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Financial future

 
Banking Dictionary: Financial Future

Futures Contract on a financial instrument. The value of the contract rises or falls in accordance with the movement of interest rates. Contracts gain in value as rates fall, and lose value when interest rates rise. Traders use financial futures to speculate on the future directions in interest rates, while financial institutions (such as banks, mortgage bankers, and savings institutions) use futures contracts to hedge against falling prices and protect the value of their portfolios' assets. Trading in financial futures is supervised by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, a federal self-regulatory organization. Financial futures traded on commodities exchanges include contracts in Treasury bill and bond futures, certificates of deposit, commercial paper, Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae) pass-through securities, foreign currencies, and stock market indexes. See also Currency Futures; Interest Rate Futures.

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Wikipedia: Financial future
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A financial future is a futures contract on a short term interest rate (STIR). Contracts vary, but are often defined on an interest rate index such as 3-month sterling or US dollar LIBOR.

They are traded across a wide range of currencies, including the G12 country currencies and many others.

Some representative financial futures contracts are:

United States

Europe

Asia

  • 3 mo Euroyen (TIF)
  • 90-day Bank Bill (SFE)

where

As an example, consider the definition of the International Money Market (IMM) eurodollar interest rate future, the most widely and deeply traded financial futures contract.

  • There are four contracts per year: March, June, September, December (plus serial months)
  • They are listed on a 10 year cycle. Other markets only extend about 2–4 years.
  • Last Trading Day is the second London business day preceding the third Wednesday of the contract month
  • Delivery Day is cash settlement on the third Wednesday.
  • The minimum fluctuation (Commodity tick size) is half a basis point or 0.005%.
  • Payment is the difference between the price paid for the contract (in ticks) multiplied by the "tick value" of the contract which is $12.50 per tick.
  • Before the Last Trading Day the contract trades at market prices. The Final Settlement Price is the British Bankers Association (BBA) percentage rate for Three–Month Eurodollar Interbank Time Deposits, rounded to the nearest 1/10000th of a percentage point at 11:00 London time on that day, subtracted from 100. (Expressing financial futures prices as 100 minus the implied interest rate was originally intended to make the contract price behave similarly to a Bond price in that an increase in price corresponds to a decrease in yield).

Financial futures are extensively used in the hedging of interest rate swaps.

See also


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Banking Dictionary. Dictionary of Banking Terms. Copyright © 2006 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Financial future" Read more