OIS Curvesbbg
OIS Curvesbbg
OIS Curvesbbg
Marco Bianchetti
Market Risk Management, Intesa San Paolo Bank, Piazza Paolo Ferrari, 10, 20121 Milan, Italy,
marco.bianchetti[AT]intesasanpaolo.com
Mattia Carlicchi
Market Risk Management, Intesa San Paolo Bank, Piazza Paolo Ferrari, 10, 20121 Milan, Italy,
mattia.carlicchi[AT]intesasanpaolo.com
Abstract
We present a quantitative study of the markets and models evolution across the credit crunch crisis. In particular, we
focus on the fixed income market and we analyze the most relevant empirical evidences regarding the divergences
between Libor and OIS rates, the explosion of Basis Swaps spreads, and the diffusion of collateral agreements and
CSA-discounting, in terms of credit and liquidity effects.
We also review the new modern pricing approach prevailing among practitioners, based on multiple yield curves
reflecting the different credit and liquidity risk of Libor rates with different tenors and the overnight discounting of cash
flows originated by derivative transactions under collateral with daily margination. We report the classical and modern
no-arbitrage pricing formulas for plain vanilla interest rate derivatives, and the multiple-curve generalization of the
market standard SABR model with stochastic volatility.
We then report the results of an empirical analysis on recent market data comparing pre- and post-credit crunch pricing
methodologies and showing the transition of the market practice from the classical to the modern framework. In
particular, we prove that the market of Interest Rate Swaps has abandoned since March 2010 the classical Single-Curve
pricing approach, typical of the pre-credit crunch interest rate world, and has adopted the modern Multiple-Curve CSA
approach, thus incorporating credit and liquidity effects into market prices. The same analysis is applied to European
Caps/Floors, finding that the full transition to the modern Multiple-Curve CSA approach has retarded up to August
2010. Finally, we show the robustness of the SABR model to calibrate the market volatility smile coherently with the
new market evidences.
Acknowledgments
The authors gratefully acknowledge fruitful interactions with A. Battauz, A. Castagna, C. C. Duminuco, F. Mercurio,
M. Morini, M. Trapletti and colleagues at Market Risk Management and Fixed Income trading desks.
Keywords: crisis, liquidity, credit, counterparty, risk, fixed income, Libor, Euribor, Eonia, yield curve, forward
curve, discount curve, single curve, multiple curve, volatility surface, collateral, CSA discounting, no arbitrage, pricing,
interest rate derivatives, FRAs, swaps, OIS, basis swaps, caps, floors, SABR.
1
1. Introduction
The financial crisis begun in the second half of 2007 has triggered, among many consequences, a deep evolution phase of
the classical framework adopted for trading derivatives. In particular, credit and liquidity issues were found to have
macroscopical impacts on the prices of financial instruments, both plain vanillas and exotics. Today, terminated or not the
crisis, the market has learnt the lesson and persistently shows such effects. These are clearly visible in the market quotes of
plain vanilla interest rate derivatives, such as Deposits, Forward Rate Agreements (FRA), Swaps (IRS) and options (Caps,
Floors and Swaptions). Since August 2007 the primary interest rates of the interbank market, e.g. Libor , Euribor, Eonia,
and Federal Funds rate1, display large basis spreads that have raised up to 200 basis points. Similar divergences are also
found between FRA rates and the forward rates implied by two consecutive Deposits, and similarly, among swap rates
with different floating leg tenors. Recently, the market has also included the effect of collateral agreements widely diffused
among derivatives counterparties in the interbank market.
After the market evolution the standard no-arbitrage framework adopted to price derivatives, developed over forty years
following the Copernican Revolution of Black and Scholes (1973) and Merton (1973), became obsolete. Familiar relations
described on standard textbooks (see e.g. Brigo and Mercurio (2006), Hull (20010)), such as the basic definition of
forward interest rates, or the swap pricing formula, had to be abandoned. Also the fundamental idea of the construction of
a single risk free yield curve, reflecting at the same time the present cost of funding of future cash flows and the level of
forward rates, has been ruled out. The financial community has thus been forced to start the development of a new
theoretical framework, including a larger set of relevant risk factors, and to review from scratch the no-arbitrage models
used on the market for derivatives’ pricing and risk analysis. We refer to such old and new frameworks as “classical” and
“modern”, respectively, to remark the shift of paradigm induced by the crisis.
The paper is organised as follows. In section 2 we describe the market evolution, focusing on interest rates, and we discuss
in detail the empirical evidences regarding basis spreads and collateral effects cited above. In section 3 we focus on the
methodological evolution from the classical to the modern pricing framework, describing the foundations of the new
multiple yield curves framework adopted by market practitioners in response to the crisis. In section 4 we report the results
of an empirical analysis on recent market data comparing three different pre- and post-credit crunch pricing
methodologies, showing the transition of the market practice from the classical to the modern pricing framework. We also
report a study of the SABR stochastic volatility model – the market standard for pricing and hedging plain vanilla interest
rate options – showing its robustness under generalisation to the modern framework and to calibrate the market volatility
surfaces across the crisis. Conclusions and directions of future works are collected in section 5.
The topics discussed here are at the heart of the present derivatives market, with many consequences in trading, financial
control, risk management and IT, and are attracting a growing attention in the financial literature. To our knowledge, they
have been approached by Kijima et al. (2008), Chibane and Sheldon (2009), Ametrano and Bianchetti (2009), Ametrano
(2011), Fujii et al. (2009a, 2010a, 2011) in terms of multiple-curves; by Henrard (2007, 2009) and Fries (2010) using a
first-principles approach; by Bianchetti (2010) using a foreign currency approach; by Fujii et al. (2009b), Mercurio (2009,
2010a, 2010b) and Amin (2010) within the Libor Market Model; by Pallavicini and Tarenghi (2010) and Moreni and
Pallavicini (2010) within the HJM model; by Kenyon (2010) using a short rate model; by Morini (2009) in terms of
counterparty risk; by Burghard and Kjaer (2010), Piterbarg (2010a, 2010b), Fujii et al. (2010b), Morini and Prampolini
(2010) in terms of cost of funding. See also the Risk Magazine reports of Madigan (2008), Wood (2009a, 2009b) and
Whittall (2010a, 2010b, 2010c).
2. Market Evolution
In this section we discuss the most important market data showing the main consequences of the credit crunch crisis started
in August 2007. We will focus, in particular, on Euro interest rates, since they show rather peculiar and persistent effects
that have strong impacts on pricing methodologies. The same results hold for other currencies, USDLibor and Federal
Funds rates in particular (see. e.g Mercurio (2009, 2010b)).
1
Libor, sponsored by the British Banking Association (BBA), is quoted in all the major currencies and is the reference rate
for international Over-The-Counter (OTC) transactions (see www.bbalibor.com). Euribor and Eonia, sponsored by the
European Banking Federation (EBF), are the reference rates for OTC transactions in the Euro market (see
www.euribor.org). The Federal Funds rate is a primary rate of the USD market and is set by the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) accordingly to the monetary policy decisions of the Federal Reserve (FED).
2
2.1. Euribor – OIS Basis
Figure 1 reports the historical series of the Euribor Deposit 6-month (6M) rate versus the Eonia Overnight Indexed Swap 2
(OIS) 6-month (6M) rate over the time interval Jan. 06 – Dec. 10. Before August 2007 the two rates display strictly
overlapping trends differing of no more than 6 bps. In August 2007 we observe a sudden increase of the Euribor rate and a
simultaneous decrease of the OIS rate that lead to the explosion of the corresponding basis spread, touching the peak of
222 bps in October 2008, when Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy protection. Successively the basis has sensibly
reduced and stabilized between 40 bps and 60 bps. Notice that the pre-crisis level has never been recovered. The same
effect is observed for other similar couples, e.g. Euribor 3M vs OIS 3M.
The reason of the abrupt divergence between the Euribor and OIS rates can be explained by considering both the monetary
policy decisions adopted by international authorities in response to the financial turmoil, and the impact of the credit
crunch on the credit and liquidity risk perception of the market, coupled with the different financial meaning and dynamics
of these rates.
The Euribor rate is the reference rate for over-the-counter (OTC) transactions in the Euro area. It is defined as “the
rate at which Euro interbank Deposits are being offered within the EMU zone by one prime bank to another at 11:00
a.m. Brussels time". The rate fixings for a strip of 15 maturities, ranging from one day to one year, are constructed as
the trimmed average of the rates submitted (excluding the highest and lowest 15% tails) by a panel of banks. The
Contribution Panel is composed, as of September 2010, by 42 banks, selected among the EU banks with the highest
volume of business in the Euro zone money markets, plus some large international bank from non-EU countries with
important euro zone operations. Thus, Euribor rates reflect the average cost of funding of banks in the interbank
market at each given maturity. During the crisis the solvency and solidity of the whole financial sector was brought
into question and the credit and liquidity risk and premia associated to interbank counterparties sharply increased. The
Euribor rates immediately reflected these dynamics and raise to their highest values over more than 10 years. As seen
in Figure 1, the Euribor 6M rate suddenly increased on August 2007 and reached 5.49% on 10th October 2008.
The Eonia rate is the reference rate for overnight OTC transactions in the Euro area. It is constructed as the average
rate of the overnight transactions (one day maturity deposits) executed during a given business day by a panel of
banks on the interbank money market, weighted with the corresponding transaction volumes. The Eonia Contribution
Panel coincides with the Euribor Contribution Panel. Thus Eonia rate includes information on the short term
(overnight) liquidity expectations of banks in the Euro money market. It is also used by the European Central Bank
(ECB) as a method of effecting and observing the transmission of its monetary policy actions. During the crisis the
central banks were mainly concerned about restabilising the level of liquidity in the market, thus they reduced the
level of the official rates: the “Deposit Facility rate” and the “Marginal Lending Facility rate”. This is clear from
Figure 2, showing that, over the period Jan. 06 – Dec. 10, Eonia is always higher than the Deposit Facility rate and
lower than the Marginal Lending Facility rate, defining the so-called “Rates Corridor”. Furthermore, the daily tenor of
the Eonia rate makes negligible the credit and liquidity risks reflected on it: for this reason the OIS rates are
considered the best proxies available in the market for the risk-free rate.
2
The Overnight Index Swap (OIS) is a swap with a fixed leg versus a floating leg indexed to the overnight rate. The Euro
market quotes a standard OIS strip indexed to Eonia rate (daily compounded) up to 30 years maturity.
3
6% 250
Euribor Deposit 6M
5%
Eonia OIS 6M 200
4% Euribor Deposit 6M -
Spread (bps)
Eonia OIS 6M Spread 150
Rate (%)
3%
100
2%
50
1%
0% 0
02/01/2006
02/07/2006
02/01/2007
02/07/2007
02/01/2008
02/07/2008
02/01/2009
02/07/2009
02/01/2010
02/07/2010
Figure 1: historical series of Euribor Deposit 6M rate versus Eonia OIS 6M rate. The corresponding spread is shown on
the right axis (Jan. 06 – Dec. 10 window, source: Bloomberg).
6%
Marginal Lending Facility
5% Eonia
Deposit Facility
4%
Rate (%)
3%
2%
1%
0%
02/01/2006
02/07/2006
02/01/2007
02/07/2007
02/01/2008
02/07/2008
02/01/2009
02/07/2009
02/01/2010
02/07/2010
Figure 2: historical series of the Deposit Lending Facility rate, of the Marginal Lending Facility rate and of the Eonia rate
(Jan. 06 – Dec. 10 window, sources: European Central Bank – Press Releases and Bloomberg).
Thus the Euribor-OIS basis explosion of August 2007 plotted in Figure 1 is essentially a consequence of the different
credit and liquidity risk reflected by Euribor and Eonia rates. We stress that such divergence is not a consequence of the
counterparty risk carried by the financial contracts, Deposits and OISs, exchanged in the interbank market by risky
counterparties, but depends on the different fixing levels of the underlying Euribor and Eonia rates.
The different influence of credit risk on Libor and overnight rates can be also appreciated in Figure 3, where we compare
the historical series for the Euribor-OIS spread of Figure 1 with those of Credit Default Swaps (CDS) spreads for some
main banks in the Euribor Contribution Panel. We observe that the Euribor-OIS basis explosion of August 2007 exactly
matches the CDS explosion, corresponding to the generalized increase of the default risk seen in the interbank market.
4
6% 250
Commerzbank
Deutsche Bank
5% Barclays 200
Santander
CDS Spread 5Y (%)
RBS
4% 150
Spread (bps)
Credit Suisse
Euribor Deposit 6M - Eonia OIS 6M Spread
3% 100
2% 50
1% 0
0% -50
02/01/2006
02/07/2006
02/01/2007
02/07/2007
02/01/2008
02/07/2008
02/01/2009
02/07/2009
02/01/2010
02/07/2010
Figure 3: left y-axis: CDS Spread 5Y for some European banks belonging to the Euribor panel. Right y-axis: spread
between the Euribor Deposit 6M – Eonia OIS 6M from Figure 1 (Jan. 06 – Dec. 10 window, source: Bloomberg).
The liquidity risk component in Euribor and Eonia interbank rates is distinct but strongly correlated to the credit risk
component. According to Acerbi and Scandolo (2007), liquidity risk may appear in at least three circumstances:
1. lack of liquidity to cover short term debt obligations (funding liquidity risk),
2. difficulty to liquidate assets on the market due excessive bid-offer spreads (market liquidity risk),
3. difficulty to borrow funds on the market due to excessive funding cost (systemic liquidity risk).
Following Morini (2009), these three elements are, in principle, not a problem until they do not appear together, because a
bank with, for instance, problem 1 and 2 (or 3) will be able to finance itself by borrowing funds (or liquidating assets) on
the market. During the crisis these three scenarios manifested themselves jointly at the same time, thus generating a
systemic lack of liquidity (see e.g. Michaud and Upper (2008)).
Clearly, it is difficult to disentangle liquidity and credit risk components in the Euribor and Eonia rates, because, in
particular, they do not refer to the default risk of one counterparty in a single derivative deal but to a money market with
bilateral credit risk (see the discussion in Morini (2009) and references therein).
Finally, we stress that, as seen in Figure 1, the Libor-OIS basis is still persistent today at a non-negligible level, despite the
lower rate and higher liquidity regime reached after the most acute phase of the crisis and the strong interventions of
central banks and governments. Clearly the market has learnt the lesson of the crisis and has not forgotten that these
interest rates are driven by different credit and liquidity dynamics. From an historical point of view, we can compare this
effect to the appearance of the volatility smile on the option markets after the 1987 crash (see e.g. Derman and Kani
(1994)). It is still there.
5
2.2. FRA Rates versus Forward Rates
The considerations above, referred to spot Euribor and Eonia rates underlying Deposit and OIS contracts, apply to forward
rates as well. In Figure 4 we report the historical series of quoted Euribor Forward Rate Agreement (FRA) 3x6 rates versus
the forward rates implied by the corresponding Eonia OIS 3M and 6M rates. The FRA 3x6 rate is the equilibrium (fair)
rate of a FRA contract starting at spot date (today + 2 working days in the Euro market), maturing in 6 months, with a
floating leg indexed to the forward interest rate between 3 and 6 months, versus a fixed interest rate leg. The paths of
market FRA rates and of the corresponding forward rates implied in two consecutive Eonia OIS Deposits observed in
Figure 4 are similar to those observed in Figure 1 for the Euribor Deposit and Eonia OIS respectively. In particular, a
sudden divergence between the quoted FRA rates and the implied forward rates arose in August 2007, regardless the
maturity, and reached its peak in October 2008 with the Lehman crash.
Mercurio (2009) has proven that the effects above may be explained within a simple credit model with a default-free zero
coupon bond and a risky zero coupon bond emitted by a defaultable counterparty with recovery rate R. The associated risk
free and risky Libor rates are the underlyings of the corresponding risk free and risky FRAs.
6% 120
Euribor FRA 3x6
5% 100
Eonia OIS 3x6 Fwd.
Spread (bps)
3x6 Fwd. Spread
Rate (%)
3% 60
2% 40
1% 20
0% 0
02/01/2006
02/07/2006
02/01/2007
02/07/2007
02/01/2008
02/07/2008
02/01/2009
02/07/2009
02/01/2010
02/07/2010
Figure 4: FRA 3x6 market quote versus 3 months forward rate implied in two consecutive 3M and 6M Eonia OIS rates.
The corresponding spread is shown on the right y-axis (Jan. 06 – Dec. 10 window, source: Bloomberg).
6
spread emerges between the two corresponding equilibrium rates (or, in other words, a positive spread must be added to
the 3M floating leg to equate the value of the 6M floating leg).
According to Morini (2009), a basis swap between two interbank counterparties under collateral agreement can be
described as the difference between two investment strategies. Fixing, for instance, a Basis Swap Euribor 3M vs Euribor
6M with 6M maturity, scheduled on 3 dates T 0, T1=T0+3M, T2=T0+6M, we have the following two strategies:
1. 6M floating leg: at T0 choose a counterparty C1 with an high credit standing (that is, belonging to the Euribor
Contribution Panel) with collateral agreement in place, and lend the notional for 6 months at the Euribor 6M rate
prevailing at T0 (Euribor 6M flat because C1 is an Euribor counterparty). At maturity T 2 recover notional plus interest
from C1. Notice that if counterparty C1 defaults within 6 months we gain full recovery thanks to the collateral
agreement.
2. 3M+3M floating leg: at T0 choose a counterparty C1 with an high credit standing (belonging to the Euribor
Contribution Panel) with collateral agreement in place, and lend the notional for 3 months at the Euribor 3M rate (flat)
prevailing at T0. At T1 recover notional plus interest and check the credit standing of C1: if C1 has maintained its credit
standing (it still belongs to the Euribor Contribution Panel), then lend the money again to C 1 for 3 months at the
Euribor 3M rate (flat) prevailing at T 1, otherwise choose another counterparty C2 belonging to the Euribor Panel with
collateral agreement in place, and lend the money to C2 at the same interest rate. At maturity T 2 recover notional plus
interest from C1 or C2. Again, if counterparties C1 or C2 defaults within 6 months we gain full recovery thanks to the
collateral agreements.
Clearly, the 3M+3M leg implicitly embeds a bias towards the group of banks with the best credit standing, typically those
belonging to the Euribor Contribution Panel. Hence the counterparty risk carried by the 3M+3M leg must be lower than
that carried by the 6M leg. In other words, the expectation of the survival probability of the borrower of the 3M leg in the
second 3M-6M period is higher than the survival probability of the borrower of the 6M leg in the same period. This lower
risk is embedded into lower Euribor 3M rates with respect to Euribor 6M rates. But with collateralization the two legs have
both null counterparty risk. Thus a positive spread must be added to the 3M+3M leg to reach equilibrium. The same
discussion can be repeated, mutatis mutandis, in terms of liquidity risk.
We stress that the credit and liquidity risk involved here are those carried by the risky Libor rates underlying the Basis
Swap, reflecting the average default and liquidity risk of the interbank money market (of the Libor panel banks), not those
associated to the specific counterparties involved in the financial contract. We stress also that such effects were already
present before the credit crunch, as discussed e.g. in Tuckman and Porfirio (2004), and well known to market players, but
not effective due to negligible basis spreads.
70
Basis Swap Spread 3M Vs 6M
60
Basis Swap Spread 6M Vs 12M
50 Basis Swap Spread Eonia Vs Euribor 3M
Spread (bps)
40
30
20
10
0
02/01/2006
02/07/2006
02/01/2007
02/07/2007
02/01/2008
02/07/2008
02/01/2009
02/07/2009
02/01/2010
02/07/2010
Figure 5: Basis Swap spreads: Euribor 3M Vs Euribor 6M, Euribor 6M Vs Euribor 12M and Eonia Vs Euribor 3M (Jan.
06 – Dec. 10 window, source: Bloomberg). Notice that the daily market quotations for some basis swap were not even
available before the crisis.
7
2.4. Collateralization and OIS-Discounting
Another effect of the credit crunch has been the great diffusion of collateral agreements to reduce the counterparty risk of
OTC derivatives positions. Nowadays most of the counterparties on the interbank market have mutual collateral
agreements in place. In 2010, more than 70% of all OTC derivatives transactions were collateralized (ISDA (2010)).
Typical financial transactions generate streams of future cash flows, whose total net present value (NPV = algebraic sum
of all discounted expected cash flows) implies a credit exposure between the two counterparties. If, for counterparty A,
NPV(A)>0, then counterparty A expects to receive, on average, future cash flows from counterparty B (in other words, A
has a credit with B). On the other side, if counterparty B has NPV(B)<0, then it expects to pay, on average, future cash
flows to counterparty A (in other words, B has a debt with A). The reverse holds if NPV(A)<0 and NPV(B)>0. Such credit
exposure can be mitigated through a guarantee, called “collateral agreement”, or “ Credit Support Annex” (CSA),
following the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) standards widely used to regulate OTC
transactions. The main feature of the CSA is a margination mechanism similar to those adopted by central clearing houses
for standard instruments exchange (e.g. Futures). In a nutshell, at every margination date the two counterparties check the
value of the portfolio of mutual OTC transactions and regulate the margin, adding to or subtracting from the collateral
account the corresponding mark to market variation with respect to the preceding margination date. The margination can
be regulated with cash or with (primary) assets of corresponding value. In any case the collateral account holds, at each
date, the total NPV of the portfolio, which is positive for the creditor counterparty and negative for the debtor
counterparty. The collateral amount is available to the creditor. On the other side, the debtor receives an interest on the
collateral amount, called “collateral rate”. Hence, we can see the collateral mechanism as a funding mechanism,
transferring liquidity from the debtor to the creditor. The main differences with traditional funding through Deposit
contracts are that, using derivatives, we have longer maturities and stochastic lending/borrowing side and amount. We can
also look at CSA as an hedging mechanism, where the collateral amount hedges the creditor against the event of default of
the debtor. The most diffused CSA provides a daily margination mechanism and an overnight collateral rate (ISDA
(2010)). Actual CSAs provide many other detailed features that are out of the scope of the present discussion.
Thus, a first important consequence of the diffusion of collateral agreements among interbank counterparties is that we can
consider the derivatives’ prices quoted on the interbank market as counterparty risk free OTC transactions. A second
important consequence is that, by no-arbitrage, the CSA margination rate and the discounting rate of future cash flows
must match. Hence the name of “CSA discounting”. In particular, the most diffused overnight CSA implies overnight-
based discounting and the construction of a discounting yield curve that must reflect, for each maturity, the funding level
in an overnight collateralized interbank market. Thus Overnight Indexed Swaps (OIS) are the natural instruments for the
discounting curve construction. Hence the alternative name of “OIS discounting” or “OIS (yield) curve”. Such discounting
curve is also the best available proxy of a risk free yield curve.
In case of absence of CSA, using the same no-arbitrage principle between the funding and the discounting rate, we
conclude that a bank should discount future cash flows (positive or negative) using its own “traditional” cost of funding
term structure. This implies important (and rather involved) consequences, such that, according to Morini and Prampolini
(2009), each counterparty assigns a different present value to the same future cash flow, breaking the fair value symmetry;
that a worsening of the its credit standing allows the Bank to sell derivatives (options in particular) at more competitive
prices (the lower the rate, the higher the discount, the lower the price); the problem of double counting the Debt Value
Adjustment (DVA) to the fair value.
Presently, the market is in the middle of a transition phase from the classical Libor-based discounting methodology to the
modern CSA-based discounting methodology. OTC transactions executed on the interbank market normally use CSA
discounting. In particular, plain vanilla interest rate derivatives, such as FRA, Swaps, Basis Swaps, Caps/Floor/Swaptions
are quoted by main brokers using CSA discounting (ICAP (2010)). On the other side, presently just a few banks have
declared full adoption of CSA discounting also for balance sheet revaluation and collateral margination (see e.g. Bianchetti
(2011)).
Finally we stress that also before the crisis the old-style standard Libor curve was representative of the average funding
level on the interbank market (see e.g. Hull (2010)). Such curve, even if considered a good proxy for a risk free curve,
thanks to the perceived low counterparty risk of primary banks (belonging to the Libor Contribution panel), was not
strictly risk free because of the absence of collateralization.
8
3. Modelling Evolution
According to Bianchetti and Morini (2010), the market “frictions” discussed in sec. 2 have induced a sort of
“segmentation" of the interest rate market into sub-areas, mainly corresponding to instruments with 1M, 3M, 6M, 12M
underlying rate tenors. These are characterized, in principle, by different internal dynamics, liquidity and credit risk
premia, reflecting the different views and interests of the market players. In response to the crisis, the classical pricing
framework, based on a single yield curve used to calculate forward rates and discount factors, has been abandoned, and a
new modern pricing approach has prevailed among practitioners. The new methodology takes into account the market
segmentation as an empirical evidence and incorporates the new interest rate dynamics into a multiple curve framework as
follows.
Discounting curves: these are the yield curves used to discount futures cash flows. As discussed in section 2.4, the
curve must be constructed and selected such that to reflect the cost of funding of the bank in connection with the
actual nature of the specific contract that generates the cash flows. In particular:
o an OIS-based curve is used to discount cash flow generated by a contract under CSA with daily margination and
overnight collateral rate;
o a funding curve is used in case of contracts without CSA;
o in case of non-standard CSA (e.g. different margination frequency, rate, threshold, etc.), appropriate curves should
be, in principle, selected, but we will not discuss this topic here since it applies to a minority of deals and it would
be out of the scope of the present paper.
We stress that the funding curve for no-CSA contracts is specific to each counterparty, that will have its specific
funding curve. This modern discounting methodology is called CSA-discounting.
Forwarding curves: these are the yield curves used to compute forward rates. As discussed in section 2.3, the curve
must be constructed and selected according to the tenor and typology of the rate underlying the actual contract to be
priced. For instance, a Swap floating leg indexed to Euribor 6M requires the an Eurbor 6M forwarding curve
constructed from quoted instruments with Euribor 6M underlying rate.
Following Bianchetti (2010), we report in Table 1 the comparison between the classical and the modern frameworks,
called Single-Curve and Multiple-Curve approach, respectively.
The adoption of the Multiple-Curve approach has led to the revision of no-arbitrage pricing formulas. According to
Mercurio (2009, 2010a, 2010b), we compare in Table 2 the classical and modern pricing formulas for plain vanilla interest
rate derivatives.
We stress that the fundamental quantity of the modern pricing framework is the FRA rate . Indeed, following Mercurio
(2009, 2010a, 2010b), the correct probability measure to be used into expectations is that associated to the discounting
curve , under which the forward rate is no longer a martingale. Instead, the FRA rate, by definition, is a martingale
under such measure.
9
Classical Methodology (Single-Curve) Modern Methodology (Multiple-Curve)
1. Yield curves Select a single finite set of the most convenient Build one discounting curve using the preferred
construction (e.g. liquid) vanilla interest rate market selection of vanilla interest rate market instruments
instruments and build a single yield curve using and bootstrapping procedure.
the preferred bootstrapping procedure. For
Build multiple distinct forwarding curves using
instance, a common choice in the European
the preferred selections of distinct sets of vanilla
market is a combination of short-term EUR
interest rate market instruments, each homogeneous
deposits, medium-term Futures/FRAs on Euribor
in the underlying rate tenor (typically
3M and medium-long-term swaps on Euribor 6M.
) and bootstrapping procedures.
For example, for the construction of the forwarding
curve only market instruments with 6-month
tenor are considered.
2. Computation For each interest rate coupon compute the For each interest rate coupon compute the relevant
of expected relevant forward rates using the given yield curve FRA rate with tenor using the
cash flows and applying the standard formula, with corresponding forwarding curve and applying the
: following formula, with :
where is the year fraction related to the time where is the year fraction associated to the time
interval [ . interval [ .
Compute cash flows as expectations at time of Compute cash flows as expectations at time of the
the corresponding coupon payoffs with respect to corresponding coupon payoffs with respect to the
the -forward measure , associated to the
discounting -forward measure , associated to
numeraire from the same yield curve :
the numeraire from the discounting curve
:
3. Computation Compute the relevant discount factors Compute the relevant discount factors from
of discount from the unique yield curve defined in step 1. the discounting curve of step 1.
factors
4. Computation Compute the derivative's price at time as the Compute the derivative’s price at time as the sum
of the sum of the discounted expected future cash flows: of the discounted expected future cash flows:
derivative’s
price
Table 1: comparison table between the classical Single-Curve methodology and the modern Multiple-Curve methodology.
We refer to a general single-currency interest rate derivative under CSA characterized by m future coupons with payoffs
, generating m cash flows at future dates , with .
10
Classical Approach (Single-Curve) Modern Approach (Multiple-Curve)
FRA
with with
with with
Swap
Basis Swap
with with
with with
Cap/Floor
Table 2: comparison table of classical and modern formulas for pricing plain vanilla derivatives. In red we emphasize the
most relevant peculiarities of the Multiple-Curve method.
11
4. Empirical Pricing Analysis
In the following sections we present the results of an empirical analysis comparing the results of the three pricing
frameworks described before against market quotations of plain vanilla interest rate derivatives at two different valuation
dates. The aim of this analysis is to highlight the time evolution of the market pricing approach as a consequence of the
financial crisis.
12
4%
3%
Rate (%)
2%
Euribor Standard
Euribor 6M Standard
1%
Euribor 6M CSA
Eonia OIS
0%
01/04/2010
01/04/2013
01/04/2016
01/04/2019
01/04/2022
01/04/2025
01/04/2028
01/04/2031
01/04/2034
01/04/2037
01/04/2040
Date
Figure 6: term structures of the Euribor Standard, the Euribor 6M Standard, the Euribor 6M CSA and Eonia OIS zero rate
curves. Reference date: 31st March 2010 (source: Reuters).
5%
4%
3%
Rate (%)
2%
Euribor Standard 6-Month Fwd. Rate
01/10/2013
01/10/2016
01/10/2019
01/10/2022
01/10/2025
01/10/2028
01/10/2031
01/10/2034
01/10/2037
01/10/2040
Date
Figure 7: term structures of the Euribor Standard 6-month forward rate, of the Euribor 6M Standard 6-month FRA rate
and of the Euribor 6M CSA 6-month FRA rate. Note that the Euribor Standard 6-month forward rate coincides with the
corresponding 6-month FRA rate since the yield curve is consistent with the Single-Curve framework. Reference date: 31st
March 2010 (source: Reuters).
13
4.2. Pricing Methodologies
We have tested three different pricing methodologies as described below.
1. Single-Curve approach: we use the Euribor Standard yield curve to calculate both the discount factors and
the forward rates needed for pricing any interest rate derivatives. This is the classical Single-Curve methodology
adopted by the market before the credit crunch, without collateral, credit and liquidity effects.
2. Multiple-Curve No-CSA approach: we calculate discount factors on the Euribor Standard curve and FRA
rates on the Euribor 6M Standard curve. This is the “quick and dirty” methodology adopted by the market in
response to the credit crunch after August 2007, that distinguishes between discounting and forwarding curves. It is
defined “No-CSA” because it does not include the effect of collateral. Indeed, the Euribor Standard discounting curve
reflects the average cost of (uncollateralized) funding of a generic European interbank counterparty (belonging to the
Euribor panel). Also the Euribor 6M Standard forwarding curve construction does not take into account
collateralization, but it does include the tenor-specific credit and liquidity risk of the underlying Euribor 6M rate.
3. Multiple-Curve CSA approach: we calculate discount factors on the Eonia OIS curve and FRA rates
on the Euribor 6M CSA curve. This is the “state of the art” modern methodology, fully coherent with the CSA
nature of the interest rate derivatives considered and with the credit and liquidity risk of the underlying Euribor 6M
rate.
The arbitrage-free formulas used in the analysis are those reported in Table 2: the Single-Curve approach is in the left
column) and the two Multiple-Curve approaches are on the right column. The two following sections report the findings of
the analysis.
14
FSIRS Rates Differences: Single-Curve Vs Market (31 Mar 2010) FSIRS Rates Differences: Single-Curve Vs Market (31 Aug 2010)
25 25
20 20
15 15
Difference (bps)
Difference (bps)
10 10
5 5
0 0
-5 -5
-10 -10
-15 -15
25Y
25Y
-20 -20
13Y
13Y
1Y
1Y
9Y
9Y
3Y
3Y
5Y
5Y
7Y
7Y
9Y
9Y
5Y
5Y
11Y
11Y
13Y
13Y
15Y
15Y
1Y
1Y
25Y
25Y
Maturity Forward Start Maturity Forward Start
FSIRS Rates Differences: Multiple-Curve No-CSA Vs Market (31 Mar 2010) FSIRS Rates Differences: Multiple-Curve No-CSA Vs Market (31 Aug 2010)
4 4
2 2
Difference (bps)
Difference (bps)
0 0
-2 -2
-4 -4
25Y
25Y
-6 -6
13Y
13Y
1Y
1Y
9Y
9Y
3Y
3Y
5Y
5Y
7Y
7Y
9Y
9Y
5Y
5Y
11Y
11Y
13Y
13Y
15Y
15Y
1Y
1Y
25Y
25Y
Maturity Forward Start Maturity Forward Start
FSIRS Rates Differences: Multiple-Curve CSA Vs Market (31 Mar 2010) FSIRS Rates Differences: Multiple-Curve CSA Vs Market (31 Aug 2010)
4 4
2 2
Difference (bps)
Difference (bps)
0 0
-2 -2
-4 -4
25Y
25Y
-6 -6
13Y
13Y
1Y
1Y
3Y
9Y
9Y
3Y
5Y
5Y
7Y
7Y
9Y
9Y
5Y
11Y
5Y
11Y
13Y
13Y
15Y
15Y
25Y
1Y
1Y
25Y
Figure 8: FSIRS rates differences. Upper panels: differences between theoretical Single-Curve FSIRS rates and market
quotes. Middle panels: differences between theoretical Multiple-Curve No-CSA FSIRS rates and market quotes. Lower
panels: differences between theoretical Multiple-Curve CSA FSIRS rates and market quotes. Valuation dates: 31 st March
2010 (left side graphs) and 31 st August 2010 (right side graphs). Note that the y-axis scale of the middle and lower graphs
has been magnified in order to better appreciate lower price differences (source: Reuters).
15
Forward Start Interest Rate Swaps Differences
Multiple-Curve No-CSA [-2.9;+3.1] [-2.9;+2.6] 1.77 1.86 [-5.7;+2.9] [-3.7;+1.7] 1.11 1.09
Multiple-Curve CSA [-2.9;+2.3] [-1.0;+1.5] 0.53 0.37 [-4.1;+2.4] [-1.4;+1.0] 0.47 0.26
Table 3: differences (in basis points) from Figure 8. For each pricing methodology (section 4.2) and each valuation date
(31st March and 31st August 2010) we show the range of minimum and maximum discrepancies and the standard deviation,
both considering all FSIRS (columns on the left) and excluding the two 1Y-2Y stripes (columns on the right).
16
Cap/Floor Premia Differences: Single-Curve Vs Market (31 Mar 2010) C Cap/Floor Premia Differences: Single-Curve Vs Market (31 Aug 2010)
20 20
15 15
Difference (bps)
Difference (bps)
10 10
5 5
0 0
-5 -5
-10 -10
3Y
10,0%
3Y
10,0%
5Y
6,0%
6,0%
5Y
7Y
4,5%
4,5%
7Y
9Y
3,5%
3,5%
9Y
2,5%
12Y
2,5%
12Y
2,0%
20Y
2,0%
20Y
1,0%
30Y
1,0%
30Y
Cap/Floor Premia Differences: Multiple-Curve No-CSA Vs Market (31 Mar 2010) C Cap/Floor Premia Differences: Multiple-Curve No-CSA Vs Market (31 Aug 2010)
20 20
15 15
Difference (bps)
Difference (bps)
10 10
5 5
0 0
-5 -5
-10 -10
3Y
10,0%
3Y
10,0%
5Y
6,0%
5Y
6,0%
7Y
4,5%
7Y
4,5%
9Y
3,5%
9Y
3,5%
2,5%
12Y
2,5%
12Y
2,0%
20Y
2,0%
20Y
1,0%
30Y
1,0%
30Y
Cap/Floor Premia Differences: Multiple-Curve CSA Vs Market (31 Mar 2010) Cap/Floor Premia Differences: Multiple-Curve CSA Vs Market (31 Aug 2010)
80 20
70
15
Difference (bps)
Difference (bps)
60
50 10
40
5
30
20 0
10
-5
0
-10 -10
3Y
10,0%
10,0%
3Y
5Y
5Y
6,0%
6,0%
7Y
7Y
4,5%
4,5%
9Y
9Y
3,5%
3,5%
12Y
2,5%
2,5%
12Y
20Y
2,0%
2,0%
20Y
30Y
1,0%
1,0%
30Y
Figure 9: cap/floor options premia differences (light colours: Floors, dark colours: Caps). Upper panels: differences
between Single-Curve premia and market premia. Middle panels: differences between Multiple-Curve No-CSA premia
and market premia. Lower panels: differences between Multiple-Curve CSA premia and market premia. Valuation dates:
31st March 2010 (left side graphs) and 31st August 2010 (right side graphs). Note that the y-axis scale of the lower graph
on the left side has been reduced to better highlight larger price differences (source: Reuters).
17
Cap/Floor Premia Differences
Table 4: differences (in basis points) from Figure 9. For each pricing methodology (section 4.2) and each valuation date
(31st March and 31st August 2010) we show the range of minimum and maximum discrepancies and the standard deviation.
Table 5: classical (top left column) vs modern (top right column) SABR model dynamics and volatility expression
consistent with the Multiple-Curve approach (bottom). See Hagan et al. (2002) for details.
In analogy with the Black model, the modern version of the SABR model is obtained from the corresponding classical
SABR version of Hagan et al. (2002) just by replacing the classical forward rate with the modern FRA rate and the -
forward Libor measure associated with the classical Single-Curve numeraire with the modern -forward measure
associated with the discounting numeraire .The SABR volatility formula remains unchanged, but takes the FRA
rate in input. Caps/Floor options are priced as in Table 2 using the standard Black’s formula and input SABR volatility. In
Table 5 we show the classical and the modern SABR equations.
18
Using different Multiple-Curve pricing methodologies as in section 4.2, based on different choices of discounting and
forwarding yield curves, leads to the definition of two distinct implied volatility surfaces referring to the same
collateralized market premia, as discussed in section 4.4 above:
the Euribor implied term volatility, which is consistent with the Multiple-Curve No-CSA approach;
the Eonia implied term volatility, which is consistent with the Multiple-Curve CSA approach.
Notice that the SABR model refers to forward (not term) volatilities implied in caplets/floorlets (not Caps/Floors). We
denote with the implied forward volatility seen at time t of an European caplet/floorlet on the spot
Euribor rate and strike , with . Thus, we stripped the two
forward volatility surfaces implied in the Cap/Floor premia published by Reuters on the 31st March and on 31st August
2010, using the two Multiple-Curve methodologies above. The stripping procedure requires many technicalities that we do
not report here, we refer to section 3.6 in Brigo and Mercurio (2006).
The SABR calibration procedure is applied to each smile section, corresponding to the strip of caplets/floorlets with the
3
same maturity date , underlying FRA rate , and different strikes , . Thus the calibration returns
the values of the model’s parameters , , , that minimize the distance between the market implied forward volatilities
and the corresponding theoretical SABR volatilities obtained through the
closed analytic formula in Table 5. Thus we obtain a set of SABR parameters for each smile section.
For the two dates (31st March and on 31st August 2010) and the two pricing methodologies (Multiple-Curve No-CSA,
Multiple-Curve CSA) associated to the two corresponding forward volatility surfaces (Euribor, Eonia), we performed two
minimizations using two distinct error functions:
a standard error function defined as the square root of the sum of the square differences between the SABR and
the market forward volatilities:
[1]
a vega-weighted error function:
[2]
where
and is the Black’s vega sensitivity of the caplet/floorlet option with strike , FRA rate and
maturity . Weighting the errors by the sensitivity of the options to shifts of the volatility allows, during the
calibration procedure, to give more importance to the near-ATM areas of the volatility surface, with high vega
sensitivities and market liquidity, and less importance to OTM areas, with lower vega and liquidity.
The initial values of , , and were respectively 4.5%, -10% and 20%. Different initializations gave no appreciable
differences in the calibration results. According to Hagan et al. (2002) and West (2004), in the calibration of the model we
decided to fix the value of the redundant parameter to 0.5. The minimization was performed using the built-in Matlab’s
function “patternsearch”.
A snapshot of the SABR calibration results is shown in Figure 10 and Figure 11, where we report three smile sections at
short term (2-year maturity), mid term (10-year maturity) and long term (30-year maturity). In Figure 12 (valuation date:
31st March 2010) and in Figure 13 (valuation date: 31st August 2010) we plot the vega-weighted calibration errors we
obtain using the two different minimization functions. For each smile section, the errors of the standard calibration are
equally weighted, while those obtained through the vega-weighted approach are weighted for the volatility sensitivity of
caplet/floorlet options given a certain strike and maturity date. In Table 6 we compare the two calibration approaches
reporting the most important numbers: the range of minimum and maximum errors and the standard deviation.
3
14 is the number of strikes quoted in the market.
19
60% Short Term (2Y) - Euribor - 31 Mar 2010 0,014 60% Short Term (2Y) - Eonia - 31 Mar 2010 0,014
Volatility
Volatility
40% 40%
0,008 0,008
Vega
Vega
0,006 0,006
30% 30%
0,004 0,004
20% 20%
0,002 0,002
60% Mid Term (10Y) - Euribor - 31 Mar 2010 0,014 60% Mid Term (10Y) - Eonia - 31 Mar 2010 0,014
0,012 0,012
50% 50%
0,010 0,010
Volatility
Volatility
40% 40%
Vega
0,008 0,008
Vega
0,006 0,006
30% 30%
Euribor Impl. Fwd. Vol. Eonia Impl. Fwd. Vol.
Vega-Wght. SABR Vol. 0,004 Vega-Wght. SABR Vol. 0,004
Standard SABR Vol. Standard SABR Vol.
20% Vega 20% Vega
0,002 0,002
60% Long Term (30Y) - Euribor - 31 Mar 2010 0,014 60% Long Term (30Y) - Eonia - 31 Mar 2010 0,014
40% 40%
Volatility
Volatility
0,008 0,008
Vega
Vega
0,006 0,006
30% 30%
0,004 0,004
20% 20%
0,002 0,002
Figure 10: SABR model calibration results. The blue dots represents the market implied forward volatility, the red line
refers to the standard calibration, the green line refers to the vega-weighted calibration and the purple line (right y-axis)
report the values of the vega. The graphs on the left are related to the market Euribor implied forward volatility. The
graphs on the right are associated to the market Eonia implied forward volatility. Upper panels: smile section with maturity
date 2-year. Middle panels: smile section with maturity date 10-year. Lower panels: smile section with maturity date 30-
years. Valuation date: 31st March 2010 (source: Reuters).
20
60% Short Term (2Y) - Euribor - 31 Aug 2010 0,014 60% Short Term (2Y) - Eonia - 31 Aug 2010 0,014
0,012 0,012
50% 50%
0,010 0,010
40% 40%
Volatility
0,008 0,008
Volatility
Vega
Vega
0,006 0,006
30% Euribor Impl. Fwd. Vol. 30%
Eonia Impl. Fwd. Vol.
Vega-Wght. SABR Vol. Vega-Wght. SABR Vol.
0,004 0,004
Standard SABR Vol. Standard SABR Vol.
20% Vega 20%
Vega
0,002 0,002
60% Mid Term (10Y) - Euribor - 31 Aug 2010 0,014 60% Mid Term (10Y) - Eonia - 31 Aug 2010 0,014
40% 40%
0,008 0,008
Volatility
Vega
Vega
0,006 0,006
30% 30%
0,004 0,004
20% 20%
0,002 0,002
60% Long Term (30Y) - Euribor - 31 Aug 2010 0,014 60% Long Term (30Y) - Eonia - 31 Aug 2010 0,014
40% 40%
Volatility
0,008 0,008
Volatility
Vega
Vega
0,006 0,006
30% 30%
0,004 0,004
20% 20%
0,002 0,002
Figure 11: same as Figure 10, valuation date: 31st August 2010.
21
Standard SABR Calibration Errors - Euribor Impl. Vol. (31 Mar 2010) Vega-Weighted SABR Calibration Errors - Euribor Impl. Vol. (31 Mar 2010)
0,20% 0,20%
0,10% 0,10%
Calibration Error
Calibration Error
0,00% 0,00%
-0,10% -0,10%
-0,20% -0,20%
01/04/2011
01/04/2011
01/04/2015
01/04/2015
01/04/2019
01/04/2019
-0,30% -0,30%
01/04/2023
01/04/2023
01/04/2027
01/04/2027
13
13
01/04/2031
01/04/2031
11
11
9
9
7
7
01/04/2035
01/04/2035
5
5
3
3
01/04/2039
01/04/2039
1
1
Maturity Strike N Maturity Strike N
Standard SABR Calibration Errors - Eonia Impl. Vol. (31 Mar 2010) Vega-Weighted SABR Calibration Errors - Eonia Impl. Vol. (31 Mar 2010)
0,20% 0,20%
0,10% 0,10%
Calibration Error
Calibration Error
0,00% 0,00%
-0,10% -0,10%
-0,20% -0,20%
01/04/2011
01/04/2011
01/04/2015
01/04/2015
01/04/2019
01/04/2019
-0,30% -0,30%
01/04/2023
01/04/2023
01/04/2027
01/04/2027
13
13
01/04/2031
01/04/2031
11
11
9
9
7
7
01/04/2035
01/04/2035
5
5
3
3
01/04/2039
01/04/2039
1
1
Maturity Strike N Maturity Strike N
Figure 12: SABR calibration errors. Upper/lower panels: SABR calibration on the Euribor/Eonia implied volatility
surface. Left/right panels: standard/vega-weighted SABR calibration. Valuation date: 31st March 2010 (source: Reuters).
Standard SABR Calibration Errors - Euribor Impl. Vol. (31 Aug 2010) Vega-Weighted SABR Calibration Errors - Euribor Impl. Vol. (31 Aug 2010)
0,20% 0,20%
0,10% 0,10%
Calibration Error
Calibration Error
0,00% 0,00%
-0,10% -0,10%
-0,20% -0,20%
01/09/2011
01/09/2011
01/09/2015
01/09/2015
01/09/2019
01/09/2019
01/09/2023
-0,30%
01/09/2023
-0,30%
01/09/2027
01/09/2027
13
13
01/09/2031
01/09/2031
11
11
9
9
7
7
01/09/2035
01/09/2035
5
5
3
3
01/09/2039
01/09/2039
1
Standard SABR Calibration Errors - Eonia Impl. Vol. (31 Aug 2010) Vega-Weighted SABR Calibration Errors - Eonia Impl. Vol. (31 Aug 2010)
0,20% 0,20%
0,10% 0,10%
Calibration Error
Calibration Error
0,00% 0,00%
-0,10% -0,10%
-0,20% -0,20%
01/09/2011
01/09/2011
01/09/2015
01/09/2015
01/09/2019
01/09/2019
01/09/2023
01/09/2023
-0,30% -0,30%
01/09/2027
01/09/2027
13
13
01/09/2031
01/09/2031
11
11
9
9
7
7
01/09/2035
01/09/2035
5
5
3
3
01/09/2039
01/09/2039
1
Figure 13: same as Figure 12, valuation date: 31st August 2010.
22
SABR Calibration Errors
Table 6: SABR model calibration errors over all the market volatility smile. For each calibration procedure (standard and
vega-weighted) and for each valuation date (31st March and 31st August 2010), we report the range of minimum and
maximum calibration errors and the standard deviation of the errors (equally-weighted for standard calibration and vega-
weighted for vega-weighted calibration).
Overall, the SABR model performs very well at both dates with both pricing methodologies. In particular, we notice that in
the short term (2-year, upper panels in Figure 10 and Figure 11) the standard SABR calibration (red line) seems, at first
sight, closer to the market volatility (blue dots) and to better replicate the trend in the OTM regions. However, a closer
look reveals that there are significant differences in the ATM area, where even small calibration errors can produce
sensible price variations. Instead, the vega-weighted SABR calibration (green line) gives a better fit of the market volatility
smile in the ATM region, in correspondence of the maximum vega sensitivity, and allows larger differences in the OTM
regions where the vega sensitivity is close to zero. Thus the vega-weighted calibration permits a more efficient fit in the
volatility surface regions that are critical for option pricing. The effects is less visible for long terms (middle and lower
panels in Figure 10 and Figure 11) because of the higher vega sensitivity in the OTM regions. The closer replication of the
vega-weighted SABR in the short term can be observed even in Figure 12 and in Figure 13.
Both the standard and the vega-weighted approaches lead to similar results in terms of range of minimum and maximum
errors and standard deviation (see Table 6). In particular, the standard deviation measures of the errors over the 30-year
term structure are almost the same: this is due to the fact that only in the short term (up to 4 years) the two calibration
differ and using a vega-weighted minimization can ensure a more better fitting of the market data, as shown in the upper
panels of Figure 10 and Figure 11.
We conclude that the SABR model is quite robust under generalisation to the modern pricing framework and can be
applied to properly fit the new dynamics of the market volatility smile and to price off-the-market options coherently with
the new market evidences.
5. Conclusions
In this work we have presented a quantitative study of the markets and models evolution across the credit crunch crisis. In
particular, we have focused on the fixed income market and we have analyzed the most relevant empirical evidences
regarding the divergences between Libor vs OIS rates, between FRA vs forward rates, the explosion of Basis Swaps
spreads, and the diffusion of collateral agreements and CSA-discounting, in terms of credit and liquidity effects. These
market frictions have induced a segmentation of the interest rate market into sub-areas, corresponding to instruments with
risky underlying Libor rates distinct by tenors, and risk free overnight rates, and characterized, in principle, by different
internal dynamics, liquidity and credit risk premia reflecting the different views and preferences of the market players.
In response to the crisis, the classical pricing framework, based on a single yield curve used to calculate forward rates and
discount factors, has been abandoned, and a new modern pricing approach has prevailed among practitioners, taking into
account the market segmentation as an empirical evidence and incorporating the new interest rate dynamics into a multiple
curve framework. The latter has required a deep revision of classical no-arbitrage pricing formulas for plain vanilla interest
rate derivatives, now funded on the risk neutral measure associated to the risk free bank account and on the martingale
property of the FRA rate under such measure. In particular, we have reported the multiple-curve generalization of the
SABR model, the simplest extension of the well known Black’s model with stochastic volatility, routinely used by market
practitioners to fit the interest rate volatility smile and to price vanilla Caps/Floors and Swaptions.
23
In section 4 we have reported the results of an empirical analysis on recent market data comparing three different pre- and
post-credit crunch pricing methodologies and showing the transition of the market practice from the classical to the
modern pricing framework. In particular, we have proven that the market of Interest Rate Swaps since March 2010 has
abandoned the classical Single-Curve pricing methodology, typical of the pre-credit crunch interest rate world, and has
adopted the modern Multiple-Curve CSA approach, thus incorporating into market prices the credit and liquidity effects.
The same happened with European Caps/Floors, with the full transition to the CSA-discounting methodology retarded up
to August 2010. Finally, we have proven that the SABR model is quite robust under generalisation to the modern pricing
framework and can be applied to properly fit the new dynamics of the market volatility smile and to price off-the-market
options coherently with the new market evidences.
The work presented here is a short step in the long-run theoretical reconstruction of the interest rate modelling framework
in a post-crisis financial world, with Libor rates incorporating credit and liquidity risks. We believe that such risks and the
corresponding market segmentation expressed by large basis swap spreads will not return negligible as in the pre-crisis
world, and will be there in the future, exactly as the volatility smile has been there since the 1987 market crash. Expected
future developments will regard, for example, the extension of pre-crisis pricing models to the Multiple-Curve world with
stochastic basis, and the pricing of non-collateralized OTC derivatives including consistently the bilateral credit risk of the
counterparties in the form of Credit Value Adjustment (CVA) and Debt Value Adjustment (DVA), and the liquidity risk of
the lender in the form of Liquidity Value Adjustment (LVA) (see e.g. Bianchetti and Morini (2010)).
24
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