<b>From single names to exotics</b>
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<b>From single names to exotics</b>

Headline: From single names to exotics
Source: Euromoney
Date: June 2001

       
Stephen Stonberg
Credit derivatives lie at the heart of the structured credit market and nearly all credit derivatives are based on credit-default swaps.

These instruments are often poorly understood by outsiders. But a plain-vanilla single-name credit-default swap is a very straightforward contract. The complications arise when the swaps are embedded in larger financial structures or are linked to more than one name.

A credit-default swap works like an insurance policy. A protection buyer, most often a bank that owns a loan or bond it wants to hedge, pays an annual premium to a protection seller. In return, the protection seller commits itself to making a one-off payment if the reference credit defaults on any of its debt. The premium is calculated as a percentage of the underlying asset.

Last month, for example, it cost around 75 basis points to buy protection on Ford in a five-year contract – the most liquid maturity. In a standard $10 million contract, the protection buyer would pay $75,000 a year to the protection seller for the next five years.









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