Title: Chapter 4 Understanding Interest Rates
1Chapter 4 Understanding Interest Rates
2Chapter 4 Understanding Interest Rates
- Measuring interest rates
- Yield on a discounts
- The distinction between interest rates and
returns - The distinction between real and nominal rates
3Measuring Interest Rates
- Present Value
- A dollar paid to you one year from now is less
valuable than a dollar paid to you today - We can deposit money into a savings account and
earn interest
4Simple Loan
- The lender provides the borrower with an amount
of funds (principal) - The borrower repays the principal and an interest
payment at maturity - Interest Rate
5Discounting the Future
6Discounting the Future
- The process of calculating todays value of
dollars received in the future - If you are promised 100 of cash flow for certain
10 years from now, it would not be as valuable
today because you could invest it and earn more
than the initial 100.
7Simple Present Value
8Four Types of Credit Market Instruments
- Simple Loan
- Fixed Payment Loan (Fully Amortized Loan)
- The lender provides the borrower with funds that
must be repaid by making the same payment every
period - Coupon Bond
- Pays a fixed amount every year and then a
specified final amount (face or par value) is
repaid at maturity - Discount Bond
- Is bought below face value, at maturity receive
the face value
9Yield to Maturity
- The interest rate that equates the present value
of cash flow payments received from a debt
instrument with its value today - It is considered the most accurate measure of
interest rates
10Simple Loan
- For the case of the simple loan, calculating the
yield to maturity is the same as the present
value
11Simple Loan Yield to Maturity
12Fixed Payment Loan
- These loans are mortgages and other installment
type loans - The borrower makes the same payment to the bank
every month - To calculate yield to maturity we equate todays
value of the loan to all future payments
13Fixed Payment Loan Yield to Maturity
14Coupon Bond
- Not very popular today
- Got their name because the bond holder would have
to mail in a coupon to receive their payment - The bond is calculated by adding up the present
value of all coupon payments and the face value - A coupon bond is describe by its coupon rate
- i.e. if you get 100 coupon and it has a 1,000
face value it is considered a 10 (100/1,000)
coupon bond
15Coupon Bond Yield to Maturity
16- When the coupon bond is priced at its face value,
the yield to maturity equals the coupon rate - The price of a coupon bond and the yield to
maturity are negatively related - The yield to maturity is greater than the coupon
rate when the bond price is below its face value
17Consol or Perpetuity
- A bond with no maturity date that does not repay
principal but pays fixed coupon payments forever
18Discount Bond
- U.S. Treasury Bills
- Yield to Maturity is calculated similarly to the
simple loan - Thus, the interest rate is calculated by
- Where PV is the purchase price today and CF is
the face value
19Discount Bond
20Discount Bond Yield to Maturity
21Bond Prices
- The bond price and interest rate are negatively
related - As the interest rate increases
- Future coupon and final bond payments are worth
less when discounted back to the present - The opportunity cost of buying the bond
increases, thus you pay less for the bond
22Yield on a Discount Basis
23Yield on a Discount Basis
- Notice it uses the percent change of the face
value, YTM uses percent change of the price - Secondly, it uses only 360 days not 365 days
- Thus it understates the interest rate
- The percent change is also smaller (price value)
- The denominator is larger under the yield on a
discount
24Rate of Return and Interest Rates
- The return equals the yield to maturity only if
the holding period equals the time to maturity - An increase in interest rates is associated with
a fall in bond prices, resulting in a capital
loss only if the time to maturity is longer than
the holding period - i.e. dont buy the bond when interest rates are
expected to increase - The more distant a bonds maturity, the greater
the size of the percentage price change
associated with an interest-rate change
25Rate of Return
26Rate of Return and Interest Rates
- The more distant a bonds maturity, the lower the
rate of return that occurs as a result of an
increase in the interest rate - Even if a bond has a substantial initial interest
rate, its return can be negative if the interest
rate rises - If the bond is sold before the maturity date, the
return on the bond is different than the YTM
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28Interest-Rate Risk
- Prices and returns for long-term bonds are more
volatile than those for shorter-term bond - Interest rate increases hold short term bonds
- Interest rate decreases hold long term bonds
- There is no interest-rate risk for any bond whose
time to maturity matches the holding period
29Real and Nominal Interest Rates
- Nominal interest rate makes no allowance for
inflation - Real interest rate is adjusted for changes in
price level so it more accurately reflects the
cost of borrowing - Ex ante real interest rate is adjusted for
expected changes in the price level - Ex post real interest rate is adjusted for actual
changes in the price level
30Fisher Equation
31Returns
- So far we have only considered nominal returns
- A big reason for an increase in interest rates
are due to higher levels of inflation - Recently, the U.S. has experienced negative real
interest rates. - Only way to avoid inflation risk is to purchase
U.S. Treasury Bonds that are indexed to
inflation. - TIPS Treasury Inflation Protected Securities
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