Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Mexican F-TIIE Futures and FX Hedging

In This Article:

Mexican F-TIIE Interest Rate futures from CME Group provide a risk management tool for overnight Mexican peso interest rates. This paper examines cross-currency interest rate trading strategies using the F-TIIE futures contract and the opportunities for hedging the FX exposure created using our MXN/USD Foreign Exchange futures contract.

In this paper, we will look at trading the interest rate differential between Mexican peso and U.S. dollar interest rates using F-TIIE and 1-Month SOFR Interest Rate futures. Trading this differential will, in practice, likely mean trading a strip of F-TIIE futures against a strip of 1-Month SOFR futures. For example, if the expectation is for Mexican interest rates to fall faster or sooner than U.S. interest rates, then buying the F-TIIE futures strip and selling the SOFR futures strip would meet this requirement. However, in order to highlight the FX component, we will simplify the transaction to look at a spread position for a single futures contract month.

The futures spread is created to benefit from a narrowing of the differential between the two interest rates. As both futures contracts are quoted in terms of “100 – Rate,” this means the futures position is created by buying the F-TIIE futures contract and selling the 1-Month SOFR futures contract.

Let’s take an example where a trader is taking on this position with exposure of $1000 per basis point. To achieve this with 1-Month SOFR futures, which have a basis point value of $41.67, a position of 24 lots is required:

Chart
Chart

To determine the equivalent position for F-TIIE futures, the Mexican peso/U.S. dollar exchange rate is required in order to convert the $1000 basis point value to a Mexican peso value. The price of a CME Group Mexican Peso FX futures contract can be used to do this. Prices for the Mexican Peso futures are quoted in terms of U.S. dollars per peso. Let’s establish a starting position with a futures price of U.S. $0.0500 per peso, which is equivalent to an FX rate of 20 pesos per dollar. The basis point value of the F-TIIE futures is 200 Mexican pesos. The number of F-TIIE futures required can be calculated as follows:

Chart
Chart

Our spread position is therefore short 24 1-Month SOFR futures, long 100 F-TIIE futures. The interest rate differential that has been locked in is 5.735%.

At this point, the FX exposure of this position is zero – the exposure is limited to movements in the two interest rates. As the number of F-TIIE futures has been calculated using the FX rate, should the FX rate change, this will affect the hedge ratio and F-TIIE futures may need to be bought or sold in order to maintain equivalent dollar exposure.