In the early 1990s, banks developed credit derivatives contracts by purchasing protection from insurers in order to manage the banks' exposure to corporate loans on the banks' books. Moreover, the 1988 Basel I Accord and associated rules required banks to set aside a greater percentage of their capital against outstanding loans. Banks preferred to transfer loan risk to entities that weren't subject to the same capital reserve requirements, and used credit derivatives to transfer risk while retaining the ownership and profits of their loans.
The credit derivatives market has experienced considerable growth since then. This growth has been driven by an increasing realization of the advantages credit derivatives possess over the cash alternative, plus the many new possibilities they present. The primary purpose of credit derivatives is to enable the efficient transfer and repackaging of credit risk. The typical definition of credit risk encompasses all credit-related events ranging from a spread widening, through a ratings downgrade, all the way to default. Banks in particular are using credit derivatives to hedge credit risk, reduce risk concentrations on their balance sheets, and free up regulatory capital in the process.
In their simplest form, credit derivatives provide a more efficient way to replicate in a derivative form the credit risks that would otherwise exist in a standard cash instrument. For example, a standard credit default swap can be replicated using a cash bond and the repo market. In their more exotic form, credit derivatives enable the credit profile of a particular asset or group of assets to be split up and redistributed into a more concentrated or diluted form that appeals to the various risk appetites of investors.
The default swap has become the standard credit derivative. For many, it is the basic building block of the credit derivatives market. According to the British Bankers' Association Credit Derivatives Survey, it dominates the credit derivatives market with a significant portion of the outstanding notional. Its appeal is its simplicity and the fact that it presents to hedgers and investors a wide range of possibilities that did not previously exist in the cash market.
A default swap is a bilateral contract that enables an investor to buy protection against the risk of default of an asset issued by a specified reference entity. Following a defined credit event, the buyer of protection receives a payment intended to compensate against the loss on the investment. This is shown in
The first thing to define is the reference entity. This is typically a corporate entity (“corporate”), bank, or sovereign issuer. There can be significant differences between the legal documentation for corporate, bank, and sovereign linked default swaps.
The next step is the definition of the credit event itself. This is obviously closely linked to the choice of the reference entity and may include the following events: (1) bankruptcy (not relevant for sovereigns); (2) failure to pay; (3) obligation acceleration/default; (4) repudiation/moratorium; and/or (5) restructuring. These events are defined in the ISDA 2003 Credit Derivatives Definitions.
Some default swaps define the triggering of a credit event using a reference obligation. The main purpose of the reference obligation is to specify exactly the capital structure seniority of the debt that is covered. The reference obligation is also important in the determination of the recovery value should the default swap be cash settled (see
The contract specifies the payoff that is made following the credit event. Typically, this will compensate the protection buyer for the difference between par and the recovery value of the reference obligation following the credit event. This payoff may be made in a physical or cash settled form. The protection buyer will usually agree to do one of the following:
The first two choices are shown in
Unless already holding the deliverable asset, the protection buyer may prefer cash settlement in order to avoid any potential squeeze that could occur on default. Cash settlement will also be the choice of a protection buyer who is simply using a default swap to create a synthetic short position in a credit. This choice has to be made at trade initiation.
The protection buyer stops paying the premium once the credit event has occurred, and this feature has to be factored into the cost of the default swap premium payments. It has the benefit of enabling both parties to close out their positions soon after the credit event and so eliminates the ongoing administrative costs that would otherwise occur. Current market standards for banks and corporates require that the protection buyer pay the accrued premium up to the credit event; sovereign default swaps do not require a payment of accrued premium.
The details of an exemplary default swap trade are shown in Table 1. The example is a £50 million, 3-year default swap linked to Poland. The cost of the protection is 33 bp per annum paid quarterly. The cash flows are shown in
A default swap is a par product: it does not totally hedge the loss on an asset that is currently trading away from par. If the asset is trading at a discount, a default swap over-hedges the credit risk and vice-versa. This becomes especially important if the asset falls in price significantly without a credit event. To hedge this, the investor can purchase protection in a smaller face value or can use an amortizing default swap in which the size of the hedge amortizes to the face value of the bond as maturity is approached.
Preferred stock is well-known—generally, it is stock that pays cash dividends on a regular basis (typically quarterly), that is senior to common stock (but junior to company debt), and has no voting rights. In the past, offshore investors were strongly discouraged from investing in cash preferreds due to negative tax implications (withholding tax on all dividends). Also, historically there has been limited liquidity in the preferred market. Other drawbacks include:
Preferred CDS (“PCDS”) (used herein generically to refer to preferred embodiments of the invention) is a novel type of credit default swap. PCDS shares many traits with traditional CDS. There are at least two major differences: (A) PCDS includes the deferral of a trust preferred coupon or preferred stock dividend as a credit event; and (B) the deliverable obligations in the case of a credit event are expanded to include preferred stock along with bonds and loans.
Although credit derivatives referenced to subordinated bank debt are widely traded, preferred securities mark a new frontier for the default swap market. Such securities rank below subordinated debt but above common stock. They are issued either as perpetuals, or in the case of trust preferreds, have very long dated final maturities. Coupons or dividend payments can be deferred. Such payment deferrals count as a credit event in a PCDS, in addition to bankruptcy, failure to pay and restructuring.
Most types of preferred and trust preferred securities can be delivered into the contract, but mandatory convertibles—convertibles which must convert into the common stock—are not deliverable (in one embodiment). Securities that rank higher than preferred also are eligible.
In at least one embodiment, PCDS provides a preferred deliverable on a credit event and a dividend deferral on a preferred or trust preferred trigger. Users are able to: (a) hedge traditional cash preferred securities; (b) create synthetic single name risk in the preferred level; (c) create multi-name portfolios of preferred risk; (d) create structured products using PCDS as a building block (first to default baskets (FTDs), tranches of portfolios, and/or credit linked notes (CLNs)).
In one aspect, the invention comprises a method comprising the steps of: (a) specifying a reference entity which is an obligor with respect to preferred securities; (b) defining a credit event to include deferral of dividend or coupon on the preferred securities; (c) specifying a payoff to include the preferred securities, the payoff to be made following the credit event; (d) specifying a premium; (e) executing an agreement with a protection buyer, wherein the agreement comprises terms based on the reference entity, the credit event, and the payoff, and wherein the protection buyer agrees to pay the premium in return for a promise to provide the payoff to the protection buyer upon occurrence of the credit event; and (f) receiving the premium from the protection buyer.
In various embodiments: (1) the method further comprises providing the payoff to the protection buyer upon occurrence of a deferral of a dividend or a coupon; (2) the preferred securities are perpetual preferred or hybrid securities; and (3) the preferred securities are trust preferred securities.
In another aspect, the invention comprises a method comprising the steps of: (a) executing an agreement with a protection provider, wherein the agreement comprises definitions for a reference entity, a credit event, and a payoff, and wherein the protection provider promises to provide the payoff upon occurrence of the credit event in exchange for payment of a premium; and (b) paying the premium to the protection provider; wherein the reference entity is an obligor with respect to preferred securities, wherein the credit event is defined to include deferral of dividend or coupon on the preferred securities, and wherein the payoff to be made following the credit event includes the preferred securities.
In various embodiments: (1) the method further comprises receiving the payoff from the protection provider upon occurrence of a deferral of a dividend or coupon; (2) the preferred securities are perpetual preferred or hybrid securities; and (3) the preferred securities are trust preferred securities.
In another aspect, the invention comprises a method comprising the steps of: (a) executing an agreement with a protection buyer, wherein the agreement comprises definitions for a reference entity, a credit event, and a payoff, and wherein the protection buyer agrees to pay a premium in exchange for a promise to provide the payoff upon occurrence of the credit event; and (b) receiving the premium from the protection buyer; wherein the reference entity is an obligor with respect to preferred securities, wherein the credit event is defined to include deferral of dividend or coupon on the preferred securities, and wherein the payoff to be made following the credit event includes the preferred securities.
In various embodiments: (1) the method further comprises providing the payoff to the protection buyer upon occurrence of a deferral of a dividend or a coupon; (2) the preferred securities are perpetual preferred or hybrid securities; and (3) the preferred securities are trust preferred securities.
In another aspect, the invention comprises a method comprising the steps of: (a) agreeing upon a reference entity which is an obligor with respect to preferred securities; (b) agreeing upon a definition of a credit event to include deferral of dividend or coupon on the preferred securities; (c) agreeing that a payoff is to include the preferred securities, the payoff to be made following the credit event; (d) agreeing upon a premium; (d) executing an agreement with a protection provider, wherein the agreement comprises terms based on the reference entity, the credit event, and the payoff, and wherein the protection provider promises to provide the payoff upon occurrence of the credit event in exchange for payment of the premium; and (e) paying the premium to the protection provider.
In various embodiments: (1) the method further comprises receiving the payoff from the protection buyer upon occurrence of a deferral of a dividend or a coupon; (2) the preferred securities are perpetual preferred or hybrid securities; and (3) the preferred securities are trust preferred securities.
In another aspect, the invention comprises a credit default swap comprising an agreement between a protection buyer and a protection provider, wherein the agreement comprises definitions for a reference entity, a credit event, and a payoff, and wherein the protection buyer agrees to pay a premium to the protection provider in exchange for a promise from the protection provider to provide the payoff to the protection buyer upon occurrence of the credit event; wherein the reference entity is an obligor with respect to preferred securities, wherein the credit event is defined to include deferral of dividend or coupon on the preferred securities, and wherein the payoff to be made following the credit event includes the preferred securities.
In various embodiments: (1) the preferred securities are perpetual preferred or hybrid securities; and (2) the preferred securities are trust preferred securities.
The above-described aspects and embodiments are not intended to be limiting. Those skilled in the art will perceive other aspects and embodiments after reviewing the drawings and the detailed description herein.
As mentioned above, PCDS shares many traits with traditional CDS. But there are at least two major differences:
(B) The deliverable obligations in the case of a credit event are expanded to include preferred stock along with bonds and loans. PCDS references preferred-level securities as an additional deliverable: While the majority of default swaps reference companies' senior unsecured debt, the reference obligation for PCDS is either preferred or trust preferred stock. If a credit event (including deferral) occurs, the buyer of protection can deliver either a preferred/trust preferred security or any obligation (e.g., bonds and loans) more senior in the capital structure. Optionally, convertible securities are deliverable upon cessation of dividend, while mandatory convertibles are not.
Certain changes have been made to the traditional CDS contract to ensure that preferred securities are deliverable. Since most preferred securities are either perpetual or have extended maturities, the 30-year maximum maturity limitation does not apply to PCDS. However, following a restructuring trigger, preferred securities would be subject to the restructuring maturity limitation date, as PCDS trades with modified restructuring. An exemplary PCDS contract is shown below in the Appendix.
*Most investment-grade and emerging markets CDS contracts trade with restructuring as a credit event.
Valuing the Premium of PCDS to CDS
In order to develop a valuation framework for PCDS, it is helpful to start with the basic valuation framework for CDS and adjust for the added deliverable and trigger event. For simplicity's sake, the credit events of bankruptcy, failure to pay, and restructuring are referred to jointly as “default.” Then, as shown in
A typical CDS spread compensates investors for the “expected loss” on the credit, which is simply the cumulative probability of default times the loss on default. For the same issuer, the probability of default will be the same for both senior CDS and PCDS. However, the loss for PCDS will be greater than or equal to that of senior CDS because of its subordination. In addition, it is possible for deferral to occur without default. In that case, only the preferred CDS contract would trigger. This feature, combined with its deeper subordination, will cause PCDS to trade at a premium to senior CDS.
As of Aug. 2, 2005.
Deferral Premium=79 bp−25 bp=54 bp
As of Aug. 2, 2005.
Fundamental Factors that Drive PCDS Premia
Due to the limited amount of data for preferred deferrals, it is difficult to estimate the value of the factors that influence probability of “deferral without default” and losses in such cases. In addition, the cash markets provide limited spread guidance because of differences in tax treatment and structures across cash preferreds. However, we have attempted to identify the major factors that may influence the premium to senior CDS based on past and recent deferral events. This analysis can be divided into a view about credit events and preferred losses related to credit events.
What Will Drive the Chances of Simultaneous Default and Deferral as Opposed to Deferral Only? Large regulated financial entities are more likely to experience a deferral without default because of regulatory intervention aimed at protecting depositors, policyholders, consumers, or other operating company counterparties from incremental financial harm. These entities are likely to have significant access to liquidity through government facilities such as the Fed window, reducing the probability of a liquidity-driven default while increasing the likelihood of a deferral trigger forced by the regulators.
One recent example of such a deferral was by Riggs Bank. Riggs had agreed to be acquired by PNC, but was facing charges from the Justice Department. During November 2004, the regional Federal Reserve Bank required the bank to defer its dividend on all (trust) preferreds. In this case, because an acquisition was likely, the deferral only caused the preferred to trade to $100. Looking at more senior deliverables, based on the limited pricing available, it does not seem that any other deliverable Riggs bond was trading below par, so a seller of protection most likely would not have sustained a loss on deferral.
For non-financials, the likely path of credit deterioration is very important. For most non-financials, expectations of a gradual credit deterioration will increase the chances of deferral without default over the case of a “jump to default” due to fraud or a major loss that results in strategic bankruptcy.
New mandatory deferral structures may increase the likelihood of deferral without default. These structures have become popular because of the high equity content allocated by the rating agencies (often up to 75%). For issuers that have preferred with mandatory deferral triggers outstanding, the PCDS premium should be higher than for issuers that do not. This premium should be limited, however, since the severe rating consequences of deferring a dividend will encourage companies to use the “cure features” to avoid deferral.
What Drives Preferred Recoveries (in “Default and Deferral” versus “Deferral Only”)? If default and deferral are simultaneous, then preferred recoveries will be very sensitive to senior bond recoveries. Unless senior bonds are “covered” and suffer limited loss, preferred recoveries are likely to be close to zero. If senior bonds are covered, preferred recoveries may be higher than zero, particularly in the case of strategic or liquidity driven bankruptcies. In a recent study of defaults from 1982 to 2003, Moody's found that the median recovery rate for senior unsecured bonds was 31 percent, compared with only 9 percent for preferred stock (Recovery Rates on Defaulted Corporate Bonds and Preferred Stocks, 1982-2003, Moody's Investors Service, December 2003). This is not surprising, given the relatively low standing of preferred stock in bankruptcy proceedings relative to senior debt.
If deferral occurs without default, preferred recoveries will be driven by the severity of the credit situation. If the deferral occurs but credit quality is expected to improve quickly (as in the case of the Riggs Bank example above), losses on deferral should be limited. In the case of a deferral that precedes a default by a short period, losses will likely be substantial.
PCDS Valuation Versus Cash
Valuing PCDS versus cash securities is not as straightforward as with traditional CDS, because additional structural factors present in preferred securities drive the basis.
Caps and Floors. Some preferred securities have caps and/or floors on coupons. This could have a positive or negative effect on the basis depending on the structure.
As of Aug. 2, 2005.
*For MER and NRU, par is $25, For FNM, par is $50.
*LIBOR OAS is used for NRU and LIBOR spread-to-call is used for FNM and MER.
*Taxable equivalent assumes a 1.38x gross up for DRD-eligible investors.
PCDS can be Useful to Both Investors and Hedgers
PCDS offers many advantages for investors looking to take preferred-level risk:
Preferred CDS also offers advantages to investors looking to hedge or get short preferred level risk.
PCDS Risks
Like all new derivative products, in addition to credit risk, PCDS brings with it a number of risks that must be considered before trading:
Documentation Risk—As with any new credit derivative product, PCDS documentation has not been tested through a deferral or default event. As a result, there is a risk that the contract may not behave as the counterparties expect. This is partially mitigated by the PCDS documentation's being built on the well-seasoned CDS contract, which has gone through a number of credit events.
Liquidity Risk—As with most new derivative products, PCDS has more limited liquidity than regular CDS markets. However, certain dealers have started making markets in PCDS. Investors can mitigate liquidity concerns by trading shorter-dated maturities in higher-quality credits until the PCDS market becomes more seasoned.
Cheapest to Deliver Risk—As a derivative instrument, PCDS is subject to many of the same risks as CDS when it comes to the choice of instrument a protection buyer wishes to deliver. In the case of a deferral trigger, it is important to note that buyers can deliver “optionally” convertible preferred stock of par value equal to that of the contract. They cannot, however, deliver “mandatory” preferreds. Buyers of PCDS can also deliver any instrument more senior in the capital structure in the case of a default or deferral trigger, just as with CDS.
“Squeeze” Risk—For buyers of PCDS protection, an important risk to consider is that of deliverable “squeeze” risk. Deliverable squeezes occur when buyers of protection scramble for limited deliverable securities following a trigger event. For issuers with limited preferred deliverables outstanding, this is mitigated somewhat by allowing delivery of more senior obligations in the case of deferral, as is the case in CDS.
Structures for Investment
Preferred CDS is a building block for many other types of investment structures. All of these can be tailored to meet an investor's investment needs.
Key PCDS Technicals
As with the CDS market a few years ago, technicals will affect PCDS spread levels and create buy and sell opportunities in the market for investors with fundamental credit views. Key PCDS technicals are likely to be the same ones observed in the CDS market:
In the past, the preferred market has been driven by issuers' needs. The bullet maturity, lack of tax penalty, and the simplified structured of PCDS will make this market more homogeneous and allow many more investors to participate. This growth will create new trading opportunities in the preferred market, similar to those present in the senior market, including basis, curve, and senior-preferred trades. Trading is likely to focus on higher-quality names in which investors are more comfortable stepping down the capital structure and names that are more liquid in the cash preferred market, as dealers and investors may need to hedge risk. Increased issuance of leveraged structures such as first-to-default baskets will likely cause compression and curve steepening as investors dip their toes into shorter maturities.
PCDS is an agreement whereby two parties exchange the credit risk of a Reference Entity without explicitly buying or selling the actual instrument. The
Protection Buyer pays a periodic premium (or, less frequently, an upfront payment) to the Protection Seller in exchange for the Protection Seller's commitment to reimburse the Protection Buyer for losses resulting from a Credit Event that affects the risk of a specified Reference Obligation. See
In addition to standard high grade CDS terms:
(A) The Reference Obligation will be a preferred or trust preferred security (each, a “Preferred Security”).
(B) Obligations will include Preferred Securities.
(C) Additional Credit Event (only for Preferred Securities): “Deferral of Payment.” Failure to pay stated dividend/distribution in full after expiration of grace period. Preferably this includes any deferral.
(D) Deliverable Obligations will include preferred and trust preferred securities. “Max Maturity” does not apply to PCDS. “Not Contingent” does not apply to PCDS. “Not Subordinated” still determined by reference to Reference Obligation. If the Reference Obligation is a trust preferred, look to the bond held by the trust preferred issuer. “Due and Payable Amount” determined by par amount of Preferred Security.
Tier 1 capital is the core measure of a bank's financial strength from a regulator's point of view. It consists of the types of financial capital considered the most reliable and liquid, primarily Shareholders' equity. Examples of Tier 1 capital are common stock, preferred stock that is irredeemable and non-cumulative, and retained earnings. Tier 2 capital generally includes undisclosed reserves, revaluation reserves, general provisions, hybrid instruments and subordinated term debt. See
Preferred CDS (PCDS) will, for the first time, enable investors to source, reference, and hedge Tier I and Junior Subordinated Preferred Securities. See
Future iterations may include Synthetic CDO origination.
Preferred CDS Applications
Hedging: Commercial banks hedge their bank loan portfolios blind to the borrower. Investment managers and insurance companies protect against spread widening while capitalizing on tax advantages of QDI (does not apply to non-retail accounts) and DRD-eligible securities. Investment Banks hedge cash trading inventory, including long secured loan positions, as well as counterparty exposure from derivative trading.
Customization: Hedge funds short credit without a short squeeze. Investment managers acquire credit exposure for terms unavailable in the cash market and execute index overlay strategies. Corporations take customized risk for cash and tax management.
Relative Value: Hedge funds use leverage, isolate the equity option in convertible bonds, and execute index out-performance strategies. Credit derivatives are one of the major tools that these funds use in capital structure arbitrage. Insurance Companies earn positive basis versus cash (on a pre- and after-tax basis).
(1) A Higher Carry Long
If you are a bullish on a name, you can sell Preferred CDS instead of Senior CDS and earn more carry. Example: Switch out of RBS 5 yr Senior CDS@10 and sell RBS 5 yr Preferred CDS@30 and pick 20 bp.
(2) A More Volatile Short
If you are bearish on a credit, you can buy Preferred CDS instead of Senior CDS. A company is more likely to miss a preferred dividend than to default outright. As a result, PCDS should widen more than Senior CDS in a widening environment. Additionally, in the event of an outright default, Preferred CDS should have a lower recovery. Example: Buy XL 5 yr PCDS@60 instead of buying 1.6× XL Senior CDS for the same spread.
(3) Buy PCDS protection, Sell 2× Senior CDS protection
Example: Buy EOP 5 yr PCDS@40, Sell 2× EOP Senior CDS @80; flat carry. If EOP misses a preferred dividend payment, your PCDS protection will trigger while the senior protection you sold will not. In the event of a default, you make money if the PCDS recovers less than ½ of the Senior CDS.
(4) Sell PCDS protection, Buy Zero-Recovery protection
Example: Sell FNMA 5 yr PCDS@60, Buy FNMA Zero-Recovery CDS@38; 22 bp positive carry. The investor faces no recovery risk in the event of default, and makes money if PCDS recovery is greater than zero as he will receive par from the digital protection he bought. The main risk to this trade is if FNMA misses a payment on its preferred stock without filing for bankruptcy or restructuring.
(5) Buy Step-up Preferreds vs. PCDS
Example: Buy ZURNVX 4/25/2011 FRN@L+120 ($97.6), equates to L+325 with the DRD gross up. Buy 5 yr PCDS@90; 30 bp positive carry (235 DRD adjusted); slightly positive VOD. Depending on your status, you may still be eligible to receive DRD even with your hedge.
(6) Sell Preferred CDS and Buy Out-of-the-Money Equity Puts
Use your carry on the PCDS to fund the purchase of OTM puts. If the credit/equity performs well, you will earn money on the CDS while losing only your premium on the puts. If the credit/equity performs poorly, your puts will act as a hedge on your CDS position. Example: Sell $5 mm VNO 5 yr PCDS@105 and earn $30.6 k over 7 months. Buy 15,400 VNO Sep 05 65-strike Equity Puts@1.90 for $29 k (71.60 spot). If CDS tightens during the period, the investor makes money regardless of equity price. The best case scenario for the investor occurs if the equity price drops while PCDS remains unchanged or tightens.
Standard Documentation
Standard Credit Default Swap Terms
A Credit Default Swap is an over-the counter contract. There are, therefore, several important features that need to be clearly agreed upon and documented between the counterparties. These include:
Effective Date—Generally Trade Date plus one day.
Maturity Date—The most liquid part of the default curve is the 5 year point, though 3 year and 1 year also see some volume. The standard maturity date is the next of either March, June, September, or December 20th to occur after the desired trade length (i.e., the standard maturity date on a 5 year CDS effective Nov. 12, 2003 is Dec. 20, 2008).
Reference Entity—The relevant issuer in the credit protection exchange.
Notional Amount—The principal amount of default protection being exchanged.
Rate—Quoted as x basis points running.
Payment Dates—Generally the 20th of March, June, September, and December, with the first payment date being the first to occur after trade inception as long as said date is at least one month after the Trade Date. If not, the subsequent payment date becomes the first.
Reference Obligation—The purpose of the Reference Obligation is to specify which portion of the Obligor's capital structure represents the credit to which the trade is applicable and the Credit Event terms affect.
Credit Events—The circumstances of credit impairment that are being traded via the protection swap.
Settlement—How the protection buyer will be compensated in the case of a Credit Event triggering.
These standard terms are suggested and defined in market-stabilizing guidelines published by the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA), with the most recent version having been released in May 2003.
Summary of the (ISDA)—Defined Credit Events
The Default Swap contingent payment is triggered by some (or all) of the following Credit Events, depending upon the terms of the trade:
Bankruptcy—Corporate becomes insolvent or is unable to pay its debt (not relevant for sovereign issuers).
Failure to Pay—Failure of the reference entity to make due payments, taking into account some grace period to prevent accidental triggering due to administrative error.
Obligation Acceleration—Obligations become due and payable earlier than they would have been due to default or a similar condition.
Repudiation/Moratorium—A reference entity or government authority rejects or challenges the validity of the obligations (usually only for sovereign issuers).
Restructuring—Changes in debt obligations of the reference creditor but excluding those that are not associated with credit deterioration, such as renegotiation of more favorable terms.
The most typical types of CDS deals in the market today are traded under one of the following Credit Event assumptions:
“NoRe”—without restructuring as a credit event. NoRe trades usually include only Bankruptcy and Failure to Pay.
“OldRe”—with restructuring as a credit event and using the definition set forth in the 2003 ISDA Credit Derivative Definitions. OldRe trades typically include all of the credit events listed above, and spreads are quoted about 16% wider than NoRe spreads
“ModRe”—with restructuring as a credit event and using the definition set forth in the 2003 ISDA Credit Derivative Definitions. ModRe trades typically include Bankruptcy, Failure to Pay, and Restructuring, and spreads are quoted about 6% wider than NoRe spreads.
The introduction of PCDS trading should increase the focus, demand, and subsequently, liquidity in this part of the capital structure. Ultimately, it will flatten the learning curve required to trade this sector by greatly simplifying hedging/risk management techniques. As a result, risk premiums should get squeezed. Also, many cash positions are hard to find and many cash structures are not accepted by some accounts. The 5 Yr term of the standard PCDS contract will further enable capital structure arbitrage and term structure arbitrage.
Also, PCDS creates transparency in the capital structure. PCDS lends the ability to short in the preferred space—it's difficult to short most preferred securities due to NYSE rules on locate to borrow. Moreover, PCDS presents the opportunity for curve trades.
Many of the factors that form “Subordination Premium” have also presented incredible opportunities for accounts that mastered the ability to hedge and leverage these risks.
Once PCDS are traded, it is possible to create an index. In one aspect, the present invention comprises a diverse basket of individual preferred credit default swaps used to create an innovative PCDS index (referred to herein as “PDX”). The single index holds each reference entity in equal weightings and preferably has semi-annual rolls. Having an index would add to the liquidity of the market, especially along that part of the capital structure, and serves as a very attracting hedging vehicle.
Preferably, PDX has the following features: (a) between 20 and 60 names across multiple sectors; (b) average rating of portfolio is Aa3/A—Preferred Rating; (c) standard maturity date with semi-annual rolls (September & March); (d) one fixed coupon for the life of the contract, trades with an upfront payment in the secondary market, just as other CDS index products; and (e) unlike other CDS index products which trade without Restructuring, PDX will trade with Modified Restructuring (ModRe) for North American names and Modified Modified Restructuring for European names.
In the event of trigger event affecting one of the underlying names, the portfolio will continue to trade in the market, while the defaulted (or triggered) credit will be removed from the portfolio.
Benefits of PDX comprise the following: (a) PDX will transcend single name PCDS to further expand the focus and liquidity in the subordinated levels of the capital structure; (b) portfolio products create efficiencies in the market, allowing for simultaneous execution and hedging on a basket rather than the just a single credit; (c) PDX may be a more attractive (i.e., liquid) means to express a negative view on subordination or a more appropriate hedge vehicle; (d) conversely, PDX may be a more attractive means to express a positive view on a credit; (e) PDX allows for an arbitrage opportunity by trading the premium/discount value of the portfolio vs. its intrinsic value; (f) the portfolio should increase the flow and transparency throughout the single name PCDS market; and (g) a PCDS portfolio lends to a natural basis between PDX and CDX products, a step beyond Senior vs. PCDS single-name trades.
Embodiments of the present invention comprise computer components and computer-implemented steps that will be apparent to those skilled in the art. For ease of exposition, not every step or element of the present invention is described herein as part of a computer system, but those skilled in the art will recognize that each step or element may have a corresponding computer system or software component. Such computer system and/or software components are therefore enabled by describing their corresponding steps or elements (that is, their functionality), and are within the scope of the present invention.
For example, all calculations preferably are performed by one or more computers. Moreover, all notifications and other communications, as well as all data transfers, to the extent allowed by law, preferably are transmitted electronically over a computer network. Further, all data preferably is stored in one or more electronic databases.
In general, although particular embodiments of the invention have been described in detail for the purpose of illustration, it is to be understood that such detail is solely for that purpose and that variations can be made thereof by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention, which should be determined exclusively from the plain wording of the appended claims. Any details in the specification that are not included in the claims themselves should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/715,732, filed Sep. 9, 2005, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/719,057, filed Sep. 20, 2005. The entire contents of those two provisional applications are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60715732 | Sep 2005 | US | |
60719057 | Sep 2005 | US |