Swap: Difference between revisions

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imported>Administrator
(CSV import)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
m (Amended wording to line up more closely with US statutory definitions as requested by John Grout (email to Doug Williamson of 17 Nov 2012).)
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1.
Any agreement which:
A capital market swap is a longer-term derivative instrument. It is an agreement to exchange a series of cashflows at pre-determined future dates, usually settled for difference.
Examples of capital market swaps include interest rate swaps, basis swaps, and cross currency interest rate swaps.


2.
(1) Provides for the exchange of one or more payments based on the value or level of one or more rates, currencies, commodities, securities, instruments of indebtedness, indices, quantitative measures, or other financial or economic interests or property of any kind;
A foreign exchange swap is a shorter term instrument. It is an agreement to exchange currencies at a fixed future date (known as the near leg date) and then to re-exchange the same currencies at a later fixed future date (the far leg date).
 
(2) And which transfers between the parties to the transaction, in whole or in part, the financial risk associated with a future change in any such value or level;
 
(3) Without also transferring a current or future direct or indirect ownership interest in an asset or liability that incorporates the financial risk transferred by the swap.
 
Examples of swaps include interest rate swaps, basis swaps, and cross currency interest rate swaps.
 
Not to be confused with a <i>foreign exchange swap</i>, which is different.


== See also ==
== See also ==
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* [[At the money]]
* [[At the money]]
* [[Basis swap]]
* [[Basis swap]]
* [[Capital market swap]]
* [[Counterparty]]
* [[Counterparty]]
* [[Cross-currency interest rate swap]]
* [[Cross-currency interest rate swap]]
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* [[Warehousing]]
* [[Warehousing]]
* [[Zero-coupon swap]]
* [[Zero-coupon swap]]

Revision as of 16:47, 19 November 2012

Any agreement which:

(1) Provides for the exchange of one or more payments based on the value or level of one or more rates, currencies, commodities, securities, instruments of indebtedness, indices, quantitative measures, or other financial or economic interests or property of any kind;

(2) And which transfers between the parties to the transaction, in whole or in part, the financial risk associated with a future change in any such value or level;

(3) Without also transferring a current or future direct or indirect ownership interest in an asset or liability that incorporates the financial risk transferred by the swap.

Examples of swaps include interest rate swaps, basis swaps, and cross currency interest rate swaps.

Not to be confused with a foreign exchange swap, which is different.

See also