Title: Bond Portfolio Management
1Bond Portfolio Management
- Five steps in investment management process
- Tracking Errors
- Active Portfolio Strategies
- Use of Leverage
- Indexing
2Five Steps in Investment Management
Setting investment objectives Establishing
Investment Policy (in cash equivalent, equities,
fixed-income, real estate) Select a portfolio
strategy (active, structured, or
indexing) Select assets Measuring and evaluating
performance (ch22)
3Tracking Error
- The standard deviation of the return of the
portfolio relative to the return of the benchmark
index. - (example on pages 416-417)
- Calculate monthly or weekly tracking error
- Annualize it
4Two Types of Tracking Error
- Backward-looking (ex-post) tracking error
tracking error calculated from observed active
returns for a portfolio - Forward-looking (ex-ante) tracking error
tracking errors associated with bond market index
based on multi-factor models setting an
appropriate benchmark
5Risk Factors
- Systematic risk factors
- Term structure risk factors
- Non-term structure risk factors
- Non-systematic risk factors
- Issuer specific
- Issue specific
6Active Portfolio Strategies
- Interest-rate expectations strategies
- Yield Curve Strategies
- Yield Spread Strategies
- Individual Security Selection Strategies
- Strategies for Asset Allocation within Bond
Sectors
7Interest-rate Expectations Strategies
- Increase or decrease duration
- increase duration when expected interest goes
down - decrease duration when expected interest goes up
- Approach Rate anticipation swaps
- Gambling incentive make an interest bet to
cover inferior performance relative to a
benchmark index.
8Yield Curve Strategy
- Seek to capitalize on expectations based on
short-term movements in yields make profit from
the change of yield curve in the portfolio - Key if your investment horizon is 1 year, what
strategy you want to take, put all your money in
1-year bonds or 30-year bonds
9Strategies
- Bullet strategy (see page 428)
- Barbell strategy
- Ladder strategy
- To see which strategy to implement, investors
need look at the impact of the strategy on the
total return of the portfolio - Exhibit 19-8 on page 431 compares the relative
performance of a bullet portfolio and a barbell
portfolio - One factor driving the difference in portfolio
performance is the difference in their convexity.
10Yield Spread Strategies
- Involve positioning a portfolio to capitalize on
expected changes in yield spreads between sectors
of the bond market. - Swapping one bond for another when manager
believes that the prevailing yield spread
between the two bonds in the market is out of
line with their historical yield spread.
11Yield Spread Strategies
- Credit spread
- Spreads between callable and noncallable
securities
12Individual Security Selection Strategy
- Identify mis-priced securities
- Its yield is higher than that of comparably rated
issues - Its yield is expected to decline because credit
analysis indicates that its rating will improve - To implement this strategy swap.
13Use of Leverage
- A portfolio in which a manager has created
leverage. - If return from investing the amount borrowed
exceed cost of funding. - Leveraging trades will generate a return needed
to make the investment attractive to traders.
14Create Leverage with Repo
Repurchase agreement sale of a security with a
commitment by the seller to buy the same security
back from the purchaser at a specified price at a
designated future date. Repurchase
price Repurchase date Repo rate Overnight repo
versus term repo
15Example
- A dealer delivers (sells) 10 million of treasury
security to a customer and buy it back in to the
next day. Repo rate is 6.5. (dealer is financing
a long position) (page 441) - What is amount borrowed by the dealer?
- What is the dollar interest
- Jargons (1) reversing out securities, (2)
reversing in securities page 442
16Indexing
- Designing a portfolio so that its performance
will match the performance of some bond index - Benefits and costs
- Low management fee and expenses
- Straightforward and easy to evaluate
- Basis risk between indexing and matching to
liabilities
17Factors Affecting Index Selection
- Level of Risk Tolerance
- Investors objective
- Difference in variability
- Nonsymmetry in rising and falling markets
18Alternative Indexes
- Lehman Brothers U.S. Aggregate Bond Index
- Salomon Smith Barney (SSB) Broad Investment-grade
Bond Index (BIG) - Merrill Lynch Domestic Market Index
- Exhibit 20-2, sector breakdown of Lehman Brother
index
19How to Create an Indexed Portfolio
- Tracking error the discrepancy between the
performance of the indexed portfolio and the
index - The tradeoff between transaction costs and
mismatching of the characteristics of the indexed
portfolio and the index. - Have logistic problem (see pages 457, 458)
20Specific Approaches
- Stratified sampling approach
- Based on characteristics (page 456)
- Optimization approach
- Jointly consider characteristics and fund
objectives - Tracking error minimization using multifactor
model - Enhanced indexing adding active portfolio
management in indexing
21Exercises Ch19 and 20
- 1. Problem 7, ch19 (a) 288.74, (b)
backward-looking, (c) enhanced indexing - 2. Problem 15, ch19 (a) II, (b) I, (c) the one
having greater convexity, (d) dont worry about
it. - 3. Problem 7, ch20