Title: Commerce 4FJ3
1Commerce 4FJ3
- Fixed Income Analysis
- Week 9
- Bonds with Options
2Traditional Yield Spread
- Traditional yield spread is 109 basis points
- Ignores term structure of interest rates
- The bond, if called in 10 years, should be
compared to a 10 year treasury
3Static Spread
- Find the treasury spot rate term structure using
the bootstrapping method - Find the present value of the cash flows for the
bond using the spot rate plus a spread - Solve for the spread that gives the current price
- Called the static or zero volatility spread
4Static Spread Example
5Value of Static Spread
- Gives the return in excess of treasury over the
entire term structure - Takes into account that there are expected
different reinvestment rates at different points
in the future - Assumes that the required spread over treasury is
constant over time
6Static vs. Traditional
- If yield curve is flat, no difference
- If yield curve is rising, the static spread will
be higher, with bigger differences for long
maturities and steeper term structures - Static may be smaller if inverted yield curve
- Bigger differences in spread for amortizing
securities (MBS, asset backed securities)
7Callable Bonds
- Two main disadvantage for buyers
- Extra reinvestment risk if the bond is called
before the investors time horizon they will face
extra reinvestment risk, probably at a lower rate - Price compression if yields fall, the bond price
will not rise as much as it should because the
bond can be bought back at a fixed price
8Traditional Valuation
- As mentioned earlier, calculate yield to each
call, yield to worst, and then decide on the
price that is reasonable - Assumes bond will be called at that date
- Ignores reinvestment rates
- can be mitigated by comparing to treasuries of
the maturity of the called bond
9Price vs. Yield for Callable
10Negative Convexity
- The normal price/yield curve is convex
- With price compression the level of convexity can
become negative (technically it is now concave) - Price change from increasing interest rates
becomes larger than the change from falling
interest rates
11Price vs. Call Price
- Note that the price of the bond can still be
higher than the face value plus call premium if
the bond has time before the call - 13 bond, callable at 5 premium in one year,
market rate is 5
12Bonds as Bundles
- Bonds with embedded options can be seen as a
package of bonds and options - Callable bond package of long an option free
bond and short a call option on bond - Putable (retractable) bond a package of long an
option free bond and long a put option on the
same bond
13Value of Options
- The option value is difficult to calculate since
most pricing models assume that the price
volatility of the underlying asset does not
change over time - The price volatility (modified duration) of the
bond changes with time and also with the level of
interest rates
14Another Problem
- Call options on bonds are American options while
pricing models are based on European options - Argument for using Euro for models is that it is
usually not worth exercizing early due to loss of
time value does not hold here since there are
intermediate cash flows
15Interest Rate Volatility
- The major influence on the price of a bond is
interest rates - Changes in interest rates can be measured over
time and the volatility can be estimated - Can be used to create an interest rate model
- Textbook model is single factor, lognormal random
walk, binomial interest ladder or lattice,
estimating potential forward rates
16Interest Rate Lattice
- A bond can be valued by taking the present value
of each cash flow, discounted by the product of
all applicable forward rates - The model assumes that the forward rate will take
one of two equally likely values - The higher rate lower rate x e2s
- Rates are found for each node using trial and
error
17Option-Free Value
- Once the interest rate lattice has been
constructed, other bonds can be analysed - Starting with the final cash flows (since the
intermediate prices can not be determined in
advance), fill in the nodes on the lattice - The price found should be identical to the one
found using the static spread analysis
18Valuation with Options
- As with the option-free bond, add the value of
the bond plus coupon to each node, but if the
bond is likely to be called (greater than call
price refunding cost), replace that value with
the call price - As above, but replace market values below the put
price with the put price
19Modelling Risk
- If the assumptions that the model is based on is
incorrect, the values derived from the model will
not be useful - The volatility assumption is critical
- The higher the volatility, the higher the value
of an option, the lower the price of a callable
bond - It is important to stress test the model
20Option Adjusted Spread
- The spread that would explain the current price
of a bond with an embedded option - Can be constructed over the treasury term
structure or the issuers term structure - Since there is disagreement between market
participants, knowing which assumption they are
using is critical
21Option Value in Spread Terms
- If we have the OAS in terms of the treasury
forward rate structure, we can calculate the
amount of the spread that is due to the embedded
option - option value static spread - OAS
- Main reason for spreads is because some market
participants prefer to talk about all investments
in terms of rate of return
22Effective Duration and Convexity
- Found using the approximation formulas
- Similar to modified if the option is deeply out
of the money
P- price if yield down P price if yield up P0
original price
23Finding P- and P
- Five step process for binomial model
- Calculate OAS for the bond
- Shift the treasury yield curve down/up a few
basis points - Construct the interest rate tree
- Add the OAS to each nodes interest rate
- Determine the value of the security
24Convertible Bonds
- Another type of embedded option
- A call option on a number of the issuers common
share where the exercise price is the bond,
regardless of current market value - Number of shares is conversion ratio
- Can be physical or cash settle
- Exchangeable bonds are similar options, but on
other companys shares
25Conversion Price
- The conversion price is simply the implied
exercise price of the option on a per share basis - If the bond is issued at par the conversion price
is
26Other Features
- Conversion ratio may change over time, on a
schedule given in the issue - Conversion ratio is adjusted for stock splits and
stock dividends - Most convertibles are also callable, which may
trigger early conversion - Some are putable (hard or soft put)
27Sample Convertible
28Minimum Price
- The bond will trade at a minimum of the greater
of the conversion value or straight (debt) value - conversion value how much the stock that the
bond can be converted to is worth - straight value the value of the convertible if
it did not have the conversion option
29Sample Minimum Price
- For the sample bond, conversion value
- 17 x 50 850
- Given a 14 yield on non-convertible otherwise
similar bonds, straight value - PVcoupons PVface 788
- This bond should trade for a minimum of 850
since that is the higher value
30Market Conversion Prices
- Since the exercise price is the bond, the
effective price of the common stock changes over
time
31Sample Conversion
- Market conversion price 950/50 19
- Market conversion premium per share 19 - 17
2 - Market conversion premium ratio 2/17 11.8
32Current Income
- One reason for not converting a convertible bond
before maturity, are the coupon payments - FIDPS Coupon/(conversion ratio) - dividend
- Premium payback period (break-even time)
Market premium per share Favourable income
differential per share
33Sample Income
- Coupon interest from bond 100
- Dividend per share 1
- Conversion ratio 50
- Favourable income differential per share
100/50 - 1 1 - Premium Payback Period 2/1 2 years
34Downside Risk
- Often measured as the premium over straight value
- (Market value/Straight value) - 1
- Sample bond 950/788 - 1 21
- Note the investor has more than 21 downside
risk since the YTM could increase, decreasing the
straight value
35Jargon
- A convertible where the option is well out of the
money is called a bond equivalent or busted
convertible - A convertible with a conversion value much higher
than its straight value is called an equity
equivalent - Between those it is a hybrid security
36Payoff
- Share price goes up to 34Shareholder return
100Convertible holder return 79 - Share price goes down to 7Shareholder return
-59Convertible holder return -17 - The convertible is less risky
37Call Risk
- One reason for issuing convertible bonds is that
the company would prefer to issue equity, but
considers the current price to be too low to be
worth issuing common shares - Conversion ratio is set to reflect reasonable
pricing - Call options can be used to force conversion
38Takeover Risk
- If the issuer gets taken over before the price of
the shares make conversion reasonable, the bond
holders may be left with a bond that pays a lower
coupon than similar corporate bonds
39Options Approach
- Similar to callable bonds, convertibles can be
viewed as a bond and an option - An additional problem here is that the exercise
price on the share changes over time as the
bonds market price is affected by changes in
interest rates - To make matters worse, most convertible bonds are
also callable