0
$\begingroup$

At its most basic the volatility of an instrument is the standard deviation of its return series over time calculated as percentage change of the price series.

How would this work for interest rate swaps where the "price" is a rate and is expressed as a percentage? I would be inclined to proceed using the percentage change in the swap rate to calculate the volatility. Is this the correct approach?

$\endgroup$
1

1 Answer 1

2
$\begingroup$

Volatility is a measure of the deviation from expected value over a given time horizon. The expected value of an IRS is the forward rate of the IRS to that time horizon. Let's assume this forward rate is normally distributed. Standard volatility quote convention for vols in IRS vol markets is basis points/day $\sigma_d$ (this is an absolute change in bps of the swap rate) and is related to the annualized bp volatility $\sigma$ via $\sigma=\sigma_d\sqrt{252}$ (for 252 business days in a year). So if the $n$-year vol of an $N$-year swap is $\sigma_d$ bps/day and the $n$-year forward rate is $F$, then this means that there is a 68% probability that the $N$-year swap rate in $n$-years time will be in the range $F\pm\sigma\sqrt{n}$.

In case you're doing some time series analysis of realized IRS vols, then it would make sense to compute the historical "bps/day" vol as this is how the implied vols are quoted in the market i.e. look at historical day/day absolute changes in IRS/forward rates.

$\endgroup$

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.