It is possible to make a credit funded investment
Alternatively to an unfunded swap or CFD, it is also possible to make a funded investment. Rather than paying LIBOR plus a spread quarterly and receiving property returns, the investor pays the notional amount of cash upfront and receives property returns net of the spread. For example, on a two-year swap an investor could choose, rather than paying LIBOR plus 1% on the swap, to pay 100% of the notional amount and receive the property return minus 1% each year and 100% redemption after two years.
The basis for property derivatives documentation is the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) documentation. Just as for other derivatives, ISDA has prepared standardized documents for property swaps, in order to facilitate trading. The Property Index Derivatives Definitions were published in May 2007. Standardization aims to reduce transaction costs, legal risk and transaction time, to increase transparency and confidence in the market, and to improve efficiency and liquidity. In addition to the definitions, ISDA provides confirmation templates for forwards and swaps in the US (Form X) and in Europe (Form Y), as well as an annex that describes the indices on which the trades are based. By September 2007, the Association has included the Standard&Poor’s/Case–Shiller Index, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) Index, the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF) Index, the worldwide Investment Property Databank (IPD) Indices, the UK Halifax House Price Index, the FTSE UK Commercial Property Index and Radar Logic’s Residential Property Index (RPX). The definitions booklet covers issues such as disruption events on these indices. More indices, as well as confirmation templates for options and basket trades, are likely to follow.
Development of the property credit and taxes
The development of the property derivatives market has so far centered on the UK and the US. However, both interest and transaction volumes are growing throughout Europe and Asia. Market participants expect first trades in Denmark, Ireland, the Netherlands, Spain and Sweden after first trades in Australia, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan and Switzerland. As the quality of indices improve, more and more countries will see first trades. Also, thePan-European IPD index creates strong interest from retail investors and from US pension funds. The trend is unlikely to spread to some countries where the data basis, needed to construct a reliable index, is insufficient.
Quickly increasing volumes are also expected due to the interest of insurance companies to hedge their liability risk, which depends heavily on real estate price changes. Liquidity will probably only change if more banks are willing to warehouse risks, i.e. take a risky position.
More mature markets will lead to more standardized derivatives traded on exchanges. However, the OTC market is likely to be the dominant derivative format in the near future.
The property group Grosvenor and ABN Amro traded the first property derivative in Australia, based on the Property Council/IPD Australian Property Index, in May 2007. The trade took the form of a two-year total return swap.
Median prices of home credits
The Chicago Board of Options Exchange (CBOE)’s Future Exchange (CFE) offers futures contracts that track prices nationally and regionally (North-east, South, Midwest and West) and eventually in 10 metropolitan areas as well.
CFE contracts are linked to the median price of existing home sales as tracked by the National Association of Realtors (NAR). Further, HedgeStreet allows anyone with a US$ 100 deposit and an internet connection to trade financial instruments called “housing price hedgelets” based on single-family house prices in six different cities (Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, San Diego and San Francisco). Just as the CFE contracts, the HedgeStreet hedgelets are based on indices of NAR. CBOE and HedgeStreet announced on 22 February 2006 that they collaborated on retail distribution of their contracts via joint marketing initiatives and that they would share certain technologies and hosting facilities to achieve cost and distribution synergies. The agreement also involved an equity investment by CBOE in HedgeStreet.
Moreover, the London-based International Real Estate Exchange (INREEX) intends to offer contracts tied to average home prices published by the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO), the agency that regulates the mortgage organizations Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The exchange’s trading technology allows investors to trade the national or a state index online.
The low trading volume in the contracts based on the S&P/Case–Shiller index caused Radar Logic, an analytic and data company providing a range of daily indices and analytic tools, to launch a further index family for residential property. The Residential Property Indices (RPX) represent the median transaction prices per square foot paid in one of 25 Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) on any given day. In addition, there is a national composite index, representing over US$ 10 trillion in residential properties. The RPX market targets investors that are exposed to mortgage credit or to the housing market cycles in general.

