Swap Contract

A derivative in which two parties exchange cash flows based on different financial instruments or rates.

Derivatives

Definition

Swaps are OTC agreements to exchange cash flow streams. The most common type—interest rate swaps—exchanges fixed-rate for floating-rate payments. Currency swaps exchange cash flows in different currencies. Swaps allow companies to manage exposure without changing underlying assets. The notional amount is not exchanged; only the net cash flow difference changes hands.

lightbulb Example

Company A has a variable-rate loan (SOFR+200bps) and wants fixed payments. Company B has a fixed 5% loan and wants floating exposure. They enter an interest rate swap: A pays B 4.5% fixed; B pays A SOFR. Both achieve their desired exposure.

verified_user Key Points

  • Notional principal is never exchanged
  • Most common: interest rate and currency swaps
  • Used to manage rate, currency, and credit exposure
  • ISDA Master Agreement governs most swaps

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