T bill future calculation

h21

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I am having headache understanding this equation for futures price calculation, can someone please help me better understand this?
f0(h)/B0(h+m)=1/B0(h)
I think I am having trouble with this
one would buy the 140-day T-bill for 0.9780 and sell the futures at a price of 0.9829. Then, 50 days later, the T-bill would be a 90-day T-bill and would be delivered to settle the futures contract

someone?
 
Stay focused on the Learning Outcome Statements. Margin and Repo Rates in Reading 48 (and when they’re discussed again in Reading 51), as well as Example 3 in R48, are part of Optional Reading sections. In other words, they won’t be tested on the exam.
That formula looks its part of pricing T-Bill futures, which again, is part of the Optional Reading section of R48.
 
thanks, can you explain that equation for me? i cant seem to put my head around it
 
eoc 7.2.1
On day 0, we buy the (h + m)-day T-bill, investing B0(h + m). We simultaneously sell a futures contract at the price f0(h). On day h, we are required to deliver an m-day T-bill. The bill we purchased, which originally had h + m days to maturity, now has m days to maturity. We therefore deliver that bill and receive the original futures price. We can view this transaction as having paid B0(h + m) on day 0 and receiving f0(h). Because f0(h) is known on day 0, this transaction is risk free. It should thus earn the same return per dollar invested as would a T-bill purchased on day 0 that matures on day h. The return per dollar invested from the arbitrage transaction would be f0(h)/B0(h + m), and the return per dollar invested in an h-day T-bill would be 1/B0(h).35 Consequently, we set these values equal
 
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