Credit Derivative

Credit Derivative

A credit derivative is a financial contract that allows parties to minimize their exposure to credit risk. Credit derivatives include credit default swaps, collateralized debt obligations, total return swaps, credit default swap options, and credit spread forwards. The value of a credit derivative is dependent on both the credit quality of the borrower and the credit quality of the third party, referred to as the counterparty. Often a credit derivative will be triggered by a qualifying credit event, such as a default, missed interest payment, credit downgrade, or bankruptcy. But the CDX index also functions as a shell, or container, as it is made up of a collection of other credit derivatives: credit default swaps (CDS).

A credit derivative allows creditors to transfer to a third party the potential risk of the debtor defaulting, in exchange for paying a fee, known as the premium.

What Is a Credit Derivative?

A credit derivative is a financial contract that allows parties to minimize their exposure to credit risk. Credit derivatives consist of a privately held, negotiable bilateral contract traded over-the-counter (OTC) between two parties in a creditor/debtor relationship. These allow the creditor to effectively transfer some or all of the risk of a debtor defaulting to a third party. This third party accepts the risk in return for payment, known as the premium.

Several types of credit derivatives exist, including:

In all cases, the price of a credit derivative is driven by the creditworthiness of the party or parties involved. Often a credit derivative will be triggered by a qualifying credit event, such as a default, missed interest payment, credit downgrade, or bankruptcy.

A credit derivative allows creditors to transfer to a third party the potential risk of the debtor defaulting, in exchange for paying a fee, known as the premium.
A credit derivative is a contract whose value depends on the creditworthiness or a credit event experienced by the entity referenced in the contract.
Credit derivatives include credit default swaps, collateralized debt obligations, total return swaps, credit default swap options, and credit spread forwards.

Understanding a Credit Derivative

As their name implies, derivatives stem from other financial instruments. These products are securities whose price depends on the value of an underlying asset, such as a stock's share price or a bond's coupon. In the case of a credit derivative, the price derives from the credit risk of one or more of the underlying assets.

There are two main types of derivatives: puts and calls. A put is a right (though not an obligation) to sell an asset at a set price, known as the strike price, while a call is a right (though not an obligation) to buy the underlying at a set price. Investors use puts and calls to hedge or provide insurance against an asset moving in an adverse price direction.

In essence, all derivative products are insurance products, especially credit derivatives. Derivatives are also used by speculators to bet on the direction of the underlying assets.

The credit derivative, while being a security, is not a physical asset. Instead, it is a contract. The contract allows for the transfer of credit risk related to an underlying entity from one party to another without transferring the actual underlying entity. For example, a bank concerned a borrower may not be able to repay a loan can protect itself by transferring the credit risk to another party while keeping the loan on its books.

Example of a Credit Derivative

Banks and other lenders use credit derivatives to remove the risk of default from a loan portfolio — in exchange for paying a fee, referred to as a premium.

Assume Company ABC borrows $10 million from a bank. Company ABC has a bad credit history and must buy a credit derivative as a condition of the loan. The credit derivative gives the bank the right to "put" the risk of default onto a third party, thereby transferring the risk to this third party.

In other words, the third party promises to pay back the loan and any interest should Company ABC default, in exchange for receiving an annual fee over the life of the loan. If Company ABC does not default, the third party profits in the form of the annual fee. Meanwhile, Company ABC receives the loan, and the bank is covered in case of default. Everyone is happy.

Valuing Credit Derivatives

The value of a credit derivative is dependent on both the credit quality of the borrower and the credit quality of the third party, referred to as the counterparty.

In placing a value on the credit derivative, the credit quality of the counterparty is more important than that of the borrower. In the event the counterparty goes into default or in some way cannot honor the derivatives contract — pay off the underlying loan — the lender is at a loss. They would not receive the return of their principal and they are out the fees paid to the third party. On the other hand, if the counterparty has a better credit rating than the borrower, it increases the quality of the debt overall.

Credit derivatives are traded over-the-counter (OTC). In 2010, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act split regulation of the OTC swaps market between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

Prior to this, a lack of regulation and oversight led to much speculative trading in the product. Furthermore, the chain of ownership of an instrument was very convoluted, and the details of terms were murky. Misuse of credit derivatives played a key role in the 2007-08 financial crisis.

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) issues a quarterly report on credit derivatives. For the fourth quarter of 2020, the credit derivatives market was estimated at $3 trillion. Credit default swaps accounted for $2.6 trillion, or about 86.5% of the market.

Credit Derivative Benchmark Indices

While credit derivatives usually trade OTC, there are now various credit derivative indexes that traders can use as a benchmark to value the performance of their holdings. Most of these indexes track and measure total returns for the various segments of the bond issuer market focusing on CDS.

For instance, The credit default swap index (CDX), formerly the Dow Jones CDX, is a benchmark financial instrument made up of CDS that have been issued by North American or emerging market companies. The CDX was the first CDS index, which was created in the early 2000s and was based on a basket of single issuer CDSs.

The CDX is itself a tradable security: a credit market derivative. But the CDX index also functions as a shell, or container, as it is made up of a collection of other credit derivatives: credit default swaps (CDS).

Related terms:

Basket

A basket is a collection of securities with a similar theme, while a basket order is an order that executes simultaneous trades in multiple securities. read more

Bilateral Contract

A bilateral contract is an agreement between two parties in which each side agrees to fulfill their side of the bargain. read more

Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is

A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more

Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO)

A collateralized debt obligation (CDO) is a complex financial product backed by a pool of loans and other assets and sold to institutional investors. read more

Contingent Credit Default Swap (CCDS)

A contingent credit default swap (CCDS) is a tailored credit default swap that depends on two triggering events for payout. read more

Counterparty

A counterparty is the party on the other side of a transaction, as a financial transaction requires at least two parties. read more

Credit Event

A credit event is a negative change in a borrower's capacity to meet its payments, which triggers settlement of a credit default swap (CDS) contract. read more

Credit History

Credit history refers to the ongoing documentation of an individual’s repayment of their debts. read more

Credit Spread Option

A credit spread option is a financial derivative contract that transfers credit risk from one party to another.  read more

Creditworthiness

Creditworthiness is how a lender determines that you will default on your debt obligations or how worthy you are to receive new credit. read more

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