Demystifying Derivatives

Executive summary:

  • Derivatives are financial contracts between two or more parties that are based on the performance of an underlying asset or index.
  • Derivatives can be used to hedge extreme market selloffs, exposure gaps between assets and liabilities, changes in interest rates or inflation expectations, the future price of commodities, the risk of missing out on a rally, and a host of other investor concerns.
  • Derivatives are complex financial instruments with associated risks, costs, and potential payoffs. Because of this, we believe it’s critical to work with an investment solutions provider that has extensive experiencing using them responsibly.

One fear that I’ve heard repeatedly since I first started trading stock options as a teenager is that derivatives are scary. This is, no doubt, thanks to the many scandals, abuse, and misapplication captured in the headlines. A specter of danger often hovers over derivative instruments, like when Warren Buffett famously described them as “financial weapons of mass destruction.” So, are derivatives inherently scary or are they like most things we buy nowadays—accompanied with disclaimers and directions about responsible usage?

Fear of derivatives is easy to understand. Perhaps it’s their quality of not existing in the physical world like a stock or a bond. Or maybe it’s their enduring nature in which as soon as one expires, there’s another one to take its place. And let’s not forget their amazing ability to hedge or gain exposure to some asset without spending the money to do so. All of this may conjure up thoughts of some sort of Frankensteinian synthetic instrument. But as tends to be the case with many origin stories, derivatives are simpler than they first appear.