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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-1 Chapter 12
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-2 Chapter Summary Objective: To explore the pattern of interest rates for different-term assets. The term structure under certainty Forward rates Theories of the term structure Measuring the term structure
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-3 Relationship between yield to maturity and maturity Information on expected future short term rates can be implied from yield curve The yield curve is a graph that displays the relationship between yield and maturity Three major theories are proposed to explain the observed yield curve Overview of Term Structure of Interest Rates
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-4 Important Terms Bond yields Spot rates Forward rates Yield curve Term structure or pure yield curve Structure of forward rates Using observed rates to predict future rates
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-5 Yields Maturity Upward Sloping Downward Sloping Flat Yield Curves
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-6 Term structure analysis under certainty Assumption: Future one-period interest rates are known at time zero Zero-coupon bond prices found from these rates Yields on these zero-coupon bonds (spot rates) found from these prices Under certainty, forward rates are equal to future short-term rates
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-7 Expected Interest Rates in Coming Years (Table 12.1) Expected One-Year Rates in Coming Years YearInterest Rate 0 (today) 8% 110% 211% 311%
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-8 Pricing of Bonds using Expected Rates PV n = Present Value of $1 in n periods r 1 = One-year rate for period 1 r 2 = One-year rate for period 2 r n = One-year rate for period n
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-9 Long-Term Rates and Bond Prices using Expected Rates Time to Maturity Price of Zero*YTM 1$925.938.00% 2 841.758.995 3 758.339.660 4 683.189.993 * $1,000 Par value zero
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-10 Summary Reminder Objective: To explore the pattern of interest rates for different-term assets. The term structure under certainty Forward rates Theories of the term structure Measuring the term structure
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-11 Two Alternative Scenarios Alternative 2: Buy a two-year zero and reinvest proceeds in one-year zero 2-year investment 1-year investment 100 131.87 = 118.80(1+r 3 ) 118.80 = 100(1+y 2 ) 2 3-year investment 100131.87 = 100(1+y 3 ) 3 Alternative 1: Buy and hold a three-year zero
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-12 f n = one-year forward rate for period n y n = yield for a security with a maturity of n Forward Rates from Observed Long-Term Rates
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-13 Example of Forward Rates using Table 12.2 Numbers 4 yr = 9.993;3yr = 9.660; fn = ? (1.0993) 4 = (1.0966) 3 (1+f n ) (1.46373)/(1.31870) = (1+f n ) f n =.10998 or 11%` Note: this is expected rate that was used in the prior example
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-14 Downward Sloping Spot Yield Curve Zero-Coupon RatesBond Maturity 12%1 11.75%2 11.25%3 10.00%4 9.25%5
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-15 Forward Rates for Downward Sloping Yield Curve 1yr Forward Rates 1yr[(1.1175) 2 / 1.12] - 1 =0.115006 2yrs[(1.1125) 3 / (1.1175) 2 ] - 1 =0.102567 3yrs[(1.1) 4 / (1.1125) 3 ] - 1 =0.063336 4yrs[(1.0925) 5 / (1.1) 4 ] - 1 =0.063008
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-16 Uncertainty and forward rates Under certainty investors are indifferent between a short-term bond and a long- term bond sold before maturity, or between one long-term investment and a sequence of rolled-over short-term investments Under uncertainty the strategy whose return does not depend on an unknown future bond price is less risky
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-17 Summary Reminder Objective: To explore the pattern of interest rates for different-term assets. The term structure under certainty Forward rates Theories of the term structure Measuring the term structure
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-18 The Expectations Hypothesis Liquidity Preference Upward bias over expectations Market Segmentation Preferred Habitat Theories of Term Structure
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-19 Expectations Theory Observed long-term rate is a function of today’s short-term rate and expected future short-term rates Long-term and short-term securities are perfect substitutes Forward rates that are calculated from the yield on long-term securities are market consensus expected future short- term rates
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-20 Long-term bonds are more risky Investors will demand a premium for the risk associated with long-term bonds Yield curve has an upward bias built into the long-term rates because of the risk premium Forward rates contain a liquidity premium and are not equal to expected future short-term rates Liquidity Premium Theory
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-21 Liquidity Premiums and Yield Curves Yields Maturity Liquidity Premium Forward Rates Observed Yield Curve
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-22 Liquidity Premiums and Yield Curves Yields Maturity Liquidity Premium Forward Rates Observed Yield Curve
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-23 Short- and long-term bonds are traded in distinct markets Trading in the distinct segments determines the various rates Observed rates are not directly influenced by expectations Preferred Habitat Theory Modification of market segmentation Investors will switch out of preferred maturity segments if premiums are adequate Market Segmentation and Preferred Habitat Theories
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-24 What does the record say? Yield curves are mostly upward-sloping Liquidity premiums are hard to estimate and may not be constant Inverted yield curves generally point to declining interest rates Steeply rising yield curves are generally interpreted as signaling impending rate increases
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-25 Summary Reminder Objective: To explore the pattern of interest rates for different-term assets. The term structure under certainty Forward rates Theories of the term structure Measuring the term structure
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-26 Measuring the term structure - The bootstrapping method Derive spot rates from bond yields of varying maturities Treat each coupon as a mini-zero coupon bond Use bonds of progressively longer maturities, starting from T-bills “Clean price” method and “dirty price” method
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-27 Example: section 12.6, from Figure 11.1 Observe prices and yields on August 17, 2001; find the spot rate for December 1, 2002 Observed yields: 3.90%, 4.04% for 6M and 12M, respectively Observed clean price for bond expiring on December 1, 2002: $1002.29 Dirty price = clean price + (time elapsed in semesters) x coupon
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-28 Bootstrapping example (cont.) Solving, we find y 3 =4.16% annually
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-29 Using Spot Rates to price Coupon Bonds A coupon bond can be viewed as a series of zero coupon bonds To find the value, each payment is discounted at the zero coupon rate Once the bond value is found, one can solve for the yield It’s the reason for which similar maturity and default risk bonds sell at different yields to maturity
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-30 Sample Bonds Assuming annual compounding AB Maturity4 years Coupon Rate6%8% Par Value1,000 Cash flow in 1-36080 Cash flow in 41,0601,080
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-31 Calculation of Price Using Spot Rates (Bond A) PeriodSpot Rate Cash Flow PV of Cash Flow 1.056057.14 2.05756053.65 3.0636049.95 4.0671,060817.80 Total978.54
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-32 Calculation of Price Using Spot Rates (Bond B) PeriodSpot Rate Cash Flow PV of Cash Flow 1.058076.19 2.05758071.54 3.0638066.60 4.0671,080833.23 Total1,047.56
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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis RyanINVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 12-33 Solving for the YTM Bond A Bond Price = 978.54 YTM = 6.63% Bond B Price = 1,047.56 YTM = 6.61%
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