Treasury Crash Course

Treasury Crash Course
By Jawwad Ahmed Farid

Contents

What is a Treasury?

Treasury

The Money Market desk

The FX Desk

The Equity Desk

The Specialized Desks

What do treasuries really do?

How is a corporate treasury different from a bank treasury?

The Treasury Function

1. Trade Flows (FX desk)

2. The Treasury Function Operations

i. Introduction

ii. Front Office Function

a. User Roles

b. Money Market Desk Activities

c. Foreign Exchange Desk Activities

d. Capital Market (CM) Desk Activities

iii. Middle Office Function

a. User Roles

b. Activities

iv. Back Office Function

a. User Roles

b. Activities

c. Basic Treasury Back Office Tasks

3. Related Terminologies

i. Four eyes

a. Ticket Approval

b. Ticket Verification

c. Ticket Authorization

ii. Confirmation

a. Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT)

iii. Settlement

a. Delivery versus payment (DVP)

iv. Reconciliation

a. Broker Reconciliation

b. Securities Reconciliation

v. Accounting

vi. Price discovery

vii. Proprietary Trading

viii. Treasury Risks

a. Credit Risk

b. Market Risk

c. Operational Risk

4. Treasury Markets

i. Foreign Exchange Market

a. FX Ready/ Forward/ Split

b. FX Swap

c. FX Placements/ Borrowings

d. FX Miscellaneous

e. FX TMU – Import/ Export/ Remittance/ Encashment

f. FX TMU – Foreign Bill Purchase (Bill Discounting)

g. FX TMU – Close Out/ Take Up

ii. Fixed Income /Money Market

a. Call/ Clean/ Placements

b. Repo/ Reverse Repo

c. Sale against Reverse Repo (SARR)

d. Outright purchase/ sale

e. Inter branch

iii. Capital Market

a. Outright Sale/ Purchase -Ready Equity

Cross Selling Treasury Products

Five core themes for treasury customer discussions

Price

Risk or Volatility

Value

Models

Relative Value

Products

Limits

Wrap- up and overview

Core Treasury products and TMU customer reactions

Core Treasury Products

TMU Customer Reactions

Payoff profile

Answers for customers reactions

Derivatives – Terminology

1. The Terminology Crash Course

i. Forward Contracts

a. The Investment Bank Intern

ii. Futures Contracts

iii. Options

a. Maturities and Exercise date

vi. Payoff Profiles

v. The Payoff profile for a forward contract

vi. Payoff profiles for Calls and Puts

vii. Building Blocks and Synthetic Configurations

a. Comparing a Call with a Forward contract

b. Comparing a Call and a Put with a Forward contract

c. Combining a long call with a short put to create a long forward

Products & Pricing

1. A Second Look at Derivative Contracts

2. Standard Template for Evaluating Derivatives

3. Options

i. Option Price

a. European option price

b. American Option Price

4. Forward Contracts

i. Forward Price

5. Futures Contracts

i. Futures Price

6. Swaps

i. Interest Rate Swap (IRS)

ii. Currency Swap

Product Variations

1. Options

i. Stock Options

ii. Foreign Currency Options

iii. Index Options

iv. Futures Options

v. Warrants

vi. Employee Stock Options

vii. Convertibles

viii. Interest Rate Options

a. Bond Options

b. Interest Rate Caps/ Floors/ Collars

c. European Swap Options

ix. Exotic Options

a. Bermuda Option

b. Quanto Option

c. Composite Option

d. Digital or Binary or “All or nothing” options

e. Barrier Options

f. Asian Options

g. Average Strike Options

h. Look back Options

i. Compound Options

j. Chooser (As you like it) Options

k. Exchange Options

l. Forward Start Options

m. Basket Options

n. Shout Options

2. Forwards

i. Synthetic Forward Contract

ii. Forward Rate Agreement (FRA)

3. Futures

i. Stock Index Futures

ii. Futures Contracts on Currencies

iii. Futures Contracts on Commodities

iv. Interest Rate Futures

a. Treasury Bond Futures

b. Treasury Note Futures

c. 5-year Treasury Note Futures

d. Treasury Bill Futures

e. Eurodollar Futures

4. Swaps

i. Fixed for fixed currency swap

ii. Floating for floating currency swap

iii. Cross-currency interest rate swap

iv. Step-up Swaps

v. Amortizing Swaps

vi. Basis Rate Swap

vii. Forward or Deferred Swaps

viii. Compounding Swaps

ix. LIBOR-in- Arrears Swap

x. Constant Maturity Swap

xi. Constant Maturity Treasury Swap

xii. Differential Swap or Quanto

xiii. Variance or Volatility Swap

xiv. Equity Swap

xv. Commodity Swap

xvi. Asset Swap

xvii. Accrual Swap

xviii. Cancellable Swap

xix. Extendable Swap

Advanced Products

1. Structured Products

i. Cross Currency Swaps

ii. Participating Forwards

iii. Equity Linked Notes

iv. Capital Protected / Capital Guaranteed Notes

v. Commodity Linked Notes

vi. Range Accruals

vii. Switchable

viii. IRD (Interest Rate Differential) Trades

a. Swap basis

b. Note basis

c. Quanto

d. Cumulative Cap

e. Steepener/ Flattener Note

f. Inverted Curve Instrument

g. Ranges

2. Credit products

i. Credit Default Swaps

ii. Total Return Swaps

iii. Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO)

Calculating Forward Prices and Forward Rates in EXCEL

1. Introduction

2. How to calculate the forward price of security

Forward Price of a security with no income

Forward Price of a security with known cash income

Forward Price of a security with known dividend yield

3. How to determine Spot Rates and Forward Rates & Yield to Maturity

How to determine Forward Rates from Spot Rates

How to determine Spot Rates from Forward Rates

How to calculate the Yield to Maturity (YTM) of a bond

Trial and error process

EXCEL’s Goal Seek

4. How to calculate the values of Forward Rate Agreements (FRA)

Value of an FRA (zero coupon rate calculated on a discrete basis)

Value of an FRA (zero coupon rate calculated on a continuously compounded basis)

5. How to calculate Forward Exchange Rates

Interest Rates compounded on a discrete basis

Interest Rates compounded on a continuous basis

6. How to calculate the value of a forward contract

Value of a long forward contract (continuous)

Value of a long forward contract (discrete)

Value of a long forward contract (continuous) which provides a known income

Value of a long forward contract (continuous) which provides a known yield

Value of a forward foreign currency contract

Other Treasury Formulas

Cost of deposit

Asset Liability Management

1. Introduction

i. Interest Rate Risk

ii. Liquidity Risk

2. Duration and Convexity

i. Duration

a. Macaulay Duration

b. Modified Duration

iii. Convexity

a. Impact of convexity

b. Modified, Effective, Positive, Negative

c. Convexity in Asset Liability Management

3. ALM Risk Measurement Tools

i. Fall in Market Value of Equity

ii. Earnings at Risk

iii. Cost to Close

iv. Rate Sensitive Gap

v. Price Sensitive Gap

vi. Liquidity Gap

vii. Net Interest Income (NII) at Risk

viii. Duration Gap Analysis

4. Applications

i. Bank

a. Duration matching/ immunization

ii. Pension Funds and Insurance

a. Portfolio dedication

Liquidity Management

1. Liquidity Ratios and Analysis

a. Current Ratio

b. Quick Ratio

c. Unused lines of credit

d. Borrowing/ Debt-to-Equity Ratio

e. Net Working Capital Ratio

f. Loan-to-Deposit Ratio

g. Loan- to- Asset Ratio

2. Liquidity Management

i. Contingency Funding Plan

a. General requirements for a liquidity contingency plan

b. Specific requirements for a liquidity contingency plan

ii. Liquidity enhancement tactics

a. For Systemic Crisis

b. For company specific crisis

Setting Limits

1. Risk Limits and Control Process

i. Operational (Exception or Management Action) Limits

ii. Capital Loss & Stop Loss Limits

iii. Inventory Age Limits

iv. Concentration Limits

v. Transaction Limits

vi. Exposure and Sensitivity Limits

vii. Pre Settlement Risk (PSR) and Potential Future Exposure (PFE) Limits

viii. Hierarchy of Limits

2. A More Detailed Look at Limits

i. Capital Loss and Stop Loss Limits

ii. Value-at-Risk Limits

iii. Regulatory Approach Limits

iv. Other Limits

a. Duration Limits

b. Convexity Limits

c. PVBP Limits

v. Credit Risk Limits

a. PSR Limits

b. Settlement Risk Limits

c. Financial Institution (FI)/ Counterparty Limits

d. Regulatory Limits

e. Internal / Concentration Limits

vi. Application to Products

vii. Setting Limits for Liquidity Risk

a. Cash flow mismatch or gap limits

b. Maturity Limits

c. Target Liquid Reserves

d. Concentration Limits

e. Contingent liability limit

f. Review

ix. Setting Limits for Interest Rate Risk

Repricing limits

x. Limit Breach, Exception processing, Action Plan for Trigger Zones

a. Exception Handling

b. Example of an Action Plan for Trigger Zones

Treasury Profitability

1. Treasury Profitability - Foreign Exchange Desk

2. Treasury Profitability – Capital Market (Equity (EQ)) Desk

Annexure A- Calculating Value at Risk

1. Introduction

2. VaR Methods

a. Variance Covariance Approach

b. Historical Simulation Method

c. Monte Carlo Simulation

d. Quick Review

e. Implementing VaR

2. Methodology

i. Setting the Scene

Sample Portfolio

ii. Preliminary steps

iii. VaR Approach Specific Steps

a. Variance-Covariance (VCV) VaR

b. Determining Historical Simulation daily VaR

iv. Scaling of the daily VaR

2. Caveats, Qualifications, Limitations and Issues

Annexure B: Building Maturity & Liquidity profiles for Deposits and Advances for ALCO, Liquidity Coverage & ICAAP reporting.

Lesson Zero: Introduction and Course Overview

Bank Deposit & Asset Maturity profiles for ALM - Objectives

Advances and Deposits Maturity & Liquidity Profile - Methodology & Sample output

Step 1: The Core Banking Dump

Step 2: Pre-processing the data and adding intelligence for the purpose of building a pivot table

Step 3: Creating the ivot Table and Generating Presentation Graphs using Pivot Charts

Lesson One: Preparing the Core Banking Dataset

Extracting Relevant Data

The DTM (Days to Maturity) formula

Lesson Two: Adding Intelligence for the Pivot Table

Deposit Size Bracket

Maturity Bucket Bracket

Cost of Deposits Bracket

Lesson Three: Creating the Pivot Table

Lesson Four: Reading the PivotTable and PivotChart

Lesson Five: Quick Review & Extending the framework.

Lesson Six: Pivot Shoot Out- Pivot Tables and Pivot Charts Galore

Lesson Seven: The Pivot Chart Shoot out for Advances

Maturity Profile Bucket

Advances Size Bucket

Pivot Table and Chart Variations

Lesson 8: Wrap up and building the ALM profile for the banking book

Bibliography 9

List of Figures 10

Disclaimer

Bibliography

v  Options, Futuresand Other Derivatives, John C. Hull, 7th Edition, Prentice Hall, 2009

v  The Handbook of Fixed Income Securities, Frank J. Fabozzi, 7th Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2005

v  RiskManagement and Financial Institutions, John C. Hull, Low Price Edition, Pearson Education, Inc., 2007

v  Exotic Equity Derivatives Manual, Salomon Smith Barney, August 1998

v  Understanding Market, Credit and Operational Risk- The Value at RiskApproach, Linda Allen, Jacob Boudoukh and Anthony Saunders,Blackwell Publishing, 2004

v  Beyond Value at Risk, The New Science of Risk Management, Kevin Dowd, John Wiley & Sons, 1998

v  Higher-Order Simulations: Strategic Investment Under Model-Induced Price Patterns, Gilbert Peffer and Bàrbara Llacay, Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation vol. 10, no. 2, 6 <http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/10/2/6.html>, 2007

v  VaRApplications: Setting VaR-based Limits, Carlos Blanco and Sally Blomstrom, Financial Engineering Associates, Inc., May 1999

v  Commonly Used Market RiskLimits, Guidelines on Risk Management of Derivatives and other traded instruments, Annex D

v  Quantitative Finance, Second Edition, Paul Wilmott, John Wiley&Sons, Ltd., 2006

v  Liquidity Risk Management, Leonard M. Martz, 2007

v  Back Office and Beyond- A guide to procedures, settlements and risk in financial markets, Mervin J. King, Harriman House Ltd., 1999

v  Mastering Treasury Office Operations- Denis Nolan & Gordon Amos, FT Prentice Hall, 2001

v  Valuation of interest-sensitive financial instruments, Babbel David F., SOA Monograph M-FI196-1, 1996

List of Figures

Figure 1: Treasury Desks

Figure 2: Money Market Desk

Figure 3: FX Desk

Figure 4: Equity Desk

Figure 5: Specialized Desks

Figure 6: Flow chart for Treasury Function

Figure 7: Foreign Currency Asset and Liability balances import functionality on a Treasury system

Figure 8: Foreign Currency Asset and Liability balances input screen on a Treasury system

Figure 9: Day Start and End functionality on a Treasury system

Figure 10: Five core themes for approaching TMU customers

Figure 11: WTI price graph

Figure 12: Price and trailing volatility for WTI

Figure 13: Gold Price Model – Actual and Simulated Prices

Figure 14: Gold WTI Ratio

Figure 15: Gold-WTI with USD/CHF

Figure 16: Product wise payoffs

Figure 17: Potential Future Exposure over life of contract

Figure 18: Core Treasury Products and Exposure Estimation

Figure 19: Difference between FX Forward Sale and Purchase contract and Bill Discounting

Figure 20: TMU customer reactions

Figure 21: Payoff Profile Tool

Figure 22: Pay off profile for a long forward contract

Figure 23: Payoff profile for a long call option

Figure 24: Treasury strategies and structures

Figure 25: Pay off profile for a short call option

Figure 26: Payoff profile for a combination of a short call and long call

Figure 27: Payoff profiles for forwards & futures contracts

Figure 28: Payoff profiles for option contracts

Figure 29: Quadrant IV - Payoff profiles for a long forward contract

Figure 30: Payoff profile for a long forward contract

Figure 31: Payoff profile for underlying security

Figure 32: Payoff profile for the holder of a call option

Figure 33: Payoff profile for the writer of a call option

Figure 34: Payoff profile for the holder of a put option

Figure 35: Payoff profile for the writer of a put option

Figure 36: Building blocks for synthetic configurations

Figure 37: Synthetic forward contract creations

Figure 38: Comparative payoff profiles for calls & forwards

Figure 39: Comparative payoff profiles for calls, puts & forwards

Figure 40: Payoff profile for a synthetic long forward

Figure 41: Revised payoff profile for a synthetic long forward

Figure 42: Template for evaluating derivatives

Figure 43: Comparative look at derivatives

Figure 44: Payoff to the buyer & seller of a call option

Figure 45: Payoff to the buyer & seller of a put option

Figure 46: Binomial tree - prices of the underlying asset

Figure 47: Using a Binomial tree to calculate the price of an American Call Option

Figure 48: Payoffs for the buyer & seller of a forward contract

Figure 49: Plain Vanilla Interest Rate Swap

Figure 50: Interest Rate Cap

Figure 51: Interest Rate Floor

Figure 52: Sample trade ticket for a Cap/ Floor

Figure 53: Sample term sheet for a double barrier