Forward rate agreement
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In finance, a forward rate agreement (FRA) is a forward contract in which one party pays a fixed interest rate, and receives a floating interest rate equal to a reference rate (the underlying rate). The payments are calculated over a notional amount over a certain period, and netted, i.e. only the differential is paid. It is paid on the termination date. The reference rate is fixed one or two days before the termination date, dependent on the market convention for the particular currency. FRAs are over-the counter derivatives. A swap is a combination of FRAs.
The payer of the fixed interest rate is also known as the borrower or the buyer, whilst the receiver of the fixed interest rate is the lender or the seller.
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[edit] Payoff formula
The netted payment made at the termination date is:
- The Fixed Rate is the rate at which the contract is agreed.
- The Reference Rate is typically Euribor or LIBOR.
- α is the day count fraction, i.e. the portion of a year over which the rates are calculated, using the day count convention used in the money markets in the underlying currency. For EUR and USD this is generally the number of days divided by 360, for GBP it is the number of days divided by 365 days.
- The Fixed Rate and Reference Rate are rates that should accrue over a period starting on the termination date, and then paid at the end of the period. However, as the payment is already known at the beginning of the period, it is also paid at the beginning. This is why the discount factor is used in the denominator.
A Forward Rate Agreement is an agreement between two parties to settle the difference between an agreed level of interest and an actual future level of interest. The contract is agreed at the start of the period for which the interest is fixed.
[edit] FRAs Notation
FRA Descriptive Notation and Interpretation
Notation - | Termination date from now - | End of period from now - | Underlying Rate |
1 x 3 | 1 month | 3 months | 3-1 = 2 months LIBOR |
1 x 7 | 1 month | 7 months | 7-1 = 6 months LIBOR |
3 x 6 | 3 months | 6 months | 6-3 = 3 months LIBOR |
3 x 9 | 3 months | 9 months | 9-3 = 6 months LIBOR |
6 x 12 | 6 months | 12 months | 12-6 = 6 months LIBOR |
12 x 18 | 12 months | 18 months | 18-12 = 6 months LIBOR |