Swap
From ACT Wiki
1. A capital market swap is a longer-term derivative instrument. It is an agreement to exchange a series of cashflows at pre-determined future dates, usually settled for difference. Examples of capital market swaps include interest rate swaps, basis swaps, and cross currency interest rate swaps.
2. A foreign exchange swap is a shorter term instrument. It is an agreement to exchange currencies at a fixed future date (known as the near leg date) and then to re-exchange the same currencies at a later fixed future date (the far leg date).
See also
- Accreting swap
- Amortising swap
- At the money
- Basis swap
- Capital market swap
- Counterparty
- Cross-currency interest rate swap
- Differential swap
- Equity swap
- Fixed rate payer
- Fixing instrument
- Floating rate payer
- Foreign exchange swap
- Interest rate swap
- Long-dated swap
- Notional principal
- Swaption
- Total return swap
- Warehousing
- Zero-coupon swap