presented by: alfred mukunya director swaps and derivative valuations november 2012
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presen ted by :
Alfred Mukunya
Director
Swaps and Derivative Valuations
November 2012
2PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Summary of Presentation
• Introduction to Interest Rate Swaps
• Swap Pricing and Valuation
• New Developments in Valuations (OIS curve discounting)
• GASB 53 & 64
• ASC 820 Fair Value
• Appendix A: Case Studies & Suggested Accounting• Appendix B: Barclays OIS Paper
Introduction to Interest Rate Swaps
4PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Interest Rate Swaps in General
• An interest rate swap is a contract between two parties (“counterparties”) to exchange interest rate payments at specified dates in the future.
• The interest rate payments for a given counterparty equal the product of an interest rate (swap rate) and a principal amount.
• Usually, the swap rate for one counterparty is a fixed rate, while the swap rate for the other counterparty is a variable rate.
• The principal amount by which the swap rates are multiplied is “notional”. That is, principal payments are not swapped, paid or exchanged; the notional principal amount is only an arithmetic device to calculate swap payments.
CounterpartyA
CounterpartyA
CounterpartyB
CounterpartyB
Fixed Payments(Fixed interest rate X
notional principal amount)
Floating Payments(Variable interest rate X
notional principal amount)
5PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Floating-To-Fixed Swap (“Synthetic Fixed”)
• A floating-to-fixed interest rate swap allows an issuer to effectively convert all or a portion of its variable (floating) rate debt to a “synthetic” fixed rate
• The issuer becomes a “fixed rate payor”, receiving a floating rate payment from a counterparty and paying a predetermined fixed rate
• To the extent the variable rate received by the issuer offsets the variable rate paid by the issuer to bondholders, the issuer’s debt cost equals the fixed swap rate plus any ancillary fees
Floating Swap RateVariable Bond Rate
Issuer
Bondholders
SwapCounterparty
Ancillary Fees:Remarketing
Liquidity
Fixed Swap Rate
30-Yr Synthetic Fixed Example
Pay Fixed Swap Rate: 2.65%
Rec Floating Swap Rate: (SIFMA)
Pay VRDB Rate: SIFMAPay Liquidity/Remarketing:
0.75%
Net: 3.40%
Swap Pricing and Valuation
7PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Market Rates
• There is an actively traded inter-dealer broker market for interest rate swaps
8PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Swap Pricing - Approach to Market Value
• Fixed swap rate is the breakeven rate that sets the present value of the fixed payments equal to the present value of the expected floating, e.g. LIBOR payments
– Expected floating payments are calculated using implied forward rates which can be derived from exchange traded Eurodollar futures
• Price or value of a swap = present value of fixed leg - present value of floating leg
• Price of an “at the market” swap = 0
• An “off market” swap has value to one party and requires an up-front cash payment to compensate for “off-market” rate
• Additional features, such as embedded caps, floors and swaptions, can be decomposed and independently valued.
9PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Swap Termination Calculation Methodology
• For a plain-vanilla interest rate swap:– The existing swap is compared to a hypothetical at-market “mirror offset” swap with
identical terms • Floating leg re-valued to next reset date (value equals zero if calculated on a rate reset
date)• Fixed leg value equals PV of difference between the fixed payments on the old and mirror
swap
– All discounting normally done at dealer’s (taxable) cost of capital
IssuerIssuer Swap DealerSwap Dealer
Floating Rate
Old Fixed Rate
Floating Rate
New Fixed Rate
Existing Swap
Mirror Offset Swap
IssuerIssuer
10PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
A Sample Swap Valuation
• The issuer would be required to pay $1,903,864 to terminate this swap
Scenario: 8 years ago an issuer entered into a 10-year Pay Fixed swap
Notional Amount: $100,000,000Existing Fixed Rate Paid by Issuer: 5.00%
Current Market Fixed Rate for 2-year swap: 4.00%
Fixed FixedPayments @ Payments @ Present
Period 5.00% 4.00% Difference Value
1 2,500,000 2,000,000 -500,000 -490,1962 2,500,000 2,000,000 -500,000 -480,5843 2,500,000 2,000,000 -500,000 -471,1614 2,500,000 2,000,000 -500,000 -461,923
Swap value =(1,903,864)
11PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Swap Termination Matrix
• A swap termination matrix can be used for sensitivity analysis
Swap Term (Years): 10.0Notional Amount: 100,000,000$
Contract Swap Rate: 5.00%Payment Frequency: 2Issuer Pays: Fixed
Change in Swap RateRemaining Term of Swap (in Years) -1.00% -0.50% 0.00% 0.50% 1.00%
10($8,175,717)($3,990,928) $0 $3,806,813$7,438,7379 ($7,496,016)($3,666,915) $0 $3,512,192$6,876,7578 ($6,788,855)($3,328,158) $0 $3,201,143$6,280,5517 ($6,053,124)($2,973,985) $0 $2,872,752$5,648,0376 ($5,287,671)($2,603,695) $0 $2,526,051$4,977,0025 ($4,491,293)($2,216,554) $0 $2,160,019$4,265,1014 ($3,662,741)($1,811,796) $0 $1,773,579$3,509,8463 ($2,800,715)($1,388,619) $0 $1,365,592$2,708,5962 ($1,903,864)($946,185) $0 $934,857 $1,858,5491 ($970,780) ($483,617) $0 $480,106 $956,735
TERMINATION PAYMENT AMOUNT
12PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Mechanics of Fuel Price Swap
• Hedger is normally a “fixed rate (price) payer” on swap• Floating index typically used in energy hedging is published price from an
industry trade publication, e.g. Platt’s Oilgram• Can specify physical or cash settlement on contract
– Physical settlement exposes hedger to force majeure events
Counterparty
Diesel Fuel Supplier
Varia
ble
Price
$/g
al
Fixed Price $/gal
ULS Diesel Index Price$/gal
Hedger
New Developments in Valuations (OIS curve
discounting)
14PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
New Developments in Valuations/Modeling
[Counterparty] will value OTC derivative transactions using rates to discount expected cash flows under the transactions reflecting the terms of any CSA (considering factors such as the yield of the eligible assets which may be posted as collateral, rather than a standard discount curve based upon LIBOR, and ‘projection’ curves derived from market standard instruments).
From a major bank:
15PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Swap Discount Curves — New and Old
as of May 15, 2012
1 M 3 M 6 M 9 M 12 M 2 Yr 3 Yr 4 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 12 Yr 15 Yr 20 Yr 25 Yr 30 Yr 40 Yr 50 Yr0.00
0.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
Overnight Index Swap
USD LIBOR Swap
16PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
New Developments in Valuations/Modeling
• USD LIBOR Curve vs. Overnight Index Swap (OIS) Curves — $100MM 20 year swap
LIBOR Discounting OIS Discounting
Impact: ($24.60MM) vs. ($25.17MM) = ($0.57MM)Rate Equivalent: 3.5 basis points (0.035%)
GASB 53 & 64
18PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Market Environment During GASB 53 Implementation
• 20 Year USD-LIBOR from 2000 to Present
19PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Low Rates Persist — Compared to Initial Transactions
• 20 Year Tax-Exempt Rate 2001 to Present
– Level of interest rates are key drivers of Fair Value
– Most borrowers hedge against rising interest rates
– Results in relatively large liabilities
20PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
GASB 53 Summary Review
The following are the three core concepts of GASB 53:
1. Report the fair value of a derivative on the statement of net assets (balance sheet).
2. All hedges must be evaluated for effectiveness (methods outlined in the Statement, applied in stepladder fashion).
3. Recognize changes in the fair value - of the derivative either:
a) on the balance sheet or statement of net assets,
as deferred inflows or deferred outflows
if the derivative passes its effectiveness test; OR
b) as investment revenue/loss (i.e., gain or loss through statement of revenues, expenses, changes in fund net assets, as appropriate) if the derivative fails, or is not a hedge.
The government must also provide a summary of activity through the reporting period
21PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Primary Issuer Concerns of GASB 53
(in order of importance)
New asset/liability effect on bond covenant ratios
Potential investment revenue/loss effect on bond covenant ratios
Potential Board, Investor, Press impact of recording
new liabilities/losses
Potential of recording large loss upon losing effectiveness (Headline risk)
Additional training and compliance cost
22PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
What are the Pros and Cons?
Pros Cons
Consistent Critical Terms
Easy to implementNo flexibility for other types of swaps
Quantitative Methods
Synthetic InstrumentsRelatively easy to implement;Uses observed bond and swap data
Could fall out of range in differing rate environments
Dollar Offset Conceptually easy to implement –just another hypothetical “perfect” trade
Unpredictable and subjective if hedging and hedged rates do not move significantly, and in tandem.
Regression AnalysisFavorite among ASC 815;Has worked well historically
Relatively harder to implement;Needs statistical knowledge
Other Quantitative Methods
Flexible, as long as one can justify
Too much subjectivity, and need to document procedure
23PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
How to Account for an Effective Hedge (Journal Entries)?
• When a derivative is an effective hedge and its value goes up by $1,000,000
• When a derivative is an effective hedge and its value goes down by $1,000,000
Date Account Titles Debit Credit
June 30, 20XX
Swap 1,000,000
Deferred Inflow 1,000,000
Date Account Titles Debit Credit
June 30, 20XX
Deferred Outflow 1,000,000
Swap 1,000,000
24PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
What Happens to an Ineffective Hedge (Journal Entries)?
• When a derivative is an ineffective hedge and its value goes up by $1,000,000
• When a derivative is an ineffective hedge and its value goes down by $1,000,000
Date Account Titles Debit Credit
June 30, 20XX
Swap 1,000,000
Investment Revenue
1,000,000
Date Account Titles Debit Credit
June 30, 20XX
Investment Loss 1,000,000
Swap 1,000,000
25PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
2. Refundings and Restructurings 2008 through 2011– Timeline Linking Market and Accounting Events
GASB 53 Effective, periods after
6/15/2009
Lehman Bankruptcy
9/15/08
Bear Stearns Collapse
3/08
GASB 53 Release
6/08
GASB 53 In effect:
7/1/2010
20 Year LIBOR Swap Rate: 2.80%
12/31/2008
20 Year LIBOR Swap Rate: 5.81%
6/30/07
GASB 53 Implementation for most Issuers:
20 Year LIBOR Swap Rate: 3.59%
Fiscal Year Ending 6/30/08 6/30/09 6/30/10 6/30/11
A. Fixed Payer Swaps B. Forward SwapsC. SwaptionsD. Basis Swaps
Defaults result in swap assignments from one
counterparty to another.
Swaption exercises; Swap Modifications from SIFMA to 67% of LIBOR;
Swaps paired to other bonds;Terminations.
A. Auction Rate Security (ARS)
B. Anticipated IssuanceC. Advance RefundingD. Fixed Rate Bond
Conversion/Reissuance from ARS to Variable Rate
Demand Bond (VRDB) , or bank notes.
Refunding Bonds issued;Refunding Bonds not issued;
Fixed Rate Bonds issued;Anticipated Bonds not issued.
Market Events
Hedges
Hedged Items
Hedge &
Hedged Item
Events
GASB 64 Release
6/11
GASB 64 Effective, periods after
6/15/2011
26PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
GASB 64 in Effect, Fair Value Measurements Coming Up
20 Year LIBOR Swap Rate: 3.94%
6/30/11
9/30/11 12/31/11 3/31/12 Fiscal Year Ending 6/30/12
GASB 64 In effect:
7/1/2011
Fair Value Measurement Task Force Formed
2/12
Fair Value Measurement
Exposure Draft Expected 11/12
Today
20 Year LIBOR Swap Rate: 2.60%
9/30/11
20 Year LIBOR Swap Rate: 2.50%
12/31/11
20 Year LIBOR Swap Rate: 2.91%
3/31/12
20 Year LIBOR Swap Rate: 2.3655%
6/30/12
27PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Credit Support
Credit Support
pulldown for access
to more detail.
Credit Support Function
ASC 820 Fair Value
29PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
The New Accounting Standards Codification (ASC)
• The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) has changed the structure and hierarchy of accounting standards. FASB ASC disassembled and reassembled thousands of accounting pronouncements (Statements, Issues, etc.) to organize them under approximately 90 topics, and Accounting Standards Updates (ASU).
• FASB issued the last Statement No. 168 in June 2009 establishing FASB ASC as the source of authoritative US accounting and reporting standards for nongovernmental entities. This is effective for periods ending after September 15, 2009.
• FAS 157 is now known as FASB ASC 820 or ASC 820.
30PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
ASC 820 Reporting Requirements
30
Example level disclosure:Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
Common stocks - Consumer durable goods 1,086,000$ -$ -$ 1,086,000$ Common stocks - Consumer nondurable goods 155,000 - 3,280,000 3,435,000$
Common stocks - Other industries 921,000 - - 921,000$
Convertible bonds - 5,400,000 - 5,400,000$
Swaps - 2,710,000 - 2,710,000$
U.S. government obligations - 3,475,000 - 3,475,000$
Repurchase agreements - 500,000 - 500,000$
TOTAL 2,162,000$ 12,085,000$ 3,280,000$ 17,527,000$
31PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
ASC 820 and ASU No. 2010-06 Summary:
Fair Value Definition• Fair value shall reflect the nonperformance risk of the client
counterparty relating to that liability • Fair value shall reflect the nonperformance risk of the bank counterparty
relating to that asset
Fair Value Hierarchy based on Valuation Technique/Input• Inputs to generate the valuation are classified into three different Levels
– Level 1 – Quoted prices– Level 2 – Observable inputs– Level 3 – Unobservable inputs
• Disclosure is made of the Level within which the Fair Value falls
• PFM will help compute Fair Value Measurements for any Asset/Liability requiring compliance with ASC 820 .
32PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
ASC 820 Outline of Methodology
• Determine nonperformance risk free valuation – Old definition of fair value, e.g. using a mid LIBOR curve
• Absent nonperformance risk, determine whether asset or liability
• Absent nonperformance risk, determine which counterparty is at risk of nonperformance
• Create a counterparty specific discounting curve based on:– A: Relevant, Observable (Level 2) industry, sector, geographic curves, e.g. Fair
Market Curves on Bloomberg, or Thomson Financial.– B: Unobservable (Level 3) client specific curve adjustments – if necessary
• Compute a risk adjusted valuation using the counterparty specific discounting curve
• The difference between the nonperformance risk free valuation and risk adjusted valuation is the transaction’s risk adjusted amount
• In the simplest case, this is the Credit Value Adjustment (CVA) to apply to the nonperformance risk free valuation to get the Fair Value under ASC 820
Appendix A:Case Studies &
Suggested Accounting
34PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Case Studies - Outline
1. Refunding and Restructuring• Changes in Hedging Item• Changes in Hedged Item• Imputed Borrowings
2. GASB 64 Update
3. Swaption Bifurcation -Trifurcation (contains all aspects of GASB 53)• Investment • Borrowing• Hedge
35PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Refundings (Hedged Item Events) and Restructurings (Hedging Item Events)
Situation:
FY ending June 2010 - Off-market SIFMA swap with up front amount received at inception.
- booked as a hybrid instrument consisting of a borrowing and an at-the-market SIFMA swap as of June 30, 2010.
During FY ending June 2011 floating leg of the swap is amended from SIFMA to 67% of USD LIBOR resulting in a lower fixed rate for the rest of the life of the swap. No cash changes hands.
Suggested treatment: new hybrid instrument accounted for as:
a) Termination of at-the-market SIFMA swap• Clear out associated deferral account
b) New imputed borrowing of fair value of terminated at-the-market SIFMA swap• To be amortized over the life of the new at-the-market 67% of LIBOR swap
c) New at-the-market 67% of LIBOR swap• Amended swap terminates the old
d) Old borrowing of upfront amount received at inception of original transaction• Continues to be amortized over remaining life
36PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Refundings (Hedged Item Events) and Restructurings (Hedging Item Events)
Situation:
During FY ending June 2012, Bank Counterparty seeking to exit municipal derivatives business agrees with issuer to novate a swap transaction to another Bank Counterparty.
Suggested treatment:
a) Viewed by the Board as a termination that changes a government’s financial position, therefore• Clear out associated deferral account• Gain/Loss is recognized in Statement of Activities
b) New off-market swap, with Imputed At-the-Market Swap, and Fixed Rate Imputed Debt.• The above market portion of the swap is an imputed borrowing• Government could have paid off the fair value of swap by a borrowing
37PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Swaptions
Background - The Bite at the Apple:– Municipal bond issuers often have the right to call and refund fixed-rate bonds
at par (face), typically 10 years after issuance of the debt.– The right to call tax-exempt debt is restricted by the call date and the Treasury
rules for tax-exempt debt. • Advance refundings are possible but restricted by tax law to one per bond issue. • Funds must be escrowed to the call date and costs may impact efficiency.
– Ability to refund bonds has been described as a “bite at the apple” to signify the one-time only decision.
– Traditionally, an issuer would wait until the call date, call the bonds and issue new refunding bonds at lower interest rates.
– Benefit of a traditional refunding is recognized through lower interest cost over time.
38PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Swaptions
Synthetic (as opposed to Traditional) Refunding:– Issuer possesses the right (option) to call their outstanding fixed-rate bonds.– The option increases in value as rates fall.– Swaption sale allows the Issuer to synthetically forward refund the Bonds to lock
in savings based on prevailing market conditions. – Aggregate premium received by the Issuer composed of two elements
• Intrinsic value – the amount by which the fixed rate commitment (strike) of the option exceeds the prevailing interest rate (at-the-money) and
• Time value of the option – the amount above the intrinsic value which a banker will pay the issuer based on the probability the option will increase more in value between the premium payment date and maturity of the option.
– Swaption sale monetizes the option embedded in the callable bonds.• Prior to a current refunding• Swaption is structured to mirror the optional redemption features of the Bonds.
39PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Swaption Accounting
Illustration 11 – Hybrid Instrument Bifurcation– Embedded Derivative Instrument
• Time Value• Goes to zero at maturity of the swaption• Will change depending on prevailing rates
– Borrowing• Instrinsic Value, carried at Historical Cost
– Rates fell significantly since inception of most swaptions– Differences interpreting definitions in the Standard, and how to compute the
components based on the definitions resulted in material differences of opinion in what to book.
– For example:• Does the Embedded Derivative Instrument value result from subtracting the prevailing
intrinsic value? • Or the historical borrowing? • Is it only the time value? • What about the large increases/decreases in the fair value of the entire swaption?
40PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
Swaption Accounting
Swaption Trifurcation– Embedded Derivative Instrument
• Time Value.• Goes to zero at maturity of the swaption.• Will change depending on prevailing rates.
– Borrowing• Instrinsic Value, carried at Historical Cost.
– At-the-Money Swap• Originally at zero cost.• Reflects the original intent of the Issuer to refund in the future.• The prevailing at-the-money swap rate at inception is the beneficial fixed rate the
issuer has locked in upon selling the swaption.
Appendix B:Barclays OIS Paper
42PFM Asset Management LLC: May, 2012
This material is based on information obtained from sources generally believed to be reliable and available to the public, however PFM Asset Management LLC cannot guarantee its accuracy, completeness or suitability. This material is for general information purposes only and is not intended to provide specific advice or a specific recommendation. All statements as to what will or may happen under certain circumstances are based on assumptions, some but not all of which are noted in the presentation. Assumptions may or may not be proven correct as actual events occur, and results may depend on events outside of your or our control. Changes in assumptions may have a material effect on results. Past performance does not necessarily reflect and is not a guaranty of future results. The information contained in this presentation is not an offer to purchase or sell any securities.
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