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  2. Interest rate swap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interest_rate_swap

    As OTC instruments, interest rate swaps (IRSs) can be customised in a number of ways and can be structured to meet the specific needs of the counterparties. For example: payment dates could be irregular, the notional of the swap could be amortized over time, reset dates (or fixing dates) of the floating rate could be irregular, mandatory break clauses may be inserted into the contract, etc.

  3. Swap (finance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swap_(finance)

    An amortizing swap is usually an interest rate swap in which the notional principal for the interest payments declines during the life of the swap, perhaps at a rate tied to the prepayment of a mortgage or to an interest rate benchmark such as the LIBOR. It is suitable to those customers of banks who want to manage the interest rate risk ...

  4. What are Interest Rate Swaps? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/interest-rate-swaps-002412705.html

    In recent years, interest rate swaps have become an important component of the fixed-income market. With an interest rate swap, investors will typically exchange or swap a fixed-interest payment ...

  5. Swap Execution Facility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swap_Execution_Facility

    The swaps that must be traded on SEFs are both subject to a CFTC-centralized clearing mandate and have been determined to be "made available to trade" (MAT) by at least one SEF. Four categories of interest rate swaps and two categories of credit default swaps are currently subject to clearing mandates. [9]

  6. Fixed income arbitrage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_income_arbitrage

    Swap Spread = Yield to Maturity of Swap – Yield to Maturity of Treasury Bond The result of this equation is most often positive. Since the swap's floating rate is the BBSW, we find that the swap will be above the yield to maturity of the Treasury Bond as the swap is almost always above the repurchase rate [8] (RBA, 2021). This is because the ...

  7. Currency swap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currency_swap

    In finance, a currency swap (more typically termed a cross-currency swap, XCS) is an interest rate derivative (IRD). In particular it is a linear IRD, and one of the most liquid benchmark products spanning multiple currencies simultaneously. It has pricing associations with interest rate swaps (IRSs), foreign exchange (FX) rates, and FX swaps ...

  8. Constant maturity swap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constant_maturity_swap

    The floating leg of a constant maturity swap fixes against a point on the swap curve on a periodic basis. A constant maturity swap is an interest rate swap where the interest rate on one leg is reset periodically, but with reference to a market swap rate rather than LIBOR. The other leg of the swap is generally LIBOR, but may be a fixed rate or ...

  9. Swaption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swaption

    Moneyness, therefore, is determined based on whether the strike rate is higher, lower, or at the same level as the forward swap rate. Addressing this, quantitative analysts value swaptions by constructing complex lattice-based term structure and short-rate models that describe the movement of interest rates over time.