UBS AG
Screenreader-optimized Version for visually impaired and blind visitors Home | Accessibility | Zoom version | Local Sitemap | Service Finder | eng deu fra ita | Search
   
About UsAnalysts & InvestorsMediaCareersUBS Locations
Annual Reporting 2006  
Annual Review Financial Report Handbook
     
Introduction
Presentation of Financial Information
UBS
Financial Businesses
Industrial Holdings
Balance Sheet and Cash Flows
Accounting Standards and Policies
Financial Statements
Notes to the Financial Statements
UBS AG (Parent Bank)
Additional Disclosure Required under SEC Regulations
 

Note 23 Derivative Instruments and Hedge Accounting
Note 23  Derivative Instruments and Hedge Accounting

A derivative is a financial instrument, the value of which is derived from the value of another ("underlying") financial instrument, an index or some other variable. Typically, the underlying is a share, commodity or bond price, an index value or an exchange or interest rate.

The majority of derivative contracts are negotiated as to amount ("notional"), tenor and price between UBS and its counterparties, whether other professionals or customers (over-the-counter or OTC contracts).

The rest are standardized in terms of their amounts and settlement dates and are bought and sold on organized markets (exchange-traded contracts).

The notional amount of a derivative is generally the quantity of the underlying instrument on which the de­rivative contract is based and is the basis upon which changes in the value of the contract are measured. It provides an indication of the underlying volume of business transacted by the Group but does not provide any measure of risk.

Derivative instruments are carried at fair value, shown in the balance sheet as separate totals of Positive replacement values (assets) and Negative replacement values (liabilities). Positive replacement values represent the cost to the Group of replacing all transactions with a fair value in the Group's favor if all the relevant counterparties of the Group were to default at the same time, assuming transactions could be replaced instantaneously. Negative replacement values represent the cost to the Group's counterparties of replacing all their transactions with the Group with a fair value in their favor if the Group were to default. Positive and negative replacement values on different transactions are only netted if the transactions are with the same counterparty and the cash flows will be settled on a net basis. Changes in replacement values of derivative instruments are recognized in the income statement unless they meet the criteria for certain hedge accounting relationships, as explained in Note 1a14) Derivative instruments and hedge accounting.

Types of derivative instruments

The Group uses the following derivative financial instruments for both trading and hedging purposes.

Forwards and futures are contractual obligations to buy or sell financial instruments or commodities on a future date at a specified price. Forward contracts are tailor-made agreements that are transacted between counterparties on the OTC market, whereas futures are standardized contracts transacted on regulated exchanges.

Swaps are transactions in which two parties exchange cash flows on a specified notional amount for a predetermined period. Most swaps are traded OTC. The major types of swap transactions undertaken by the Group are as ­follows:

– Interest rate swap contracts generally entail the contractual exchange of fixed-rate and floating-rate interest payments in a single currency, based on a notional amount and a reference interest rate, e. g. LIBOR.

– Cross currency swaps involve the exchange of interest payments based on two different currency principal balances and reference interest rates and generally also ­entail exchange of principal amounts at the start and / or end of the contract.

– Credit default swaps (CDSs) are the most common form of credit derivative, under which the party buying pro­tection makes one or more payments to the party selling protection in exchange for an undertaking by the ­seller to make a payment to the buyer following a credit event (as defined in the contract) with respect to a third-party credit entity (as defined in the contract). Settlement ­following a credit event may be a net cash amount or cash in return for physical delivery of one or more obli­gations of the credit entity and is made regardless of whether the protection buyer has actually suffered a loss. After a ­credit event and settlement, the contract is ter­minated.

– Total rate of return swaps give the total return receiver exposure to all of the cash flows and economic benefits and risks of an underlying asset, without having to own the asset, in exchange for a series of payments, often based on a reference interest rate, e. g. LIBOR. The total return payer has an equal and opposite position.

– Options are contractual agreements under which, typically, the seller (writer) grants the purchaser the right, but not the obligation, either to buy (call option) or to sell (put option) by or at a set date, a specified quantity of a financial instrument or commodity at a predetermined price. The purchaser pays a premium to the seller for this right. Options involving more complex payment structures are also transacted. Options may be traded OTC or on a regulated exchange and may be traded in the form of a security (warrant).

Derivatives transacted for trading purposes

Most of the Group's derivative transactions relate to sales and trading activities. Sales activities include the structuring and marketing of derivative products to customers to enable them to take, transfer, modify or reduce current or expected risks. Trading includes market making, positioning and arbitrage activities. Market making involves quoting bid and offer ­prices to other market participants with the intention of generating revenues based on spread and volume. Positioning means managing market risk positions with the expectation of profiting from favorable movements in prices, rates or indices. Arbitrage activities involve identifying and profiting from price differentials between the same product in different markets or the same economic factor in different products.

Derivatives transacted for hedging purposes

The Group enters into derivative transactions for the purposes of hedging assets, liabilities, forecast transactions, cash flows and credit exposures. The accounting treatment of hedge transactions varies according to the nature of the instrument hedged and whether the hedge qualifies as such for accounting purposes.

Derivative transactions may qualify as hedges for accounting purposes. These are described under the corresponding headings in this note. The Group's accounting policies for derivatives ­designated and accounted for as hedging instruments are ­explained in Note 1a14) Derivative instruments and hedge accounting, where terms used in the following sections are explained.

The Group also enters into CDSs that provide economic hedges for credit risk exposures in the loan and traded product portfolios but do not meet the requirements for hedge accounting treatment.

Starting in fourth quarter 2005, the Group also entered into interest rate swaps for day-to-day economic interest rate risk management purposes, but without applying hedge accounting. The fair value changes of such swaps are booked to Net trading income. The Group limits the resultant income volatility by selecting short- to medium-term swaps only. Longer term swaps continue to be supported by the cash flow hedging model explained in a subsequent section of this note.

Fair value hedges

The Group's fair value hedges principally consist of interest rate swaps that are used to protect against changes in the fair value of fixed-rate instruments due to movements in market interest rates. For the year ended 31 December 2006, the Group recognized a net loss of CHF 18 million, for the year ended 31 December 2005 a net loss of CHF 22 million and for the year ended 31 December 2004 a net gain of CHF 22 million, representing the ineffective portions, as defined in Note 1a14), of fair value hedges. The fair values of outstanding derivatives designated as fair value hedges were a CHF 222 million net positive replacement value at 31 December 2006 and a CHF 380 million net positive replacement value at 31 December 2005.

In addition, the Group has entered into a fair value hedge accounting relationship to protect a certain portion of available-for-sale equity investments from foreign currency exposure using FX derivatives. For the year ended 31 December 2006, the Group recognized a net gain of CHF 5 million as hedge ineffectiveness. The time value associated with the FX derivatives is excluded from the evaluation of hedge ineffectiveness. The fair value of outstanding FX derivatives designated as fair value hedges was a CHF 1 million net positive replacement value at 31 December 2006.

Fair value hedge of portfolio of interest rate risk

The Group has applied fair value hedge accounting of portfolio interest rate risk since September 2005. For the year ended 31 December 2006, the Group recognized a net loss of CHF 8 million and for the year ended 31 December 2005 a net loss of CHF 22 million, representing the ineffective portions of fair value hedges. The change in fair value of the hedged items is recorded separately from the hedged item on the balance sheet. The fair value of derivatives designated for this hedge method at 31 December 2006 was a CHF 8 million net positive replacement value. There were no derivative contracts designated as hedges under this method at 31 December 2005, as all the hedges had become ineffective and the hedge relationships were de-designated at the end of December 2005.

Cash flow hedges of forecast transactions

The Group is exposed to variability in future interest cash flows on non-trading assets and liabilities that bear interest at variable rates or are expected to be refunded or reinvested in the future. The amounts and timing of future cash flows, representing both principal and interest flows, are projected for each portfolio of financial assets and liabilities, based on contractual terms and other relevant factors including estimates of prepayments and defaults. The aggregate principal balances and interest cash flows across all portfolios over time form the basis for identifying the non-trading interest rate risk of the Group, which is hedged with interest rate swaps, the maximum maturity of which is 22 years.

The schedule of forecast principal balances on which the expected interest cash flows arise as of 31 December 2006 is shown below.

CHF billion

< 1 year

1–3 years

3–5 years

5–10 years

over 10 years

Cash inflows (assets)

228

420

294

267

7

Cash outflows (liabilities)

88

156

109

151

41

Net cash flows

140

264

185

116

(34)

Gains and losses on the effective portions of derivatives designated as cash flow hedges of forecast transactions are initially recorded in Equity as Net income recognized directly in equity and are transferred to current period earnings when the forecast cash flows affect net profit or loss. The gains and losses on ineffective portions of such derivatives are recognized immediately in the income statement. A CHF 36 million loss, CHF 35 million gain and a CHF 13 million gain were recognized in 2006, 2005 and 2004, respectively, due to hedge ineffectiveness.

As of 31 December 2006 and 2005, the fair values of outstanding derivatives designated as cash flow hedges of forecast transactions were a CHF 462 million net negative replacement value and a CHF 1,124 million net negative ­replacement value, respectively. Swiss franc hedging interest rate swaps terminated during 2006 and 2005 had a replacement value of CHF 0 million and a positive replacement value of CHF 80 million, respectively. At the end of 2006 and 2005, unrecognized income of CHF 214 million and CHF 346 million associated with terminated swaps remained ­deferred in Equity. It will be removed from Equity when the hedged cash flows have an impact on net profit or loss. Amounts reclassified from Net income recognized directly in Equity to current period earnings due to discontinuation of hedge accounting were a CHF 132 million net gain in 2006, a CHF 243 million net gain in 2005 and a CHF 304 million net gain in 2004. These amounts were recorded in Net ­interest income.

Risks of derivative instruments

Derivative instruments are transacted in many trading portfolios, which generally include several types of instruments, not just derivatives. The market risk of derivatives is managed and controlled as an integral part of the market risk of these portfolios. The Group's approach to market risk is described in Note 29, Financial Instruments Risk Position, part b) Market Risk.

Derivative instruments are transacted with many different counterparties, most of whom are also counterparties for other types of business. The credit risk of derivatives is managed and controlled in the context of the Group's overall credit exposure to each counterparty. The Group's approach to credit risk is described in Note 29, Financial Instruments Risk Position, part c) Credit Risk. It should be noted that, although the positive replacement values shown on the balance sheet can be an important component of the Group's credit exposure, the positive replacement values for any one counterparty are rarely an adequate reflection of the Group's credit exposure on its derivatives business with that counterparty. This is because, on the one hand, ­replacement values can increase over time ("potential future exposure"), while on the other hand, exposure may be mitigated by entering into master netting agreements and ­bilateral collateral arrangements with counterparties. Both the exposure measures used by the Group internally to control credit risk and the capital requirements imposed by regulators reflect these additional factors. There are additional capital requirements shown in Note 29 e) Capital Adequacy under Off-balance sheet and other positions as Forward and swap contracts and Purchased options, which reflect the additional potential future exposure. In Note 29 c) Credit Risk, the Derivatives positive replacement values shown under Traded products, and in Note 29 part e) Capital Adequacy, the Positive replacement values shown under balance sheet assets are lower than those shown in the balance sheet because they reflect close-out netting arrangements accepted by the Swiss Federal Banking Commission (SFBC) as being enforceable in insolvency. The impact of such netting agreements on the gross replacement values shown in the tables on the next two pages is to reduce both positive and negative replacement values by CHF 219,820 million and CHF 252,192 million at 31 December 2006 and 2005 respectively. As a result, positive replacement values after netting for UBS Group were CHF 108,625 million at 31 December 2006 and CHF 81,590 million at 31 December 2005. These figures differ from those shown in Note 29 e) because they cover the whole UBS Group, whereas the relevant tables in Note 29 cover only those ­entities which are subject to consolidation for regulatory capital purposes.

As of 31 December 2006

Term to maturity

within 3 months

3-12 months

1-5 years

over 5 years

Total PRV

Total NRV

Total notional CHF bn

CHF million

PRV 1

NRV 2

PRV

NRV

PRV

NRV

PRV

NRV

Interest rate contracts

Over-the-counter (OTC) contracts

Forward contracts

1,001

764

172

177

38

34

1,211

975

1,848.0

Swaps

5,629

4,784

9,891

10,134

46,690

47,128

87,079

81,719

149,289

143,765

22,643.4

Options

273

308

127

440

2,252

3,563

13,529

15,148

16,181

19,459

1,432.5

Exchange-traded contracts 3

Futures

2,904.4

Options

406

438

474

485

96

96

976

1,019

34.7

Total

7,309

6,294

10,664

11,236

49,076

50,821

100,608

96,867

167,657

165,218

28,863.0

Credit derivative contracts

Over-the-counter (OTC) contracts

Credit default swaps

35

54

363

673

12,874

14,035

7,425

7,953

20,697

22,715

2,536.6

Total rate of return swaps

54

63

100

74

583

1,606

4,284

3,512

5,021

5,255

103.0

Total

89

117

463

747

13,457

15,641

11,709

11,465

25,718

27,970

2,639.6

Foreign exchange contracts

Over-the-counter (OTC) contracts

Forward contracts

4,565

4,322

1,765

1,968

827

531

17

103

7,174

6,924

784.0

Interest and currency swaps

24,724

22,977

10,363

10,599

14,641

12,366

12,821

11,831

62,549

57,773

4,064.6

Options

2,877

2,624

2,987

3,042

828

1,041

51

49

6,743

6,756

1,276.2

Exchange-traded contracts 3

Futures

20.8

Options

12

16

2

2

14

18

0.1

Total

32,178

29,939

15,117

15,611

16,296

13,938

12,889

11,983

76,480

71,471

6,145.7

Precious metals contracts

Over-the-counter (OTC) contracts

Forward contracts

348

339

573

355

757

371

37

48

1,715

1,113

25.6

Options

293

580

676

784

1,554

1,281

118

68

2,641

2,713

70.6

Exchange-traded contracts 3

Futures

1.0

Options

333

400

427

381

1,050

1,087

1,810

1,868

23.9

Total

974

1,319

1,676

1,520

3,361

2,739

155

116

6,166

5,694

121.1

Equity / index contracts

Over-the-counter (OTC) contracts

Forward contracts

1,179

1,464

386

1,217

506

8

14

103

2,085

2,792

107.8

Options

1,073

3,485

3,702

5,655

6,121

8,821

1,605

2,795

12,501

20,756

258.0

Exchange-traded contracts 3

Futures

72.4

Options

4,277

4,602

8,238

8,396

9,978

10,458

453

433

22,946

23,889

270.7

Total

6,529

9,551

12,326

15,268

16,605

19,287

2,072

3,331

37,532

47,437

708.9

Commodities contracts, excluding precious metals contracts

Over-the-counter (OTC) contracts

Forward contracts

3,254

3,223

2,894

3,155

1,724

1,579

766

840

8,638