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Chapter 6. Bonds, bond prices and interest rates

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Chapter 6. Bonds, bond prices and interest rates Bond prices and yields Bond market equilibrium Bond risks Bonds: 4 types zero coupon bonds e.g. Tbills fixed payment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 6. Bonds, bond prices and interest rates


1
Chapter 6. Bonds, bond prices and interest rates
  • Bond prices and yields
  • Bond market equilibrium
  • Bond risks

2
Bonds 4 types
  • zero coupon bonds
  • e.g. Tbills
  • fixed payment loans
  • e.g. mortgages, car loans
  • coupon bonds
  • e.g. Tnotes, Tbonds
  • consols

3
Zero coupon bonds
  • discount bonds
  • purchased price less than face value
  • -- F gt P
  • face value at maturity
  • no interest payments

4
example
  • 91 day Tbill,
  • P 9850, F 10,000
  • YTM solves

5
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6
yield on a discount basis (127)
  • how Tbill yields are actually quoted
  • approximates the YTM

7
example
  • 91 day Tbill,
  • P 9850, F 10,000
  • discount yield

8
  • idb lt YTM
  • why?
  • F in denominator
  • 360 day year

9
  • fixed-payment loan
  • loan is repaid with equal (monthly) payments
  • each payment is combination of principal and
    interest

10
example 2 fixed pmt. loan
  • 20,000 car loan, 5 years
  • monthly pmt. 500
  • so 15,000 is price today
  • cash flow is 60 pmts. of 500
  • what is i?

11
  • i is annual rate
  • (effective annual interest rate)
  • but payments are monthly, compound monthly
  • (1im)12 i
  • im i1/12-1
  • im is the periodic rate
  • note APR im x 12

12
im1.44
i(1. 0144)12 1 18.71
13
  • how to solve for i?
  • trial-and-error
  • table
  • financial calculator
  • spreadsheet

14
Coupon bond
  • (chapter 4)

15
Bond Yields
  • Yield to maturity (YTM)
  • chapter 4
  • Current yield
  • Holding period return

16
Yield to Maturity (YTM)
  • a measure of interest rate
  • interest rate where

P
PV of cash flows
17
Current yield
  • approximation of YTM for coupon bonds

annual coupon payment
ic
bond price
18
  • better approximation when
  • maturity is longer
  • P is close to F

19
example
  • 2 year Tnotes, F 10,000
  • P 9750, coupon rate 6
  • current yield

600
ic
6.15
9750
20
  • current yield 6.15
  • true YTM 7.37
  • lousy approximation
  • only 2 years to maturity
  • selling 2.5 below F

21
Holding period return
  • sell bond before maturity
  • return depends on
  • holding period
  • interest payments
  • resale price

22
example
  • 2 year Tnotes, F 10,000
  • P 9750, coupon rate 6
  • sell right after 1 year for 9900
  • 300 at 6 mos.
  • 300 at 1 yr.
  • 9900 at 1 yr.

23
i/2 3.83 i 7.66
24
  • why i/2?
  • interest compounds annually not semiannually

25
The Bond Market
  • Bond supply
  • Bond demand
  • Bond market equilibrium

26
Bond supply
  • bond issuers/ borrowers
  • look at Qs as a function of price, yield

27
  • lower bond prices
  • higher bond yields
  • more expensive to borrow
  • lower Qs of bonds
  • so bond supply slopes up with price

28
Bond price
Q of bonds
29
  • Changes in bond price/yield
  • Move along the bond supply curve
  • What shifts bond supply?

30
Shifts in bond supply
  • Change in government borrowing
  • Increase in govt borrowing
  • Increase in bond supply
  • Bond supply shifts right

31
P
Qs
32
  • a change in business conditions
  • affects incentives to expand production

supply of bonds (shift rt.)
exp. profits
  • exp. economic expansion shifts bond supply rt.

33
  • a change in expected inflation
  • rising inflation decreases real cost of borrowing

supply of bonds (shift rt.)
exp. inflation
34
Bond Demand
  • bond buyers/ lenders/ savers
  • look at Qd as a function of bond price/yield

35
Bond yield
Qd of bonds
price of bond
Qd of bonds
  • so bond demand slopes down with respect to price

36
Bond price
Quantity of bonds
37
  • Changes in bond price/yield
  • Move along the bond demand curve
  • What shifts bond demand?

38
  • Wealth
  • Higher wealth increases asset demand
  • Bond demand increases
  • Bond demand shifts right

39
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40
  • a change in expected inflation
  • rising inflation decreases real return

inflation expected to
demand for bonds (shift left)
41
  • a change in exp. interest rates
  • rising interest rates decrease value of existing
    bonds

int. rates expected to
demand for bonds (shift left)
42
  • a change in the risk of bonds relative to other
    assets

relative risk of bonds
demand for bonds (shift left)
43
  • a change in liquidity of bonds relative to other
    assets

relative liquidity of bonds
demand for bonds (shift rt.)
44
Bond market equilibrium
  • changes when bond demand shifts,
  • and/or bond supply shifts
  • shifts cause bond prices AND interest rates to
    change

45
Example 1 the Fisher effect
  • expected inflation 3

46
  • exp. inflation rises to 4
  • bond demand
  • -- real return declines
  • -- Bd decreases
  • bond supply
  • -- real cost of borrowing declines
  • -- Bs increases

47
  • bond price falls
  • interest rate rises

48
Fisher effect
  • expected inflation rises,
  • nominal interest rates rise

49
Example 2 economic slowdown
50
  • bond demand
  • decline in income, wealth
  • Bd decreases
  • P falls, i rises
  • bond supply
  • decline in exp. profits
  • Bs decreases
  • P rises, i falls

51
  • shift Bs gt shift in Bd
  • interest rate falls

52
Why shift Bs gt shift Bd?
  • changes in wealth are small
  • response to change in exp. profits is large
  • large cyclical swings in investment

53
  • interest rate is pro-cyclical

54
Why are bonds risky?
  • 3 sources of risk
  • Default
  • Inflation
  • Interest rate

55
Default risk
  • Risk that the issuer fails to make promised
    payments on time
  • Zero for U.S. govt debt
  • Other issuers corporate, municipal, foreign have
    some default risk
  • Greater default risk means a greater yield

56
Inflation risk
  • Most bonds promise fixed dollar payments
  • Inflation erodes the real value of these payments
  • Future inflation is unknown
  • Larger for longer term bonds

57
Interest rate risk
  • Changing interest rates change the value (price)
    of a bond in the opposite direction.
  • All bonds have interest rate risk
  • But it is larger for the long term bonds
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