Title: Bond Pricing Duration and Convexity
1Lecture 7
- Bond Pricing Duration and Convexity
- Managing Bond Portfolios
2Review of Bond Pricing
- The bond price is
- C and r should be consistent with the frequency
of coupon payments. - Is coupon being paid annually or semiannually?
3Yield-to-Maturity (YTM)
- It is the interest rate (IRR) at which the PV of
the future payments is equal to the current
price. - If a bond maturing in n years from now makes two
payments of C/2 each year, then the YTM is the
value of r such that
4Current Yield
- It is the bonds annual coupon payment divided by
the current bond price. - It is similar to the concept of dividend yield
for shares. - The current yield is higher than the coupon rate
if the bond is selling at a discount. The current
yield is lower than the coupon rate if the bond
is selling at a premium.
5Yield-to-Call
- Some bonds are callable, which given the right to
the firm to retire the bond prior to the maturity
date. - Yield-to-call for callable bonds is just like the
YTM except that the time until call replace time
maturity, and the call price replaces the par
value.
6Example 1
- What is the price of a semi-annual coupon with 8
coupon rate and 30-year maturity? The
yield-to-maturity is 10. - Answer
- The YTM is greater than the coupon rate, so the
bond is sold at a discount.
7Example 1 (continued)
- If the bond is callable in 10 years at a call
price of 1,100, what is the yield-to-call? - Suppose the current price is 870.
- Solve for r.
- Using Excel IRR function. IRR 5.37.
- YTC 25.37 10.73
8Price-Yield Curve
- Bond prices and yields are inversely related.
- An increase in a bonds yield results in a
smaller price decline than the price gain
associated with a decrease of equal magnitude in
yield. - Prices of long-term bonds tend to be more
sensitive to interest rate changes than prices of
short term bonds.
9Price-Yield Curve (contd)
- As maturity increases, price sensitivity to yield
changes increases at a decreasing rate. - Interest rate risk is inversely related to the
bonds coupon rate. - Bond prices are more sensitive to changes in
yields when the bond is selling at a lower
initial YTM. - If a bond is sold at par, then its YTM must be
equal to its coupon rate.
10Zero-Coupon Bonds
- Zero coupon bonds do not pay coupons.
- The price of a zero is
- Origin The U.S. Treasury STRIP program.
- A coupon bond is a combination of a series of
zeros. Short cut to calculate bond price. - Australian zero coupon rates can be found in the
Datastream.
11Floating-Rate Bonds
- Floating-rate bonds (floaters) link interest
payments with some measure of current market
rates, such as LIBORs. - The coupon payments of inverse floaters are
negatively related to a reference rate. - A floater may have a cap and/or a floor.
12Price of a Floater
- The price of a floater depends on (1) the spread
over the reference rate, and (2) any restrictions
on the resetting of the coupon rate. - The price of a floater will trade close to its
par value as long as (1) the spread above the
reference rate that the market requires is
unchanged and (2) neither the cap nor the floor
is reached.
13Practical Example 1 PBL-PARS
- Publishing and Broadcasting Limited (PBL) issued
PARS in September 1999. It is listed on the
Australian Stock Exchange (code PBLHA). - PBL issued 3 million notes with a face value of
100 to raise 300mil. - Interest payments are four times a year.
- No maturity date perpetual unless redeemed by
the issuer. - It is rated BBB by standard and Poors.
-
14PBL-PARS
15Convertible Bonds
- Convertible bonds give the holders an option to
exchange each bond for a specified number of
shares of common stock of the firm. - The conversion ratio gives the number of shares
for which each bond may be exchanged.
16Convertible Bonds An Example
- Suppose a bond that is issued at par value of
1000 is convertible into 40 shares of a firms
stock. The current stock price is 20, so it is
not profitable to convert the bond into stocks.
However, when the stock price rises to 30, then
it is profitable to do so. - The value of a convertible bond is the sum of the
comparable straight bond and the option value of
conversion.
17Conversion Value and Premium
- Given the current stock price at 20, the
conversion value is 800. If the bond were sold
at 960, then the conversion premium would be
160. - Conversion is voluntary, but most convertibles
are also callable at the discretion of the firm.
18Practical Example 2 DIWGA Convertible Notes
- Issuer Djerriwarrh Investments Limited
- Quoted date12 July 2004
- Issue type Unsecured Convertible Notes
- Number on issue40,000,000
- Face value3.90 per note
- Maturity date30 September 2009 (unless converted
earlier) - Interest rate The notes will bear interest at a
rate of 6.5 per cent per annum on the face value
of the New Note accruing from the allotment date
and payable semi-annually on each interest
payment date - Interest payment dates First payment on 30
September 2004 (for the period from the Allotment
date to 30 September 2004) and then on 31 March
and 30 September each year until 30 September
2009.
19Practical Example 2 DIWGA Convertible Notes
(continued)
- Conversion details The new Notes may be
converted into Ordinary shares on a one for one
basis on 31 March or 31 September of each year
from the Allotment date to Maturity and at the
occurrence of certain events - Ranking The New Notes will be unsecured and rank
equally with any unsecured convertible notes
previously issued by the Company. Each Ordinary
shared issued on conversion will rank pari passu
and form one class with the Ordinary Shares then
on issue and be entitled to all dividends
declared after the date of conversion
20Call Policy
- Companies can force a conversion at a preset
price. - If you want to maximise the shareholders value,
you must not call the bonds if they are worth
less than the call price. - Similarly, you must not allow the bonds to remain
uncalled if their value is above the call price.
21Indexed Bonds
- The interest payments and the principals of
indexed bonds are linked with a general price
index (e.g. CPI) or the price of a particular
commodity. - The main purpose of using indexed bonds is to
hedge against inflation risk.
22Index Bonds An Example
- A 10-yr bond is indexed on the CPI. The annual
real coupon is assumed to be 4, and the
inflation rate is roughly around 3.
23Inflation Rate and Interest Rate
- The modified Fisher equation is
- Or, approximately,
- where p is the anticipated inflation rate, and p
is the inflation risk premium. - Investors require inflation risk premium because
of unanticipated inflation.
24Duration
- A measure of the effective maturity of a bond
- The weighted average of the times until each
payment is received, with the weights
proportional to the present value of the payment - Duration is shorter than maturity for all bonds
except zero coupon bonds - Duration is equal to maturity for zero coupon
bonds
25Duration Calculation
26Duration Calculation Example using Table 16.3
27Duration/Price Relationship
- Price change is proportional to duration and not
to maturity. It is the first derivative of the
price w.r.t. the interest rate. - ?P/P -D ?(1y) / (1y)
- D modified duration
- D D / (1y)
- ?P/P - D ?y
28Rules for Duration
- Rule 1 The duration of a zero-coupon bond equals
its time to maturity - Rule 2 Holding maturity constant, a bonds
duration is higher when the coupon rate is lower - Rule 3 Holding the coupon rate constant, a
bonds duration generally increases with its time
to maturity - Rule 4 Holding other factors constant, the
duration of a coupon bond is higher when the
bonds yield to maturity is lower
29Rules for Duration (contd)
- Rules 5 The duration of a level perpetuity is
equal to - Rule 6 The duration of a level annuity is equal
to
30Rules for Duration (contd)
- Rule 7 The duration for a corporate bond is
equal to - Rule 8 For coupon bonds selling at par, rule 7
simplifies to -
31Duration and Convexity
Yield
32Correction for Convexity
Correction for Convexity (second derivative)
33Portfolio Immunisation
- Portfolio immunisation insulate the portfolio
from interest rate risk, using duration matching. - Immunization of interest rate risk
- Net worth immunization (.e.g. banks and Insurance
companies) - Duration of assets Duration of liabilities
- Note the duration of a portfolio is a weighted
average of the duration of its components. But
this is not true for the convexity.
34Example
- An insurance company issues a 5 year Guaranteed
Income Contract (GIC) for 10,000. - A GIC is a zero-coupon bond.
- To insure the interest risk, the company funds
the obligation with a 6 year 8 annual coupon
bond. - Verify this with Rule 8.
- There is still some small residue difference due
to convexity. - Need to rebalance immunised portfolios.
35Cash Flow Matching and Dedication
- Why not to simply buy a 5 year zero-coupon bond
that covers the obligation for the GIC? - Cash flow matching on a multi-period basis is
referred to as a dedication strategy. - Cash flow matching is not more widely pursued
probably because of the constraints that it
imposes on bond selection. Sometimes, it is not
possible to find a good match.
36Contingent Immunization
- A combination of active and passive management.
- The strategy involves active management with a
floor rate of return. - As long as the rate earned exceeds the floor, the
portfolio is actively managed. - Once the floor rate or trigger rate is reached,
the portfolio is immunized.