fluctuation (tick size)
Listed contract months
Termination of trading (last trading day)

The 2-Year Note

The 2-Year Note has a contract size of $200,000 face-value per contract. This size is unique to 2-Year Notes as all other active U.S. Treasury futures have a face value of $100,000.

When calculating a 2-Year Note’s invoice amount, CME Group calculations sometimes refer to a contract factor. The contract factor for 2-Year Notes is $2,000 per contract. The delivery grade of a U.S. Treasury futures contract refers to the U.S. Treasury securities eligible to be delivered into the futures contract that will fulfil the terms for final settlement.

All CME Group U.S. Treasury futures contracts settle to a physical delivery of an underlying U.S. Treasury note or bond. But each individual contract has its own list of securities that can be delivered. In other words, the short position, responsible for making delivery, cannot simply pick any government security and deliver it to the long position, responsible for accepting and paying for delivery. The short position must choose from one of several securities eligible according to the contract specifications.

For 2-Year Note futures, the eligible securities are defined as, “U.S. Treasury notes with an original term to maturity of not more than five years and three months and a remaining term to maturity of not less than one year and nine months from the first day of the delivery month and a remaining term to maturity of not more than two years from the last day of the delivery month. The invoice price equals the futures settlement price times a conversion factor, plus accrued interest. The conversion factor is the price of the delivered note ($1 par value) to yield 6 percent.

2-Year Note futures trade in points and fractions of 1/32 of a point. The smallest increment a 2-Year Note futures contract can trade in is a ¼ of a 1/32. Since the 2-Year Note has a face-value of $200,000 per contract 1/32 is equal to $62.50 per contract. Therefore, the minimum tick, or smallest increment of price change, is ¼ of 1/32 a tick is worth 0.25 x $62.50 or $15.625 per contract.

2-Year Note futures list three consecutively quarterly contract months at a time following the March, June, September, and December expiration cycle.

Termination of trading, also known as last trading day (LTD), is the last business day of a quarterly contract month. The last delivery day (LDD) is three business days after the last business day of a quarterly contract month.

The 5-Year Note

5-Year Note futures are similar to 2-Years in their listing cycle; they are listed in three consecutive quarterly expiration months following the March, June, September, December cycle. 5-Year Notes have a face value of $100,000 per contract and a contract factor of $1,000 per contract.

The deliverable grade for 5-Year Notes is, “U.S. Treasury notes with an original term to maturity of not more than five years and three months and a remaining term to maturity of not less than four years and two months as of the first day of the delivery month. The invoice price equals the futures settlement price times a conversion factor, plus accrued interest. The conversion factor is the price of the delivered note ($1 par value) to yield 6 percent.”

Like all U.S. Treasury futures, 5-Year Note futures trade in points and fractions of a 1/32. The minimum price fluctuation, or tick size, is ¼ of a 1/32. Since the face value of the 5-Year Note future is $100,000 a 1/32 is worth $31.25, therefore ¼ of a 1/32 is equal to 0.25 x $31.25 = $7.8125, rounded to the nearest cent per contract.

Last trading day  and last delivery day are the same as 2-Year Notes. LTD for 5-Year notes is the last business day of a quarterly contract month and LDD is three business days following the last business day of the quarterly contract month.

The 10-Year Note

10-Year Notes and all the consecutively longer maturity contracts also have a $100,000 face value and $1,000 contract factor amount. The 10-Year Note’s delivery grade is, “U.S. Treasury notes with a remaining term to maturity of at least six and a half years, but not more than 10 years, from the first day of the delivery month. The invoice price equals the futures settlement price times a conversion factor, plus accrued interest. The conversion factor is the price of the delivered note ($1 par value) to yield 6 percent.”

10-Year Note futures minimum price fluctuation, or tick size, is ½ of 1/32. Therefore, the minimum price change would be 0.50 x $31.25 = $15.625, rounded to the nearest cent per contract. CME Group lists three consecutive quarterly contracts in 10-Year Notes.

LTD and LDD are different than 2- and 5-Year Note futures. The 10-Year Note ceases trading (LTD) seven business days prior to the last business day of the quarterly contract month. The LDD for 10-Year Notes is the last business day of the quarterly contract month.

Ultra 10-Year Note

Ultra 10-Year Notes list, price and trade just like the original 10-Year Notes described above.

The only difference in specifications between the 10-Year Note and Ultra 10-Year note is in the delivery grade. Securities eligible for delivery into the Ultra 10-Year are referenced as, “Original issue 10-Year U.S. Treasury notes with not less than 9 years 5 months and not more than 10 years of remaining term to maturity from first day of futures delivery month. The invoice price equals the futures settlement price times a conversion factor, plus accrued interest. The conversion factor is the price of the delivered note ($1 par value) to yield 6 percent.”

U.S. Treasury Bonds

The original U.S. Treasury Bond contract, sometimes referred to as the Classic Bond, has a face value of $100,000 per contract and a contract factor of $1,000.

Its deliverable grade is defined as, “U.S. Treasury bonds that have remaining term to maturity of at least 15 years and less than 25 years from the first day of the futures delivery month.* The delivery invoice amount equals the futures settlement price times a conversion factor, plus accrued interest. The conversion factor is the price of the delivered bond ($1 par value) to yield 6 percent.”

The minimum price fluctuation is 1/32 of a point or $31.25 per contract. CME Group lists three consecutive quarterly month contracts of this contract. Its LTD is seven business days prior to the last business day of the quarterly contract. LDD is the last business of the quarterly contract month.

The Ultra Bond

The Ultra-Bond contract is just like the Classic Bond except in deliverable grade terms.

The delivery grade terms for the Ultra-Bond are, “U.S. Treasury bonds with remaining term to maturity of not less than 25 years from the first day of the futures contract delivery month. The invoice price equals the futures settlement price times a conversion factor, plus accrued interest. The conversion factor is the price of the delivered bond ($1 par value) to yield 6 percent.

Summary

Understanding how to read contract specifications is important because the specs define the terms and obligations of the buyers and sellers and may provide clues into how a contract prices versus its underlying product.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

 

Treasuries – Delivery Process

Interest Rate Education Homepage

At the expiration of a futures contract, the contract is usually settled one of two ways, through a physical settlement involving a delivery of the underlying product or by means of a financial, or cash, settlement to an index or widely accepted price benchmark.

Knowing the final settlement process of a futures contract is important, even though most open futures positions never go all the way to expiration. Interest rate futures traded at CME Group are settled both financially and through physical delivery.

U.S. Treasury notes and bonds are settled through physical-delivery. It is the prospect of having to make or take delivery of an actual U.S. Treasury security that imposes the pricing integrity to the U.S. Treasury futures market. Therefore, understanding the delivery process is essential to understanding how futures on U.S. Treasuries price and trade.

Delivery Process

The U.S. Treasury futures delivery process takes place over or near the quarterly contract delivery month. Quarterly contract months are defined by CME Group as March, June, September and December.

The short (seller) position has all the optionality regarding delivery. This means the short position choses when to deliver and which eligible security to deliver based on the contract’s specifications and their own financial self-interest.

The long (buyer) position is passive until assigned delivery by the clearing house. The short position may deliver security for contract on any business day of the expiring quarterly contract month. In this case, futures on U.S. Treasuries behave like an American-style option, in that the short can exercise its option before the last trading day of the contract. This is an important and defining feature.

The actual delivery process is a three-day event. It is always three days and cannot be shortened nor extended. The three days are known as intention day, notice day and delivery day.

Large Open Interest Holders

The possibility of an unexpected early delivery effects when the large open interest holders roll forward to the next quarterly contract.

Because many large open interest holders do not want to assume the responsibility of delivery and want to avoid delivery completely, they chose to roll their positions into the next quarterly contract prior to intention day. By rolling forward early they avoid any chance of an unintended delivery.

By rolling forward they also take liquidity in the front quarterly contract and transfer it to the next quarterly contract. Which causes the roll, or calendar spread, between front and next quarterly contract to be most liquid and tight during the last few days of the month preceding the quarterly expiration month. This is unique to physically-settled futures and distinct from cash-settled contracts.

Intention Day

Because the delivery process is a three-day event and because the short can elect to deliver securities the first business day of the quarterly contract expiration month, it is necessary that the first intention day precede the first business by two business days. This date, two business days prior to the first business day of the expiration month, is first intention day, also known as first position day.

Example

For the March 2017 contracts, the first business day of March 2017 is Wednesday, March 1. First position day would therefore be Monday, February 27, 2017. On February 27, an open long position could be subject to being assigned delivery of a U.S. Treasury security for settlement March 1.

When a short futures position decides to make delivery, they must notify CME Clearing by 6 p.m. Central Time of their intention to deliver. This is where the name, intention day comes from.

The short notifies CME Clearing of its intention to deliver, causing the process to begin. The first thing to note is that day’s official CME Group settlement price of the intended contract, which is now used to create the invoice amount for this delivery. Then CME Clearing assigns the delivery to the oldest outstanding long position. The longest, or oldest-dated longs, have the greatest chance of an early delivery.

On intention day, the short position declares they are making delivery, final contract price is determined and the long position is assigned by CME Clearing.

Notice Day

Notice Day is when the short position declares which U.S. Treasury security they will deliver versus cash payment to the long position.

The short must select a government security that fulfills the eligibility requirements determined by the contract specifications of the respective contract being delivered. Each eligible security has its own conversion factor, which is based on the security’s coupon, maturity date and the expiration date of the futures contract. This conversion factor is used along with the final futures price and accrued interest to determine the final invoice amount of the delivery.

At the end of notice day, the second day in the three-day delivery process, the short and the long know the final price, security, conversion factor for the security and accrued interest of that security. They calculate, using those inputs, the invoice amount. CME Clearing confirms these amounts for each matched short versus long for that delivery and assures the respective parties have exchange bank wire instructions.

Delivery Day

Having confirmed all the details and instructions, all security versus cash transactions are completed by 1 p.m. on the third day, delivery day, and the delivery process is over.

Summary

It is important to remember that this process may occur prior to the last trading day  of a contract. 10-year note and bond contracts cease trading seven business days prior to the last business day of a quarterly contract month and 2-year and 5-year notes cease trading the last business day of the month.

If the short elects to deliver after last trading day, the final price on last trading day is used to determine the final invoice amount. Last delivery day  for 10-year notes and bonds is the last business day of the expiring quarterly contract month. Last delivery day for 2-year and 5-year notes is three days after the last business day of the expiring quarterly contract month.

Though most traders and hedgers never go all the way through to delivery, it is important to understand the delivery process because the concepts and formula that define the final invoice amount drive the pricing and trading behavior of the futures contract.

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

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure