Title: BOND PRICES AND INTEREST RATE RISK
1CHAPTER 5
- BOND PRICES AND INTEREST RATE RISK
2Time Value of Money
- A dollar today is worth more than a dollar
received at some future date. - Income may be spent on consumption or saved by
investing in real capital assets (machinery) or
by buying financial assets (deposits or stock).
3Time Value of Money (concluded)
- With a positive time preference for consumption,
investment (real or financial) means giving up
consumption (opportunity cost). - The opportunity cost of giving up consumption is
known as the time value of money. It is the
minimum rate of return required on a risk-free
investment.
4Future Value or Compound Value
- The future value (FV) of a sum (PV) is
- FV PV (1i)n.
- (1i)n is referred to as the Future Value
Interest Factor. - Multiply by the dollar amount involved to
calculate the FV of an investment. - Interest factor formulas are included in
financial calculators. Please use your financial
calculators.
5Present Value
- The value today (at present) of a sum received at
a future date discounted at the required rate of
return. - Given the time value of money, one is indifferent
between the present value today or the future
value received in the future.
6Present Value (concluded)
- With risk present, a premium return may be added
to the risk-free time value of money. - The higher the risk or higher the interest or
discount rate, the lower the present value.
7Valuing a Financial Asset
- There are two necessary ingredients for valuing
financial assets. - Estimates of future cash flows.
- The estimates include the timing and size of each
cash flow. - An appropriate discount rate.
- The discount rate must reflect the risk of the
asset.
8The Mechanics of Bond Pricing
- A fixed-rate bond is a contract detailing the par
value, the coupon rate, and maturity date. - The coupon rate is typically close to the market
rate of interest on similar bonds at the time of
issuance. - In a fixed-rate bond, the interest income remains
fixed throughout the term (to maturity). - We will not consider floating-rate bonds.
9The Mechanics of Bond Pricing (concluded)
- The value of a bond is the present value of
future contractual cash flows discounted at the
market rate of interest, i - Ci is the coupon payment and Fn is the face value
of the bond. - Cash flows are assumed to flow at the end of the
period and are assumed to be reinvested at i.
Bonds typically pay interest semiannually. - Increasing i decreases the price of the bond (PB).
It is much easier to use your financial
calculator or a spreadsheet program.
10Pricing Zero Coupon Bonds
- Bonds that pay no periodic interest payments are
called zero-coupon bonds. - Zero coupon bonds trade at a discount.
- The value of the "zero" bond is
- There is no reinvestment of coupon payments with
zeros and thus, no reinvestment risk. The yield
to maturity, i, is the actual yield received if
held to maturity.
11Zero -Coupon Securities - Continued
- Zero coupon securities are securities that have
no coupon payment but promise a single payment at
maturity. - Most money market instruments, such as commercial
paper and U.S. Treasury Bills, are sold on a
discount basis. - You have to declare the Original Issue Discount
for tax purposes.
12Bond Yields
- Bond yields are related to several risks.
- Credit or default risk is the chance that some
part or all of the interest or principal payments
will be delayed or not paid. - Reinvestment risk is the potential variability of
market interest rates affecting the reinvestment
rate of the periodic interest received resulting
in an actual, realized rate different from the
expected yield to maturity. - Price risk relates to the potential variability
of the market price of the bond caused by a
change in market interest rates.
13Bond Yields (continued)
- Bond yields are market rates of return which
equate the market price of the bond with the
discounted expected cash flows of the bond. - A bond yield measure should reflect all three
cash flows from the bond and their timing - Periodic coupon payments.
- Interest income from reinvestment of coupon
interest. - Any capital gain or loss.
14Bond Yields (continued)
- The yield to maturity is the investor's expected
or promised yield if the bond is held to maturity
and the cash flows are reinvested at the yield to
maturity. - Bond yields-to-maturity vary inversely with bond
prices. - If the market price of the bond increases, i, or
the yield to maturity declines.
15Bond Yields (continued)
- If the market price of the bond decreases, the
yield to maturity increases. - When the bond is selling at par, the coupon rate
approximates the market rate of interest. - Bond prices above par are said to be priced at a
premium below par, at a discount.
16Bond Yields (continued)
- The realized yield is the ex-post, actual rate of
return, given the cash flows actually received
and their timing. Realized yields may differ
from the promised yield to maturity due to - A change in the amount and timing of the promised
cash flows. - A change in market interest rates since the
purchase of the bond, thus affecting the
reinvestment rate of the coupons. - The bond may be sold before maturity at a market
price varying from par.
17Bond Yields (concluded)
- The expected, ex-ante yield, assuming a realized
price and future interest rate levels, are
forecasted rates of return.
18Bond Theorems
- Bond yields vary inversely with changes in bond
prices. - Bond price volatility increases as maturity
increases. - Bond price volatility decreases as coupon rates
increase.
19Amortized Loan Contracts
- One type repays the loan in equal payments over
the life of the loan (mortgage type) - Another type pays a set amount per period and
interest on the outstanding balance per period.
20Bond Price Volatility
- The percentage change in bond price for a given
change in yield is bond price volatility. - ?PB the percentage change in price.
- Pt the new price in period t.
- Pt-1 the price one period earlier.
21Relationship Between Price, Maturity, Market
Yield, and Price Volatility
Assume a 1,000, 5 coupon bond with annual
payments. The longer the maturity, the greater
the price volatility.
22Relationship Between Price, Coupon Rate, Market
Yield, and Price Volatility
Assume a 10 year, 1,000 bond. The lower the
coupon rate, the greater the volatility.
23Interest Rate Risk
- Reinvestment risk--variability in realized yield
caused by changing market rates for coupon
reinvestment. - Price risk--variability in realized return caused
by capital gains/losses or that the price
realized may differ from par. - Price risk and reinvestment risk partially offset
one another, depending upon maturity and coupon
rates.
24Example of Interest Rate Risk -Anticipate a
200,000 payment at the end of 10 years
- If interest rate fall and the portfolio is
invested in relatively short-term bonds, then the
reinvestment rate penalty exceeds the capital
gains, so a net shortfall occurs. - If the portfolio had been invested in relatively
long-term bonds, a drop in interest rates would
produce capital gains, which would more than
offset the shortfall caused by low reinvestment
rates.
25Example of Interest Rate Risk - Assume a payment
of 200,000 at the end of 10 years
- If interest rates rise, and the portfolio is
invested in relatively short-term bonds, then
gains from high reinvestment rates will more than
offset capital losses,and the portfolio amount
will exceed the required amount. - If the portfolio had been invested in long-term
bonds, then capital losses would more than offset
reinvestment gains, and a shortfall would occur.
26Duration
- Duration is a measure of effective maturity. It
is measured in years. - Duration is a measure of interest rate risk that
considers both coupon rate and term to maturity. - Duration is the ratio of the sum of the
time-weighted discounted cash flows divided by
the current price of the bond. - Bonds with higher coupon rates have shorter
duration and less price volatility.
27Duration (continued)
- A bonds Duration is a weighted average of the
number of years until each of the bonds cash
flows is received. - Duration can be thought of as the weighted
average maturity of all cash flows (coupon
payments plus maturity value) provided by a bond. - Duration equals maturity for zero coupon
securities. - The longer the maturity, the higher the duration
and greater the price variability, given changes
in interest rates. - The higher the market rate of interest, the
shorter the duration.
28Duration - (continued)
- Each year of duration equals the chance for a 1
gain or loss of principal for every 1 change of
rate movements. An investor owning an
intermediate bond fund with a duration of 5 years
could lose 5 of his or her principal if the
5-year interest rate go up 1. - Bonds with high duration have high price
variability.
29Duration Calculations
- D duration.
- CFt interest or principal at time t.
- t time period in which cash flow is received.
- n number of periods to maturity.
- i the yield to maturity (interest rate).
We will use a different formula than the one
given above and in the text.
30Duration Calculations (continued)
- Calculate duration of a bond with 3 years to
maturity, an 8 percent coupon rate paid annually,
and a yield to maturity of 10.
I feel that this is the long way of solving for
Duration. What if the bonds maturity is 20 years?
31Duration Calculations (Continued)
Assume that the same bond had 3 years left to
maturity, a 8 coupon rate, a 1000 par value,
and a 10 yield to maturity. Calculate the
Duration of the bond.
First calculate the current market price.
N 3 FV 1000 PMT 1000 x 8 80 Yield to
maturity I 10 calculate PV (950.26)
32Duration Calculations (concluded)
-N
C ( 1 y) 1 - (1 y)
Par - C
N
y
y
y
N
(1 y)
Duration
Price
C PMT 80 y Yield to maturity I 10 N
Number of Years to Maturity 3 Calculate
Duration 2.78 years
Price 950.26
33Calculation of Duration Using EXCEL
34Duration for Bonds Yielding 10 (Annual
Compounding)
Please notice that the higher the coupon rate,
the shorter the Duration. The longer the
maturity, typically the longer the Duration. For
Zero Coupon bonds, the Duration is equal to the
maturity.
35Properties of Duration
- The greater the duration, the greater is price
volatility. - Bonds with higher coupon rates have shorter
durations. - Generally, bonds with longer maturities have
longer durations.
36Properties of Duration (continued)
- Except for bonds with a single payment, duration
is less than maturity. For bonds with a single
payment, duration equals maturity (Zero-coupon
bond). - The higher the yield to maturity, the shorter is
duration.
37Duration - (concluded)
- Firms try to match the duration of their assets
with the duration of their liabilities - Portfolio managers structure bond investments
such that the duration of the bonds equals the
holding period required. Capital gains or losses
from interest rate changes are exactly offset by
changes in reinvestment income.
38Limitations of Duration
- Assumes a flat yield curve
- Assumes a parallel shift in the yield curve -
yields across the entire structure change equally
39Using Duration to Estimate Bond Price Volatility
- The formula for estimating the percent change in
price for a given change in the market rate of
interest using duration is
40Convexity
- The formula for estimating the percent change in
a bonds price using duration works well for
small changes in interest rates, but not for
large changes in interest rates. - The formula can be modified to work well for
large interest changes and the modification is an
adjustment for convexity. - Please see Exhibit 5.6 on page 122 of your text
for an example of convexity.
41Calculating Convexity
- The formula for convexity is
42Using Duration and Convexity to Estimate the
Percent change in a Bonds Price
- The formula for using duration and convexity to
estimate the percent change in a bonds price is
43Managing Interest Rate Risk with Duration
- Zero-coupon bonds (zero) have no reinvestment
risk. - The duration of a zero equals its maturity. Buy
a zero with the desired holding period and lock
in the yield to maturity. - To assure that the promised yield to maturity is
realized, investors select bonds with durations
matching their desired holding periods.
(duration-matching approach).
44Managing Interest Rate Risk with Duration
(concluded)
- Selecting a bond maturity equal to the desired
holding period (maturity-matching approach)
eliminates the price risk, but not the
reinvestment risk.
45Duration Gap
- To properly determine a financial institutions
risk exposure, managers must have information
describing the characteristics of assets and
liabilities. The Duration Gap is the risk
sensitive duration difference between assets and
liabilities. - Banks try to match the average duration of the
assets with the average duration of the
liabilities. We will cover this concept in
Chapter 14.
46Immunization
- Bond portfolios can be immunized against interest
rate risk (both reinvestment risk and price
risk). The process involves selecting maturities
for the bonds in a portfolio such that gains or
losses from reinvestment exactly match gains or
losses from price changes. The bond portfolios
have to be rebalanced periodically to maintain
immunization. - It is a portfolio management strategy to achieve
a realized rate of return at the end of a holding
period that is no less than the expected
(promised) yield at the beginning of the period.
A portfolio is immunized if its duration is equal
to its holding period (e.g. 10 years).
47Conclusion
- Bond Yields
- Interest Rate Risk
- Reinvestment Risk
- Price Risk
- Duration
- Measure of effective maturity
- Convexity
- Immunization