Futures Price Valuation - Equity Derivatives Provision
2002 ISDA Equity Derivatives Definitions A Jolly Contrarian owner’s manual™
6.8 in all its glory
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Overview
Article 6. Valuation
Section 6.1. Valuation Time
Section 6.2. Valuation Date
Section 6.3. General Terms Relating to Market Disruption Events
- 6.3(a) Market Disruption Event
- 6.3(b) Trading Disruption
- 6.3(c) Exchange Disruption
- 6.3(d) Early Closure
Section 6.4. Disrupted Day
Section 6.5. Scheduled Valuation Date
Section 6.6. Consequences of Disrupted Days
Section 6.7. Averaging
- 6.7(a). Averaging Date
- 6.7(b). Settlement Price and Final Price
- 6.7(c). Averaging Date Disruption
- 6.7(d). Adjustments of the Exchange-traded Contract
- 6.7(e). Adjustments to Indices (Averaging)
Section 6.8. Futures Price Valuation
- 6.8(a) Valuation Date (Futures Price Valuation)
- 6.8(b) Additional definitions (Futures Price Valuation)
- 6.8(c) Settlement Price and Final Price (Futures Price Valuation)
- 6.8(d) Adjustments of the Exchange-traded Contract (Futures Price Valuation)
- 6.8(e) Non-Commencement or Discontinuance of the Exchange-traded Contract
- 6.8(f) Corrections of the Official Settlement Price
Paragraph 6.8(d) is identical to the text of 6.7(d), except that that relates to Averaging.
Summary
Where you price an Index Swap or Index Basket Swap by reference to an futures contract rather than the published price of the Index itself. This requires you to designate not just the Index to which the futures contract relates (which needless to say you’d be specifying anyway), but also the delivery month of the relevant futures contract and the exchange on which the futures contract is traded.
Note that valuation keys off the Official Settlement Price published by the Exchange on the Valuation Date, so you don’t need the Valuation Time concept.
Section 6.8(e) Non-Commencement or Discontinuance of the Exchange-traded Contract
Part of the greater flow of what you should do if you have a Index swap which you are hedging by reference to an Exchange-traded Contract. This part: what to do if the Exchange-traded Contract you are hedging with goes away, or — more ontologically challengingly, you would think — never existed in the first place.
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- The JC’s famous Nutshell™ summary of this clause