Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

1 Introduction Chapter 1. Prelude Some theories that arise in a special field, because of their deep insight and analytical power, become the foundation.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "1 Introduction Chapter 1. Prelude Some theories that arise in a special field, because of their deep insight and analytical power, become the foundation."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Introduction Chapter 1

2 Prelude Some theories that arise in a special field, because of their deep insight and analytical power, become the foundation of much broader fields. Since the seminal work of Black and Scholes, the option theory, starting as a “derivative” theory on shares and other securities, has been applied to many different areas. Financial engineering will become the foundation of finance, economics, and biology. The Black-Scholes based theory will fundamentally change the way we understand the world, which has been dominated by the Newtonian theory for several hundred years.

3 History in parallel Newtonian mechanics, initially developed to understand the movements of several planets, eventually exert dominant influence over physics, biology, economics and finance.

4 General background Financial engineering is often regarded as a technical and narrow field The following quote from Fischer black, the main founder of financial engineering, may give us a different impression

5 Quote from Fischer Black I like the beauty and symmetry in Mr. Treynor’s equilibrium models so much that I started designing them myself. I worked on models in several areas: Monetary theory Business cycles Options and warrants For 20 years, I have been struggling to show people the beauty in these models to pass on knowledge I received from Mr. Treynor. In monetary theory --- the theory of how money is related to economic activity --- I am still struggling. In business cycle theory --- the theory of fluctuation in the economy - -- I am still struggling. In options and warrants, though, people see the beauty. (p. 93)

6 In this course, we will show that the option theory that Black and others pioneered has much broader impacts. Develop a general theory of economics inspired by the option theory Present a new monetary theory and business cycle theory by extending the ideas of Fischer Black.

7 The Nature of Derivatives A derivative is an instrument whose value depends on the values of other more basic underlying variables. Or A derivative is an instrument whose value is a function the values of other more basic underlying variables

8 Examples of Derivatives Forward Contracts Futures Contracts Swaps Options

9 Derivative use and financial crisis Mortgage backed securities: Complex derivatives difficult to value –Prepayment risk –Default risk MBS: enabling the dramatic increase of mortgage businesses for financial institutions, which increases the building of houses.

10 Derivative use and financial crisis CDS (Credit Default Swap) –Measured by the spread from risk free bonds –Provide a natural tool to bet on bond yields –AIG CDS bailout and payments Goldman Sachs: 12.9 billion Society General; 11.9 billion Deutsche Bank: 11.8 billion http://www.reuters.com/article/2009/03/18/us-aig- goldmansachs-sb-idUSTRE52H0B520090318 –The large positions show that these banks were confident about the impending collapse of the mortgage market and take advantages of it.

11 The advantages of derivative trading Derivative securities are very flexible. They can be designed to take advantages of any scenarios.

12 What can we get out of this Historically, destructive forces precede constructive forces Guns precede internal combustion engines Nuclear bombs precede nuclear reactors Floods precede hydra dams Oxygen as a poison precedes oxygen as an energy source How about derivative securities? One purpose of this course is to develop theories that can be used constructively.

13 Derivatives in a broader sense Insurance policy function of age, job, health condition, amount to insure Share price function of assets, revenue, profit, interest rate, competitors Bank loans –Uncertainty of repayment Bonus: An option on performance

14 Derivatives in a broader sense (Continued Project finance –Whether to proceed depends on the price movement of the products and company’s own structure Cost of production –Influenced by raw material prices, labor cost, borrowing rate and uncertainty in demand Bank bailout –Depends on the performance of banks

15 History of Derivative markets Metal coins –Content of precious metal –Value of metal coins Paper currency: Song dynasty –In Sichuan Province of China lacking bronze, iron was used to make coins, which was very heavy –Paper money start to circulate Rice futures in Japan Chicago –Farmers and merchants OTC markets

16 Derivatives Markets Exchange traded –Traditionally exchanges have used the open-outcry system, but increasingly they are switching to electronic trading –Contracts are standard there is virtually no credit risk –Example of default: HKFE in October, 1987 Over-the-counter (OTC) –A computer- and telephone-linked network of dealers at financial institutions, corporations, and fund managers –Contracts can be non-standard –credit risk, especially during crises –Much bigger than exchanged based

17 Ways Derivatives are Used To hedge risks –Commodity producers and large commodity consumers, such as airliners –Pro and con of hedging –Some of the largest losses are due to hedging. How? Mismatach of maturity and other properties

18 Some examples An oil supply company signed fixed price contracts with many clients. To hedge risk, it long futures contracts. Later oil prices dropped, which generates massive margin call. But oil supply contracts are long term, which do not provide immediate large cash inflows. What happened next? In 2008, at the peak of oil price, many Chinese airlines bought massive oil futures. At that time, it was widely circulated that Chinese bought over 90% of the oil futures world wide. Goldcorp http://www.goldcorp.com/http://www.goldcorp.com/ –In its company slide show: 100% unhedged gold production New consensus: more harm than benefit in hedging

19 Ways Derivatives are Used (Continued) To speculate (take a view on the future direction of the market) –To gain leverage or utilize information more precisely. For example, how one can make money in a stable market? –Futures trading and the scarcity of commodities To lock in an arbitrage profit –E.g. Arbitrage between index components and index futures

20 Ways Derivatives are Used (Continued) To change the nature of a liability –Interest rate swap to reduce mortgage risk in banks To change the nature of an investment without incurring the costs of selling one portfolio and buying another To bypass regulations and laws –Forward contract: disguise identities of traders –CDS: Insurance contract without regulatory constraints


Download ppt "1 Introduction Chapter 1. Prelude Some theories that arise in a special field, because of their deep insight and analytical power, become the foundation."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google