Title: Bonds
1Bonds
2Why Buy Bonds?
- Attractive to investors seeking steady income and
aggressive investors seeking capital gains - Promised yield to maturity is known at the time
of purchase - Can eliminate risk that a rise in rates decreases
bond price by holding to maturity - Diversification
3WHY ARE BONDS VIABLE INVESTMENT ALTERNATIVES?
- YIELD ON T-BONDS AND SP 500 DIVIDEND YIELD
4The Case Against Buying Bonds
- Dont hold bonds unless investing strictly for
income - Capital appreciation negative
- Alternative a combination of cash investments
and stocks - Investors should consider whether they could
build better portfolios that do not include bonds
5Are bonds important?
- Bond analysis is relevant for
- Pension funds that have major investments in
fixed income securities - In order to understand basics of discounting
- At individual level closely related to mortgages
etc.
6Market Value of a Bond
- Present Value of the Future Expected Cash Flows
discounted by the - Required Rate of Return
7Required Rate of Return
- Required Rate of Return on a Particular Bond is a
Function of - Real Risk Free Rate
- Inflation Risk
- Credit Risk
- Interest Rate Risk
- Call Risk
- Liquidity Risk
- Foreign Exchange Risk
8Bond Basics
- Indenture
- Bond contract specifying the terms of the bond.
- Terms that must be specified
- Bond Date
- Stated Rate
- Interest Date(s)
- Maturity Date
- Maturity Value
- Selected Optional Terms
- Callable
- Convertible
9How are the cash flows being sold specified?
- The bond terms specify the cash flows.
- Two types of cash flows
- Annuity
- Single Sum
- Annuity being sold is the periodic interest
payments. - SR X MV X 1/ interest pmts. per year
- Single sum is the maturity value
10What is the value of the bonds sold?
- The value of the bonds is measured at the present
value of the two types of cash flows being sold. - The cash flows are discounted (present value
determined) using the market rate of interest.
11Bond ExampleMarket Rate Stated Rate
- Terms
- Stated Rate 10
- Bond date June 1, 1997
- Maturity value 100,000
- Interest dates May 31 and Nov. 30
- Maturity Date May 31, 1999
- Information determined outside contract
- Market rate of interest 10
- Issue date Bond date
12Bond Value CalculationStep One
- Determine the cash flows associated with the bond
issue
13Bond Value CalculationStep One
- Determine the cash flows associated with the bond
issue
14Bond Valuation Step Two
- Determine the Present Value of the cash flows
determined in step one. - Calculate the Market Rate per interest payment
period - Annual Market rate / interest Pmts. per Yr.
15Bond Valuation Step Two
- Determine the Present Value of the cash flows
determined in step one. - Calculate the Market Rate per interest payment
period - Annual Market rate / interest Pmts. per Yr.
- 10 / 2 5 semi-annual rate
- Calculate the PV of each cash flow.
16Bond Valuation Step Two
- Determine the Present Value of the cash flows
determined in step one. - Calculate the Market Rate per interest payment
period - Annual Market rate / interest Pmts. per Yr.
- 10 / 2 5 semi-annual rate
- Calculate the PV of each cash flow.
17(No Transcript)
18Various Yield Measures You Need Know and Price
Volatility
- YTMYield to maturity
- YTCYield to call
- RCYRealized compound yield.
- Price Changes
19Yield to Maturity
For A Zero Coupon Bond
Investors Earn Yield to Maturity Only if Hold
to maturity Reinvest at the market rate
purchased to yield.
20(No Transcript)
21Yield to Call
- Yield to a specified call date and call price
- Substitute number of periods until first call
date for and call price for face value
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24Is the YTM the same as The Compound Annual Return
on Investment?
- Only if the periodic cash flows from the
investment are reinvested at the rate the bonds
were originally purchased to return. - In other words, if the RIR (reinvestment rate)
YTM (yield to maturity) then, - RCY (Realized Compound Yield) YTM
- Note, the RCY is the same as the Geometric return
we previously calculated.
25Realized Compound Yield
- Rate of return actually earned on a bond given
the reinvestment of the coupons at varying rates - Can only be calculated after investment period is
over - Horizon return analysis
- Bond returns based on assumptions about
reinvestment rates
26RIR YTM
RIR YTM RCY YTM
27RIR gt YTM
RIR gt YTM RCY gt YTM
28RIR lt YTM
RIR lt YTM RCY lt YTM
29Bond Price Changes
- What happens to FMV when interest rates change?
30Bond Price Changes
- Holding maturity constant, a rate decrease will
raise prices a greater percent than a
corresponding increase in rates will lower prices
Price
Market yield
31Measuring Bond Price Volatility Duration
- Important considerations
- Different effects of yield changes on the prices
and rates of return for different bonds - Maturity inadequate measure of a bonds economic
lifetime - A measure is needed that accounts for both size
and timing of cash flows
32Sensitivity to Rate Changes
33Whats the only difference between the two bond?
Bond 2 is more volatile.
Bond 2 maturity gt Bond 1 maturity
34Maturity and Price Volatility Given a Rate Change
2.68
4.83
35Sensitivity to Rate Changes
36Whats the only difference between the two bond?
Bond 1 is more volatile.
Bond 2 Coupon gt Bond 1 Coupon
37Summary of Volatility to Rate Changes
- Greater Maturity, Greater Volatility to rate
changes. - Lower Coupon, Greater Volatility to rate Changes.
38Duration
- A measure of a bonds lifetime, stated in years,
that accounts for the entire pattern (both size
and timing) of the cash flows over the life of
the bond - The weighted average maturity of a bonds cash
flows - Weights determined by present value of cash flows
39Calculating Duration
- Need to time-weight present value of cash flows
from bond - Duration depends on three factors
- Maturity of the bond
- Coupon payments
- Yield to maturity
40(No Transcript)
41Duration Used to Estimate Volatility
- Higher the duration, the greater the volatility
of the bond to rate changes - Need to calculate a Modified duration to estimate
the volatility.
42Estimating Price Changes Using Duration
- Modified duration DD/(1r/2)
- Dcan be used to calculate the bonds percentage
price change for a given change in interest rates
43(No Transcript)
44Duration Relationships
- Duration increases with time to maturity but at a
decreasing rate - For coupon paying bonds, duration is always less
than maturity - For zero coupon-bonds, duration equals time to
maturity - Duration increases with lower coupons
- Duration increases with lower yield to maturity
45Why is Duration Important?
- Allows comparison of effective lives of bonds
that differ in maturity, coupon - Used in bond management strategies particularly
immunization - Measures bond price sensitivity to interest rate
movements, which is very important in any bond
analysis
46Convexity
- Refers to the degree to which duration changes as
the yield to maturity changes - Price-yield relationship is convex
- Duration equation assumes a linear relationship
between price and yield - Convexity largest for low coupon, long-maturity
bonds, and low yield to maturity
47Duration Conclusions
- To obtain maximum price volatility, investors
should choose bonds with the longest duration - Duration is additive
- Portfolio duration is just a weighted average
- Duration measures volatility which isnt the only
aspect of risk in bonds
48Risk Structure of Rates
- Yield spreads
- Relationship between yields and the particular
features on various bonds
49Bond Yield Spread
- Attributes that affect a bonds value
- Time to maturity
- Term structure
- Coupon rate
- Call provisions
- Tax status
- Marketability
- Default probability
50Call provisions
- A provision in some bond indentures that permits
an issuer to retire some or all of the bonds in a
particular issue prior to maturity date stated
51Call provisions 2
- Issuer may find it advantageous to call existing
bond - if market interest rate is lower, then replace
existing bonds with lower rate bonds - Callable bonds have lower price
52Tax structure
- Taxation affects bond prices and yields
- low-coupon bonds selling at a discount provide
return in - coupon payments
- gains from price appreciation
- taxes on appreciation may be deferred until bond
sale or maturity (US) - discount bonds have a tax advantage
53Marketability
- Refers to the ability of the investor to resell
- Bid-ask spread is one indicator of marketability
- the higher the spread, the less marketable
- Bonds that are actively traded should have a
lower YTM.
54Default probabilities
- Some bond issuers may default (Mexican debt
crisis) - Probability of default important in pricing
- Bond ratings provided by professional services
- Moodys Investors Services, Inc.
- Standard Poors Corporate ratings
55Ratings
- Ratings go from AAA to D
- Categories
- investment grade usually the bonds in the top
four ratings (B or higher) - BB or lower are called speculative/junk bonds
- Lower ratings promise higher yields
56Ratings 2
- Better ratings are generally associated with
- larger financial leverage
- larger firm size
- larger and steadier profits
- large cash flows
- lack of subordination to other debt series
57(No Transcript)
58The Term Structure of Interest Rates
- Term structure of interest rates
- Relationship between time to maturity and yields
- Yield curves
- Graphical depiction of the relationship between
yields and time for bonds that are identical
except for maturity - Default risk held constant
59 60(No Transcript)
61Term Structure of Interest Rates
- Upward-sloping yield curve
- typical, interest rates rise with maturity
- Downward-sloping (or inverted) yield curves
- Unusual, predictor of recession?
- Term structure theories
- Explanations of the shape of the yield curve and
why it changes shape over time
62Pure Expectations Theory
- Long-term rates are an average of current
short-term rates and those expected to prevail
over the long-term period - Average is geometric rather than arithmetic
- If expectations otherwise, the shape of the yield
curve will change - Forward rates are rates that are expected to
prevail in the future
63Liquidity Preference Theory
- Rates reflect current and expected short rates,
plus liquidity risk premiums - Liquidity premium to induce long term lending
- Implies long-term bonds should offer higher
yields - Interest rate expectations are uncertain
64Preferred Habitat Theory
- Investors have preferred maturities
- Borrowers and lenders can be induced to shift
maturities with appropriate risk premium
compensation - Shape of yield curve reflects relative supplies
of securities in each sector - Most market observers are not firm believers in
any one theory
65Passive Bond Strategies
- Investors do not actively seek out trading
possibilities in an attempt to outperform the
market - Bond prices fairly determined
- Risk is the portfolio variable to control
- Investors do assess default and call risk
- Diversify bond holdings to match preferences
66Passive Bond Strategies
- Buy and hold
- Choose most promising bonds that meet the
investors requirements - No attempt to trade in search of higher returns
- Indexing
- Attempt to match performance of a well known bond
index - Indexed bond mutual funds
67Immunization
- Used to protect a bond portfolio against interest
rate risk - Price risk and reinvestment risk cancel
- Price risk results from relationship between bond
prices and rates - Reinvestment risk results from uncertainty about
the reinvestment rate for future coupon income
68Immunization
- Risk components move in opposite directions
- Favorable results on one side can be used to
offset unfavorable results on the other - Portfolio immunized if the duration of the
portfolio is equal to investment horizon - Like owning zero-coupon bond
69Active Bond Strategies
- Requires a forecast of changes in interest rates
- Lengthen (shorten) maturity of bond portfolio
when interest rates are expected to decline
(rise) - Horizon analysis
- Projection of bond performance over investment
horizon given reinvestment rates and future yield
assumptions
70Active Bond Strategies
- Identify mispricing among bonds then swap
- Substitution swap, yield pickup swap, rate
anticipation swap, sector swap - Interest rate swaps
- Exchange a series of cash flows
- Convert from fixed- to floating-rate
- Primarily used to hedge interest rate risk
71Building a Fixed-Income Portfolio
- If conservative investor
- View bonds as fixed-income securities that will
pay them a steady stream of income with little
risk - Buy and hold Treasury securities
- Conservative investor should consider
- Maturity, reinvestment risk, rate expectations,
differences in coupons, indirect investing
72Building a Fixed Income Portfolio
- If aggressive investor
- View bonds as source of capital gains arising
from changes in interest rates - Treasury bonds can be bought on margin to further
magnify gains (or losses) - Seek the highest total return
- International bonds
- Direct or indirect investment
73Immunization
74Bond A
75Bond B
76Bond A and B if Reinvestment Rate YTM
77Bond B if Reinvestment Rate lt YTM
78Bond A if Reinvestment Rate lt YTM