Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Derivatives
Depressions may or may not be in store. But times are bad enough now and excessive debt and reckless use of some derivatives clearly deserve much of the blame.
Most of us have direct experience with debt. You give me money now and I promise to repay you later with interest. Of course it is not always this simple. The bewildering complexity of some debt instruments can boggle the mind. But at least the fundamental idea of debt is familiar.
In contrast, you may think that you have never bought or sold derivatives and have little or no notion about their good and bad features. What are they? Are they really needed? If they are malevolent why not just outlaw them?
Here is a starter course. I will have more to say in future posts.
Wikipedia defines financial derivatives as follows:
Derivatives are financial contracts, or financial instruments, whose values are derived from the value of something else (known as the underlying).
I was brought up to take umbrage when an adjective ("underlying the ...") morphs into a noun ("the underlying"), but this usage is too pervasive to ignore.
A financial derivative is a contract in which one party promises to make a payment to another party in the future, where the amount to be paid is based on the value of something else (known as the underlying) at the time.
Even this is not broad enough but will do for now.
Here is a graph of an example that appeals to many investing for their retirement years.

But wait. What do you have to pay for this contract? More than $100 of course. Perhaps $110. So you could lose money, but no more than $10 out of your initial investment of $110.


The symbol x represents the final value of the underlying. For emphasis I have put a tilde (squiggly line) over it to indicate that its actual value is not known with certainty before the payoff date. The symbol y represents the value of the payoff, which is also uncertain today. The symbols f(..) represent a function, which relates the promised payoff to x. In this case, it is the red line in our first figure – it shows the relationship between the underlying (x) and the promised payoff.
Friday, July 11, 2008
About Lifetime Finance
For most of us income is not aligned nicely with spending over the course of a lifetime.
Early in our careers it seems sensible to spend more than we earn. We typically borrow money via credit cards, mortgages and the like.
Later it seems better to spend less than we earn. We save, on our own and/or via an employer-sponsored retirement plan.
In most cases we also have to decide how to invest such savings.
While working, we may be concerned that disability or death might cause economic hardship for our family and may purchase insurance that will provide payments if we are disabled or die.
With luck, at some point we will retire and find that our financial situation has changed radically. We may choose to purchase an annuity -- an insurance contract that will provide payments as long as we live.
After retiring, we may also keep some of our accumulated savings, investing it to provide some or all of our spending during the “golden years”.
These are my main subjects: Borrowing, Saving, Investing, Insuring and Spending.
To find a post on a particular subject, check the archive list (at the bottom of the right-hand column). To find the subjects for a particular month, just click on the header for the month.
I welcome your comments, although I am not planning to show them on the blog. I may not be able to answer you directly, but be assured that I will appreciate suggestions, information, reactions, references and the like.