Interest Rate Call Option
Key takeaways
* An interest rate call option gives its holder the right, but not the obligation, to pay a fixed interest rate and receive a floating (variable) rate for a specified period.
* The option is exercised when the market (floating) rate at settlement exceeds the strike (fixed) rate; the payoff equals the present value of the difference multiplied by the notional and the accrual period.
* These options are used to hedge or speculate on interest-rate movements and can be traded on exchanges or over the counter (OTC).
What it is
An interest rate call option is a derivative whose underlying is an interest rate (for example, a 3‑month Treasury bill yield or LIBOR). The buyer of the option acquires the right to receive the floating rate and pay the fixed strike rate for a specified notional principal and period. The seller (writer) of the option takes the opposite side and may owe a net payment if the option is exercised.
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How it works
- If the underlying floating rate at settlement is greater than the strike rate, the option is “in the money” and the holder will normally exercise it. If the floating rate is lower, the option expires worthless.
- Settlement payment = present value of [(floating rate − strike rate) × year fraction × notional].
- Year fraction = accrual period divided by the day-count basis used in the contract (commonly 360 or 365 days).
- The actual cash settlement often occurs at the end of the underlying accrual period and may be discounted to present value.
Example
Suppose an investor holds a 180‑day interest rate call option on a notional of $1,000,000 with a strike of 1.98%. If the underlying 180‑day rate at settlement is 2.20%, the rate difference is 0.22 percentage points (2.20% − 1.98% = 0.22% = 0.0022). The payoff before discounting is:
Payoff = 0.0022 × (180/360) × $1,000,000 = $1,100
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If settlement cash is paid later, that $1,100 would be discounted to present value using the agreed discounting rate.
Uses and benefits
- Hedging: Lenders can use interest rate calls to hedge against rising funding costs or to lock a floor on future lending rates. Borrowers or investors with floating‑rate obligations can limit their maximum interest payments while retaining upside if rates fall.
- Speculation: Traders can take directional positions on future interest‑rate movements without trading the underlying debt instruments.
- Flexibility: Options can be structured for periodic payments or balloon settlements and are available on exchanges or as customized OTC contracts.
Practical considerations
- Payoff depends on the notional, the rate differential, and the accrual period; contracts specify the day‑count convention and settlement timing.
- Liquidity, counterparty credit risk (for OTC contracts), and option premium (cost to buy the option) affect the economics of using interest rate calls.
- Alternatives and complements include interest rate puts, swaps, and other rate derivatives used in broader hedging strategies.