Title: EMBAF
1Bond Price Volatility
- Zvi Wiener
- Based on Chapter 4 in Fabozzi
- Bond Markets, Analysis and Strategies
2You Open a Bank!
- You have 1,000 customers.
- Typical CD is for 1-3 months with 1,000.
- You pay 5 on these CDs.
- A local business needs a 1M loan for 1 yr.
- The business is ready to pay 7 annually.
- What are your major sources of risk?
- How you can measure and manage it?
3Money Manager
value
0 t D
48 Coupon Bond
Zero Coupon Bond
5Price-Yield for option-free bonds
price
yield
6Taylor Expansion
- To measure the price response to a small change
in risk factor we use the Taylor expansion. - Initial value y0, new value y1, change ?y
7Derivatives
F(x)
x
8Properties of derivatives
9Zero-coupon example
10Example
y10, ?y0.5
T P0 P1 ?P 1 90.90 90.09 -0.45 2 82.64 81.16 -1
.79 10 38.55 35.22 -8.65
11Property 1
- Prices of option-free bonds move in OPPOSITE
direction from the change in yield. - The price change (in ) is NOT the same for
different bonds.
12Property 2
- For a given bond a small increase or decrease in
yield leads very similar (but opposite) changes
in prices. - What does this means mathematically?
13Property 3
- For a given bond a large increase or decrease in
yield leads to different (and opposite) changes
in prices. - What does this means mathematically?
14Property 4
- For a given bond a large change in yield the
percentage price increase is greater than the
percentage decrease. - What does this means mathematically?
15What affects price volatility?
- Linkage
- Credit considerations
- Time to maturity
- Coupon rate
16Bond Price Volatility
- Consider only IR as a risk factor
- Longer TTM means higher volatility
- Lower coupons means higher volatility
- Floaters have a very low price volatility
- Price is also affected by coupon payments
- Price value of a Basis Point (PVBP) price change
resulting from a change of 0.01 in the yield.
17Duration and IR sensitivity
18Duration
- F. Macaulay (1938)
- Better measurement than time to maturity.
- Weighted average of all coupons with the
corresponding time to payment. - Bond Price Sum CFt/(1y)t
- suggested weight of each coupon
- wt CFt/(1y)t /Bond Price
- What is the sum of all wt?
19Duration
- The bond price volatility is proportional to the
bonds duration. - Thus duration is a natural measure of interest
rate risk exposure.
20Modified Duration
- The percentage change in bond price is the
product of modified duration and the change in
the bonds yield to maturity.
21Duration
22Duration
23Duration
24Measuring Price Change
25The Yield to Maturity
- The yield to maturity of a fixed coupon bond y is
given by
26Macaulay Duration
- Definition of duration, assuming t0.
27Macaulay Duration
A weighted sum of times to maturities of each
coupon.
- What is the duration of a zero coupon bond?
28Meaning of Duration
29Parallel shift
r
T
30Comparison of two bonds
- Coupon bond with duration 1.8853
- Price (at 5 for 6m.) is 964.5405
- If IR increase by 1bp
- (to 5.01), its price will fall to 964.1942, or
- 0.359 decline.
- Zero-coupon bond with equal duration must have
1.8853 years to maturity. - At 5 semiannual its price is
- (1,000/1.053.7706)831.9623
- If IR increase to 5.01, the price becomes
- (1,000/1.05013.7706)831.66
- 0.359 decline.
31Duration
D
Zero coupon bond
15 coupon, YTM 15
Maturity
0 3m 6m 1yr 3yr 5yr 10yr 30yr
32Example
- A bond with 30-yr to maturity
- Coupon 8 paid semiannually
- YTM 9
- P0 897.26
- D 11.37 Yrs
- if YTM 9.1, what will be the price?
- ?P/P - ?y D
- ?P -(?y D)P -9.36
- P 897.26 - 9.36 887.90
33What Determines Duration?
- Duration of a zero-coupon bond equals maturity.
- Holding ttm constant, duration is higher when
coupons are lower. - Holding other factors constant, duration is
higher when ytm is lower. - Duration of a perpetuity is (1y)/y.
34What Determines Duration?
- Holding the coupon rate constant, duration not
always increases with ttm.
35Convexity
36Example
- 10 year zero coupon bond with a semiannual yield
of 6
The duration is 10 years, the modified duration
is
The convexity is
37Example
If the yield changes to 7 the price change is
38FRM-98, Question 17
- A bond is trading at a price of 100 with a yield
of 8. If the yield increases by 1 bp, the price
of the bond will decrease to 99.95. If the yield
decreases by 1 bp, the price will increase to
100.04. What is the modified duration of this
bond? - A. 5.0
- B. -5.0
- C. 4.5
- D. -4.5
39FRM-98, Question 17
40FRM-98, Question 22
- What is the price of a 10 bp increase in yield on
a 10-year par bond with a modified duration of 7
and convexity of 50? - A. -0.705
- B. -0.700
- C. -0.698
- D. -0.690
41FRM-98, Question 22
42Portfolio Duration
- Similar to a single bond but the cashflow is
determined by all Fixed Income securities held in
the portfolio.
43Bond Price Derivatives
- D - modified duration, dollar duration is the
negative of the first derivative
Dollar convexity the second derivative, C -
convexity.
44Duration of a portfolio
45ALM Duration
- Does NOT work!
- Wrong units of measurement
- Division by a small number
46Duration Gap
- A - L C, assets - liabilities capital
47ALM Duration
- A similar problem with measuring yield
48- Do not think of duration as a measure of time!
49- Key rate duration
- Principal component duration
- Partial duration
50Very good question!
- Cashflow
- Libor in one year from now
- Libor in two years form now
- Libor in three years from now (no principal)
- What is the duration?
51Home Assignment
- What is the duration of a floater?
- What is the duration of an inverse floater?
- How coupon payments affect duration?
- Why modified duration is better than Macaulay
duration? - How duration can be used for hedging?
52Home AssignmentChapter 4
- Ch. 4 Questions 1, 2, 3, 4, 15.
- Calculate duration of a consul (perpetual bond).
53End Ch. 4
54Understanding of Duration/Convexity
- What happens with duration when a coupon is paid?
- How does convexity of a callable bond depend on
interest rate? - How does convexity of a puttable bond depend on
interest rate?
55Callable bond
- The buyer of a callable bond has written an
option to the issuer to call the bond back. - Rationally this should be done when
- Interest rate fall and the debt issuer can
refinance at a lower rate.
56Puttable bond
- The buyer of a such a bond can request the loan
to be returned. - The rational strategy is to exercise this option
when interest rates are high enough to provide an
interesting alternative.
57Embedded Call Option
r
58Embedded Put Option
regular bond
r
59Convertible Bond
Payoff
Stock
60Timing of exercise
- European
- American
- Bermudian
- Lock up time
61Macaulay Duration
Modified duration
62Bond Price Change
63Duration of a coupon bond
64Exercise
- Find the duration and convexity of a consol
(perpetual bond). - Answer (1y)/y.
65FRM-98, Question 29
- A and B are perpetual bonds. A has 4 coupon, and
B has 8 coupon. Assume that both bonds are
trading at the same yield, what can be said about
duration of these bonds? - A. The duration of A is greater than of B
- B. The duration of A is less than of B
- C. They have the same duration
- D. None of the above
66FRM-97, Question 24
- Which of the following is NOT a property of bond
duration? - A. For zero-coupon bonds Macaulay duration of the
bond equals to time to maturity. - B. Duration is usually inversely related to the
coupon of a bond. - C. Duration is usually higher for higher yields
to maturity. - D. Duration is higher as the number of years to
maturity for a bond selling at par or above
increases.
67FRM-99, Question 75
- You have a large short position in two bonds with
similar credit risk. Bond A is priced at par
yielding 6 with 20 years to maturity. Bond B has
20 years to maturity, coupon 6.5 and yield of
6. Which bond contributes more to the risk of
the portfolio? - A. Bond A
- B. Bond B
- C. A and B have similar risk
- D. None of the above
68Portfolio Duration and Convexity
69Example
- Construct a portfolio of two bonds A and B to
match the value and duration of a 10-years, 6
coupon bond with value 100 and modified duration
of 7.44 years. - A. 1 year zero bond - price 94.26
- B. 30 year zero - price 16.97
70- Barbel portfolio consists of very short and very
long bonds. - Bullet portfolio consists of bonds with similar
maturities. - Which of them has higher convexity?
71FRM-98, Question 18
- A portfolio consists of two positions. One is
long 100 of a two year bond priced at 101 with a
duration of 1.7 the other position is short 50
of a five year bond priced at 99 with a duration
of 4.1. What is the duration of the portfolio? - A. 0.68
- B. 0.61
- C. -0.68
- D. -0.61
72FRM-98, Question 18
Note that 100 means notional amount and can be
misunderstood.
73Useful formulas
74Volatilities of IR/bond prices
- Price volatility in End 99 End 96
- Euro 30d 0.22 0.05
- Euro 180d 0.30 0.19
- Euro 360d 0.52 0.58
- Swap 2Y 1.57 1.57
- Swap 5Y 4.23 4.70
- Swap 10Y 8.47 9.82
- Zero 2Y 1.55 1.64
- Zero 5Y 4.07 4.67
- Zero 10Y 7.76 9.31
- Zero 30Y 20.75 23.53
75Duration approximation
- What duration makes bond as volatile as FX?
- What duration makes bond as volatile as stocks?
- A 10 year bond has yearly price volatility of 8
which is similar to major FX. - 30-year bonds have volatility similar to equities
(20).
76Volatilities of yields
- Yield volatility in , 99 ?(?y/y) ?(?y)
- Euro 30d 45 2.5
- Euro 180d 10 0.62
- Euro 360d 9 0.57
- Swap 2Y 12.5 0.86
- Swap 5Y 13 0.92
- Swap 10Y 12.5 0.91
- Zero 2Y 13.4 0.84
- Zero 5Y 13.9 0.89
- Zero 10Y 13.1 0.85
- Zero 30Y 11.3 0.74