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Posts tagged ‘foreclosure’

19
May

Real estate as an asset class

The real estate market as a whole is an aggregate of many submarkets such as owneroccupied housing, offices or land. Usually the performance of a submarket and not the overall market is the focus of an investor. It is important to take indices as underlying instruments that have a large community of potential users. Primary users are generally institutional investors, but private investors should also be able to understand and benefit from property derivatives.

While investors see real estate as an asset class that must generate a return as high as possible, homeowners see their house as a consumption good with some price risk. The submarkets for the two are completely different. The choice of an index as a suitable underlying instrument for derivatives depends mainly on the criteria of the region, property type and data base (rents, transaction prices or appraisal values). Types with a potential volume that is sufficiently large for a reasonable derivatives market include offices, residential properties, retail space and industrial space. It is doubtful whether more special property types such as hotels or even land would find a big enough market.

Owner-occupied housing is treated very differently around the globe. While homeowners borrow relatively moderately and stay for decades in their home in central Europe, households in the UK and in the US are much more sensitive to property price movements. Often, they are ready to realize gains by selling their home or they increase the mortgage once prices have appreciated.

Only the latter mind-set may lead to a broadly supported desire for protection against falling house prices. The market for owner-occupied housing is huge, and the sufficiently large number of transactions make indices more reliable.

19
May

The impact of payday loans market

There is mixed evidence on the impact of a derivatives market on its underlying asset market. Some studies have found a reduction in volatility after the introduction of derivatives while others conclude that volatility was not affected or even increased.

The general reasoning for an increase in payday loans volatility states that derivatives attract speculators who may destabilize the base market and create bubbles, and that the closing out of hedging positions shortly before expiration creates additional price variation. On the other hand, a decrease of volatility could result as derivatives make a market more complete, reduce transaction costs and enhance information flows. Also, the transfer of speculative activity from the base market to the derivative market may dampen volatility.

Others suggests that derivatives improve the efficiency of incomplete markets by expanding the opportunity set faced by investors. This in turn should reduce the volatility of the underlying asset. Research show that option listings have beneficial effects and improve the market quality and liquidity of the underlying stocks. They analyzed the impact of derivatives on their underlying assets for 174 stocks that had an option listed on either the American Stock Exchange (Amex), the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE), the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), the Pacific Stock Exchange (PSE) or the Philadelphia Stock Exchange (PHLX) from 1983 to 1989. In particular, they observed a decrease in the bid-offer spreads and increases in quoted depth, trading volume, trading frequency and transaction size after the introduction of derivatives. In summary, the listing of options resulted in reduced transaction costs for the underlying stocks. Further, they found that information asymmetries decreased and pricing efficiency increased.

3
May

The Credit Property Total Return Swap

By December 2007, property derivatives deals have been made public in Australia, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, Switzerland, the UK and the US. Deals were referenced to both commercial and residential properties. Derivatives that reflect commercial real estate are typically tied to appraisal-based indices while derivatives that reflect owner-occupied residential housing usually use transaction-based indices as the underlying instrument (see property indices).

Most contracts are still executed as matched bargain trades between a buyer and a seller, with pricing determined through negotiations between them. As the market becomes more liquid, standardized contracts will become available directly from intermediaries. They will price the contracts and assume the risk of finding a suitable counterparty.

Several derivative structures have been developed and traded. So far, the bulk of trades has been structured as over-the-counter (OTC) swap contracts. In addition, a few derivatives are listed and traded on public exchanges. Most market participants are aiming to create derivatives that replicate the familiar characteristics of direct property investment, i.e. quarterly rental income and annual capital growth. As the market expands, the variety of structures increases. Derivative markets have a particular order of development and it is not unusual for options to develop after futures and swaps, because the option writers require these instruments to be liquid in order to hedge their positions.

The Property Total Return Swap (PTRS) is the most popular format and, in principle, swaps a fixed or floating interest payment for an amount calculated with reference to total returns on the property index, which consists of both rental income and capital gains (see swap transactions). The swap structure is quite simple and the variations usually only involve the choice of the index (country, sector and rental, and/or capital growth index), the tenor and the payment conventions.

27
Apr

Cash-settled payday loan contracts are available

After the launch of futures and options on regional home prices, CME announced a partnership with the commercial real estate index provider Global Real Analytics (GRA) on 6 September 2006. They listed future and option contracts based on the S&P/GRA Commercial Real Estate Indices (CREX) on 29 October 2007.

The S&P/GRA CREX indices capture underlying real estate dynamics by tracking transaction-based price changes in diverse property sectors and geographic regions. GRA has a 20-year history of capturing data and sees the new indices as a natural extension, suited for the use of publicly traded futures contracts.

Ten quarterly cash-settled contracts are available: a national composite index, five regional indices (Desert Mountain West, Mid-Atlantic South, Northeast, Midwest and Pacific West) and four national property type indices (retail, office, apartment and warehouse properties).

CME expects the users of the new property contracts to be different from those trading in housing derivatives. If someone hedges against house-price declines in an area, he or she develops or buys a house there. The commercial contracts, on the other hand, are designed for larger investors who hold commercial properties in their portfolios, such as pension funds and REITs.

To hedge real estate or home price declines, individuals can purchase put options based on a particular index. If prices fall, investors will naturally see the value of their real estate holdings decline, but they offset the losses with gains in the put options. The CME hopes that there will be enough speculators in the market to take the other side of the transactions.

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