Title: Inflation%20and%20the%20Yield%20Curve
1Inflation and the Yield Curve
2Inflation Premium and Returns
- Fixed income securities lose purchasing power
with inflation investors adjust expected real
rate for inflation - The Fisher Equation reflects this if ? is
expected inflation and R is expected real
ratewhere r is the nominal rate and
approximately we say that r R ?, ignoring
the cross-product term as small as of multiple of
two fractions
3Inflation Premium
- Fisher hypothesis is that inflation premium
equals expected inflation ? - Harrod-Mundel theorize that inflation reduces
wealth in real money balances, causing increased
saving and decreasing real rate, thus R declines
r is constant - Darby-Feldstein note look at after-tax returns
and argue that r increases more than ? to
maintain same return after inflation
4Nominal and Real Returns
- We have looked at nominal T-Bill yields and ex
post real returns using realized inflation - Expected real returns include a premium for
expected inflation - Realized real returns differ from expected
returns because - Expected inflation changes
- Unexpected inflation occurs
5Definitions
- The term structure is defined as the relation
between yield (to maturity) and term or time to
maturity - Term structure and yield curve are the same
- Term structure is defined as of a given date
(e.g. today, or January 1, 1996) - Term structure is given for fixed incomes of a
given risk class (usually Treasuries)
6Types of Term Structures
- Upward sloping, sometimes called normal or rising
term structure, can be steep or gentle - Downward sloping, or falling term structure
- A flat or horizontal term structure
- A humped term structure
- Four years ago, we observed a unique U-shaped
term structure, not seen since - The Treasury yield curve is published daily in
the Wall Street Journal
7Term Structure
- Is drawn as of a given date but changes over
time. - Our objective is to look at the pure term effect
on yields - Coupon issues have different payments, so tax and
reinvestment rates blur pure term effect - Best to use T-Bills or zero coupon bonds (called
Strips with Treasuries)
8Short and Long Treasury Rates
Source FRB St. Louis
9Treasury Rates since 1970
10Term Structure Shifts in 1980s
11Term Structure in 1990s
12Term Structure in 1999
13U-Shaped Yield Curves 2000-01
14Term Structure Last 2002
15Current and 2003-5 Yield Curves
Source FRBoard Release H15
16Treasury Strips
- Treasury pays coupon interest and principal to
holders of its many bonds frequently - Coupons and principal can be stripped from bonds
and sold separately - E.g. the 5-3/4 Aug 10 will pay 28,750 for every
1 million outstanding in August, 2010 - Aug 10 stripped interest ci sold for 7408 on
Sept. 26, 2002, that is, .7425 times face value
of coupon payments. What does it sell for now?
17The Forward Rate of Interest
- The spot rate on current (time t) observable rate
on securities of maturity n, that is, the current
market rate, is noted - The forward rate is the rate now (t) on an
one-period investment beginning tk periods in
the future
18Definition of Forward Rates
- Forward rates are often unquoted or unavailable
- Forward rates are implicit in the term structure
of spot rates since spot rates of different
maturities define forward rates - Note there is no one-period forward rate now but
only for future or forward periods
19Solving for Forward Rates 1
- Two spot rates differing by maturity one year
can be used to solve for forward rates - Example using Treasury strips of one and two year
maturities from Sept. 26, 2002
20Solving for Forward Rates 2
- Example using T-Bills of 3 and 6 months
- In this case, we have to annualize the
three-month (.25 year) forward rateor, in
other words, rates are not expected to change
much on three-month bills 1.54
21Interpretation of Forward Rates
- Forward rates are merely defined as relations
between observed spot rates - Theories of the term structure can be discussed
in terms of what forward rates mean - Three basic theories
- Unbiased or pure expectations theory
- Market segmentation or preferred habitats
- Uncertainty, term or liquidity premiums
22Expectations Theory
- Forward rates represent expectations of future
spot rates - Economic reasoning is based on arbitrage if for
any horizon, we haveor for three-period
example
23Expectations Theory (continued)
- In the examples, we make more if we invest in the
shorter maturity bond and reinvest at the
expected future spot rate - Note that the expected future spot rate is the
same as the definition of the forward rate if
equation holds as equality - Under pure expectations, the forward rate is the
unbiased expectation of expected future spot rates
24Expectations Theory (example)
- Using previous examples, if we haveand we
believe the Treasury rate in one year will be
higher than 2.94, we will buy the one-year
Treasury and plan to reinvest at higher rates in
one year - Arbitrage drives returns into line with
expectations so that forward expected rate
25Example of Short Sale
26Term Structure and Expectations
- Rearranging our forward rate definition,or the
spot rate is the geometric average of future
forward or expected future spot rates - A downward sloping term structure implies falling
rates, a rising term structure increasing rates,
and a flat structure unchanging rates
27Expectations Theory
- Simple and based on basic principles
- Assumes investors are indifferent to risk of
holding period returns (risk neutral) - Arbitrage is a powerful economic force
- Widely used in analysis of market events
- Students should be able to do calculations and
interpret term structure in terms of future
expected spot rates - We discuss the evidence on theory later
28Market Segmentation/Preferred Habitat Theory
- Investors have different asset maturities and
want to match asset/liability interest rate risks - Risk-matching is assumed to be much more
important than possible profit opportunities
(extreme risk aversion) - Very little supporting evidence and little room
for arbitrage or risk-taking
29Term or liquidity premiums
- Theory combines some aspects of other two
- Borrowers and lenders may have different concerns
in interest rates -- lenders may prefer long-term
fixed rates, investors fear gains and losses from
longer investments - Longer rates may have therefor have a term or
liquidity premium - Forward rates would be biased because of the
premium
30Recent Term Structure Theories
- Cox-Ingersoll-Ross (CIR)
- Continuous time models using option-pricing
techniques - Arbitrage portfolios determine prices of risk
- Risk factors are state of technology (I.e. real
return on capital) - CIR show basis for term premiums
- Lattice models (e.g. Black-Derman-Toy) gaining
widespread use to price derivatives
31Next (October 5)
- Read over Fama-Bliss and Black-Derman-Toy for
Oct. 5 - Read text Chapter 8 and KMV reading posted on
website for Oct. 12 class - See me concerning the group project if you have
remaining questions or need help - Take-home examination will be distributed October
13 to be returned by next class, so review old
exams and raise any questions you have with me