Which of the following statements regarding forward rate agreements (FRAs) is least accurate?
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A forward rate agreement can be viewed as a forward contract to borrow or lend money at a certain rate at some future date. Because no actual loan is made at the settlement date, the forward interest rate does not need to reflect the creditworthiness of the parties to the contract (however, the parties may still face default risk). If the floating rate at contract expiration is above the rate specified in the forward agreement, the long position in the contract can be viewed as the right to borrow at below market rates and the long will receive a payment. If the reference rate at the expiration date is below the contract rate, the short can be viewed as the right to lend at rates higher than market rates.
The short in a forward rate agreement:
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Each party to a forward contract faces default risk to some extent. If the floating rate at contract expiration (LIBOR or Euribor) is above the rate specified in the forward rate agreement (FRA), the long position in the contract can be viewed as the right to borrow at below market rates and the long will receive a payment from the short. If floating rates (LIBOR or Euribor) at the expiration date are below the rate specified in the FRA the short will receive a cash payment from the long. However, "the short profits if LIBOR decreases" is not necessarily true because LIBOR can decrease but remain above the rate specified in the FRA.
A forward rate agreement (FRA):
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An FRA settles in cash and carries both default risk and interest rate risk, even when based on an essentially risk-free rate. It can be used to hedge the risk/uncertainty about a future payment on a floating rate loan.
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An FRA is a forward rate agreement.
A forward rate agreement (FRA):
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If the floating rate is above the rate specified in the agreement, the long position can be viewed as the right to borrow at below-market rates. Floating rates like LIBOR are used in FRAs. The long must pay the short only if the contracted rate at the expiration date is above the floating rate.
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