Fixed Income
What is fixed income? When you hear fixed income what do you think about? A type of investing or budgeting style for which real return rates or periodic income is received at regular intervals at reasonably predictable levels
Who uses fixed income? Retail investors Retirement accounts Pensions
Types of Fixed Income Annuities Tax-Exempt Bonds Taxable Bonds MBSs, CDOs, CMOs, MSRs
Annuities Sold by financial institutions Accept and grow funds Payment later Accumulation phase Annuitization phase
Structure Principal + Accumulated Returns Guaranteed Index Based Tax Benefits
Present Value An individual wants to determine how much money she would need to put away to have $100 on year from today What we need?
PV of Annuity Formula 0AAA A A AA A F i Discounting to Present Time
FV of Annuity
Present Value of an Annuity Use Future Value to get Present Value Discount
Present Value of an Annuity Substitute in the Future Value
Bonds A debt investment in which an investor loans money to an entity which borrows the funds for a given period of time at a variable or fixed interest rate Used to finance capital expenditure Owners referred to as debtholders or creditors of the issue
Components of Bonds Interest rate (Coupon) Principal Maturity Date Issue Price At par Face Value Intrinsic Value
Types of Bonds Zero Coupon Convertible Callable Non-Callable
Zero Coupon No regular coupon payments Issued at a discount to market Market price converges to face value
Convertible They are bonds with an embedded call option Allows bondholders to convert debt into equity Attractive conversion
Callable Company can call back bonds from debt holders Interest rate decrease ReFi Usually traded at a premium
Features of Bonds Credit Quality Yield Pricing Duration
Credit Quality Each bond has a credit rating Indicates likelihood of default Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch
Ratings
Yield Amount of return an investor will realize on a bond Nominal Yield Current Yield Yield Curve
Treasury Yield Curve
Bond Pricing Premium, Discount, or Par Calculating max you want to pay Fundamentally: the price of a bond is the sum of the present values of all coupon payments plus the present value of the par value at maturity
Pricing Formula (Basic)
Pricing Formula (Annuity Incorporation)
Duration Measures price sensitivity to change in interest rates Longer maturity = more sensitive Expressed as a number of years Rising interest rates = falling bond prices Falling interest rates = rising bond prices
Duration Formula
Types of Bonds Treasuries TIPS Municipalities Sovereign Corporate Many More…..
Bond Market Size