Definition
A payer swaption grants the right to enter a swap as the fixed-rate payer (and floating-rate receiver); a receiver swaption grants the right to receive the fixed rate. Like all options, the buyer pays a premium upfront. Swaptions are used by institutions to hedge uncertainty about future funding costs or to speculate on interest rate movements without committing to a full swap now. Settlement at expiry can be physical (the parties enter the underlying swap) or cash-settled (the in-the-money value is paid out). Swaptions are complex OTC instruments subject to the same derivatives-regulation framework as swaps under NI 93-101 and NI 94-101 through 94-102. For CIRE purposes, swaptions represent the intersection of options concepts (premium, strike, expiry) and swap concepts (notional, fixed vs floating); questions may test whether candidates can identify the rights and obligations of each counterparty.
Source
NI 93-101; NI 94-101; CIRO IDPC KYP obligations for complex products
Where this shows up on the CIRE
- Outcome 5.3