Hi all, I have a question about discount continuous index forward to the current point
long a 90 days index forward mature in 90 days. The index is currently at 1145. The continuously compounded dividend yield is 1.75 percent. The discrete risk-free rate is 4.25 percent. It is now 28 days since the purchase The index value is at 1225. the question want us to alculate the value of the forward contract 28 days into the contract.
The answer is
St = $1,225
T = 90/365 = 0.2466
t = 28/365 = 0.0767
T − t = 0.1699
r = 0.0425
rc = ln(1 + 0.0425) = 0.0416——my issue is with this, i understand we are discounting the forward price to the time point t, but why do we take the In of the 1+dividend rate? instead of just use e−0.025(0.1699)
δc = 0.0175
Vt(0,T) = ($1,225 × e−0.0175(0.1699)) − (1151.83e−0.0416(0.1699)) = $77.65
Thanks
long a 90 days index forward mature in 90 days. The index is currently at 1145. The continuously compounded dividend yield is 1.75 percent. The discrete risk-free rate is 4.25 percent. It is now 28 days since the purchase The index value is at 1225. the question want us to alculate the value of the forward contract 28 days into the contract.
The answer is
St = $1,225
T = 90/365 = 0.2466
t = 28/365 = 0.0767
T − t = 0.1699
r = 0.0425
rc = ln(1 + 0.0425) = 0.0416——my issue is with this, i understand we are discounting the forward price to the time point t, but why do we take the In of the 1+dividend rate? instead of just use e−0.025(0.1699)
δc = 0.0175
Vt(0,T) = ($1,225 × e−0.0175(0.1699)) − (1151.83e−0.0416(0.1699)) = $77.65
Thanks