Dear David,
I would really appreciate it if you can help me out with the following topic: In your 2009 study notes on financial products, you mentioned that a FRA position can be decomposed into 1) Long 6 month bill 2) Short 12-month bill; I've been thing hard about this but still couldn't understand how the 12-month bill comes into play when the long FRA valuation formula should be L(M-K)(T2 - T1)exp(-rT2) and therefore should depend on M (prevailing market rate in 6 month) as well K(negotiated contract rate), nothing to do with 12-month?
Can I also just double check with you that:
1) to map a derivative position is to essentially valuate the position and find out the correct formula for calculating position value?
For example, long currency forward contract valuation (essentially) = (F-K)exp(-rt), so by replacing F with F=S*exp(r-rf)t, we can derive the forward valuation formula that is S*exp(-rf t) - K * exp(-rt) (where S and F are respectively the spot and forward price at the time of valuation)
2) Why N(d1) equals to delta? does it apply to Black-scholes option pricing as well?
Thank you very much!
Cheers
Liming
30/09/2009
I would really appreciate it if you can help me out with the following topic: In your 2009 study notes on financial products, you mentioned that a FRA position can be decomposed into 1) Long 6 month bill 2) Short 12-month bill; I've been thing hard about this but still couldn't understand how the 12-month bill comes into play when the long FRA valuation formula should be L(M-K)(T2 - T1)exp(-rT2) and therefore should depend on M (prevailing market rate in 6 month) as well K(negotiated contract rate), nothing to do with 12-month?
Can I also just double check with you that:
1) to map a derivative position is to essentially valuate the position and find out the correct formula for calculating position value?
For example, long currency forward contract valuation (essentially) = (F-K)exp(-rt), so by replacing F with F=S*exp(r-rf)t, we can derive the forward valuation formula that is S*exp(-rf t) - K * exp(-rt) (where S and F are respectively the spot and forward price at the time of valuation)
2) Why N(d1) equals to delta? does it apply to Black-scholes option pricing as well?
Thank you very much!
Cheers
Liming
30/09/2009