Com 4FJ3 Fixed Income Analysis Week 3 Determinants of Interest Rates.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 25 Factors Affecting Bond Yields Fabozzi:Investment Management Graphics by.
Advertisements

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 6 The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates.
Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates -- Fin THE RISK AND TERM STRUCTURE OF INTEREST RATES Risk Structure of Interest Rates Default risk Liquidity.
Risk and term structure of interest rates
Fin424 (Ch 5) 1 Risk and Term Structure 1. Factors affecting Yields to Maturity 2. Yield Curve 3. Theoretical Spot Rate Curve 4. Forward Rate 5. Determinants.
Chapter 6 The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
Berlin, Fußzeile1 Bonds and Valuing Bonds Professor Dr. Rainer Stachuletz Corporate Finance Berlin School of Economics.
Characteristics of Taxable Securities Money Market Investments Highly liquid instruments which mature within one year that are issued by governments and.
Interest Rate Risk. Money Market Interest Rates in HK & US.
1 Yield Curves and Rate of Return. 2 Yield Curves Yield Curves  Yield curves measure the level of interest rates across a maturity spectrum (e.g., overnight.
The Term Structure of Interest Rates
INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin CHAPTER 15 The Term Structure.
Chapter 3 The Level and Structure of Interest Rates
Risk Structure of Long-Term Bonds in the United States
2-1 Copyright © 2006 McGraw Hill Ryerson Limited prepared by: Sujata Madan McGill University Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Third Canadian Edition.
Duration and Yield Changes
06-Liquidity Preference Theory. Expectations Theory Review Given that Expectations Theory: – Given that we want to invest for two years, we should be.
Chapter 3 Structure of Interest Rates © 2001 South-Western College Publishing Company.
Pricing Fixed-Income Securities. The Mathematics of Interest Rates Future Value & Present Value: Single Payment Terms Present Value = PV  The value today.
CHAPTER 15 The Term Structure of Interest Rates. Information on expected future short term rates can be implied from the yield curve The yield curve is.
Chapter 6. Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates Risk Structure Term Structure Risk Structure Term Structure.
How Do The Risk and Term Structure Affect Interest Rates
The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
THE STRUCTURE OF INTEREST RATES
Copyright © 2000 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 15 The Term Structure of Interest Rates.
Chapter 6 The Risk Structure and Term Structure of Interest Rates.
The Money Market. The money market is the market for short term debt – that is, debt that matures in less than or equal to one year. The main instruments.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Interest Rates and Bond Valuation Module 4.1.
Factors Affecting Bond Yields and the Term Structure of Interest Rates
Copyright © 2003 McGraw Hill Ryerson Limited 4-1 prepared by: Carol Edwards BA, MBA, CFA Instructor, Finance British Columbia Institute of Technology Fundamentals.
Yield Curves and Term Structure Theory. Yield curve The plot of yield on bonds of the same credit quality and liquidity against maturity is called a yield.
1 The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates Chapter 6.
Interest Rates and Returns: Some Definitions and Formulas
1 Bond Price, Yields, and Returns Different Bond Types Bond Price Bond Yield Bond Returns Bond Risk Structure.
CORPORATE FINANCIAL THEORY Lecture 8. Corp Financial Theory Topics Covered: * Capital Budgeting (investing) * Financing (borrowing) Today: Revisit Financing.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 5-1 How do risk and term structure affect interest rates? Yesterday, we examined interest.
Copyright  2011 Pearson Canada Inc Chapter 6 The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates.
The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
Financial Instruments
The risk and term structure of interest rates
Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill /Irwin Chapter Two Determinants of Interest Rates.
Fixed Income Analysis Week 2 Measuring yields and returns
The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
Introduction to Fixed Income – part 2
BOND VALUATION CONCEPTS FIN 3403, 3404 FIN 3403, 3404 PROF. DIGGLE.
Fixed Income Analysis Week 9 Bonds with Options
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Chapter 6 Interest Rates And Bond Valuation.
Comm 324 – W. suo Slide 1. Comm 324 – W. suo Slide 2  Face or par value  Coupon rate Zero coupon bond  Compounding and payments  Indenture  Issuers.
1 Bond:Analysis and Strategy Chapter 9 Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management.
Intermediate Investments F3031 Passive v. Active Bond Management Passive – assumes that market prices are fairly set and rather than attempting to beat.
Understanding the Concept of Present Value. Interest Rates, Compounding, and Present Value In economics, an interest rate is known as the yield to maturity.
© 2004 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 11 Fundamentals of Interest Rate Futures.
1 CHAPTER TWO: Time Value of Money and Term Structure of Interest.
Fixed Income Basics - part 2 Finance 70520, Spring 2002 The Neeley School of Business at TCU ©Steven C. Mann, 2002 Forward interest rates spot, forward,
CHAPTER 3 Structure of Interest Rates © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Yield Curve and Term Structure of Interest Rate. Base rate of interest –US Treasuries are “safer” than any other (US) debt security free of credit risk.
CHAPTER TWELVE Bonds: Analysis and Strategy CHAPTER TWELVE Bonds: Analysis and Strategy Cleary / Jones Investments: Analysis and Management.
The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill /Irwin 2-1 Chapter Two Determinants of Interest Rates.
© 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
1 Business F723 Fixed Income Analysis. 2 Plain Vanilla Bond Issuer Maturity Date Face Value ($1,000) Coupon Rate (paid 1/2 every six months) Financial.
Relationship among rates on bonds with different characteristics but same maturity. What causes interest rates on bonds with the same maturities to increase?
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 5 How Do Risk and Term Structure Affect Interest Rates?
1 FIN 2802, Spring 08 - Tang Chapter 15: Yield Curve Fina2802: Investments and Portfolio Analysis Spring, 2008 Dragon Tang Lecture 11 Bond Prices/Yields.
PowerPoint to accompany Chapter 6 Bonds. Copyright © 2011 Pearson Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Ltd) – / Berk/DeMarzo/Harford.
Chapter 5 Factors Affecting Bond Yields and the Term Structure of Interest Rates.
Fixed income securities valuation Spot rates and forward rates and bond equivalent yields 1.
The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
Bonds and interest rates
The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
Presentation transcript:

Com 4FJ3 Fixed Income Analysis Week 3 Determinants of Interest Rates

2 Base Interest Rate Defined as the minimum interest rate that investors would require for an investment of a particular maturity Often referred to as a benchmark rate Typically the “on the run” treasury notes –on the run; issued during the most recent treasury auction –not all maturities represented

3 Sample On the Run Rates

4 Yield Spread The difference between the base rate and the YTM of an issue Often called the risk premium –Verizon (A1), 10 year bond yields 4.93% –US Treasury, 10 year bond yields 3.95% –Yield spread= = 0.98% = 98 basis points

5 Yield Ratio Sometimes you want to present spreads as a relative measure –Verizon (A1), 10 year bond yields 4.93% –US Treasury, 10 year bond yields 3.95% –Yield ratio = 4.93/3.95 = May be more useful if interest rates are highly volatile

6 Type of Issuer Different market sectors in bond market have different characteristics; US Gov’t, foreign Gov’t, credit, municipal, etc. Subsectors in credit market; industrial, utility, finance, and noncorporate Intermarket sector spread; the difference between the average rates in a sector and the corresponding treasury

7 Credit Rating Usually credit quality is not calculated by individuals but left up to major credit rating companies. USA; Moody’s, S&P, Fitch Aaa, AAA, AAA  C, D, D Canada; Dominion, & Canadian AAA, A++  C, D

8 Rating Categories

9 Quality Spread Also known as credit spread That part of the spread that is explained by the difference in credit rating Should compare bonds that are “identical in all respects except for quality” Often awkward to set up in practice

10 Embedded Options Call options and others that are beneficial to the issuer will cause the risk premium to be larger than bonds without those options Put, conversion, extendible, etc. options that benefit the buyer will reduce the spread –Can drive YTM below treasury bill yields –Can even drive YTM negative

11 Taxation in USA Municipal bonds not taxed federally Treasury bond interest not taxed by municipalities, so part of the spread between treasuries and corporate bonds is actually not a credit spread Some states tax both, neither, or some combination

12 After-Tax Yield To compare yields, express all on an after- tax basis, multiply by (1 - marginal rate) –Complication, not all investors have same rate –Given a bond with a 5% pre-tax yield 40% tax rate investor: (5%)(1 -.4) = 3.0% 30% tax rate investor: (5%)(1 -.3) = 3.5% Can also calculate equivalent taxable yield

13 More Taxation Tax rates on interest and capital gains are different; high marginal tax rate investors have an incentive to buy discount bonds RRSP holdings are tax deferred, all income is treated the same… so, an incentive to buy premium bonds

14 Liquidity The more frequently a bond is traded, the lower the bid/ask spread Therefore issues with high liquidity have lower required yields Part of yield spread over treasury is due to lower liquidity since treasuries are usually the most liquid bonds

15 Financeability If a bond can easily be used as collateral for short term borrowing, it can have a lower yield spread Repo market can see a high demand for some issues as security dealers need access to those issues to “cover their shorts,” this can increase the value of the issue and drive down the yield spread

16 Term to Maturity Value of bond changes over time as the term to maturity changes Three main maturity sectors in bond market –Short-term; years –Intermediate term; years –Long-term; greater than 12 years Less than 1 year = money market

17 Yield Curve Different maturities have different required yields A plot of the required yields vs. time to maturity is call a yield curve Not all bonds will fall on the yield curve –Consider 2, 5-year treasury bonds with coupons of 12% and 3%, YTM is likely to be different

18 Yield Curve; September 1982

19 Yield Curve; March 1980

20 Yield Curve; January 1970

21 Yield Curve Concerns Using YTM as single discount rates does not consider information in yield curve Bonds can be considered as a package of zero coupon bonds Each cashflow could have an appropriate discount rate based on the term structure of interest rates or theoretical spot rate

22 Term Structure of Interest Rates The theoretical spot rate for zero coupon bonds for each maturity in the market Can be calculated by bootstrapping Often done with on the run treasury bonds assuming that they should trade at par

23 Bootstrapping Example A six month bond has a YTM of 5.25% A one-year par bond has a YTM of 5.5% –Present value the cash received at end of 6 months and 1 year, calculate the pure discount 1 year rate

24 Bootstrapping See the text for an enhanced example Calculate each six month rate over the 30 year maturity of the long treasury bond For missing maturities, use linear interpolation of the required YTM –can cause problems due to the fact that there are many maturities with no on the run treasuries to use… particularly between 10 and 30 years

25 Other Methods Other source groups of bonds can be used –On the run and select off the run –All treasury bonds; but sophisticated techniques needed as not all bonds of a particular maturity have the same yield, e.g. exponential spline –Treasury coupon strips: created by securities dealers, already pure discount, but include some liquidity and taxation issues

26 Using Theoretical Spot Rates Instead of discounting all spot rates at YTM discount each cashflow at the appropriate rate and sum the present values (p. 108) –Note: the price in this example is not what you get from YTM due to rounding and missing data for term structure Since securities dealers can split up those coupons we should expect to see that price

27 Implicit Forward Contracts A contract that commits both parties to a specific transaction in the future is a forward contract. A bank offering to pay you 10% interest on a $1,100 deposit that you agree to make one year from today, is offering a forward contract.

28 Implicit Forward Contracts If the bank is currently offering a one year rate of 10% and a 10% two year rate. Accepting that two year rate would be equivalent to accepting the one year rate with a $1,000 investment now and also entering into the forward contract detailed above. With the rates that the bank is offering, the bank implies that they would be willing to enter into that forward contract.

29 Forward Rates How can we find the forward rate? The basic tactic is to find the future value of the two investments and then future value the shorter investment to find the rate that would set the two investments equal. Consider a 5-year GIC at 6% e. a. r. and a 7-year GIC at 6.5% e. a. r. What is the effective annual rate that you are implicitly being offered for the final 2 years of the investment?

30 Forward Rates The investment effectively pays 7.76% in years 6 and 7.

31 Which is Better? It depends on you expect interest rates to be in 6 years. If you expect interest rates to be greater than 7.76% six years from now, you should choose the 5-year GIC and reinvest the proceeds in a two-year GIC. If you think that interest rates are unlikely to be that high, the 7-year investment will be a better option. Of course if you need to have the money available in five years and you are not allowed to sell or cancel the GIC before maturity, you'd want the five-year investment. The term structure can therefore be used to gauge what the market believes interest rates will be in the future.

32 Market Consensus Rates Forward rates calculated from bond market yields are often called market consensus rates Some don’t like the implication of the above and refer to the forward rate as a hedgeable rate, since you can hedge the 6 month rate six months from now using 6 month and one year t-bills

33 Term Structure Theory What do the calculated forward rates tell us about the market participant’s forecast of future interest rates 2 main theories; –expectations theory pure expectation vs. biased expectation –market segmentation

34 Unbiased Expectations Theory Also know as pure expectations theory UET says that the forward rates calculated by examining the bond market is the market estimate of the future rate of interest. If the forward rate is too high, speculators will want to lock in lending, causing high supply, driving the rate down.

35 Subsets of Pure Expectations Local Expectations Theory –The expected return on holding the bond is the same for all maturities for short holing periods Return-to-maturity expectations theory –The expected return on a 5 year pure discount bond is the same as the expected return of a series of 6 month bonds

36 Biased Expectations Theory Investing in bonds with maturities other than what your planning horizon increases the level of risk an investor faces Investors will add a risk premium to bonds in addition to their forecast level of future interest rates

37 Liquidity (Preference) Theory LPT says that longer maturities have more risk (interest and reinvestment) and therefore long rates are higher than the market participants actual expectations to compensate for the added risk. This liquidity premium is positively related to the time to maturity

38 Preferred Habitat Which is riskier, a 2-year zero or a 1-year zero reinvested for a second year? Depending on an investor’s needs, longer bonds could be less risky than short bonds This theory says that market participants have preferences and can only be lured to other maturities by better rates The risk premium in bonds is not necessarily directly related to the time to maturity

39 Market Segmentation Theory MST says that the markets for different maturities are virtually independent and the forward rates calculated are meaningless Money market participants will not look at long bonds or even medium bonds, long bond buyers are unconcerned with money market rates There are not enough speculators to balance the markets

40 PH vs. MST The strong version of market segmentation says market participants will not be swayed, even by 1 year in time to maturity, by price differences In the weak version, market participants will consider other maturities, depending on prices, is virtually indistinguishable from the preferred habitat expectations theory

41 Summary There is not just 1 interest rate Yield spread over treasury is common, for credit, liquidity, options, etc. Yield curve for treasuries can be converted to term structure of interest rates Exactly how the market forecast of interest rates affect the term structure is debatable