Deleted User
New member
- Mar 5, 2008
- 0
- 0
I’m thinking of this from a different POV.
Taking the actual prices of the spread from the link given above and being conservative (the move was a 25x increase, so lets assume 2bps and 44 bps for whole number sake)
So at 2bps.
You would have to pay $0.02 for every $100 of protection annually or $0.20 over a 10 years contract. Assuming the spread in the CDS dictates the probability of default, then the expected return in event of default is 0.002 x $60 (recovery rate) - $0.20 (cost of contract over its life) which equals -$0.08. So at this point there is a premium for the purchase of the contract due to the recovery rate assumption.
At the new price of 44bps:
You would have to pay $0.44 for every $100 of protection annully or $4.40 over the life of the contract. The expected return paying the $0.02/yr would be 0.044 x $60 - $0.20 equalling $2.44.
Wouldn’t the increase be approximately 25x as the probablility of default has come up and you have no investment except for the payments on the swap? The value of the $0.02/yr swap is now much higher as an equivalent swap now costs $0.44/yr.
Mind you, these probabilities are very primative yet there is some conservative calculation as this assumes all payments are made, although payments would stop when default occurs.
Taking the actual prices of the spread from the link given above and being conservative (the move was a 25x increase, so lets assume 2bps and 44 bps for whole number sake)
So at 2bps.
You would have to pay $0.02 for every $100 of protection annually or $0.20 over a 10 years contract. Assuming the spread in the CDS dictates the probability of default, then the expected return in event of default is 0.002 x $60 (recovery rate) - $0.20 (cost of contract over its life) which equals -$0.08. So at this point there is a premium for the purchase of the contract due to the recovery rate assumption.
At the new price of 44bps:
You would have to pay $0.44 for every $100 of protection annully or $4.40 over the life of the contract. The expected return paying the $0.02/yr would be 0.044 x $60 - $0.20 equalling $2.44.
Wouldn’t the increase be approximately 25x as the probablility of default has come up and you have no investment except for the payments on the swap? The value of the $0.02/yr swap is now much higher as an equivalent swap now costs $0.44/yr.
Mind you, these probabilities are very primative yet there is some conservative calculation as this assumes all payments are made, although payments would stop when default occurs.