SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 44
Bond Valuation An Overview

   Introduction to bonds and bond markets
    » What are they? Some examples

   Zero coupon bonds
    » Valuation
    » Interest rate sensitivity

   Coupon bonds
    » Valuation
    » Interest rate sensitivity

   The term structure of interest rates
                                             1
What is a Bond?

   A bond is a security that obligates the issuer to make specified interest
    and principal payments to the holder on specified dates.
     » Coupon rate
     » Face value (or par)
     » Maturity (or term)
   Bonds are also called fixed income securities.
   Bonds differ in several respects:
     » Repayment type
     » Issuer
     » Maturity
     » Security
     » Priority in case of default

                                                                                2
Repayment Schemes

   Pure Discount or Zero-Coupon Bonds
     » Pay no coupons prior to maturity.
     » Pay the bond‟s face value at maturity.
   Coupon Bonds
     » Pay a stated coupon at periodic intervals prior to maturity.
     » Pay the bond‟s face value at maturity.
   Floating-Rate Bonds
     » Pay a variable coupon, reset periodically to a reference rate.
     » Pay the bond‟s face value at maturity.
   Perpetual Bonds (Consols)
     » No maturity date.
     » Pay a stated coupon at periodic intervals.
   Annuity or Self-Amortizing Bonds
     » Pay a regular fixed amount each payment period.
     » Principal repaid over time rather than at maturity.


                                                                        3
Types of Bonds: Issuers


Bonds                        Issuer
Government Bonds             US Treasury, Government Agencies
Mortgage-Backed Securities   Government agencies (GNMA etc)
Municipal Bonds              State and local government
Corporate Bonds              Corporations
Asset-Back Securities        Corporations




                                                                4
U.S. Government Bonds

   Treasury Bills
    » No coupons (zero coupon security)
    » Face value paid at maturity
    » Maturities up to one year


   Treasury Notes
    » Coupons paid semiannually
    » Face value paid at maturity
    » Maturities from 2-10 years


                                          5
U.S. Government Bonds (Cont.)

   Treasury Bonds
    »   Coupons paid semiannually
    »   Face value paid at maturity
    »   Maturities over 10 years
    »   The 30-year bond is called the long bond.
   Treasury Strips
    » Zero-coupon bond
    » Created by “stripping” the coupons and principal from Treasury
      bonds and notes.
   No default risk. Considered to be risk free.
   Exempt from state and local taxes.
   Sold regularly through a network of primary dealers.
   Traded regularly in the over-the-counter market.
                                                                       6
Agency and Municipal Bonds

   Agency bonds: mortgage-backed bonds
    » Bonds issued by U.S. Government agencies that are backed by a
      pool of home mortgages.
    » Self-amortizing bonds. (mostly monthly payments)
    » Maturities up to 30 years.
    » Prepayment risk.
   Municipal bonds
    » Maturities from one month to 40 years.
    » Usually exempt from federal, state, and local taxes.
    » Generally two types:
       – Revenue bonds
       – General Obligation bonds
    » Riskier than U.S. Government bonds.
                                                                      7
Corporate Bonds


   Bonds issued by corporations
    »   Bonds vs. Debentures
    »   Fixed-rate versus floating-rate bonds.
    »   Investment-grade vs. Below investment-grade bonds.
    »   Additional features:
         – call provisions
         – convertible bonds
         – puttable bonds




                                                             8
Seniority of Corporate Bonds


   In case of default, different classes of bonds have different
    claim priority on the assets of a corporation.

   Secured Bonds (Asset-Backed)
    » Secured by real property.
    » Ownership of the property reverts to the bondholders upon default.


   Debentures
    » Same priority as general creditors.
    » Have priority over stockholders, but subordinate to secured debt.


                                                                           9
Bond Ratings
Moody’s   S&P                           Quality of Issue
Aaa       AAA     Highest quality. Very small risk of default.

 Aa       AA      High quality. Small risk of default.

 A         A      High-Medium quality. Strong attributes, but potentially
                  vulnerable.
Baa       BBB     Medium quality. Currently adequate, but potentially
                  unreliable.
 Ba       BB      Some speculative element. Long-run prospects
                  questionable.
 B         B      Able to pay currently, but at risk of default in the future.
Caa       CCC     Poor quality. Clear danger of default.

 Ca       CC      High speculative quality. May be in default.

 C        C       Lowest rated. Poor prospects of repayment.

 D         -      In default.
                                                                             10
The US Bond Market

                           Debt Instrument                 2006 Q2

                           Treasury securities              4759.6

                          Municipal securities              2305.7

                      Corporate and foreign bonds           8705.3

                            Consumer Credit                 2327.4

                               Mortgages                   12757.7


                           Corporate equities              18684.5


Amount ($bil.). Source: U.S. Federal Reserve (Table L.4, September/2006)   11
Bond Valuation: Zero Coupon Bonds
B   = Market price of the Bond of bond
F   = Face value
R   = Annual percentage rate
m   = compounding period (annual  m = 1, semiannual  m = 2,…)
i   = Effective periodic interest rate; i=R/m
T   = Maturity (in years)
N   = Number of compounding periods; N = T*m

   Two cash flows to purchaser of bond:
     » -B at time 0
     » F at time T
   What is the price of a bond?
     Use present value formula:
                                                F
                                           B         N
                                               1 i

                                                                  12
Valuing Zero Coupon Bonds:
                                An Example

   Value a 5 year, U.S. Treasury strip with face value of $1,000. The APR is
    R=7.5% with annual compounding? What about quarterly compounding?




   What is the APR on a U.S. Treasury strip that pays $1,000 in exactly 7 years
    and is currently selling for $591.11 under annual compounding? Semi-annual
    compounding?




                                                                                   13
Interest Rate Sensitivity:
                         Zero Coupon Bonds

   Consider the following 1, 2 and 10-year zero-coupon
    bonds, all with
     » face value of F=$1,000
     » APR of R=10%, compounded annually.
    We obtain the following table for increases and decreases of the
    interest rate by 1%:
         Interest Rate     Bond 1       Bond 2        Bond 3
                           1-Year       2-Year        10-Year
                 9.0%      $917.43      $841.68        $422.41
                10.0%      $909.09      $826.45        $385.54
                11.0%      $900.90      $811.62        $352.18
   Bond prices move up if interest rates drop, decrease if
    interest rates rise
                                                                       14
Bond Prices and Interest Rates
$1,200
                                                             Bond prices are
$1,000                                                        inversely related
                                                              to IR
 $800                                                        Longer term
 $600
                                                              bonds are more
                                                              sensitive to IR
 $400           1-Year                                        changes than
                2-Year                                        short term
 $200                                                         bonds
                10-Year
   $0                                                        The lower the
         0.0%   5.0%      10.0%   15.0%   20.0%   25.0%       IR, the more
                                                              sensitive the
                                                              price.



                                                                              15
Measuring Interest Rate Sensitivity
                           Zero Coupon Bonds

   We would like to measure the interest rate sensitivity of a bond or a
    portfolio of bonds.
     » How much do bond prices change if interest rates change by a small
        amount?
     » Why is this important?
   Use “Dollar value of a one basis point decrease” (DV01):
     » Basis point (bp): 1/100 of one percentage point =0.01%=0.0001
     » Calculate DV01:
          – Method 1: Difference of moving one basis point down:
               DV01= B(R-0.01%)-B(R).
          – Method 2: Difference of moving 1/2bp down minus 1/2pb up:
               DV01=B(R-0.005%) -B(R+0.005%).
          – Method 3: Use calculus:
                                                 B
                                     DV 01           0.0001
                                                 R
                                                                            16
Computing DV01: An Example

   Reconsider the 1, 2 and 10- year bonds discussed before:
         Interest Rate    Bond 1       Bond 2 Bond 3
                          1-Year       2-Year 10-Year
              9.990%     $909.1736   $826.5966 $385.8940
              9.995%     $909.1322   $826.5214 $385.7186
             10.000%     $909.0909   $826.4463 $385.5433
             10.005%     $909.0496   $826.3712 $385.3681
         Method 1        $0.082652   $0.150283 $0.350669
         Method 2        $0.082645   $0.150263 $0.350494
         Method 3        $0.082645   $0.150263 $0.350494

   Method 3:
                 B          $1,000                        1
                   0.0001 T         0.0001 T * $0.10 *
                 R          1.10T 1                    1.10T   1
                                                                   17
DV01: A Graphical Approach
                           10-Year

      $1,200.00

      $1,000.00

        $800.00

        $600.00

        $400.00

        $200.00

          $0.00
                       Interest Rate

   DV01 estimates the change in the Price-Interest rate curve using a
    linear approximation.
       higher slope implies greater sensitivity
                                                                         18
Valuing Coupon Bonds
              Example 1: Amortization Bonds

   Consider Amortization Bond
    »   T=2
    »   m=2
    »   C=$2,000 c = C/m = $2,000/2 = $1,000
    »   R=10%  i = R/m = 10%/2 = 5%
   How can we value this security?
    » Brute force discounting
    » Similar to another security we already know how to value?
    » Replication




                                                                  19
Valuing Coupon Bonds
                    Example 1: Amortization Bonds


      Compare with a portfolio of zero coupon bonds:

                                 0         1         2         3         4
Buy Coupon Bond         -$3,545.95 $1,000.00 $1,000.00 $1,000.00 $1,000.00
Buy 6-Month Zero          -$952.38
Buy 1-Year Zero           -$907.03
Buy 1.5-Year Zero         -$863.84
Buy 2-Year Zero           -$822.70
Portfolio               -$3,545.95


                                                                         20
A First Look at Arbitrage

   Reconsider amortization bond; suppose bond
    trades at $3,500 (as opposed to computed price of
    $3,545.95)
    » Can we make a profit without any risk?
       – What is the strategy?
       – What is the profit?




                                                        21
A First Look at Arbitrage

   Reconsider amortization bond; suppose bond trades at $3,500 (as
    opposed to computed price of $3,545.95)
     » Can make risk less profit
         – Buy low: buy amortization bond
         – Sell high: Sell portfolio of zero coupon bonds
                                                         Time Period
                                          0            1           2         3          4
            Buy Coupon Bond      -$3,500.00    $1,000.00 $1,000.00 $1,000.00 $1,000.00
            Sell 6-Month Zero       $952.38   -$1,000.00      $0.00      $0.00      $0.00
            Sell 1-Year Zero        $907.03        $0.00 -$1,000.00      $0.00      $0.00
            Sell 1.5-Year Zero      $863.84        $0.00      $0.00 -$1,000.00      $0.00
            Sell 2-Year Zero        $822.70        $0.00      $0.00      $0.00 -$1,000.00
            Portfolio             $3,545.95   -$1,000.00 -$1,000.00 -$1,000.00 -$1,000.00
            Net Cash Flow            $45.95        $0.00      $0.00      $0.00      $0.00

         – riskless profit of $45.95
         – no riskless profit if price is correct                                           22
Valuation of Coupon Bonds:
                    Example 2: Straight Bonds


   What is the market price of a U.S. Treasury bond that has a coupon
    rate of 9%, a face value of $1,000 and matures exactly 10 years from
    today if the interest rate is 10% compounded semiannually?

0       6      12       18      24 ...   120                  Months

        45     45      45       45       1045




                                                                           23
Valuing Coupon Bonds
                 The General Formula
   What is the market price of a bond that has an annual coupon C, face
    value F and matures exactly T years from today if the required rate of
    return is R, with m-periodic compounding?
     » Coupon payment is: c = C/m
     » Effective periodic interest rate is: i = R/m
     » number of periods N = Tm

0       1      2       3        4 ...        …                  N
         c    c        c        c…           …                  c+F
                   B       Annuity       Zero
                        c            1            F
                          1              N             N
                        i       1 i              1 i
                                                                             24
The Concept of a “Yield to Maturity”
   So far we have valued bonds by using a given interest rate,
    then discounted all payments to the bond.
   Prices are usually given from trade prices
    » need to infer interest rate that has been used
    Definition: The yield to maturity is that interest rate that
    equates the present discounted value of all future payments
    to bondholders to the market price:
   Algebraic:

                  c            1                  F
         B              1               N                  N
              yield / m   1 yield / m        1 yield / m


                                                                   25
Yield to Maturity
                              A Graphical Interpretation


            $2,500.00


            $2,000.00


            $1,500.00


            $1,000.00


              $500.00


                $0.00
                        0%
                             2%
                                  4%
                                       6%
                                            8%
                                                 10%
                                                       12%
                                                             14%
                                                                   16%
                                                                         18%
                                                                               20%
                                                                                     22%
                                                                                           24%
   Consider a U.S. Treasury bond that has a coupon rate of 10%, a face value of
    $1,000 and matures exactly 10 years from now.
     » Market price of $1,500, implies a yield of 3.91% (semi-annual
        compounding); for B=$1,000 we obviously find R=10%.
                                                                                                 26
Interest Rate Sensitivity:
                          Coupon Bonds

   Coupon bonds can be represented as portfolios of zero-
    coupon bonds
    » Implication for price sensitivity


   Consider purchasing the US Treasury bond discussed
    earlier (10 year, 9% coupon, $1,000 face)
    » Suppose immediately thereafter interest rates fall to 8%,
      compounded semiannually.
    » Suppose immediately thereafter interest rate rises to 12%
      compounded semiannually.
    » Suppose the interest rate equals 9%, compounded semiannually.


   What are the pricing implications of these scenarios?
                                                                      27
Implication of Interest Rate Changes on
             Coupon Bond Prices
    Recall the general formula:

                            c       1          F
                       B      1          N         N
                            i      1 i       1 i

    What is the price of the bond if the APR is 8% compounded
     semiannually?




    Similarly:
          If R=12%: B=$ 827.95
          If R= 9%: B=$1,000.00
                                                                 28
Relationship Between Coupon Bond
          Prices and Interest Rates
   Bond prices are inversely related to interest rates (or
    yields).


   A bond sells at par only if its interest rate equals the
    coupon rate


   A bond sells at a premium if its coupon rate is above the
    interest rate.


   A bond sells at a discount if its coupon rate is below the
    interest rate.                                               29
DV01 and Coupon Bonds

   Consider two bonds with 10% annual coupons with maturities of 5
    years and 10 years.
   The APR is 8%
   What are the responses to a .01% (1bp) interest rate change?

     Yield   5-Year Bond   $ Change    % Change 10-Year Bond $ Change % Change
    7.995%   $1,080.06        $0.21019 0.0195% $1,134.57       $0.36585 0.0323%
    8.000%   $1,079.85                          $1,134.20
    8.005%   $1,079.64       -$0.21013 -0.0195% $1,133.84 -$0.36569 -0.0322%
     DV01                     $0.42032                         $0.73154

   Does the sensitivity of a coupon bond always increase with the term to
    maturity?



                                                                                  30
Bond Prices and Interest Rates

                 $2,500.00
                                                                              5-Year Bond
                 $2,000.00                                                    10-Year Bond
     Price (P)



                 $1,500.00

                 $1,000.00

                  $500.00

                    $0.00
                             0%
                                  2%
                                       4%
                                            6%
                                                 8%
                                                      10%
                                                            12%
                                                                  14%
                                                                        16%
                                                                              18%
                                                                                    20%
                                                                                          22%
                                                                                                24%
                                                  Interest Rate (R)



         Longer term bonds are more sensitive to
changes in interest rates than shorter term bonds, in general.
                                                                                                      31
Bond Yields and Prices
    Consider the following two bonds:
      » Both have a maturity of 5 years
      » Both have yield of 8%
      » First has 6% coupon, other has 10% coupon, compounded
        annually.
    Then, what are the price sensitivities of these bonds, measured by
     DV01 as for zero coupon bonds?
     Yield    6%-Bond    $ Change    % change     10%-Bond    $ Change    % change
    7.995%    $920.33    $0.1891                  $1,080.06   $0.2102
    8.000%    $920.15                             $1,079.85
    8.005%    $919.96    ($0.1891)                $1,079.64   ($0.2101)
                                        0.0411%                              0.0389%
    DV01      $0.3782                             $0.4203

    Why do we get different answers for two bonds with the same yield
     and same maturity?
                                                                                       32
Maturity and Price Risk

   Zero coupon bonds have well-defined relationship
    between maturity and interest rate sensitivity:

   Coupon bonds can have different sensitivities for
    the same maturity
    » DV01 now depends on maturity and coupon


   Need concept of “average maturity” of coupon
    bond:
    » Duration
                                                        33
Duration

   Duration is a weighted average term to maturity where the
    weights are relative size of the contemporaneous cash flow.
                    PV (c )   PV (c )     PV (c )
      Duration   T       1 T       2  T       N T PV (F)
                  1   B     2   B       N   B     N  B



   Duration is a unitless number that quantifies the percentage
    change in a bond‟s price for a 1 percentage change in the
    interest rate.                     B
                               B 1 R   B
                  Duration
                               R B           R
                                           1 R
                                                                   34
Duration (cont.)

   The duration of a bond is less than its time to maturity (except for
    zero coupon bonds).
   The duration of the bond decreases the greater the coupon rate.
    This is because more weight (present value weight) is being given
    to the coupon payments.
   As market interest rate increases, the duration of the bond
    decreases. This is a direct result of discounting. Discounting at a
    higher rate means lower weight on payments in the far future.
    Hence, the weighting of the cash flows will be more heavily
    placed on the early cash flows -- decreasing the duration.
   Modified Duration = Duration / (1+yield)
                                                                       35
A Few Bond Markets Statistics
                   U.S. Treasuries, May 20th 2007.



Bills
                   MATURITY               DISCOUNT/YIELD      DISCOUNT/YIELD    TIME
                   DATE                                       CHANGE
3-Month            08/16/2007 4.72 / 4.84 0.01 / .010 13:41
6-Month            11/15/2007 4.78 / 4.98 0.01 / .015 13:41




Notes/Bonds
          COUPON   MATURITY               CURRENT              PRICE/YIELD      TIME
          DATE                PRICE/YIELD         CHANGE
2-Year    4.500    04/30/2009 99-121⁄4 / 4.84     -0-02 / .03514:08
3-Year    4.500    05/15/2010 99-081⁄2 / 4.77     -0-031⁄2 / .040       14:06
5-Year    4.500    04/30/2012 98-281⁄2 / 4.75     -0-06 / .04314:07
10-Year   4.500    05/15/2017 97-15 / 4.82        -0-091⁄2 / .038       14:07
30-Year   4.750    02/15/2037 96-17+ / 4.97       -0-17 / .03514:07



                                                                                       36
Spot Rates


   A spot rate is a rate agreed upon today, for a loan that is to be
    made today
    » r1=5% indicates that the current rate for a one-year loan is 5%.
    » r2=6% indicates that the current rate for a two-year loan is 6%.
    » Etc.
   The term structure of interest rates is the series of spot rates
    r1, r2, r3,…
    » We can build using STRIPS or coupon bond yields.
    » Explanations of the term structure.



                                                                         37
The Term Structure of Interest Rates
                  An Example


 Yield


   6.00

   5.75



   5.00



          1   2         3      Maturity


                                          38
Term Structure, July 1st 2005.




                                 39
Term Structure, September 12th, 2006




                                       40
Term Structure, May 20th, 2007




                                 41
Term Structure of Interest Rates




                                   42
43
Summary

   Bonds can be valued by discounting their future cash
    flows
   Bond prices change inversely with yield
   Price response of bond to interest rates depends on term
    to maturity.
    » Works well for zero-coupon bond, but not for coupon bonds
   Measure interest rate sensitivity using „DV01‟ and
    duration.
   The term structure implies terms for future borrowing:
    » Forward rates
    » Compare with expected future spot rates
                                                                  44

More Related Content

What's hot

Chapter 10_The Bond Market
Chapter 10_The Bond MarketChapter 10_The Bond Market
Chapter 10_The Bond Market
Rusman Mukhlis
 
Security valuation bonds updated
Security valuation bonds updatedSecurity valuation bonds updated
Security valuation bonds updated
Sudarshan Kadariya
 
Bonds, preferred stocks and common stocks
Bonds, preferred stocks and common stocksBonds, preferred stocks and common stocks
Bonds, preferred stocks and common stocks
Salman Irshad
 

What's hot (20)

Bonds 1
Bonds 1Bonds 1
Bonds 1
 
Fixed income securities (types of bond)
Fixed income securities (types of bond)Fixed income securities (types of bond)
Fixed income securities (types of bond)
 
Chapter 10_The Bond Market
Chapter 10_The Bond MarketChapter 10_The Bond Market
Chapter 10_The Bond Market
 
Bonds
BondsBonds
Bonds
 
Bond immunization
Bond immunizationBond immunization
Bond immunization
 
Security valuation bonds updated
Security valuation bonds updatedSecurity valuation bonds updated
Security valuation bonds updated
 
Module iv fixed income securities final
Module iv  fixed income securities finalModule iv  fixed income securities final
Module iv fixed income securities final
 
Fixed income securities- Analysis and valuation
Fixed income securities- Analysis and valuationFixed income securities- Analysis and valuation
Fixed income securities- Analysis and valuation
 
Basics on Bonds
Basics on BondsBasics on Bonds
Basics on Bonds
 
Bonds, equities and interest rates
Bonds, equities and interest ratesBonds, equities and interest rates
Bonds, equities and interest rates
 
bond and its types
bond and its typesbond and its types
bond and its types
 
Chapter 9:Capital Budgeting Techniques
Chapter 9:Capital Budgeting TechniquesChapter 9:Capital Budgeting Techniques
Chapter 9:Capital Budgeting Techniques
 
short term financing
 short term financing short term financing
short term financing
 
Risk & return analysis
Risk & return analysisRisk & return analysis
Risk & return analysis
 
Bond basics
Bond basicsBond basics
Bond basics
 
Portfolio management
Portfolio managementPortfolio management
Portfolio management
 
Bonds, preferred stocks and common stocks
Bonds, preferred stocks and common stocksBonds, preferred stocks and common stocks
Bonds, preferred stocks and common stocks
 
The Different Types of Fixed-Income Securities
The Different Types of Fixed-Income SecuritiesThe Different Types of Fixed-Income Securities
The Different Types of Fixed-Income Securities
 
Introduction To Fixed Income Markets
Introduction To Fixed Income MarketsIntroduction To Fixed Income Markets
Introduction To Fixed Income Markets
 
Investing with Bonds
Investing with BondsInvesting with Bonds
Investing with Bonds
 

Similar to Bond valuation

421 mortmkts 2012 set 5
421 mortmkts 2012 set 5421 mortmkts 2012 set 5
421 mortmkts 2012 set 5
rachidbadini
 
X430 611-intro summary-infosession
X430 611-intro summary-infosessionX430 611-intro summary-infosession
X430 611-intro summary-infosession
BMLP
 
[Goldman Sachs] A mortgage product primer
[Goldman Sachs] A mortgage product primer[Goldman Sachs] A mortgage product primer
[Goldman Sachs] A mortgage product primer
3mag1
 
ch21 - Econ 442 - financial markets Par 1 of 2 (1).pdf
ch21 - Econ 442 - financial markets Par 1 of 2 (1).pdfch21 - Econ 442 - financial markets Par 1 of 2 (1).pdf
ch21 - Econ 442 - financial markets Par 1 of 2 (1).pdf
jgordon21
 
Fixed income primer 0607 (2016_01_25 03_57_23 UTC)
Fixed income primer 0607 (2016_01_25 03_57_23 UTC)Fixed income primer 0607 (2016_01_25 03_57_23 UTC)
Fixed income primer 0607 (2016_01_25 03_57_23 UTC)
Gordon R. Schonfeld, CFA
 
INVESTING IN STOCKS AND BONDSWhy Consider BondsBond.docx
INVESTING IN STOCKS AND BONDSWhy Consider BondsBond.docxINVESTING IN STOCKS AND BONDSWhy Consider BondsBond.docx
INVESTING IN STOCKS AND BONDSWhy Consider BondsBond.docx
mariuse18nolet
 

Similar to Bond valuation (20)

421 mortmkts 2012 set 5
421 mortmkts 2012 set 5421 mortmkts 2012 set 5
421 mortmkts 2012 set 5
 
Bond
BondBond
Bond
 
Investment Fundamentals
Investment Fundamentals Investment Fundamentals
Investment Fundamentals
 
CHAPTER-4 FIS.ppt
CHAPTER-4 FIS.pptCHAPTER-4 FIS.ppt
CHAPTER-4 FIS.ppt
 
Bonds and their valuation
Bonds and their valuationBonds and their valuation
Bonds and their valuation
 
Bond valuation
Bond valuationBond valuation
Bond valuation
 
X430 611-intro summary-infosession
X430 611-intro summary-infosessionX430 611-intro summary-infosession
X430 611-intro summary-infosession
 
[Goldman Sachs] A mortgage product primer
[Goldman Sachs] A mortgage product primer[Goldman Sachs] A mortgage product primer
[Goldman Sachs] A mortgage product primer
 
CORPORATE_FINANCE_BOND_VALUATION_PRESENTATION_PPT
CORPORATE_FINANCE_BOND_VALUATION_PRESENTATION_PPTCORPORATE_FINANCE_BOND_VALUATION_PRESENTATION_PPT
CORPORATE_FINANCE_BOND_VALUATION_PRESENTATION_PPT
 
Ch7
Ch7Ch7
Ch7
 
BONDS
BONDSBONDS
BONDS
 
Burke bonds ifm smc
Burke bonds ifm smcBurke bonds ifm smc
Burke bonds ifm smc
 
5.pdf
5.pdf5.pdf
5.pdf
 
The Credit Crunch
The Credit CrunchThe Credit Crunch
The Credit Crunch
 
ch21 - Econ 442 - financial markets Par 1 of 2 (1).pdf
ch21 - Econ 442 - financial markets Par 1 of 2 (1).pdfch21 - Econ 442 - financial markets Par 1 of 2 (1).pdf
ch21 - Econ 442 - financial markets Par 1 of 2 (1).pdf
 
Bonds Defined and Catagorized
Bonds Defined and CatagorizedBonds Defined and Catagorized
Bonds Defined and Catagorized
 
Bonds and Its types
Bonds and Its typesBonds and Its types
Bonds and Its types
 
Bond Valuation YTM (Yield to Maturity) - CA Final SFM
Bond Valuation YTM (Yield to Maturity) - CA Final SFMBond Valuation YTM (Yield to Maturity) - CA Final SFM
Bond Valuation YTM (Yield to Maturity) - CA Final SFM
 
Fixed income primer 0607 (2016_01_25 03_57_23 UTC)
Fixed income primer 0607 (2016_01_25 03_57_23 UTC)Fixed income primer 0607 (2016_01_25 03_57_23 UTC)
Fixed income primer 0607 (2016_01_25 03_57_23 UTC)
 
INVESTING IN STOCKS AND BONDSWhy Consider BondsBond.docx
INVESTING IN STOCKS AND BONDSWhy Consider BondsBond.docxINVESTING IN STOCKS AND BONDSWhy Consider BondsBond.docx
INVESTING IN STOCKS AND BONDSWhy Consider BondsBond.docx
 

Recently uploaded

FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
dollysharma2066
 
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
dlhescort
 
unwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabi
unwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabiunwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabi
unwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabi
Abortion pills in Kuwait Cytotec pills in Kuwait
 
Chandigarh Escorts Service 📞8868886958📞 Just📲 Call Nihal Chandigarh Call Girl...
Chandigarh Escorts Service 📞8868886958📞 Just📲 Call Nihal Chandigarh Call Girl...Chandigarh Escorts Service 📞8868886958📞 Just📲 Call Nihal Chandigarh Call Girl...
Chandigarh Escorts Service 📞8868886958📞 Just📲 Call Nihal Chandigarh Call Girl...
Sheetaleventcompany
 
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service Bangalore
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service BangaloreCall Girls Hebbal Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service Bangalore
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service Bangalore
amitlee9823
 
Nelamangala Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore...
Nelamangala Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore...Nelamangala Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore...
Nelamangala Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore...
amitlee9823
 
Russian Call Girls In Rajiv Chowk Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service ...
Russian Call Girls In Rajiv Chowk Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service ...Russian Call Girls In Rajiv Chowk Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service ...
Russian Call Girls In Rajiv Chowk Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service ...
lizamodels9
 
Call Girls Electronic City Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Servi...
Call Girls Electronic City Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Servi...Call Girls Electronic City Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Servi...
Call Girls Electronic City Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Servi...
amitlee9823
 

Recently uploaded (20)

FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
 
Marel Q1 2024 Investor Presentation from May 8, 2024
Marel Q1 2024 Investor Presentation from May 8, 2024Marel Q1 2024 Investor Presentation from May 8, 2024
Marel Q1 2024 Investor Presentation from May 8, 2024
 
Organizational Transformation Lead with Culture
Organizational Transformation Lead with CultureOrganizational Transformation Lead with Culture
Organizational Transformation Lead with Culture
 
Katrina Personal Brand Project and portfolio 1
Katrina Personal Brand Project and portfolio 1Katrina Personal Brand Project and portfolio 1
Katrina Personal Brand Project and portfolio 1
 
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
 
Malegaon Call Girls Service ☎ ️82500–77686 ☎️ Enjoy 24/7 Escort Service
Malegaon Call Girls Service ☎ ️82500–77686 ☎️ Enjoy 24/7 Escort ServiceMalegaon Call Girls Service ☎ ️82500–77686 ☎️ Enjoy 24/7 Escort Service
Malegaon Call Girls Service ☎ ️82500–77686 ☎️ Enjoy 24/7 Escort Service
 
unwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabi
unwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabiunwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabi
unwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabi
 
Eluru Call Girls Service ☎ ️93326-06886 ❤️‍🔥 Enjoy 24/7 Escort Service
Eluru Call Girls Service ☎ ️93326-06886 ❤️‍🔥 Enjoy 24/7 Escort ServiceEluru Call Girls Service ☎ ️93326-06886 ❤️‍🔥 Enjoy 24/7 Escort Service
Eluru Call Girls Service ☎ ️93326-06886 ❤️‍🔥 Enjoy 24/7 Escort Service
 
Chandigarh Escorts Service 📞8868886958📞 Just📲 Call Nihal Chandigarh Call Girl...
Chandigarh Escorts Service 📞8868886958📞 Just📲 Call Nihal Chandigarh Call Girl...Chandigarh Escorts Service 📞8868886958📞 Just📲 Call Nihal Chandigarh Call Girl...
Chandigarh Escorts Service 📞8868886958📞 Just📲 Call Nihal Chandigarh Call Girl...
 
Call Girls Zirakpur👧 Book Now📱7837612180 📞👉Call Girl Service In Zirakpur No A...
Call Girls Zirakpur👧 Book Now📱7837612180 📞👉Call Girl Service In Zirakpur No A...Call Girls Zirakpur👧 Book Now📱7837612180 📞👉Call Girl Service In Zirakpur No A...
Call Girls Zirakpur👧 Book Now📱7837612180 📞👉Call Girl Service In Zirakpur No A...
 
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service Bangalore
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service BangaloreCall Girls Hebbal Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service Bangalore
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service Bangalore
 
Uneak White's Personal Brand Exploration Presentation
Uneak White's Personal Brand Exploration PresentationUneak White's Personal Brand Exploration Presentation
Uneak White's Personal Brand Exploration Presentation
 
Cheap Rate Call Girls In Noida Sector 62 Metro 959961乂3876
Cheap Rate Call Girls In Noida Sector 62 Metro 959961乂3876Cheap Rate Call Girls In Noida Sector 62 Metro 959961乂3876
Cheap Rate Call Girls In Noida Sector 62 Metro 959961乂3876
 
Nelamangala Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore...
Nelamangala Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore...Nelamangala Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore...
Nelamangala Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore...
 
Phases of Negotiation .pptx
 Phases of Negotiation .pptx Phases of Negotiation .pptx
Phases of Negotiation .pptx
 
Call Girls Service In Old Town Dubai ((0551707352)) Old Town Dubai Call Girl ...
Call Girls Service In Old Town Dubai ((0551707352)) Old Town Dubai Call Girl ...Call Girls Service In Old Town Dubai ((0551707352)) Old Town Dubai Call Girl ...
Call Girls Service In Old Town Dubai ((0551707352)) Old Town Dubai Call Girl ...
 
Falcon Invoice Discounting: The best investment platform in india for investors
Falcon Invoice Discounting: The best investment platform in india for investorsFalcon Invoice Discounting: The best investment platform in india for investors
Falcon Invoice Discounting: The best investment platform in india for investors
 
Russian Call Girls In Rajiv Chowk Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service ...
Russian Call Girls In Rajiv Chowk Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service ...Russian Call Girls In Rajiv Chowk Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service ...
Russian Call Girls In Rajiv Chowk Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service ...
 
PHX May 2024 Corporate Presentation Final
PHX May 2024 Corporate Presentation FinalPHX May 2024 Corporate Presentation Final
PHX May 2024 Corporate Presentation Final
 
Call Girls Electronic City Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Servi...
Call Girls Electronic City Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Servi...Call Girls Electronic City Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Servi...
Call Girls Electronic City Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Servi...
 

Bond valuation

  • 1. Bond Valuation An Overview  Introduction to bonds and bond markets » What are they? Some examples  Zero coupon bonds » Valuation » Interest rate sensitivity  Coupon bonds » Valuation » Interest rate sensitivity  The term structure of interest rates 1
  • 2. What is a Bond?  A bond is a security that obligates the issuer to make specified interest and principal payments to the holder on specified dates. » Coupon rate » Face value (or par) » Maturity (or term)  Bonds are also called fixed income securities.  Bonds differ in several respects: » Repayment type » Issuer » Maturity » Security » Priority in case of default 2
  • 3. Repayment Schemes  Pure Discount or Zero-Coupon Bonds » Pay no coupons prior to maturity. » Pay the bond‟s face value at maturity.  Coupon Bonds » Pay a stated coupon at periodic intervals prior to maturity. » Pay the bond‟s face value at maturity.  Floating-Rate Bonds » Pay a variable coupon, reset periodically to a reference rate. » Pay the bond‟s face value at maturity.  Perpetual Bonds (Consols) » No maturity date. » Pay a stated coupon at periodic intervals.  Annuity or Self-Amortizing Bonds » Pay a regular fixed amount each payment period. » Principal repaid over time rather than at maturity. 3
  • 4. Types of Bonds: Issuers Bonds Issuer Government Bonds US Treasury, Government Agencies Mortgage-Backed Securities Government agencies (GNMA etc) Municipal Bonds State and local government Corporate Bonds Corporations Asset-Back Securities Corporations 4
  • 5. U.S. Government Bonds  Treasury Bills » No coupons (zero coupon security) » Face value paid at maturity » Maturities up to one year  Treasury Notes » Coupons paid semiannually » Face value paid at maturity » Maturities from 2-10 years 5
  • 6. U.S. Government Bonds (Cont.)  Treasury Bonds » Coupons paid semiannually » Face value paid at maturity » Maturities over 10 years » The 30-year bond is called the long bond.  Treasury Strips » Zero-coupon bond » Created by “stripping” the coupons and principal from Treasury bonds and notes.  No default risk. Considered to be risk free.  Exempt from state and local taxes.  Sold regularly through a network of primary dealers.  Traded regularly in the over-the-counter market. 6
  • 7. Agency and Municipal Bonds  Agency bonds: mortgage-backed bonds » Bonds issued by U.S. Government agencies that are backed by a pool of home mortgages. » Self-amortizing bonds. (mostly monthly payments) » Maturities up to 30 years. » Prepayment risk.  Municipal bonds » Maturities from one month to 40 years. » Usually exempt from federal, state, and local taxes. » Generally two types: – Revenue bonds – General Obligation bonds » Riskier than U.S. Government bonds. 7
  • 8. Corporate Bonds  Bonds issued by corporations » Bonds vs. Debentures » Fixed-rate versus floating-rate bonds. » Investment-grade vs. Below investment-grade bonds. » Additional features: – call provisions – convertible bonds – puttable bonds 8
  • 9. Seniority of Corporate Bonds  In case of default, different classes of bonds have different claim priority on the assets of a corporation.  Secured Bonds (Asset-Backed) » Secured by real property. » Ownership of the property reverts to the bondholders upon default.  Debentures » Same priority as general creditors. » Have priority over stockholders, but subordinate to secured debt. 9
  • 10. Bond Ratings Moody’s S&P Quality of Issue Aaa AAA Highest quality. Very small risk of default. Aa AA High quality. Small risk of default. A A High-Medium quality. Strong attributes, but potentially vulnerable. Baa BBB Medium quality. Currently adequate, but potentially unreliable. Ba BB Some speculative element. Long-run prospects questionable. B B Able to pay currently, but at risk of default in the future. Caa CCC Poor quality. Clear danger of default. Ca CC High speculative quality. May be in default. C C Lowest rated. Poor prospects of repayment. D - In default. 10
  • 11. The US Bond Market Debt Instrument 2006 Q2 Treasury securities 4759.6 Municipal securities 2305.7 Corporate and foreign bonds 8705.3 Consumer Credit 2327.4 Mortgages 12757.7 Corporate equities 18684.5 Amount ($bil.). Source: U.S. Federal Reserve (Table L.4, September/2006) 11
  • 12. Bond Valuation: Zero Coupon Bonds B = Market price of the Bond of bond F = Face value R = Annual percentage rate m = compounding period (annual  m = 1, semiannual  m = 2,…) i = Effective periodic interest rate; i=R/m T = Maturity (in years) N = Number of compounding periods; N = T*m  Two cash flows to purchaser of bond: » -B at time 0 » F at time T  What is the price of a bond? Use present value formula: F B N 1 i 12
  • 13. Valuing Zero Coupon Bonds: An Example  Value a 5 year, U.S. Treasury strip with face value of $1,000. The APR is R=7.5% with annual compounding? What about quarterly compounding?  What is the APR on a U.S. Treasury strip that pays $1,000 in exactly 7 years and is currently selling for $591.11 under annual compounding? Semi-annual compounding? 13
  • 14. Interest Rate Sensitivity: Zero Coupon Bonds  Consider the following 1, 2 and 10-year zero-coupon bonds, all with » face value of F=$1,000 » APR of R=10%, compounded annually. We obtain the following table for increases and decreases of the interest rate by 1%: Interest Rate Bond 1 Bond 2 Bond 3 1-Year 2-Year 10-Year 9.0% $917.43 $841.68 $422.41 10.0% $909.09 $826.45 $385.54 11.0% $900.90 $811.62 $352.18  Bond prices move up if interest rates drop, decrease if interest rates rise 14
  • 15. Bond Prices and Interest Rates $1,200  Bond prices are $1,000 inversely related to IR $800  Longer term $600 bonds are more sensitive to IR $400 1-Year changes than 2-Year short term $200 bonds 10-Year $0  The lower the 0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% IR, the more sensitive the price. 15
  • 16. Measuring Interest Rate Sensitivity Zero Coupon Bonds  We would like to measure the interest rate sensitivity of a bond or a portfolio of bonds. » How much do bond prices change if interest rates change by a small amount? » Why is this important?  Use “Dollar value of a one basis point decrease” (DV01): » Basis point (bp): 1/100 of one percentage point =0.01%=0.0001 » Calculate DV01: – Method 1: Difference of moving one basis point down: DV01= B(R-0.01%)-B(R). – Method 2: Difference of moving 1/2bp down minus 1/2pb up: DV01=B(R-0.005%) -B(R+0.005%). – Method 3: Use calculus: B DV 01 0.0001 R 16
  • 17. Computing DV01: An Example  Reconsider the 1, 2 and 10- year bonds discussed before: Interest Rate Bond 1 Bond 2 Bond 3 1-Year 2-Year 10-Year 9.990% $909.1736 $826.5966 $385.8940 9.995% $909.1322 $826.5214 $385.7186 10.000% $909.0909 $826.4463 $385.5433 10.005% $909.0496 $826.3712 $385.3681 Method 1 $0.082652 $0.150283 $0.350669 Method 2 $0.082645 $0.150263 $0.350494 Method 3 $0.082645 $0.150263 $0.350494  Method 3: B $1,000 1 0.0001 T 0.0001 T * $0.10 * R 1.10T 1 1.10T 1 17
  • 18. DV01: A Graphical Approach 10-Year $1,200.00 $1,000.00 $800.00 $600.00 $400.00 $200.00 $0.00 Interest Rate  DV01 estimates the change in the Price-Interest rate curve using a linear approximation. higher slope implies greater sensitivity 18
  • 19. Valuing Coupon Bonds Example 1: Amortization Bonds  Consider Amortization Bond » T=2 » m=2 » C=$2,000 c = C/m = $2,000/2 = $1,000 » R=10%  i = R/m = 10%/2 = 5%  How can we value this security? » Brute force discounting » Similar to another security we already know how to value? » Replication 19
  • 20. Valuing Coupon Bonds Example 1: Amortization Bonds  Compare with a portfolio of zero coupon bonds: 0 1 2 3 4 Buy Coupon Bond -$3,545.95 $1,000.00 $1,000.00 $1,000.00 $1,000.00 Buy 6-Month Zero -$952.38 Buy 1-Year Zero -$907.03 Buy 1.5-Year Zero -$863.84 Buy 2-Year Zero -$822.70 Portfolio -$3,545.95 20
  • 21. A First Look at Arbitrage  Reconsider amortization bond; suppose bond trades at $3,500 (as opposed to computed price of $3,545.95) » Can we make a profit without any risk? – What is the strategy? – What is the profit? 21
  • 22. A First Look at Arbitrage  Reconsider amortization bond; suppose bond trades at $3,500 (as opposed to computed price of $3,545.95) » Can make risk less profit – Buy low: buy amortization bond – Sell high: Sell portfolio of zero coupon bonds Time Period 0 1 2 3 4 Buy Coupon Bond -$3,500.00 $1,000.00 $1,000.00 $1,000.00 $1,000.00 Sell 6-Month Zero $952.38 -$1,000.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 Sell 1-Year Zero $907.03 $0.00 -$1,000.00 $0.00 $0.00 Sell 1.5-Year Zero $863.84 $0.00 $0.00 -$1,000.00 $0.00 Sell 2-Year Zero $822.70 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 -$1,000.00 Portfolio $3,545.95 -$1,000.00 -$1,000.00 -$1,000.00 -$1,000.00 Net Cash Flow $45.95 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 – riskless profit of $45.95 – no riskless profit if price is correct 22
  • 23. Valuation of Coupon Bonds: Example 2: Straight Bonds  What is the market price of a U.S. Treasury bond that has a coupon rate of 9%, a face value of $1,000 and matures exactly 10 years from today if the interest rate is 10% compounded semiannually? 0 6 12 18 24 ... 120 Months 45 45 45 45 1045 23
  • 24. Valuing Coupon Bonds The General Formula  What is the market price of a bond that has an annual coupon C, face value F and matures exactly T years from today if the required rate of return is R, with m-periodic compounding? » Coupon payment is: c = C/m » Effective periodic interest rate is: i = R/m » number of periods N = Tm 0 1 2 3 4 ... … N c c c c… … c+F B Annuity Zero c 1 F 1 N N i 1 i 1 i 24
  • 25. The Concept of a “Yield to Maturity”  So far we have valued bonds by using a given interest rate, then discounted all payments to the bond.  Prices are usually given from trade prices » need to infer interest rate that has been used Definition: The yield to maturity is that interest rate that equates the present discounted value of all future payments to bondholders to the market price:  Algebraic: c 1 F B 1 N N yield / m 1 yield / m 1 yield / m 25
  • 26. Yield to Maturity A Graphical Interpretation $2,500.00 $2,000.00 $1,500.00 $1,000.00 $500.00 $0.00 0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% 14% 16% 18% 20% 22% 24%  Consider a U.S. Treasury bond that has a coupon rate of 10%, a face value of $1,000 and matures exactly 10 years from now. » Market price of $1,500, implies a yield of 3.91% (semi-annual compounding); for B=$1,000 we obviously find R=10%. 26
  • 27. Interest Rate Sensitivity: Coupon Bonds  Coupon bonds can be represented as portfolios of zero- coupon bonds » Implication for price sensitivity  Consider purchasing the US Treasury bond discussed earlier (10 year, 9% coupon, $1,000 face) » Suppose immediately thereafter interest rates fall to 8%, compounded semiannually. » Suppose immediately thereafter interest rate rises to 12% compounded semiannually. » Suppose the interest rate equals 9%, compounded semiannually.  What are the pricing implications of these scenarios? 27
  • 28. Implication of Interest Rate Changes on Coupon Bond Prices  Recall the general formula: c 1 F B 1 N N i 1 i 1 i  What is the price of the bond if the APR is 8% compounded semiannually?  Similarly: If R=12%: B=$ 827.95 If R= 9%: B=$1,000.00 28
  • 29. Relationship Between Coupon Bond Prices and Interest Rates  Bond prices are inversely related to interest rates (or yields).  A bond sells at par only if its interest rate equals the coupon rate  A bond sells at a premium if its coupon rate is above the interest rate.  A bond sells at a discount if its coupon rate is below the interest rate. 29
  • 30. DV01 and Coupon Bonds  Consider two bonds with 10% annual coupons with maturities of 5 years and 10 years.  The APR is 8%  What are the responses to a .01% (1bp) interest rate change? Yield 5-Year Bond $ Change % Change 10-Year Bond $ Change % Change 7.995% $1,080.06 $0.21019 0.0195% $1,134.57 $0.36585 0.0323% 8.000% $1,079.85 $1,134.20 8.005% $1,079.64 -$0.21013 -0.0195% $1,133.84 -$0.36569 -0.0322% DV01 $0.42032 $0.73154  Does the sensitivity of a coupon bond always increase with the term to maturity? 30
  • 31. Bond Prices and Interest Rates $2,500.00 5-Year Bond $2,000.00 10-Year Bond Price (P) $1,500.00 $1,000.00 $500.00 $0.00 0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% 14% 16% 18% 20% 22% 24% Interest Rate (R) Longer term bonds are more sensitive to changes in interest rates than shorter term bonds, in general. 31
  • 32. Bond Yields and Prices  Consider the following two bonds: » Both have a maturity of 5 years » Both have yield of 8% » First has 6% coupon, other has 10% coupon, compounded annually.  Then, what are the price sensitivities of these bonds, measured by DV01 as for zero coupon bonds? Yield 6%-Bond $ Change % change 10%-Bond $ Change % change 7.995% $920.33 $0.1891 $1,080.06 $0.2102 8.000% $920.15 $1,079.85 8.005% $919.96 ($0.1891) $1,079.64 ($0.2101) 0.0411% 0.0389% DV01 $0.3782 $0.4203  Why do we get different answers for two bonds with the same yield and same maturity? 32
  • 33. Maturity and Price Risk  Zero coupon bonds have well-defined relationship between maturity and interest rate sensitivity:  Coupon bonds can have different sensitivities for the same maturity » DV01 now depends on maturity and coupon  Need concept of “average maturity” of coupon bond: » Duration 33
  • 34. Duration  Duration is a weighted average term to maturity where the weights are relative size of the contemporaneous cash flow. PV (c ) PV (c ) PV (c ) Duration T 1 T 2  T N T PV (F) 1 B 2 B N B N B  Duration is a unitless number that quantifies the percentage change in a bond‟s price for a 1 percentage change in the interest rate. B B 1 R B Duration R B R 1 R 34
  • 35. Duration (cont.)  The duration of a bond is less than its time to maturity (except for zero coupon bonds).  The duration of the bond decreases the greater the coupon rate. This is because more weight (present value weight) is being given to the coupon payments.  As market interest rate increases, the duration of the bond decreases. This is a direct result of discounting. Discounting at a higher rate means lower weight on payments in the far future. Hence, the weighting of the cash flows will be more heavily placed on the early cash flows -- decreasing the duration.  Modified Duration = Duration / (1+yield) 35
  • 36. A Few Bond Markets Statistics U.S. Treasuries, May 20th 2007. Bills MATURITY DISCOUNT/YIELD DISCOUNT/YIELD TIME DATE CHANGE 3-Month 08/16/2007 4.72 / 4.84 0.01 / .010 13:41 6-Month 11/15/2007 4.78 / 4.98 0.01 / .015 13:41 Notes/Bonds COUPON MATURITY CURRENT PRICE/YIELD TIME DATE PRICE/YIELD CHANGE 2-Year 4.500 04/30/2009 99-121⁄4 / 4.84 -0-02 / .03514:08 3-Year 4.500 05/15/2010 99-081⁄2 / 4.77 -0-031⁄2 / .040 14:06 5-Year 4.500 04/30/2012 98-281⁄2 / 4.75 -0-06 / .04314:07 10-Year 4.500 05/15/2017 97-15 / 4.82 -0-091⁄2 / .038 14:07 30-Year 4.750 02/15/2037 96-17+ / 4.97 -0-17 / .03514:07 36
  • 37. Spot Rates  A spot rate is a rate agreed upon today, for a loan that is to be made today » r1=5% indicates that the current rate for a one-year loan is 5%. » r2=6% indicates that the current rate for a two-year loan is 6%. » Etc.  The term structure of interest rates is the series of spot rates r1, r2, r3,… » We can build using STRIPS or coupon bond yields. » Explanations of the term structure. 37
  • 38. The Term Structure of Interest Rates An Example Yield 6.00 5.75 5.00 1 2 3 Maturity 38
  • 39. Term Structure, July 1st 2005. 39
  • 40. Term Structure, September 12th, 2006 40
  • 41. Term Structure, May 20th, 2007 41
  • 42. Term Structure of Interest Rates 42
  • 43. 43
  • 44. Summary  Bonds can be valued by discounting their future cash flows  Bond prices change inversely with yield  Price response of bond to interest rates depends on term to maturity. » Works well for zero-coupon bond, but not for coupon bonds  Measure interest rate sensitivity using „DV01‟ and duration.  The term structure implies terms for future borrowing: » Forward rates » Compare with expected future spot rates 44