Swap spread: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Financial metric}}
{{Technical|date=June 2025}}
'''Swap spreads''' are the difference between the yield on a government bond or sovereign debt security and the fixed component of a swap, both of which have a similar time until maturity. Given that most sovereign debt securities such as government bonds are considered to be risk free securities the role of a swap spread is to reflect the risk levels of an agreement perceived by the investors involved. Swap spreads are therefore categorised to be an economic indication tool as the size of the swap spread reflects the level of risk aversion within the financial markets. Swap spreads is a term coined by economists to generate a tool to assess current market conditions. Swap spreads have become more popular as a metric of financial forecasting and measurement as a result of their increased correlation to financial market activity and volatility. Used as an indicator of economic activity, higher swap spreads are indicative of greater risk aversion within the market place. Governments, financial markets and policy makers in general therefore utilise this metric to make decisions as it is argued to reflect market sentiment.
 
 
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==Finance==
 
The use of the term swap-spreads in financial markets has grown progressively over time. Many economists have deconstructed swap spreads and their implications on the financial markets in order to make investment decisions within the global equity and fixed income markets. The utilization of swap spreads as a tool within the markets has grown substantially since 1994 due to the growing understanding of the interrelationship between financial themes.<ref name=Refini>https://doi.org/10.1007/s00181-020-01852-0 Kóbor, Shi, L., & Zelenko, I. (2005). What determines U.S. swap spreads? World Bank. “Market Voice: A Negative for Swap Spreads.” Refinitiv Perspectives, 5 Jan. 2021</ref>. A swap spread is the difference between the fixed component of a given swap and the yield of a debt security. In the US this correlation triggered the emergence of derivative products and contracts as investors looked to exchange fixed interest repayments on their securities for floating rate repayments. Swap spreads as a result emerged as a mechanism to price this transition from fixed to floating rate repayments.<ref name=Lando>Feldhütter, & Lando, D. (2008). Decomposing swap spreads. Journal of Financial Economics, 88(2), 375–405. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfineco.2007.07.004</ref>
 
==Mechanics==
Swap spreads have been adopted into the pricing metrics by many financial institutions when they look to assess the value of their assets under management and future business opportunities. At the base level, swap spreads are contracts which allow people to manage their risk in which two parties agree to exchange cash flows between a fixed and floating rate holding. Simply, the swap spread rate = swap rate – yield on a government bond. <ref name=Lando /> The computation of a swap spread has evolved overtimeover time as financial market participants look to use the data to make either short or long decisions within the financial markets.
 
==Computation==
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==Negative swap spreads==
 
Negative swap spreads are a new phenomenon occurring in the market. Beginning in 2008 the commonly referenced swap spread on the 30-year swap T-bonds turned negative and has remained so since. The swap spread on the 10 year T-bonds also turned negative during 2015 in response to the Chinese government selling US treasuries. Negative swap spreads are difficult for traditional asset pricing models to utilise as they imply a risk free arbitrage opportunity .<ref name=J />. The development of the financial markets has propelled market efficiency and during a limited arbitrage environment negative swap spreads are not uncommon. Therefore negative swap spreads are indicative of market development and efficiency. A negative swap spread also is an indicator of a market arbitrage opportunity however in order to capitalise on this opportunity market participants must assume exposure to the repo market. <ref name= Refini /> For market participants broadly, those who do not undertake a market arbitrage strategy an inversion in swap spreads suggests that overall market upside is limited. Upside however resumed once the swap spread normalises. <ref name= Refini />
Swap Spread as an economic indicator
Given that swap spreads require an understanding of basic arithmetic they have been labelled as complex financial products which quantify the difference between yields in on government bonds and interest rate swaps on similar securities. During periods of sustained economic volatility swap spread markets move violently as financial institutions slash rates to contain economic fallout. Spreads widen, volumes surge and prices fluctuate substantially during periods of economic stress evdent in the 2008 GFC and Covid 19 economic meltdown in March 2020. <ref>Amir Khwaja 2020</ref>
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==Variation across economies==
 
There is observable variance in swap spreads between economies. <ref name=Sclip />. This has been explained by variables which are the core fundamentals of what is used to price and determine the swap spreads within a given economy. The cost of repo financing, the price of bank credit or bank bonds, the gross issuance of bonds, that is the new supply of bonds within the market and the central bank within the specified economies share of the nominal bond market all determine the swap spread.<ref name=Louise /> Covid-19 has presented unique patterns in the performance of swap spreads as artificial fiscal supply of money and market arbitrage by algorithmic trading platforms have generated unusual outcomes such as negative swap spreads. The 10 year swap spread has been observed to trade through or below economies 10 year bonds such as the treasuries in the United States. This has been argued to be a result of governments issuing substantial supply of government debt to fund their growing fiscal deficits incurred due to covid-19 related expenditure. <ref name=Refini /> The performance of an economies stock market is also influential on swap spreads and vice versa. The stock market within an economy is unable to perform when swap spreads are negative or trading through the government bonds. A normalisation of swap spreads to be positive is seen as a signal of a resumption to the long standing bull stock market trend.
 
==References==