Title: International%20Fixed%20Income
1International Fixed Income
- Topic IVB
- International Fixed Income Pricing -
- Investment Strategies
2Outline
- Strategies
- Relation between international fixed income bonds
- Examples of active strategies
- An example mean-variance analysis
3I. Strategies
- Trading strategies in the international fixed
income arena are theoretically separable - Currency bet
- buy fn. Gvt bond - could lose money if interest
rates rise - buy/sell forwards/futures in currency market
- Foreign interest rate bet
- buy fn. Gvt bond - could lose money if currency
depreciates - buy forward-hedged, foreign gvt. bonds
4Strategies continued.
- Interesting combinations of bets
suppose you thought US rates were going to
decline, but the /euro was going up, i.e., Euro
is appreciating.
What could you do? - Buy U.S. gvt. Bonds
- Sell U.S. forward for Euros
Youre exposed to US rates Euros at the
same time. You have converted future (risky)
into Euros.
5IA Pricing International Fixed Income Bonds
- How do you price future cash flows?
- What does interest rate parity tell us about
relative discount factors across countries? - General pricing formula
- Example from class
6Pricing Review
- Suppose we have an asset whose cash flows are
risk-free. - Then, by no arbitrage, the market value of the
asset must be
7Review of Interest Rate Parity
- Ftd/f/S0d/f (1rd)/(1rf)t
- Forward premiums and discounts are entirely
determined by interest rate differentials. - It holds by ARBITRAGE
- ...that is, if it didnt, you
- could make an infinite profit
8General Pricing Formula
- What these two no-arbitrage results tell us is
that the price of a foreign bond can be described
by the (I) domestic bond valuation, and (II) the
forward currency curve.
9Underlying Mathematics
The forward premium/discount is just the ratio
of the discount factors in the two countries,
i.e., between their prices of future currencies.
If a countrys discount factor is higher, then
it sells at a premium.
10General Pricing Formula
Using this result, then the value of a foreign
bond in dollar terms is
11Example of U.S. Treasury Bond
- From class earlier in semester, recall that the
6-mth, 1-yr and 1.5-yr discount factors for the
U.S. were 0.9730, 0.9476 and 0.9222,
respectively. - The corresponding exchange rate for /DEM is a
spot rate of .7095, and corresponding forward
rates of .7158, .7214 and .7256.
12Valuing A 1.5-Year, 8.5 T-Note
13Valuing A 1.5-Year, 8.5 Bund
This gives a total value in DEM of 10,658.78.
Why?
14Intuition
- What happened if the prices of these bonds were
different? - Translate the German bund into a U.S. bond by
converting future DEM cash flows into US . - Take US and discount them at U.S. rates. If this
value is different then the bund value times the
/DEM exchange rate, you have arbitrage!
15IB. Popular Active Strategies
- Tactical hedging strategy
- Hedge only a percentage of the currency risk,
depending on strength of currency forecasts
(e.g., if you expect currency to appreciate,
dont hedge as much) - R()Ru(1-P)Rh(P), where P hedged
- Currency overlay strategy
- Hedged foreign currency position, plus a currency
bet - R()RhP(St1/Ft), where -1ltPlt1
16Comparison of Strategies
- 4 strategies (hedge, no hedge, tactical, currency
overlay) based on forecasts - Levich-Thomas (1993) study of 5 markets
(DM,C,GBP,Yen,Global) over 1977-90 period. - Sharpe Ratio measures
(m-r)/s , i.e., excess return/risk
During this period, it was 0.12 for US
gvts.
17Sharpe Ratios
18Sharpe Ratios in Subperiods for Global Portfolio
of Intl. Bonds
19II. Mean-Variance Analysis
- One popular criteria for judging an investment is
to consider its expected return (its mean) versus
its risk (its volatility) - Mean-variance portfolios find the weights in each
individual security (in this case, intl. Gvt.
Bonds) which give minimum volatility for a given
level of expected return.
20Procedure
- Consider a portfolio of intl. Government bonds,
each with return, Ri. - The expected return on the portfolio is
- where wi is the weight in each bond.
- Find the weight wi that, for a given ER,
minimizes the risk, i.e., the vol. Of the
portfolio
21Example of Mean-Variance Efficient Portfolios
(unhedged and hedged), 1977-90
22Example of Mean-Variance Efficient Portfolios
(unhedged and hedged), 1977-90
23General Conclusions
- Substantial benefits in terms of risk reduction
by diversifying across bond markets - diversify
away idiosyncratic central bank and economy risks
that do not get incorporated into exchange rates. - There seem to be gains from actively managing
international bond portfolios by using forecast
methods for exchange rates - these methods were discussed earlier in the
course, and involve such techniques as
market-based and model-based (e.g., technical and
fundamental) methods.