Credit-Default Swaps Spur Fastest Derivatives Growth in 9 Years
By Hamish Risk
May 21 (Bloomberg) -- The global derivatives market grew at the fastest pace in at least nine years during 2006 as the amount of contracts based on bonds more than doubled to $29 trillion, the Bank for International Settlements said today.
Derivatives covering bonds and loans rose by $15 trillion last year, the Basel, Switzerland-based bank said on its Web site. The total amount of over-the-counter contracts whose value is derived from price changes of bonds, currencies, commodities and stocks, or events like interest rates or the weather rose 39.5 percent to $415 trillion, the biggest jump since the BIS began compiling the data.
Morgan Stanley, Bear Stearns Cos. and Deutsche Bank AG depended on credit derivatives to report first-quarter profits that beat analyst forecasts. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said last week that the contracts ``increased the resilience'' of financial markets, while warning that they may be exploited by investors to profit from insider trading.
``Derivatives are now a major contributor to investment bank earnings,'' said Jerry Del Missier, co-president of Barclays Capital in London, the biggest underwriter of European bonds last year. ``Credit derivatives will continue their high growth path for a long time yet, and that growth rate will be higher than any other market.''
The actual money at risk through credit derivatives increased 93 percent to $470 billion last year, the BIS said. The amount at stake in the entire derivatives market is $9.7 trillion, according to the BIS, which was formed in 1930 to monitor financial markets and regulate banks.
Salomon Brothers
The market, started by Salomon Brothers Inc. in 1981 when the firm arranged for International Business Machines Corp. and the World Bank to swap debt payments in Swiss francs and German marks for dollar obligations, has become Wall Street's most- profitable activity.
Morgan Stanley, the world's second-biggest securities firm by market value, said a jump in revenue from credit products helped spur a 70 percent increase in first-quarter profit to an all-time high. Bear Stearns, the fifth-biggest U.S. securities firm, said credit derivatives trading contributed to an 8 percent increase in first-quarter profit. Deutsche Bank reported record revenue from trading debt and credit derivatives, helping lift first-quarter profit by 30 percent.
Contracts on bonds took off in the 1990s when New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co. led banks creating credit-default swaps. The contracts allow bond investors to hedge against the risk of a company or country defaulting on interest payments or speculate on its creditworthiness.
Market Declines
Derivatives helped investors hedge their risks and contained a decline in bond prices during 2005 when the credit ratings on debt of Ford Motor Co. in Dearborn, Michigan, and Detroit-based General Motors Corp. was reduced to below investment grade.
The contracts also limited the fallout from Greenwich, Connecticut-based Amaranth Advisors LLC's record $6.6 billion loss last year and this year's slump in the U.S. subprime mortgage market, said Anshu Jain, head of sales and trading at Deutsche Bank in London.
``We have been through several market corrections in the past few years and in each case, markets have recovered,'' Jain said in an e-mail. ``In retrospect, people think the market has been characterized by calm, continuous and even benign conditions. Derivatives are a big part of explaining that phenomenon.''
Interest-Rate Swaps
Banks and hedge funds say it's cheaper and easier to use credit-default swaps than buying or selling the underlying securities. Investors who buy the contracts are paid the face value of the underlying debt in exchange for the defaulted notes should the company fail to adhere to debt agreements.
Interest-rate swaps remain the biggest part of the derivatives market, growing 15 percent to $292 trillion, compared with 38-percent growth the previous year, the report said. The contracts allow companies to switch between fixed-rate and floating-rate interest payments.
Growth in the overall derivatives market outpaced the previous record increase of 39.2 percent in 2003.
Foreign-exchange derivatives rose 28 percent to $40.2 billion in 2006. Contracts based on commodities such as gold and oil expanded by 27.7 percent to $6.9 trillion.
The BIS surveyed 62 institutions for its semi-annual report.
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The outstanding amounts of derivatives ($ trillion).
End-Dec 2006 End-June 2006 End-Dec 2005
Interest rates 292 262 212
Credit 29 20 14
Equity 7.5 6.8 5.8
Commodities 6.9 6.4 5.4
Foreign Exchange 40 38 31
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To contact the reporter on this story: Hamish Risk in London hrisk@bloomberg.net . Last Updated: May 20, 2007 19:18 EDT |