The Handbook of Hybrid Securities : Convertible Bonds, CoCo Bonds and Bail-In.
Introducing a revolutionary new quantitative approach to hybrid securities valuation and risk management To an equity trader they are shares. For the trader at the fixed income desk, they are bonds (after all, they pay coupons, so what''s the problem?). They are hybrid securities. Neither...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Hoboken :
Wiley,
2014.
©2014 |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- The Handbook of Hybrid Securities; Contents; Reading this Book; Acknowledgments; 1 Hybrid Assets; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Hybrid Capital; 1.3 Preferreds; 1.4 Convertible Bonds; 1.5 Contingent Convertibles; 1.6 Other Types of Hybrid Debt; 1.6.1 Hybrid Bank Capital; 1.6.2 Hybrid Corporate Capital; 1.6.3 Toggle Bonds; 1.7 Regulation; 1.7.1 Making Failures Less Likely; 1.7.2 Making Failures Less Disruptive; 1.8 Bail-In Capital; 1.9 Risk and Rating; 1.9.1 Risk; 1.9.2 Rating; 1.10 Conclusion; 2 Convertible Bonds; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Anatomy of a Convertible Bond; 2.2.1 Final Payoff.
- 2.2.2 Price Graph2.2.3 Quotation of a Convertible Bond; 2.2.4 Bond Floor (BF); 2.2.5 Parity; 2.2.6 Convexity; 2.2.7 Optional Conversion; 2.2.8 Forced Conversion; 2.2.9 Mandatory Conversion; 2.3 Convertible Bond Arbitrage; 2.3.1 Components of Risk; 2.3.2 Delta; 2.3.3 Delta Hedging; 2.3.4 Different Notions of Delta; 2.3.5 Greeks; 2.4 Standard Features; 2.4.1 Issuer Call; 2.4.2 Put; 2.4.3 Coupons; 2.4.4 Dividends; 2.5 Additional Features; 2.5.1 Dividend Protection; 2.5.2 Take-Over Protection; 2.5.3 Refixes; 2.6 Other Convertible Bond Types; 2.6.1 Exchangeables; 2.6.2 Synthetic Convertibles.
- 2.6.3 Cross-Currency Convertibles2.6.4 Reverse Convertibles; 2.6.5 Convertible Preferreds; 2.6.6 Make-Whole; 2.6.7 Contingent Conversion; 2.6.8 Convertible Bond Option; 2.7 Convertible Bond Terminology; 2.7.1 144A; 2.7.2 Fixed-Income Metrics; 2.8 Convertible Bond Market; 2.8.1 Market Participants; 2.8.2 Investors; 2.9 Conclusion; 3 Contingent Convertibles (CoCos); 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Definition; 3.3 Anatomy; 3.3.1 Loss-Absorption Mechanism; 3.3.2 Trigger; 3.3.3 Host Instrument; 3.4 CoCos and Convertible Bonds; 3.4.1 Forced vs. Optional Conversion; 3.4.2 Negative vs. Positive Convexity.
- 3.4.3 Limited vs. Unlimited Upside3.4.4 Similarity to Reverse Convertibles; 3.5 CoCos and Regulations; 3.5.1 Introduction; 3.5.2 Basel Framework; 3.5.3 Basel I; 3.5.4 Basel II; 3.5.5 Basel III; 3.5.6 CoCos in Basel III; 3.5.7 High and Low-Trigger CoCos; 3.6 Ranking in the Balance Sheet; 3.7 Alternative Structures; 3.8 Contingent Capital: Pro and Contra; 3.8.1 Advantages; 3.8.2 Disadvantages; 3.8.3 Conclusion; 4 Corporate Hybrids; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Issuer of Hybrid Debt; 4.3 Investing in Hybrid Debt; 4.4 Structure of a Corporate Hybrid Bond; 4.4.1 Coupons.
- 4.4.2 Replacement Capital Covenant4.4.3 Issuer Calls; 4.5 View of Rating Agencies; 4.6 Risk in Hybrid Bonds; 4.6.1 Subordination Risk; 4.6.2 Deferral Risk; 4.6.3 Extension Risk; 4.7 Convexity in Hybrid Bonds; 4.7.1 Case Study: Henkel 5.375% 2104; 4.7.2 Duration Dynamics; 4.8 Equity Character of Hybrid Bonds; 5 Bail-In Bonds; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Definition; 5.3 Resolution Regime; 5.3.1 Resolution Tools; 5.3.2 Timetable; 5.4 Case Studies; 5.4.1 Bail-In of Senior Bonds; 5.4.2 Saving Lehman Brothers; 5.5 Consequences of Bail-In; 5.5.1 Higher Funding Costs; 5.5.2 Higher GDP.