Interest Rate Floor

Interest Rate Floor

An interest rate floor is an agreed-upon rate in the lower range of rates associated with a floating rate loan product. Interest rate floor contracts are one of three common interest rate derivative contracts, the other two being interest rate caps and interest rate swaps. The lender’s lending terms structure the contract with an interest rate floor provision, which means that the rate is adjustable based on the agreed-upon market rate until it reaches the interest rate floor. In the case of an interest rate floor, the buyer of an interest rate floor contract seeks compensation when the floating rate falls below the contract’s floor. Interest rate floor and interest rate cap contracts can provide a different alternative to the exchanging of balance sheet assets in an interest rate swap.

Contracts and loan agreements often include interest rate floors.

What Is an Interest Rate Floor?

An interest rate floor is an agreed-upon rate in the lower range of rates associated with a floating rate loan product. Interest rate floors are utilized in derivative contracts and loan agreements. This is in contrast to an interest rate ceiling (or cap).

Interest rate floors are often used in the adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) market. Often, this minimum is designed to cover any costs associated with processing and servicing the loan. An interest rate floor is often present through the issuing of an ARM, as it prevents interest rates from adjusting below a preset level.

Contracts and loan agreements often include interest rate floors.
Interest rate floors are in contrast to interest rate ceilings or caps.
There are three common interest rate derivative contracts, with interest rate floors being just one.

Understanding Interest Rate Floors

Interest rate floors and interest rate caps are levels used by varying market participants to hedge risks associated with floating rate loan products. In both products, the buyer of the contract seeks to obtain a payout based on a negotiated rate. In the case of an interest rate floor, the buyer of an interest rate floor contract seeks compensation when the floating rate falls below the contract’s floor. This buyer is buying protection from lost interest income paid by the borrower when the floating rate falls.

Interest rate floor contracts are one of three common interest rate derivative contracts, the other two being interest rate caps and interest rate swaps. Interest rate floor contracts and interest rate cap contracts are derivative products typically bought on market exchanges similar to put and call options. Interest rate swaps require two separate entities to agree on the swapping of an asset, typically involving the exchanging of fixed-rate debt for floating-rate debt. Interest rate floor and interest rate cap contracts can provide a different alternative to the exchanging of balance sheet assets in an interest rate swap.

Real World Example of an Interest Rate Floor

As a hypothetical example, assume that a lender is securing a floating rate loan and is looking for protection against lost income that would arise if interest rates were to decline. Suppose the lender buys an interest rate floor contract with an interest rate floor of 8%. The floating rate on the $1 million negotiated loan then falls to 7%. The interest rate floor derivative contract purchased by the lender results in a payout of $10,000 = (($1 million *.08) - ($1 million*.07)).

The payout to the holder of the contract is also adjusted based on days to maturity or days to reset which is determined by the details of the contract.

The Use of Floors in Adjustable Rate Loan Contracts

An interest rate floor can also be an agreed upon rate in an adjustable rate loan contract, such as an adjustable mortgage. The lender’s lending terms structure the contract with an interest rate floor provision, which means that the rate is adjustable based on the agreed-upon market rate until it reaches the interest rate floor. A loan with an interest rate floor provision has a minimum rate that must be paid by the borrower to protect the income for the lender.

Related terms:

Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)

An adjustable-rate mortgage is a type of mortgage in which the interest rate paid on the outstanding balance varies according to a specific benchmark. read more

Floor and Examples

A floor in finance may refer to several things, including the lowest acceptable limit, the lowest guaranteed limit, or the physical space where trading occurs. read more

Hedge

A hedge is a type of investment that is intended to reduce the risk of adverse price movements in an asset. read more

Initial Interest Rate

The initial interest rate is the introductory rate on an adjustable or floating rate loan. read more

Interest-Rate Derivative

An interest-rate derivative is a broad term for a derivative contract, such as a futures, option, or swap, that has an interest rate as its underlying asset. read more

Interest Rate , Formula, & Calculation

The interest rate is the amount lenders charge borrowers and is a percentage of the principal. It is also the amount earned from deposit accounts. read more

Interest Rate Ceiling

An interest rate ceiling is the maximum interest rate permitted in a particular transaction. It is the opposite of an interest rate floor. read more

Interest Rate Collar

An interest rate collar is an options strategy that limits one's interest rate risk exposure. read more

Interest Rate Swap

An interest rate swap is a forward contract in which one stream of future interest payments is exchanged for another based on a specified principal amount. read more

Lender

A lender is an individual, a public or private group, or a financial institution that makes funds available to another with the expectation that the funds will be repaid. read more