You can't compare a Swap to simply a cap on a loan, as the interest rates drop his payments go up quite dramatically. This was not explained. What would have been acceptable iis f the customer paid a fixed premium on the fixed rate so that it would be clear what his cost was. What the customer wasn't told was that he had a huge bet on interest rates going up. If interest rates had gone up he would have made hundreds of thousands, but instead he lost hundreds of thousands.
This would have all been fine had it been explained to the customer. Basically a bank is expected to take on the risk of providing fixed rates by charging a premium. This is what happens when you take out a fixed rate mortgage. They didn't do this. In fact I can't see the point of this deal other than is simply seems to be a bet that the Swaps dealer at the bank thought he would win (and he did).
What business customers don't need is a huge bet on the interest rate swaps market but a plannable loan. The banks were just misselling.
A cap which is also a derivative sold in conjunction with a variable rate loan might have been more appropriate to the customer's need. Effectively this what the bank could have easily offered and packaged up as a fixed rate loan.
This would have all been fine had it been explained to the customer. Basically a bank is expected to take on the risk of providing fixed rates by charging a premium. This is what happens when you take out a fixed rate mortgage. They didn't do this. In fact I can't see the point of this deal other than is simply seems to be a bet that the Swaps dealer at the bank thought he would win (and he did).
What business customers don't need is a huge bet on the interest rate swaps market but a plannable loan. The banks were just misselling.
A cap which is also a derivative sold in conjunction with a variable rate loan might have been more appropriate to the customer's need. Effectively this what the bank could have easily offered and packaged up as a fixed rate loan.
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