Derivatives Market — Futures, Options & Swaps
Derivatives: value from underlying asset. Types: forwards (OTC), futures (exchange), options (call=buy right, put=sell right), swaps (currency/interest rate/CDS). Participants: hedgers, speculators, arbitrageurs. Cotton 1875, LC Gupta Committee, FRA convention, ISDA documentation.
Banky Enters the World of Derivatives! 📊
Derivatives are financial instruments whose value comes from something else — like butter’s price depends on milk’s price. They’re used to hedge risk, speculate, or arbitrage. Your bank’s treasury uses them daily for managing interest rate and forex risks.
Why Read This Chapter?
Your bank’s treasury uses derivatives DAILY to manage interest rate and forex risks — understand the tools
Exam Marks
3-5 questions — cotton 1875 (first Indian derivative), guarantor NOT a participant, functions = ALL (price discovery + lower cost + leverage), currency futures NOT OTC, FRA 6×9 convention. High weightage!
Career Growth
Treasury and risk management are the highest-paid banking verticals — derivatives knowledge is essential
Real Life
You’ll understand futures trading on Zerodha/Groww, how insurance is like a put option, and why gold prices fluctuate
How Will It Benefit You?
Real career advantages
What Is This Chapter About?
30-second summary
Key Definitions — Banky Asks, Mentor Explains
Every term explained like you’re 10
Banky’s Understanding: RBI definition: value changes with underlying (interest rate, stock price, commodity, forex, credit rating). Requires no/little initial investment. Settled at future date. Also defined under Section 2(ac) of SCRA 1956. Types: financial (forwards, futures, options, swaps) and commodity. Butter analogy: butter is derivative of milk — butter price depends on milk price!
Banky’s Understanding: Bombay Cotton Trade Association 1875 = India’s first derivatives (futures trading). 1952: Govt banned cash settlement and options. Shifted to informal forwards. Securities Laws Amendment 1995: withdrew prohibition on options. LC Gupta Committee: recommended derivatives trading → SEBI approved May 2001. NSE Nifty futures: June 12, 2000 (first financial derivative). BSE Sensex options: June 4, 2001. Individual stock options: July 2001. Stock futures: November 2001.
Banky’s Understanding: Hedgers: MAJORITY of participants. Use derivatives to reduce/eliminate price risk. Example: exporter hedges forex risk via forward. Speculators: Bet on future price movements using leverage. Higher gains AND higher losses. Arbitrageurs: Exploit price differences between markets — lock in risk-free profit. Example: buy in cash market, sell in futures if overpriced. ⚠️ Guarantor is NOT a participant in derivative transactions (exam PYQ!).
Banky’s Understanding: Key functions: (1) Price discovery — futures prices indicate future spot prices. (2) Risk transfer — from low-risk appetite to high-risk appetite. (3) Hedging — protection against adverse price movements. (4) Lower transaction cost — cheaper than cash market. (5) Higher leverage — futures need only 20-40% margin; options need only premium. (6) Access to unavailable assets/markets. ⚠️ All of the above = CORRECT (exam PYQ!).
Banky’s Understanding: Forward contracts: OTC (over-the-counter) — negotiated directly between buyer and seller. Customised terms. No money at inception. Settled at maturity. Neither party can walk away. In India: must have genuine underlying (firm order, LC, bill). Futures: Exchange-traded (NSE/BSE). Standardised contracts. Daily mark-to-market settlement. Margin requirements. More liquid, transparent. ⚠️ Currency futures are NOT OTC — they’re exchange traded (exam PYQ!).
Banky’s Understanding: Call option: buyer gets right to BUY underlying at strike price. Put option: buyer gets right to SELL underlying at strike price. Key: buyer has RIGHT but not obligation (can walk away — unlike forwards/futures). Seller (writer) has OBLIGATION. Premium: price paid by buyer to seller. Strike price: pre-determined price for buy/sell. Open Interest: total outstanding contracts. European: exercise only on expiry. American: exercise any time before expiry.
Banky’s Understanding: Currency swap: exchange principal + interest in one currency for another. Interest Rate Swap (IRS): exchange fixed rate for floating (or vice versa). Example: bank has FCNR fixed rate deposit + floating rate loan → enters IRS to convert floating to fixed. Credit Default Swap (CDS): buyer pays premium to seller; seller reimburses if reference entity defaults. Like insurance against default. 2008 GFC: CDS sellers (Lehman, AIG) defaulted → crisis spread. RBI CDS guidelines: market makers need ₹500 Cr min NOF.
Banky’s Understanding: FRA (Forward Rate Agreement): contract to exchange interest payments on notional principal. Convention: 6×9 = borrow 3 months starting 6 months from now (ending 9 months). 3×6 = 3 months starting 3 months from now. ISDA Master Agreement: International Swaps and Derivatives Association. Standard documentation for OTC derivatives. Framework: master agreement + schedule + confirmations + definitions + credit support. Once signed, future deals need only brief confirmation. Developed from Swaps Code (1985).
Chapter Explained in Simple Stories
So easy even Banky’s nephew understands
📊 Block 1: What Are Derivatives & Who Uses Them?
Derivative = value derived from underlying asset. Underlying can be: stock price, interest rate, commodity price, forex rate, credit rating, index.
History in India: Cotton futures 1875 (Bombay) → options banned 1952 → Securities Laws 1995 unban → LC Gupta Committee → SEBI approved → NSE Nifty futures June 12, 2000 (India’s first financial derivative!).
3 Participants: Hedgers (majority — reduce risk), Speculators (bet with leverage), Arbitrageurs (exploit price gaps). ⚠️ Guarantor is NOT a participant (exam PYQ!).
Functions: Price discovery, risk transfer, hedging, lower transaction cost, higher leverage, market access — ALL correct (exam PYQ!).
🔄 Block 2: Forwards, Futures & Options — The Big Three
Forwards (OTC): Customised, between two parties, no money at inception, settled at maturity, genuine underlying required (India). Neither party can exit.
Futures (Exchange): Standardised, traded on NSE/BSE, daily margin, mark-to-market. ⚠️ Currency futures are exchange-traded, NOT OTC! (exam PYQ).
Options: Call = right to BUY. Put = right to SELL. Buyer has right (not obligation) — pays premium. Seller has obligation. Example: Buy Reliance Put at ₹2300, premium ₹125. If price falls to ₹1800 → profit = 2300-1800-125 = ₹375. If price rises to ₹2800 → don’t exercise → lose only premium ₹125.
💱 Block 3: Swaps, CDS, FRA & ISDA Documentation
Currency Swap: Exchange principal + interest between currencies. IRS: Exchange fixed for floating (or vice versa). Banks use to manage FCNR risk.
CDS (Credit Default Swap): Insurance against default. Buyer pays premium → seller reimburses if default. 2008 GFC: Lehman/AIG defaulted as CDS sellers! RBI: market makers need ₹500 Cr NOF.
FRA Convention: 6×9 = borrow 3 months, starting 6 months from now, ending 9 months. Buyer pays fixed, receives floating. ⚠️ Company borrows for 3 months, 6 months from now = 6×9 FRA (exam PYQ!).
ISDA: Master agreement for OTC derivatives. Framework: master agreement + schedule + confirmations. From Swaps Code 1985. Once signed → future deals need only brief confirmation.
Exam Angle — Every Testable Point
All facts, numbers, definitions JAIIB tests
✅ Must-Know Facts — Highest Probability
- Derivative: value derived from underlying — interest rate, stock, commodity, forex, credit rating
- India’s FIRST derivative: Cotton futures (Bombay Cotton Trade Association, 1875!)
- 1952: Govt banned cash settlement + options | 1995: Securities Laws Amendment unban options
- LC Gupta Committee → SEBI approved derivatives → NSE Nifty futures June 12, 2000
- BSE Sensex options: June 4, 2001 | Individual stock options: July 2001 | Stock futures: Nov 2001
- 3 participants: hedgers (majority, reduce risk), speculators (leverage), arbitrageurs (price gaps)
- Guarantor is NOT a derivative participant — exam PYQ!
- Functions: price discovery + risk transfer + hedging + lower cost + leverage + market access = ALL correct!
- Forwards: OTC, customised, genuine underlying required (India) | Neither party can exit
- Futures: exchange traded (NSE/BSE), standardised, daily margin, mark-to-market
- Currency futures are EXCHANGE TRADED (NOT OTC!) — exam PYQ
- Call option = right to BUY | Put option = right to SELL | Buyer has right, seller has obligation
- Option premium = price paid by buyer | Strike price = pre-determined buy/sell price
- Currency swap: exchange principal + interest | IRS: fixed ↔ floating
- CDS: insurance against default | Buyer pays premium | Seller reimburses on default
- 2008 GFC: CDS sellers (Lehman, Bear Stearns, AIG) defaulted — primary cause of crisis!
- RBI CDS guidelines: market makers = SCBs, NBFCs, SPDs with ₹500 Cr min NOF
- FRA convention: 6×9 = borrow 3 months starting at month 6 ending month 9
- Company borrows 3 months, 6 months from now = 6×9 FRA (NOT 3×6!)
- ISDA Master Agreement: standard OTC documentation | Developed from Swaps Code 1985
📝 Previous Year Questions
Memory Tricks That STICK
Lock every fact permanently
🧠 Trick 1 — Cotton 1875
🧠 Trick 2 — Guarantor ≠ Participant
🧠 Trick 3 — Call = Buy, Put = Sell
🧠 Trick 4 — Currency Futures ≠ OTC
🧠 Trick 5 — FRA 6×9 Convention
🧠 Trick 6 — Forward vs Future
🧠 Trick 7 — CDS = Insurance
🧠 Trick 8 — ALL Functions Correct
Visual Summary — Chapter Map
Entire chapter in one diagram
Flash Revision — Last-Minute Cards
Read these 10 minutes before exam
⚡ Chapter 36 Complete — Derivatives Market
- Derivative: value from underlying | Cotton 1875 (India’s first) | LC Gupta → SEBI June 2000
- Participants: Hedgers + Speculators + Arbitrageurs (NOT guarantor!)
- Functions: ALL correct — price discovery, risk transfer, hedging, lower cost, leverage
- Forwards=OTC custom | Futures=Exchange standard | Currency futures ≠ OTC!
- Call=right to BUY | Put=right to SELL | Buyer has right, seller has obligation | Premium
- Swaps: Currency (exchange currencies), IRS (fixed↔floating), CDS (default insurance)
- FRA: 6×9=start@6,end@9 | ISDA: standard OTC documentation (from 1985 Swaps Code)
Banky says: “Cotton 1875, guarantor≠participant, call=buy put=sell, currency futures≠OTC, FRA 6×9!” 🎉📊
You now understand derivatives — from forwards to futures to options to swaps. When your treasury manager discusses hedging strategies, you’ll follow every move! 💪🔄