Title: Bond Prices and the Importance of Duration
1Bond Prices and the Importance of Duration
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K. Hartviksen
2Bonds
- Please review and then study the chapter on bond
valuation. - Challenge the chapter problems.
- You must be able to perform calculations such as
- Current yield
- Yield to maturity
- Realized compound yield
- Input forward rates
3Malkiels Theorums of Bond Price Behaviour
- Be sure to understanding Malkiels bond theorums
- Inverse relationship between yields and prices
- Price volatility increases with time remaining to
maturity - Higher coupon rates lower interest rate risk
- The relative importance of theorum 2 diminishes
as maturity increases - Capital gains from a fall in interest rates
exceeds the capital loss from an equivalent
interest rate increase.
4Diversifying a Bond Portfolio
- Bond diversification
- There is no such thing as systematic and
unsystematic risk in bond portfolios - The two types of relevant risk in bond portfolios
are - Default risk - this topic has a great deal of
relevance to the bond portfolio manager, if you
can select bonds whose issuers will experience an
improved financial health and a higher bond
rating, required returns will fall and prices
will rise - Interest rate risk again, bond portfolio
managers may seek to improve returns on their
portfolio by making bets in accordance with their
yield curve forecasts
5Valuing Bonds
- Bonds and Bond Valuation
- Bond Features and Prices
- Bond Values and Yields
- Interest Rate Risk
- Finding the Yield to Maturity
- Bond Price Reporting
- Interest Rates
- Short-term interest rates Risk free rate - yields
on treasury bills - Determinants of short-term rates - Fisher Effect
(Inflation, nominal and real rates of return) - Term Structure of Interest Rates (Expectations,
Liquidity Preference, Segmentation Hypotheses)
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6Bond Features
- Fixed coupon rate expressed as a of the par or
face value - face value 1,000
- known term to maturity
- required rate of return is the rate the market
demands on such an investment YTM - coupon payments are usually made semi-annually
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7Bond Concepts
- Note the difference between Canada Bonds and
Canada Savings Bonds (CSBs) - CSBs are not negotiable.if you want to liquidate
such an investment you redeem them through a
financial institution like a Bank.
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8Bond Terminology
- Par value face value
- coupon rate
- term to maturity
- zero-coupon bonds
- call provision
- convertible bonds
- retractable and extendible bonds
- floating-rate bonds
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9Quoted Bond Prices
- Quoted bond prices do not include the accrued
interest that accrues between coupon payment
dates.
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10Bond Quality
- determinants of bond safety
- coverage ratios
- leverage ratio
- liquidity ratio
- profitability ratio
- cashflow to debt ratio
- bond ratings focus on the foregoing factors
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11Bond Indentures
- Contract between the issuer and bondholder
- protective covenants
- sinking funds (two systems)
- subordination of further debt
- dividend restrictions
- collateral
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12Bond Pricing
- Present value of all expected future cashflows
- Yield to maturity
- ex ante calculation
- underlying assumptions
- Yield to call
- Realized Compound Yield (ex post) versus Yield to
Maturity (ex ante) - Yield to Maturity versus Holding Period Return
- current yield
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13After-Tax Returns
- OID - original issue discount - example
zero-coupon bonds - OIDs result in an implicit interest payment to
the holder of the security. - Revenue Canada requires tax on imputed interest
each year.
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14Strip Bonds
- A derivative security
- a product created by an investment dealer
decomposing a government bond and selling
individual claims to the different parts of the
bond to different investors
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15Stripped Bond
- Is a claim on the face value of a coupon-bearing
bond. - The types of bonds that are stripped are often
- government of Canada
- provincial bonds
- Ontario Hydro, Hydro Quebec
K. Hartviksen
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16Stripped Bonds
- Why are they called a derivative security?
- Because the original or underlying security was a
normal bond that offered a stream of coupons
(strip) and a face value due at maturity. - Investment dealers buy up the original bonds,
then sell claims to the annuity and face value
separately.
New Market Price
New Market Price
Market Price
Stripped bond
K. Hartviksen
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17What is the appeal of a Stripped Bond for
investors?
- You avoid the problems associated with
reinvestment of the annual coupons. - A yield-to-maturity (YTM) calculation assumes
that all coupon interest that will be received is
reinvested at the ex ante YTM. - Because there are no intermediate cash flows
(coupon interest) involved in a stripped bondthe
ex ante YTM must equal the ex post YTM. This
allows the investor to lock in a rate of return
on their stripped bond investment for the term
remaining to maturity (as much as 30 years!
K. Hartviksen
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18Stripped bond example
- What price would you pay for a stripped bond if
it has 30 years to maturity, 20,000 face value
and offers a 12 yield-to-maturity? - P0 20,000(PVIFn30, k 12)
- 20,000 (.0334)
- 668.00
- Many people who are planning for retirement use
such securities to lock in a given rate of return
in their RRSPs. - Parents can use them to save for their childs
education through an RESP.
K. Hartviksen
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19Disadvantages of Stripped bonds
- You lock in a given rate of returnif interest
rates rise, the market value of the investment
will drop very rapidly. - As a derivative product, the investment is
illiquid (ie. No secondary market for this
exists). Your ability to liquidate your
investment will depend on the underwriters
willingness to reverse the transaction. Hence
this is not a good vehicle to use to make
speculative returns when trying to take advantage
of interest rate forecasts. - Held outside of an RRSP or RESP, the imputed
interest earned each year is subject to tax
despite the fact that you did not receive a cash
return.
K. Hartviksen
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20Interest Rate Price Sensitivity
- Because there are no coupon payments, stripped
bonds have a duration equal to their term to
maturity. - Because of the distant cashflow involved, the
current price (present value of that distant cash
flow) is highly sensitive to changes in interest
rates.
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21Price Sensitivity Example
- Take our previous example
- P0 20,000(PVIFn30, k 12)
- 20,000 (.0334)
- 668.00
- Assume now that interest rates fall by 16.7 from
12 to 10. What is the percentage change in
price of the bond? - P0 20,000(PVIFn30, k 10)
- 20,000 (.0573)
- 1,146.00
- Percentage change in price (1,146 - 668) /
668 - 71.6
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22Price Elasticity of Stripped Bonds
30 year stripped bond price given different YTM.
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23Bond Value
- Value C(PVIFAn,r) 1,000(PVIFn,r)
- involves an annuity stream of payments plus the
return of the principal on the maturity date
Bond Price discounted value of all future cash
flows
1 2 3 4 5 6 M
60 60 60 60 60 60 60
1,000
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24Yield to Maturity
- An ex ante calculation
- the discount rate that equates the market price
of the bond with the discounted value of all
future cash flows. - Is the investors required return
- changes in response to
- changes in the general level of interest rates in
the economy - changes in the risk of the issuing firm
- changes in the risk of the bond itself
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25Bond Price Behaviour
- Bond prices are affected by changes in interest
rates. - Bond prices are inversely related to interest
rates - Longer term bond prices are more sensitive to a
given interest rate change - low coupon rate bond prices are more sensitive to
a given interest rate change
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26Term Structure of Interest Rates
- Liquidity preference theory
- Expectations hypothesis
- Segmentation theory
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27Liquidity Preference Theory
- Investors require a premium for tying up their
investment in bonds over a longer period of time.
28Expectations Theory
- The current spot rate is the geometric average of
the forward rates expected to prevail over the
life of the investment. - r spot rate
- f forward rate
- (1 r2)2 (1 r1)(1 f2)
- f2 (1 r2)2 / (1 r1)
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29Segmentation Theory
- There may be separate supply/demand conditions
present at the short, intermediate, or long-term
part of the market. - These conditions can cause the yield curve to be
disjoint
30Duration
- is a handy tool because it can encapsule interest
rate exposure in a single number. - rather than focus on the formula...think of the
duration calculation as a process... - semi-annual duration calculations simply call for
halving the annual coupon payments and
discounting every 6 months.
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31Duration Rules-of-Thumb
- duration of zero-coupon bond (strip bond) the
term left until maturity. - duration of a consol bond (ie. a perpetual bond)
1 (1/R) - where R required yield to maturity
- duration of an FRN (floating rate note) 1/2
year
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32Other Duration Rules-of-Thumb
- Duration and Maturity
- duration increases with maturity of a
fixed-income asset, but at a decreasing rate. - Duration and Yield
- duration decreases as yield increases.
- Duration and Coupon Interest
- the higher the coupon or promised interest
payment on the security, the lower its duration.
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33Economic Meaning of Duration
- duration is a direct measure of the interest
rate sensitivity or elasticity of an asset or
liability. (ie. what impact will a change in YTM
have on the price of the particular fixed-income
security?) - interest rate sensitivity is equal to
- dP - D dR/(1R)
- P
- Where P Price of bond
- C Coupon (annual)
- R YTM
- N Number of periods
- F Face value of bond
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34Interest Rate Elasticity
- the percent change in the bonds price caused by
a given change in interest rates (change in YTM)
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35Economic Meaning of Duration
- interest rate sensitivity is equal to
- dP - D dR/(1R)
- P
- dP/P change in bond price
- dR/(1R) change in interest rate
- Obviously, the relationship is an inverse
function of Duration (D)
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36Example of Calculation of Interest Rate
Sensitivity
- given
- n 6 years (Eurobond ... annual coupon payments)
- 8 percent coupon
- 8 YTM
- if yields are expected to rise by 10, what
impact will that have on the price of the bond? - the first step is to calculate the duration of
the bond. - If there were no coupon payments the duration
would be 6. - since there are coupon payments the duration must
be less than 6 years. - D 4.993 years
- the second step is to calculate the change in
price for the bond. - -(4.993)(.1/1.08) - 0.4623 - 46.23
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37Immunization
- fully protecting or hedging an FIs equity
holders against interest rate risk. - elimination of interest rate risk by matching the
duration of both assets and liabilities. (not
their average lives or final maturities). - when immunized
- the gains or losses on reinvestment income that
result from an interest rate change are exactly
offset by losses or gains from the bond proceeds
on sale of the bond.
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38Example of Bond Price
- The Canada 10.25 1 Feb 04 is quoted at 123.95
yielding 5.27. This means that for a 1,000 par
value bond, these bonds are trading a premium
price of 1,239.50 - The figure represents bond prices as of June 17,
1998. - This bond has 5 years and 8 months
(approximately) until maturity 5(8/12) 5.7
years - Bond Price 102.50(PVIFAn5.7 ,r5.27)
1,000 / (1.0527)5.7 - 102.50(PVIFAr5.27, n 5.7) 746.21
- 102.50(4.8156653) 746.21
- 493.61 743.42 1,237.03
- Can you explain why the quoted price might differ
from your answer?
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K. Hartviksen
39Sensitivity Analysis of Bonds
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K. Hartviksen
40Prices over time
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K. Hartviksen
41Bond Pricing Theorums
42Theorums about Bond Prices
- 1. Bond prices move inversely to bond yields.
- 2. For any given difference between the coupon
rate and the yield to maturity, the accompanying
price change will be greater, the longer the term
to maturity (long-term bond prices are more
sensitive to interest rates changes than
short-term bond prices).
43Theorums about Bond Prices
- 3. The percentage change described in theorum 2
increases at a diminishing rate as n increases. - 4.For any given maturity, a decrease in yields
causes a capital gain which is larger than the
capital loss resulting from an equal increase in
yields.
44Theorums about Bond Prices
- 5. The higher the coupon rate on a bond, the
smaller will be the percentage change for any
given change in yields.
45Theorum Implications
- 1. It is best to buy into the bond market at the
peak of an interest rate cycle. - Because
- as interest rates fall, bond prices will rise
and the investor will receive capital gain (this
is important for investors with investment time
horizons that are shorter than the term remaining
to maturity of the bond.)
46Theorum Implications
- 1. It is best to buy into the bond market at the
peak of an interest rate cycle. - Because
- the bond will be priced to offer a high yield to
maturity. If your investment time horizon
matches the term to maturity for the bond, then
holding the bond till it matures should offer you
a high rate of return. (If it is a high coupon
bond, though, you will have to reinvest those
coupons when received a the going rate of
interest. If it is a stripped bond, then there
would be no interest rate risk and the ex ante
yield to maturity will equal the ex post yield.
47Theorum Implications
- 1. When you expect a rise in interest rates,
sell short/leave the market/move to bonds with
fewer years to maturity. - Because if rates rise, then you will experience
capital losses on the bond. Of course, paper
capital losses may not be particularly relevant
if your investment time horizon equals the term
to maturity because, as the maturity date
approaches, the bond price will approach its par
value regardless of prevailing interest rates.
48Theorum Implications
- 2. If interest rates go up your capital losses
will be smaller if you are in the short end of
the market. - So your choice of investing in bonds with short
or long-terms to maturity should be influenced by
your expectations for changes in interest rates.
If you think rates will rise (and bond prices
fall) invest short term. If you think rates will
fall (and bond prices rise) then invest in
long-term bonds. (The foregoing assumes that you
are not interested in purely immunizing your
position.
49Theorum Implications
- 2. If you are at the peak of the short-term
interest rate cycle, buying into the long end of
the market will bring you the greatest returns.
50Theorum Implications
- 3 It is not necessary to buy the longest term to
get large price fluctuations.
51Theorum Implications
- 4 For a given change in interest rates an
investor will receive a greater capital gain when
rates fall and he/she is in a long position, than
if he/she is short and interest rates rise.
52Theorum Implications
- 5 Bonds with low coupon rates have more price
volatility (bond price elasticity) than bonds
with high coupon rates, other things being equal. - It follows, that stripped bonds have the
greatest interest rate elasticity.
53How a change in interest rates affects market
prices for bonds of varying lengths of maturity.
1,055.35
10 yield-to-maturity
Years to maturity
54Bond Price Elasticity
55Bond Price Elasticity
- The sensitivity of bond prices (BP) to changes in
the required rate of return (I) is commonly
measured by bond price elasticity (BPe), which is
estimated as
56Example of Elasticity
- If the required rate of return changes from 10
percent to 8 percent, the bond price of a zero
coupon bond will rise from 386 to 463. Thus
the bond price elasticity is
57Example of Elasticity
This implies that for each 1 percent change in
interest rates, bond prices change by 0.997
percent in the opposite direction.
58Bond Price Elasticity and Bond Price Theorums
- The following table demonstrates how bond price
elasticity measures the effects of a given change
in interest rates on bonds with different coupon
rates. - Zero coupon or stripped bonds have the longest
durations because there are no intermediate cash
flows, hence they exhibit the greatest
elasticity. - The higher the coupon rate, the lower the
elasticity all other things being equal.
59Sensitivity of 10-year bonds with different
coupon rates to interest rate changes
60Bond Price Sensitivity and Term to Maturity
- The following chart explores the impact of the
term to maturity on bond price sensitivity - clearly, the longer the term to maturity, the
greater the bond price elasticity. - When interest rates rise, the bond price will
rise by a greater percentage, than the fall in
bond price in response to an equal but opposite
increase in interest rates.
61Sensitivity of 10-year bonds with different
coupon rates to interest rate changes
62Bond Prices and Term to Maturity
63Duration
- An alternative measure of bond price sensitivity
is the bonds duration. - Duration measures the life of the bond on a
present value basis. - Duration can also be thought of as the average
time to receipt of the bonds cashflows. - The longer the bonds duration, the greater is
its sensitivity to interest rate changes.
64Duration and Coupon Rates
- A bonds duration is affected by the size of the
coupon rate offered by the bond. - The duration of a zero coupon bond is equal to
the bonds term to maturity. Therefore, the
longest durations are found in stripped bonds or
zero coupon bonds. These are bonds with the
greatest interest rate elasticity. - The higher the coupon rate, the shorter the
bonds duration. Hence the greater the coupon
rate, the shorter the duration, and the lower the
interest rate elasticity of the bond price.
65Duration
- The numerator of the duration formula represents
the present value of future payments, weighted by
the time interval until the payments occur. The
longer the intervals until payments are made, the
larger will be the numerator, and the larger will
be the duration. The denominator represents the
discounted future cash flows resulting from the
bond, which is the bonds present value.
66Duration Example
- As an example, the duration of a bond with 1,000
par value and a 7 percent coupon rate, three
years remaining to maturity, and a 9 percent
yield to maturity is
67Duration Example ...
- As an example, the duration of a zero-coupon bond
with 1,000 par value and three years remaining
to maturity, and a 9 percent yield to maturity is
68Example of a Duration Calculation
69Duration of a Portfolio
- Bond portfolio mangers commonly attempt to
immunize their portfolio, or insulate their
portfolio from the effects of interest rate
movements. - For example, a life insurance company knows that
they need 100 million 30 years from now cover
actuarially-determined claims against a group of
life insurance policies just no sold to a group
of 30 year olds. - The insurance company has invested the premiums
into 30-year government bonds. Therefore there
is no default risk to worry about. The company
expects that if the realized rate of return on
this bond portfolio equals the yield-to-maturity
of the bond portfolio, there wont be a problem
growing that portfolio to 100 million. The
problem is, that the coupon interest payments
must be reinvested and there is a chance that
rates will fall over the life of the portfolio.
70Duration of a Portfolio ...
- The life insurance company example illustrates a
keep risk in fixed-income portfolio management -
interest rate risk. - The portfolio manager, before-the-fact calculates
the bond portfolios yield-to-maturity. This is
an ex ante calculation. As such, a naïve
assumption assumption is made that the coupon
interest received each year is reinvested at the
yield-to-maturity for the remaining years until
the bond matures. - Over time, however, interest rates will vary and
reinvestment opportunities will vary from that
which was forecast.
71Duration of a Portfolio ...
- The insurance company will want to IMMUNIZE their
portfolio from this reinvestment risk. - The simplest way to do this is to convert the
entire bond portfolio to zero-coupon/stripped
bonds. Then the ex ante yield-to-maturity will
equal ex post (realized) rate of return. (ie.
the ex ante YTM is locked in since there are no
intermediate cashflows the require reinvestment). - If the bond portfolio manager matches the
duration of the bond portfolio with the expected
time when they will require the 100 m, then
interest rate risk will be eliminated.