dingying85
New member
- Jan 17, 2012
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Why receiver swaption is equivalent to call option? I thought receiver swaption benefit from interest rate fall since it is receive fixed rate, so it should be equivalent to put option, is that right?
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I thought I got that but one thing is troubling me. With a call option on a bond, your upside is unlimited, just like with any other call…if teh underlying rises, your call appreciates more and more. With a receiver swaption, you have the option to get into a swap which allows you to receive 6% and pay float. If interest rates fall (similar to bond price going up above), what happens? You still receive 6% fixed, so your upside doesn’t look like it’s same as with a call.Join me wrote:
So, is this final that receiver swaption is equivalent to call option on bond and put option on interest rate. Put option on Interst rate equivalency is not mentioned in the curriculum. Plse reply bcz exam is just around the corner.
Trouble is that receiver swaption caps your profit, but that’s not the case with a call on bond…as interest rates fall further your call on bond appreciates further…but as rates fall further (with receiver swaption) you still get paid a fixed amount, known from the onset! To me they are not the same.kwalew wrote:
Receiver swaption = call option on bond, both benefits when rates fall. Receive = option to receive fixed when rates are below strike. As rates fall (as above) call option on bond has value.
that’s it, I fogot that you receive fixed and pay float! That’s called poor memory.Clark_CFA_Candidate wrote:
If rates fall to 5%, and you have a receiver swaption with 6% fixed rate, you earn 6% - 5% = 1%
If rates fall further to 2%, and you have a receiver swaption with 6% fixed rate, you earn 6% - 2% = 4%
You still have to pay the floating rate with a receiver swaption. It’s still a swap!