Dow-223.32down-2.63%
8,280.74
Nasdaqunch0.00%
1,796.52
S&P-26.91down-2.91%
896.42
cash globe © PhotoAlto/SuperStock

Extra10/18/2008 12:01 AM ET

Got $596 trillion? Well, kind of

In the arcane realm of derivatives, all over-the-counter contracts combined have been valued at 3 1/2 times the world's total assets. Ridiculous, right? Not entirely.

By Slate.com

Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin has issued a call for regulation of the over-the-counter derivatives market, which has an estimated size of $596 trillion. By contrast, the value of the world's financial assets -- including all stock, bonds and bank deposits -- was pegged at $167 trillion last year by consulting firm McKinsey.

How can the derivatives market be larger than the entire world's financial wealth?

Because the same assets might be involved in several different derivatives. A derivative is a financial instrument whose value depends on something else, such as a share of stock, an interest rate, a foreign currency or a barrel of oil.

One kind of derivative might be a contract that allows you to buy oil at a given price six months from now. But since we don't yet know how the price of oil will change, the value of that contract can be hard to estimate. (In contrast, it's relatively easy to add together the value of every share being traded on the stock market.)

As a result, financial experts have to make an educated guess about the total amount at stake in all these contracts. One method is to simply add up the value of the assets the derivatives are based on. In other words, if my contract allows me to buy 50 barrels of oil and the current price is $100, its "notional value" is said to be $5,000, since that's the value of the assets from which my contract derives.

If you make the same calculation for every derivative and add those numbers together, you get something around $596 trillion, the notional value of the world's over-the-counter derivatives at the end of 2007, according to the Bank of International Settlements. (Over-the-counter derivatives contracts are negotiated between two parties rather than through an exchange.)

But the notional value isn't usually a good representation of what a contract might really be worth to the parties involved or how much risk they are taking. (And it isn't easily compared with other measures of financial wealth. After all, owning the right to buy $5,000 worth of oil isn't the same as actually owning $5,000 of oil.)

Within that $596 trillion are derivatives that effectively relate to the same assets. If you have a contract to buy euros in January and I have one to buy euros in April, we may end up buying the same currency, but its notional value will get counted twice.

Moreover, in many instances, the notional amount is just a benchmark that never changes hands -- as in the case of the interest-rate swap, by far the most common type of derivative. Likewise, because derivatives are often used to hedge risks, there's a good probability that many contracts in the system essentially cancel one another out.

Video on MSN Money

Jim Jubak © MSN Money
Volatility will continue
The stock market has had huge sell-offs and quick rallies recently, but we’ve been stuck in a trading range the whole time. That’s what happened in 1987 and it’s the likely scenario for the rest of 2008, says MSN Money's Jim Jubak.

An alternative way to measure the size of the derivatives market is to calculate the instruments' market value, which refers to how much the instruments would be worth if the contracts had to be settled today. The gross market value of all outstanding derivatives was $14.5 trillion at the end of 2007, less than 3% of the $596 trillion estimate. (That number shrinks to about $3.3 trillion once you take into account contracts that directly offset one another.)

Still, the concept of notional value is not entirely irrelevant. For one, growth in the notional value of all derivatives -- which has gone up about fourfold in the past five years -- does give a reasonable indication of how fast the market is expanding. And for credit-default swaps, a type of derivative at the center of the current financial crisis, the growth has been especially large, with the total notional amount rising from just $2.69 trillion in 2003 to $54.6 trillion this year.

This article was reported and written by Jacob Leibenluft for Slate.com.

Rate this Article

Click on one of the stars below to rate this article from 1 (lowest) to 5 (highest). LowRate it 1Rate it 2Rate it 3Rate it 4Rate it 5High

Fund data provided by Morningstar, Inc. © 2009. All rights reserved.
StockScouter data provided by Gradient Analytics, Inc.
Quotes supplied by Interactive Data.
MSN Money's editorial goal is to provide a forum for personal finance and investment ideas. Our articles, columns, message board posts and other features should not be construed as investment advice, nor does their appearance imply an endorsement by Microsoft of any specific security or trading strategy. An investor's best course of action must be based on individual circumstances.