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Part II

Dec 31, 2015

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Part II. Fundamentals of Interest Rates. Chapter Three. Understanding Interest Rates. Present Value. Four Types of Credit Instruments Simple Loan Fixed Payment Loan Coupon Bond Discount Bond Concept of Present Value. Yield to Maturity: Loans. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Part II
Page 2: Part II

Part II

Fundamentals of Interest Rates

Page 3: Part II

Chapter Three

Understanding Interest Rates

Page 4: Part II

Slide 3–4

Simple loan of $1

Year 1 2 3 n

$1.10 $1.21 $1.33 1(1+i)n

PV of future $1 =$1

1+ i n

Present Value

• Four Types of Credit Instruments1. Simple Loan2. Fixed Payment Loan3. Coupon Bond4. Discount Bond

• Concept of Present Value

Page 5: Part II

Slide 3–5

Yield to Maturity: Loans

• Yield to maturity = interest rate that equates today's value with present value of all future payments

1. Simple Loan (i = 10%)

$100 $110 1 i

i $110 $100

$100

$10

$100.10 10%

Page 6: Part II

Slide 3–6

Yield to Maturity: Loans

2. Fixed Payment Loan (i = 12%)

$1000 $126

1 i

$126

1 i 2 $126

1 i 3 ... $126

1 i 25

LV FP

1 i

FP

1 i 2 FP

1 i 3 ... FP

1 i n

Page 7: Part II

Slide 3–7

Figure 3-1: A Mortgage Payment Table

Page 8: Part II

Slide 3–8

Figure 3-2: A Bond Table

Page 9: Part II

Slide 3–9

Yield to Maturity: Bonds

3. Coupon Bond (Coupon rate = 10% = C/F)

P $100

1 i

$100

1 i 2 $100

1 i 3 ... $100

1 i 10 $1000

1 i 10

P C

1 i

C

1 i 2 C

1 i 3 ... C

1 i n F

1 i n

– Consol: Fixed coupon payments of $C forever

P C

ii

C

P

Page 10: Part II

Slide 3–10

Yield to Maturity: Bonds

4. One-Year Discount Bond (P = $900, F = $1000)

$900 $1000

1 i

i $1000 $900

$900.111 11.1%

i F P

P

Page 11: Part II

Slide 3–11

Relationship Between Price and Yield to Maturity

• Three interesting facts in Table 3-1

1. When bond is at par, yield equals coupon rate

2. Price and yield are negatively related

3. Yield greater than coupon rate when bond price is below par value

Page 12: Part II

Slide 3–12

Current Yield

• Two Characteristics1. Is better approximation to yield to maturity, nearer price

is to par and longer is maturity of bond

2. Change in current yield always signals change in same direction as yield to maturity

ic C

P

Page 13: Part II

Slide 3–13

idb (F - P)

F

360

(number of days to maturity)

idb $1000 - $900

$1000

360

365.099 9.9%

• Two Characteristics1. Understates yield to maturity; longer the maturity,

greater is understatement

2. Change in discount yield always signals change in same direction as yield to maturity

Yield on a Discount Basis

• One-Year Bill (P = $900, F = $1000)

Page 14: Part II

Bond Page of the Newspaper

Page 15: Part II

Slide 3–15

Distinction Between Real and Nominal Interest Rates

• Real interest rate1. Interest rate that is adjusted for expected changes in the

price level

ir i e

2. Real interest rate more accurately reflects true cost of borrowing

3. When real rate is low, greater incentives to borrow and less to lend

Page 16: Part II

Slide 3–16

Distinction Between Real and Nominal Interest Rates (cont.)

• If i = 5% and πe = 0% then

ir 5% 0% 5%

ir 10% 20% 10%

• If i = 10% and πe = 20% then

Page 17: Part II

Slide 3–17

U.S. Real and Nominal Interest Rates

Figure 3-3: Real and Nominal Interest Rates (Three-Month Treasury Bill), 1953–2001

Sample of current rates and indexeshttp://www.martincapital.com/charts.htm

Page 18: Part II

Slide 3–18

RET C Pt1 Pt

Pt

ic g

where ic C

Pt

current yield

g pt1 Pt

Pt

capital gain

Distinction Between Interest Rates and Returns

• Rate of Return

Page 19: Part II

Slide 3–19

Key Facts about the Relationship Between Rates and Returns

Sample of current coupon rates and yields on government bondshttp://www.bloomberg.com/markets/iyc.html

Page 20: Part II

Slide 3–20

Maturity and the Volatility of Bond Returns

• Key findings from Table 3-21. Only bond whose return = yield is one with maturity = holding

period

2. For bonds with maturity > holding period, i P implying capital loss

3. Longer is maturity, greater is price change associated with interest rate change

4. Longer is maturity, more return changes with change in interest rate

5. Bond with high initial interest rate can still have negative return if i

Page 21: Part II

Slide 3–21

Maturity and the Volatility of Bond Returns

• Conclusion from Table 3-2 analysis1. Prices and returns more volatile for long-term bonds

because have higher interest-rate risk

2. No interest-rate risk for any bond whose maturity equals holding period

Page 22: Part II

Slide 3–22

Reinvestment Risk

1. Occurs if hold series of short bonds over long holding period

2. i at which reinvest uncertain

3. Gain from i , lose when i

Page 23: Part II

Slide 3–23

Calculating Durationi =10%, 10-Year 10% Coupon Bond

Page 24: Part II

Calculating Durationi = 20%, 10-Year 10% Coupon Bond

Page 25: Part II

Slide 3–25

DUR tCPt

1 i tt 1

n

CPt

1 i tt 1

n

Formula for Duration

• Key facts about duration1. All else equal, when the maturity of a bond lengthens,

the duration rises as well

2. All else equal, when interest rates rise, the duration of a coupon bond fall

Page 26: Part II

Slide 3–26

Formula for Duration

1. The higher is the coupon rate on the bond, the shorter is the duration of the bond

2. Duration is additive: the duration of a portfolio of securities is the weighted-average of the durations of the individual securities, with the weights equaling the proportion of the portfolio invested in each

Page 27: Part II

Slide 3–27

Duration and Interest-Rate Risk

• i 10% to 11%:– Table 3-4, 10% coupon bond

%P DURi

1 i

%P 6.76 0.01

1 0.10

%P 0.0615 6.15%

Page 28: Part II

Slide 3–28

Duration and Interest-Rate Risk (cont.)

• i 10% to 11%:– 20% coupon bond, DUR = 5.72 years

%P 5.72 0.01

1 0.10

%P 0.0520 5.20%

Page 29: Part II

Slide 3–29

Duration and Interest-Rate Risk

• The greater is the duration of a security, the greater is the percentage change in the market value of the security for a given change in interest rates

• Therefore, the greater is the duration of a security, the greater is its interest-rate risk