FAR 5 - Financial Instruments & Derivatives Flashcards

1
Q

Financial Instruments inlude “C-O-D

A

Cash

Ownership interest in an equity (stocks)

Derivative contracts that create a right & obligation to transfer other financial instriment (stock options)

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2
Q

What are the three reasons entities aquire derivities?

A
  1. Investments
  2. Arbitrage
  3. Hedges
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3
Q

What are the three characteristic of a Derivative?

NUNS

A

Derivative contracts that creat a right & obligation to transfer other financial instruments.

A derivative is a financial instrument that meet certain requirements:

  1. No net investment
  2. An Underlying & a Notional amount
  3. Net Settlement
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4
Q

Derivative Examples

4 Main types

A

Option Contract - (has right but not obligation to purch/sell in the future) Put-options, right to sell shares; Call-options, right to aquire shares

Futures Contract - (has right & obligation to deliver/purchase foreign currency or goods in the futere at a set price today)

Forward Contract - has right & obligation to buy or sell a commodity at a future date for an agreed-upon price

Interest Rate or Foreign Currency Swap - a forward based contract or agreement between two counter parties to exchange streams of cash flows over a specified period in the future

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5
Q

Fair Value Hedge

vs.

Cash Flow Hedge

A

FV Hedge - hedging against a recognized asset or firm purchase commitment. Change in value is recognized in income from continuing operations (I/S)

Cash Flow Hedge - hedging against a forecased transaction. Change in value is recognized in OCI

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6
Q

What is a hedge?

A

A hedge is the use of a derivative to reduce or eliminate a risk that the entity is subject to either from an asset or liability recognized on its financial statement or a future transaction.

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7
Q

Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic Value of Option Contracts

A

Smythe Co. invested $200 in a call option for 100 shares of Gin Co. $.50 par common stock, when the market price was $10 per share. The option expired in three months and had an exercise price of $9 per share. What was the intrinsic value of the call option at the time of initial investment?

The intrinsic value of a stock option is the market price less the strike price. At the time of initial investment each option had an intrinsic value of $1 ($10 market price less $9 strike price). The intrinsic value is 100 shares x $1 = $100.

The extrinsic value of stock options is the new market price less the market price at the time of the intial investment/options were agreed on.

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