November 6th, 2013, 8:11 pm
I think futures being exchange-traded and forwards being OTC is not the only reason that impacts the curve construction. Another important difference is futures are always cleared, but not all FRAs are cleared. It would be interesting to see the usage or impact of CCP cleared FRAs (not sure there is a huge market for these out there) for forward curve construction.QuoteOriginally posted by: ChicagoGuyQuoteOriginally posted by: ThinkDifferentQuoteOriginally posted by: ChicagoGuyQuoteOriginally posted by: ThinkDifferentQuoteOriginally posted by: kirankondapalliHi,I had my interview yesterday for a Trade Management system company for Front Office Business Analyst role. Below questions were kind of tough for me. Can someone answer them for me please?1. Why use futures and why not FRAs in the yield curve construction?I answered liquidity, exchange traded blah blah but the intereviewer was not convinced. that's exactly the main reason (except the blah blah part).FRAs have counterparty risk (because they are OTC) where as futures don't (because they are traded through an exchange), so it is easier to build counterparty risk free curves with futures.right. Didn't he say "exchange traded" though?Futures are by definition exchange traded and forwards are OTC. So saying that futures are exchange traded is not insightful. The term "exchange traded" and "counterparty free" are not equivalent, though one implies the other (if you consider the exchange to have zero probability of defaulting, which is not the case). Both forwards and futures can be liquid and illiquid.