Equity swaps are like trading toy cars with your friend to see whose car goes faster.
Imagine you and your friend each have a toy car. You think yours is better at racing, but your friend thinks theirs will win. Instead of actually racing them, you agree to swap how well your cars do for a while, if your friend’s car does better, they give you some candy; if yours does better, you give them some candy. That way, both of you can see who was right without having to race every day.
How it works
In real life, people use equity swaps when they want to bet on how well a company's stock will do. One person thinks the stock will go up, and the other thinks it will go down. They agree to swap their results, if the stock goes up, one person gets money; if it goes down, the other person gets money.
Why people use them
It’s like trading toy cars with a friend, you don’t have to own the car to bet on it. You can just trade how well they do instead. That makes it easier and more fun!
Examples
- Imagine you and a friend agree to trade the results of your favorite sports team's performance, no need for either of you to own the team.
- You promise to give your friend the profit from a stock if they give you their profit from another stock instead.
- It’s like trading candy with your neighbor: you both get what you want without needing to know all the details.
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See also
- Gold Eagles VS Silver Eagles WHICH IS BETTER?
- ETFs Explained for Beginners. What is a ETF?
- Earnings Season: How do Quarterly Earnings Reports Affect Stocks?
- How Does An introduction to financial markets - MoneyWeek Investment Tutorials Work?
- How Does 5 Steps to Better Understand Stock Trend Analysis Work?