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5.2.2 Cap-/floorlets


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The cap-floor parity relation (2.2.4#eq.3) shows that both share many features with swaps. The contract is again decomposed into elementary intervals and the valuation of every caplet or floorlets is carried out backwards starting from zero, since a finite time has to pass to accumulate interest rate earnings. The incremental change reflects the difference between the spot and the cap-/floor rates; contrary to swaps, this difference can never become negative, since caps and floors do not carry any obligation. Using the Vasicek model, the contract can therefore be viewed as a bond paying a continuously compounded annual coupon of $ \max(r-K,0)dt$ for caplets and $ \max(K-r,0)dt$ for floorlets. By analogy with the swap rate, define the

The VMARKET applet below calculates the value of a caplet with a cap rate of 8%, as a function of the spot rate and an increasing time to the maturity.

VMARKET applet:  press Start/Stop to simulate the value of a caplet V(r) as a function of the spot rate r for an increasing lifetime of the contract. The parameters assume a cap rate of 8% and a market with a volatility of 1%.



Virtual market experiments: parameters of a caplet
  1. Verify that holding a Caplet and shorting a Floorlet in a portfolio results in the same payoff as the swap that can be reproduced by selecting a IRateSwap.
  2. Press Display to discuss in detail the similarities and the differences you notice in a comparison with the payoff from call / put options on shares. Why is the payoff deep ``in-the-money'' here curved?
  3. Set Volatility=0.05 and more to study how uncertainties affect the prices.
  4. Examine the effect of drifts in the forecasted rates by changing parameters such as MktPriceRsk, MeanRevTarg, MeanRevVelo, UserDouble.

The same models used to forecast drifts in the interest rate can also be used here, but the volatility should be modified to reflect the uncertainty in the interest earnings (exercise 5.07).

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