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Credit Derivatives

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Publication ordering

If you want to order one or more copies of printed publications as listed below, please click on the respective order number.

NameTypeDateSizeFileOrder No.
Products 2012 
BrochureJan 20122370 kBE2E-153-0112
Wholesale Trade Entry Facilities - Overview and Issues in Daily Operation 
PresentationJun 20111061 kBonly available online
Eurex Option Seminar: Introduction to Theoretical Pricing Models 
PresentationMay 2011453 kBonly available online
Enhancement of Eurex Wholesale Trading Facilities: EFPI 
PresentationOct 2010970 kBonly available online
Eurex OTC Flexible Contracts 
PresentationMay 2009772 kBonly available online
Enhancement of Eurex Wholesale Trading 
Article & SurveyNov 200884 kBonly available online
Eurex OTC Trade facilities - Meeting the needs of the asset managment industry

Byron Baldwin, Eurex
 
Article & SurveySep 2008230 kBonly available online
Enhancement of Eurex Wholesale Trading Facilities 
Article & SurveyMay 2008160 kBonly available online
The World of Credit - A chronology from 1999 to 2008 
BrochureOct 20073352 kBE2E-113-1007
Case Study: Portfolio Overlay Strategy Using Eurex iTraxx® Credit Futures - Introducing More Options in European Fund Management

Byron Baldwin, Eurex
 
Article & SurveySep 2007136 kBonly available online
Eurex iTraxx® Credit Futures

Byron Baldwin, Eurex
 
Article & SurveySep 200786 kBonly available online
Credit Derivatives - Always... Making Fresh iTraxx 
FlyerMay 2007149 kBonly available online
The Case for Exchange-Based Credit Futures Contracts

Brian A. Eales, London Metropolitan University
The Case for Exchange-Based Credit Futures Contracts
This article examines the growth in the use and application of credit derivatives. It discusses the general advantages to investors that can be gained by using exchange-based futures compared to their OTC counterparts. The iTraxx© index operational framework, composition of the indexes, fixed coupon, and market quotes are explained with the aid of a Bloomberg screen and a numerical example. There is an overview of credit default swap pricing and a presentation of a Bloomberg screen that illustrates the detailed pricing output for Eurex Credit Default Swap Futures in respect of the iTraxx© Europe 5-year contract. The article focuses on the variety of ways in which credit derivatives generally are being used in today\'s markets. It presents the three Eurex Futures contracts in detail and explains how settlement will be affected both in the absence of default and when default(s) occur. The empirical section examines different investment strategies where existing iTraxx© index products could have been used to great advantage. The scenarios examined consider the total return performance of bond indexes, a single bond and an equity index when combined with existing iTraxx© benchmark indexes. The results of the study are positive and implicitly indicate uses to which corresponding exchange-based credit futures could be put.
Academic StudyMay 20071822 kBE5E-209-0507
Eurex Credit Futures: iTraxx® Europe, iTraxx® HiVol, iTraxx® Crossover 
PresentationApr 2007243 kBonly available online
Always... first out - Eurex Credit Derivatives 
FlyerFeb 200758 kBonly available online
Recent Developments in the Credit Default Swap Market

Robert Reoch, Reoch Credit Partners LLP & Mehtap Dinc, Eurex
 
Article & SurveyFeb 200737 kBonly available online
Quick Reference Guide Market Model 
BrochureJan 2007308 kBonly available online
Quick Reference Guide Trading 
BrochureDec 20062157 kBonly available online
Credit Derivatives - Strategies and instruments 
Article & SurveySep 20061013 kBE2E-094-0906
Replicating Hedge Fund Returns Using Futures - A European Perspective

Cass Business School, Harry M. Kat
Replicating Hedge Fund Returns Using Futures - A European Perspective
Hedge funds tend to put a lot of effort into generating their returns and charge substantial fees to do so. However, with the latest performance evaluation studies indicating that hedge fund performance is not truly superior (anymore), the question arises whether it is possible to generate similar, hedge fund-like, returns in a more mechanical way and with less effort. In other words, is it possible to design dynamic trading strategies, mechanically trading stocks, bonds, etc., that generate hedge fund-like returns? If such strategies indeed exist, then this would solve a respectable number of problems surrounding hedge fund investments and alternative investments in general, including the need for extensive due diligence, liquidity, capacity, transparency, style drift and regulatory problems, as well as excessive management fees. In this paper we develop and demonstrate the workings of a technique that allows the derivation of dynamic futures trading strategies, which generate returns with statistical properties similar to hedge funds. Trading nothing else than Eurex DAX 30 and Euro Bund futures, we show that this technique is not only capable of replicating fund of funds returns, but is equally capable of replicating individual hedge fund returns. Accurately replicating the risk-return profile, but sharing none of the drawbacks of real hedge funds, our synthetic hedge fund returns are a worthwhile alternative to direct hedge fund investment.
Academic StudyMar 2006370 kBE5E-164-0306
Hedge Funds Trading Strategies 
Article & SurveyJan 200325 kBonly available online

 








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