An interest rate swap (IRS) is a financial derivative instrument that involves an exchange of a fixed interest rate for a floating interest rate. More specifically,

An interest rate swap’s (IRS’s) effective description is a derivative contract, agreed between two counterparties, which specifies the nature of an exchange of payments benchmarked against an interest rate index. The most common IRS is a fixed for floating swap, whereby one party will make payments to the other based on an initially agreed fixed rate of interest, to receive back payments based on a floating interest rate index. Each of these series of payments is termed a ‘leg’, so a typical IRS has both a fixed and a floating leg. The floating index is commonly an interbank offered rate (IBOR) of specific tenor in the appropriate currency of the IRS, for example LIBOR in USD, GBP, EURIBOR in EUR or STIBOR in SEK. To completely determine any IRS a number of parameters must be specified for each leg; the notional principal amount (or varying notional schedule), the start and end dates and date scheduling, the fixed rate, the chosen floating interest rate index tenor, and day count conventions for interest calculations. Read more

The above description refers to a plain vanilla IRS. However, interest rate swaps can come in many different flavors. These include, (but are not limited to)
  • Amortizing notional IRS
  • Cross-currency swap
  • Float-for-float (basis) swap
  • Overnight index swap
  • Inflation swap etc.
Interest rate swaps are often used to hedge the fluctuation in the interest rate. To value an IRS, fixed and floating legs are priced separately using the discounted cash flow approach.

Below is an example of a hypothetical plain vanilla IRS
Maturity: 5 years
Notional: 10 Million EUR
Fixed rate: 3.5%
Floating rate: Euribor
The values of the fixed, floating legs and the IRS are calculated using an Excel spreadsheet.

Originally Published Here: Interest Rate Swap-Derivative Pricing in Excel
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