Plain Vanilla Swap

Plain Vanilla Swap

A plain vanilla swap is one of the simplest financial instruments contracted in the over-the-counter market between two private parties, both of which are usually firms or financial institutions. In a plain vanilla interest rate swap, Company A and Company B choose a maturity, principal amount, currency, fixed interest rate, floating interest rate index, and rate reset and payment dates. A plain vanilla interest rate swap is often done to hedge a floating rate exposure, although it can also be done to take advantage of a declining rate environment by moving from a fixed to a floating rate. On the specified payment dates for the life of the swap, Company A pays Company B an amount of interest calculated by applying the fixed rate to the principal amount, and Company B pays Company A the amount derived from applying the floating interest rate to the principal amount. The term plain vanilla swap is most commonly used to describe an interest rate swap in which a floating interest rate is exchanged for a fixed rate or vice versa.

A plain vanilla swap is the simplest type of swap in the market, often used to hedge floating interest rate exposure.

What Is a Plain Vanilla Swap?

A plain vanilla swap is one of the simplest financial instruments contracted in the over-the-counter market between two private parties, both of which are usually firms or financial institutions. There are several types of plain vanilla swaps, including an interest rate swap, commodity swap, and a foreign currency swap. The term plain vanilla swap is most commonly used to describe an interest rate swap in which a floating interest rate is exchanged for a fixed rate or vice versa.

A plain vanilla swap is the simplest type of swap in the market, often used to hedge floating interest rate exposure.
There are various types of plain vanilla swaps, including interest rate, commodity, and currency swaps.
Generally, both legs of the swap are denominated in the same currency, and interest payments are netted.

Understanding a Plain Vanilla Swap

A plain vanilla interest rate swap is often done to hedge a floating rate exposure, although it can also be done to take advantage of a declining rate environment by moving from a fixed to a floating rate. Both legs of the swap are denominated in the same currency, and interest payments are netted. The notional principal does not change during the life of the swap, and there are no embedded options.

Types of Plain Vanilla Swaps

The most common plain vanilla swap is a floating rate interest rate swap. Now, the most common floating rate index is the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), which is set daily by the International Commodities Exchange (ICE). LIBOR is posted for five currencies — the U.S. dollar, euro, Swiss franc, Japanese yen, and British pound. Maturities range from overnight to 12 months. The rate is set based on a survey of between 11 and 18 major banks.

The Intercontinental Exchange, the authority responsible for LIBOR, will stop publishing one-week and two-month USD LIBOR after Dec. 31, 2021. All other LIBOR will be discontinued after June 30, 2023.

The most common floating rate reset period is every three months, with semi-annual payments. The day count convention on the floating leg is generally actual/360 for the U.S. dollar and the euro, or actual/365 for the British pound, Japanese yen, and Swiss franc. The interest on the floating rate leg is accrued and compounded for six months, while the fixed-rate payment is calculated on a simple 30/360 or 30/365 basis, depending on the currency. The interest due on the floating rate leg is compared with that due on the fixed-rate leg, and only the net difference is paid.

Example of a Plain Vanilla Swap

In a plain vanilla interest rate swap, Company A and Company B choose a maturity, principal amount, currency, fixed interest rate, floating interest rate index, and rate reset and payment dates. On the specified payment dates for the life of the swap, Company A pays Company B an amount of interest calculated by applying the fixed rate to the principal amount, and Company B pays Company A the amount derived from applying the floating interest rate to the principal amount. Only the netted difference between the interest payments changes hands.

Related terms:

Amortizing Swap

An amortizing swap is an interest rate swap where the notional principal amount is reduced at the underlying fixed and floating rates. read more

Arrears Swap

An arrears swap is an interest rate swap where the floating payment is based on the rate at the end, rather than the beginning, of the reset period. read more

Fixed Price

Fixed price can refer to a leg of a swap where the payments are based on a constant interest rate, or it can refer to a price that does not change. read more

Fixed Interest Rate

A fixed interest rate remains the same for a loan's entire term, making long-term budgeting easier. Some loans combine fixed and variable rates. read more

Floating Price

The floating price is a leg of a swap contract that depends on a variable, including an interest rate, currency exchange rate or price of an asset. 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

London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR)

LIBOR is a benchmark interest rate at which major global lend to one another in the international interbank market for short-term loans. read more

Notional Principal Amount

Notional principal amount, in an interest rate swap, is the predetermined dollar amounts on which the exchanged interest payments are based.  read more

Plain Vanilla

Plain vanilla is the most basic or standard version of a financial instrument. It is the opposite of an exotic instrument. read more

Zero-Coupon Swap

A zero-coupon swap is an exchange of income streams but the stream of fixed-rate payments is made as one lump-sum payment. read more