Remember from sect.2.2.3 that a swap is a contract derived from a loan, where the payments from a fixed interest rate are exchanged for the payments from a floating interest rate. In a plain vanilla swap, the floating rate is evaluated at the end of every accrual period when a payment is made in compensation for the difference in rates.
To avoid difficulties with a floating rate that is only known at the end of the accrual period, the calculation proceeds backwards in time and evaluates the price (of what is sometimes called FRA) for each period separately using the same procedure as for bonds. The equilibrium swap rate is chosen so as to make the contract worthless at the onset and the mismatch between the spot rate and the swap rate is accumulated over the accrual period to calculate the price of a swap having a finite lifetime . For a unit Notional principal, the incremental change in swap value is the difference of interest rates multiplied by the time interval . As for any asset with an investment value, the accumulated earnings or losses from the swap can themselves be viewed as bonds with a positive or negative value and can therefore be described using the Vasicek model from the previous section. In fact, a swap can be understood as a bond that starts with zero as initial value and pays a continuously compounded annual coupon . Only one parameter is required in addition to those that have been defined in sect.5.1.2:
StrikePrice
) is
expressed as the relative annual return in the fixed leg,
e.g. 0.04 for a predetermined swap rate of 4%.
The VMARKET applet below shows how the value of a swap with a fixed rate of 8% evolves as a function of the spot rate for an increasing time to the maturity.
Think of a swap as a coupon paying bond: the downward curvature of the price ( ) is the results of the exponential growth at the spot rate, which is expected for any risk free investment when the time runs forward. The opposite happens when the time is reversed and the exponential decrease of the swap price with the spot rate results in a downward curvature in the same manner as previously seen for the discount function.
The same models that have been used for bonds forecast the drift in the interest rate, but the volatility should here be modified to reflect the uncertainty of payments in the floating leg (exercise 5.07). The volatility reduces the overall curvature and therefore also reduces the value of the swap: this can be understood financially from the spot rate fluctuations above and below the swap rate, which tend to cancel out in time and reduce the value of the swap.
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