Archive for the ‘market’ Category

Oanda Corporation

Friday, February 5th, 2010

OANDA Corporation is a financial services provider of currency conversion, online retail foreign exchange (forex) trading, online foreign currency transfers, and forex information. It is one of the largest non-bank Futures Commission Merchants (FCMs) that specializes solely in spot forex trading. OANDA is a registered FCM with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and a member of the National Futures Association (NFA).

The name OANDA is short for “Olsen And Associates” named after the founder.

OANDA.com offers an online trading platform (FXTrade), currency conversion tools, a foreign exchange wire service (FXGlobalTransfer), a corporate hedging consulting service (FXConsulting), discussion forums, tables of historical currency data, as well as forex news and analysis OANDA’s historical tables are used by some companies to calculate average exchange rates for accounting purposes. Since these historical rates remain accessible afterwards, they can also be used to define applicable exchange rates for contracts. OANDA provides many Foreign Exchange services besides FXTrade, their FOREX trading platform. They provide conversion tools and currency charts for businesses to integrate into their sites and indexes and information for travelers.

Unique Features

OANDA’s founders published The Forex Trader’s Bill of Rights to highlight what they describe as the fundamental right of foreign exchange traders to a free, open, and stable forex market, including technological efficiency and unfettered access to information.

One feature included in this Bill of Rights is the application of continuous interest, second-by-second, a feature of OANDA’s FXTrade platform. When interest is applied only once a day on open positions (the typical broker’s standard), there is an artificial bias toward shorting weaker currencies (with higher rates of interest), and, potentially, rewarding buyers of stronger currencies with lower rates of interest. The “Bill of Rights” asserts that this practice results in “distorted pricing flows that upset trends, create valuation havoc, and encourage speculation for its own sake.”

Mathematician BenoĆ®t Mandelbrot singles out OANDA’s FXTrade technology as one example of how the foreign exchange market should work to ensure liquidity. The forex market, despite its vast size, can be vulnerable to periods of illiquidity. These periods pose a risk to an interconnected globalized economy that is increasingly dependent on foreign currency exchange for currency disintermediation and micro-hedging, along with everyday B2B and B2C cross-border transactions.

History

OANDA is an outgrowth of the Swiss Olsen Group and was created to serve as an internet trading platform to automate techniques based on the group’s 20 years’ worth of research in foreign exchange trading. Much of OANDA’s technology is based on algorithms published in the book High Frequency Finance, which was co-authored by Dr. Richard Olsen, a principal of OANDA and co-inventor of these algorithms.

OANDA Corporation was incorporated in 1996 in the state of Delaware, and initially provided online access to live currency information that was previously inaccessible to the public at large. At its inception, OANDA.com offered free currency conversion tools, tables of historical data, news, and analysis through a multilingual interface, and other information likely to be of use to international travelers.

In 2001, OANDA launched FXTrade, an online forex trading system designed with the aim to lower the costs and risks associated with forex trading. Some of its more innovative features included flexible trade sizes, 24/7 trading, instant settlement on all transactions, continuous interest payments calculated second-by-second throughout the day, and no lot size restrictions (that is, traders could buy and sell any number of units, all at the same rate).

In 2005, OANDA published The Forex Trader’s Bill of Rights to outline its philosophy of what forex markets can and should offer to forex traders. In 2007, OANDA offered spot trading in an expanded list of currencies, including the Chinese yuan.

In 2008 OANDA launched FXGlobalTransfer, an automated online foreign currency transfer service designed to offer corporate clients a low-cost, convenient, and secure method of sending funds globally at any time from any computer connected to the Internet. The same year, OANDA launched FXPedia, an online wiki of forex information and commentary, and FXConsulting, a consulting service for corporate hedging.

Convertible bond arbitrage

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

A convertible bond is a bond that an investor can return to the issuing company in exchange for a predetermined number of shares in the company.

A convertible bond can be thought of as a corporate bond with a stock call option attached to it.

The price of a convertible bond is sensitive to three major factors:

* interest rate. When rates move higher, the bond part of a convertible bond tends to move lower, but the call option part of a convertible bond moves higher (and the aggregate tends to move lower).
* stock price. When the price of the stock the bond is convertible into moves higher, the price of the bond tends to rise.
* credit spread. If the creditworthiness of the issuer deteriorates (e.g. rating downgrade) and its credit spread widens, the bond price tends to move lower, but, in many cases, the call option part of the convertible bond moves higher (since credit spread correlates with volatility).

Given the complexity of the calculations involved and the convoluted structure that a convertible bond can have, an arbitrageur often relies on sophisticated quantitative models in order to identify bonds that are trading cheap versus their theoretical value.

Convertible arbitrage consists of buying a convertible bond and hedging two of the three factors in order to gain exposure to the third factor at a very attractive price.

For instance an arbitrageur would first buy a convertible bond, then sell fixed income securities or interest rate futures (to hedge the interest rate exposure) and buy some credit protection (to hedge the risk of credit deterioration). Eventually what he’d be left with is something similar to a call option on the underlying stock, acquired at a very low price. He could then make money either selling some of the more expensive options that are openly traded in the market or delta hedging his exposure to the underlying shares.