330 likes | 837 Views
. . Repo. What's Repo?. A repurchase agreement, or repo, is a single transaction consisting of A spot portion in which a security is sold for cash andA forward portion in which the security is repurchased for later settlementDealers often use repo to finance inventories of securitiesRepo can be for overnight, term or open.
E N D
3. What’s Repo? A repurchase agreement, or repo, is a single transaction consisting of
A spot portion in which a security is sold for cash and
A forward portion in which the security is repurchased for later settlement
Dealers often use repo to finance inventories of securities
Repo can be for overnight, term or open
4. Repo: Spot Portion Investor
5. Repo: Forward Portion Investor
6. Repo Investor
7. Example
8. Terminology The party who sells collateral in the first leg and repurchases collateral in the second leg is called the repo seller.
Dealers who finance securities with repo are repo sellers.
The other party is the repo buyer.
Investors who invest in repo are repo buyers.
9. Repo Mechanics Margin
Margin is collateral in excess of the principal amount of the transaction
Demanded to limit credit exposure
Typically 1% to 3% (5% to 10% for riskier collateral)
Example: If margin is 2%, a dealer would deliver $10.2 million (market value) of collateral against a principal amount of $10 million.
10. Example: T-bill Margin
11. Repo Mechanics Marking to Market
Collateral may be marked to market and the trade adjusted
Margin call: If collateral value declines, additional collateral may be required to restore the original margin. (Dealer delivers more collateral to investor.)
Repricing: If collateral value declines, the principal amount of the transaction can be reduced to restore the original margin. (Dealer wires cash back to investor.)
12. Repo Mechanics Collateral
Substitution
Dealer may request the investor to return the original collateral in exchange for different collateral having the same market value
If collateral cannot be substituted, it is special
Cash flows
The repo seller is entitled to receive any interest or principal payments off the collateral
13. Repo Mechanics Collateral
Delivery
Outright: Seller delivers the collateral to the buyer. Buyer returns the collateral at maturity.
Safekeeping: Seller holds the collateral for the buyer. Also known as “letter” repo or “held in custody” repo.
Third party: Seller delivers collateral to purchaser’s custodial account at seller’s clearing bank.
14. Reverse Repo A reverse is a repo viewed from the perspective of the counterparty lending cash
There are two reasons for doing reverses:
Investors seeking short-term relatively safe investments may invest in repo.
Traders seeking to cover a short position in a security may borrow the needed securities by doing a reverse for specific collateral
15. Repo Rates General collateral rates
Relation to the Fed funds rate
Specials
Rates can go special when there is strong demand for specific collateral
Example: Traders as a group build up a sizeable short position in a particular issue.
16. Repo Books Dealers often work both sides of the market, doing repo with one group of investors and reverses with another.
In a matched book, a dealer reverses in securities from one party, repos them out to another party, and profits from the spread.
17. For Example A Brazilian bank finances some of its Brazilian Brady holdings by doing a repo with a dealer in New York for LIBOR + 1%
The repo dealer in New York uses the collateral to do a repo with an American investor for LIBOR
The dealer pockets the spread (1%)
18. Application: Tailing If you buy a 90-day T-bill and hold it for 30 days, it becomes a 60-day bill.
19. Application: Tailing To create a T-bill “tail”
Buy a T-bill with t1 days to maturity
Finance it for t2 days with term repo
Inherit a T-bill with t1 - t2 days to maturity when the financing comes off.
Dealers use this strategy to buy T-bills forward
Why buy bills forward?
20. For Example
21. Quick Check Explain the mechanics of a repo transaction.
What is margin in the repo market? Why is it needed? How does it vary by collateral?
How do repo rates go special?
What’s a bill tail? How do dealers create them? Why?
22. Review Scope of the money market
Three bases for measuring yield
Effective yield and Bond Equivalent Yield
Details of the T-bill market
Mechanics of the RP market
25. What is a Bond? A bond is a debt contract between
The issuer (borrower), and
The purchaser (lender).
Bond indentures
Detailed description
Cash flows
Security interests
Covenants
Default provisions
Role of trustee
26. Sellers and Buyers Bonds are issued by
Sovereigns and other government agencies
Corporations
Bonds are purchased by
Institutions
Financial corporations
Individual investors
27. Bond Characteristics Principal and coupon
Corpus
Coupons (frequency)
Zeros
Maturity
Prepayment option
Hybrids
Convertibles
28. Bond Markets Primary
Auction mechanisms
Placed issues
Private placements
Public offerings
Secondary
Exchange traded
OTC markets
29. Example The US government 8 3/4 of 5/15/20
Originally issued 5/15/90 as a 30-year bond
Not callable
Par bond (issued at par; redeemed at par)
Pays 4.375% semi annually
Traded OTC
Recently quoted at 131:21 ask (5.98% ytm)
30. Example Kyushu Electric Power
$40 billion yen issue of 10-yr bonds
In Japan
Denominations 1MM yen thru 100 MM yen
Issue date 11/10/00; Maturity date 11/25/10
2.00% coupon payable semi annually
Priced at 99.99 (2.001% ytm)
Lead manager was Mizuho Securities
31. Example Mexican (Brady) Series A Par Bond
Issued March 1990
Original issue maturity of 29 3/4 yrs
6 1/4% fixed coupon
Principal (face amount) backed by US Government zeros
Designed to replace defaulted loans
Sold at well below face value initially
Risky coupon
32. Bond Pricing The bond equation
Equates a bond’s price to the discounted present value of the future cash flows associated with the bond