Title: Interest Rates: Basic Determinants
1Interest RatesBasic Determinants
- Week 5 September 28, 2005
2Financial Asset Prices
- We have introduced the major players in financial
markets - Funds in financial institutions (banks, insurance
companies, pension plans, etc.) - Decision makers allocating those funds (bank
managers, insurance company managers, asset
managers under contract from pension-fund
sponsors, etc.) - Decision makers implementing plans interact in
markets trading in similar securities - Largest category of markets divides securities
into fixed income and equities markets
3Fixed Income Market
Fixed Income Market United States 2004 Fixed Income Market United States 2004
Issuer Amount
U. S. Treasury Issues 4,166.3
GSE Debt 2,697.7
GSE and Agency Pools 3,542.5
ABS Issuers 1,511.4
Municipal Debt 1,665.0
Non-Financial Corporate Debt 2,947.4
Financial Corporate Debt 3,679.0
Total of Debt Shown 20,209.3
Source FRB Flow of Funds, June, 2005
4Fixed Income Returns
- Fixed income securities
- Bonds and notes
- Mortgages and other loan contracts (e.g. car
loans) - Money market instruments
- Business lending
- We will define and contrast contract rates,
discount rates, yields to maturity, realized or
holding period returns, and expected yields or
expected returns
5Contract rate
- Contract rate determines maximum future cash
flows paid by borrower - With bonds, contract or coupon rate determines
periodic interest payments. - E.g. 5-3/8 Feb 31 will pay 2-11/16 or .026875
times the face value or principal of holdings
every six months, or each February and August
until February 2031(for about 26.5 years) - If investor owns 1,000 in principle, pays
semiannual 26.88, if 1,000,000, pays 26,875
6Fixed Income Prices and Yields
- Fixed income cash flows are determined by the
contracts underlying their issuances - The price of a fixed-income security is the
present value of the contractual cash flows
calculated using the risk-adjusted discount rate
investors apply to securities of that class of
risk - Given the cash flows, the price of a fixed income
and its yield to maturity are two ways of looking
at the same thing
7Bond Prices
- Bonds are usually quoted as a percent of
principal or face value, e.g. on September 22,
2005, the Treasury maturing in February 2031
(26.5 years) was quoted at 11326 ask, translated
as 113-26/32 or 1.138125 times face value.
Todays price? - 1,000 face value cost 1,138.13 then
- 1,000,000 face value cost 1,138,125 then
- Examples of 1,000 face prices are rarely seen
- Bonds normally sell retail in blocks of 5,000
but Wall Street Journal quotes are for 1 million
face value amounts or over (institutional traders)
8Bond Yield to Maturity
- The yield to maturity for a bond is the discount
rate that makes the present value of coupon
payments and redemption of principal equal to the
current market price - The relation of price to yield to maturity is
given byfor y is yield to maturity, p is
decimal price, c is coupon rate, is the yield to
maturity, m (4.46 in our Treasury bond example)
9Bond Yields (continued)
- Current yield is calculated asas is reported
by Wall Street Journal for U.S Exchange traded
corporate bonds (not Treasuries), but is not too
useful - Expected yield is less than the yield to maturity
because yield to maturity assumes all payments
are made on time (no default)
10Bond Yields (continued)
- Holding period yield (HPY) is the actual cash
realized yield over some holding period, usually
stated as an annual yield. - If you bought the 30-year Treasury in 2002 (5-3/8
Feb 31) for 11014 ask (its price then) and sold
it for 10403 in 2003 (its then bid price), HPY
would have been
11Relation between yields
- Expected yields for default risky bonds are below
yields to maturity because yields to maturity do
not allow for default or late payments - Current yields are below yields to maturity
because they ignore repayment of principle - Expected yield should equal expected
holding-period or realized yield over time in
efficient markets
12Interest rate components
- Real rate
- Inflation premium
- Term premium
- Risk premium
6/98
9/02
1/80
13Theories of Interest Rates
- The Classical Theory of Interest Rates
- The Liquidity Preference or Cash Balances Theory
of Interest Rates - The Loanable Funds Theory of Interest
- The Rational Expectations Theory
14Theory of Real Risk-free Rate
- Income and wealth (future income)
- Time preference
- Ability to exchange income through time or a
financial market - Exchange establishes rate of transformation
between current and future consumption and
depends on allocation of income and wealth
between market participants
15Exchange economy and real rate
Not an Equilibrium
As Income
Future Consumption
A Repays
Bs Utility
Bs Income
As Utility
B Lends
0
Present Consumption
A Borrows
16Exchange and Investment
Future Consumption
Borrowing
0
Present Consumption
Investment
17Alternative Views of Real Rate
The Equilibrium Rate of Interest In the Classical
Theory
18Historical Perspective - T-Bills
19Ex-post Real Rate 1950 to 2004
20Ex-post Real Rate since 1980
21Real Rate TIPS
- TIPS Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities
- Issued in 5-, 10-, and 30-year maturities,
starting in January, 1997 - Principal value is adjusted daily using CPI index
changes from three months earlier - Problems
- CPI as measure of inflation and lags
- Taxation on increases in principal
22Alternative Theories Money
- Liquidity preference theory assumes two assets,
one of which is zero-interest earning money or
cash balances - Demand for money is composed of transactions,
precautionary, and speculative components - Interest rate is determined by price of bonds
relative to demand for money
23Total Demand for Money
24Money and Interest Rates
The Equilibrium Interest Rate In the Liquidity
Preference Theory
25Demand and Supply of Credit
The Equilibrium Interest Rate
26Rational Expectations
27Comparing Theories of Interest
- Liquidity theory focuses on money and bonds and
not on real assets - Loanable funds theory concentrates on primary
sectors demands for funds which are linked to
returns on investment in real assets - Rational expectations is a powerful explanation
of the relation between interest rates in
efficient markets which we will draw on in
discussing the term structure of interest rates
28Next time October 1, 2005
- Read Chapter 7
- Read articles selected by students from trade
publications on real rates and/or expected
inflation - Meet with your team and be prepared to define and
refine your term project topic and discuss with me