Correlation swap

A correlation swap is an over-the-counter financial derivative that allows one to speculate on or hedge risks associated with the observed average correlation, of a collection of underlying products, where each product has periodically observable prices, as with a commodity, exchange rate, interest rate, or stock index.

Payoff Definition

The fixed leg of a correlation swap pays the notional times the agreed strike , while the floating leg pays the realized correlation . The contract value at expiration from the pay-fixed perspective is therefore

Given a set of nonnegative weights on securities, the realized correlation is defined as the weighted average of all pairwise correlation coefficients :

Typically would be calculated as the Pearson correlation coefficient between the daily log-returns of assets i and j, possibly under zero-mean assumption.

Most correlation swaps trade using equal weights, in which case the realized correlation formula simplifies to:

The specificity of correlation swaps is somewhat counterintuitive, as the protection buyer pays the fixed, unlike in usual swaps.

Pricing and valuation

No industry-standard models yet exist that have stochastic correlation and are arbitrage-free.

gollark: ```pythonPython 3.8.5 (default, Jul 27 2020, 08:42:51) [GCC 10.1.0] on linuxType "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.>>> import sys>>> import ctypes>>> ctypes.memmove(id(7), id(8), sys.getsizeof(7))139972903897408>>> 78```
gollark: Okay, so actually it crashes, but if you do this with 7 and 8 instead it won't.
gollark: No, it would make 1 be 3.
gollark: Can't do that.
gollark: Same as usual.

See also

Sources

  • Meissner, Gunter (2014). Correlation risk modeling and management : an applied guide including the Basel III correlation framework-- with interactive models in Excel/VBA. Wiley. p. 11. ISBN 111879690X.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.