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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 1
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 2 Active strategy Trade on interest rate predictions Trade on market inefficiencies Passive strategy Control risk Balance risk and return Managing Fixed Income Securities: Basic Strategies
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 3 Yield Curve Changes It involves positioning a portfolio to capitalize on expected changes in the shape of the treasury yield curve Type of shifts in the yield curve: Parallel shift: changes in the yields on all maturities are the same yield change shortintermediate long yield change
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 4 Yield Curve Change... Non parallel shifts Twist: flattening or steepening of the yields curve Slope of the yield curve is usually measures by the spread between some long-term treasury and some short term treasury yields, e.g., 30 y over 12 year; 20 y over 2 y yield change Flattening Steepening
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 5 Yield Curve Change... Butterfly shift Change in the humpedness of the yield curve: both the yields on the short end and the long change in the same direction, while the yields with intermediate maturities change to an opposite direction yield change
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 6 Yield Curve Movement: Historical Facts The three types of movements combined can explain more than 90% of the yield curve changes They are not independent: downward shift usually combined the steepening of the yield curve upward shift usually combined the flattening of the yield curve
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 7 Yield Curve Strategy Yield curve analysis is important if one has a portfolio consisting of many different maturities Positioning a portfolio with respect to the maturities of the securities across the spectrum included in the portfolio Common strategies: Bullet strategy: securities in the portfolio are concentrated around one maturity Barbell strategy: concentrated around the extreme ladder strategy: evenly invested in securities with different maturities
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 8 Example Bullet portfolio (I): 100% of C Barbell portfolio (II): 50.2% of A, and 49.8% of B Duration: I: 6.434; II: 0.502*4.005+0.498*8.882 = 6.434 Dollar convexity: I: 55.4506; II: 0.502*19.8164+0.498*124.1702 = 71.7806 Yield: I: 9.25%, and II: 0.502*8.50%+0.498*9.50% = 8.998% BondCouponMatCash PrYieldMDDollar C’ty A8.551008.54.00519.8164 B9.5201009.58.882124.1702 C9.25101009.256.43455.4506
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 9 Example … Yield difference: 9.25%-8.998% = 25.2 b.p. This is referred to as the cost of convexity: giving up yield for better convexity Now suppose one has a 6-month investment horizon, which portfolio should he choose: Same duration Yield (I) > Yield (II) Convexity (I) < Convexity (II)
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 10 Spread Trades Consider the following bond that has a maturity on 5/15/2034 and the T-note with coupon 5.5% and matures on 11/30/2007 bidaskyieldSDAcc IntPVBP 108.8405108.9037.96%12/2/050.4086541200.643 109.0806109.14137.94%12/3/050.4326921204.999 109.8076109.87017.88%12/4/050.4567311218.246 bidaskyieldSDAcc IntPVBP 100.3735100.43605.30%12/2/050.03022187.3602 1004664100.52895.25%12/3/050.04533187.34 100.5967100.65925.18%12/4/050.06044187.4086
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 11 Spread Trades Yield Spread between 30 bond and the two year bond: 7.96%-5.30%=2.66% What can one do if he believes that yield would be significantly increase (or the slope of the yield curve will increase) in a couple of days? We don’t want to bear the risk of the yield curve having a parallel shift need to make the portfolio’s price risk to be zero: In order for the spread to increase: yield for the 30 year increase relatively more than the 2 year note yield for the 30 year decrease relatively less than the 2 year note How to setup portfolio to realize a profit based on one’s belief?
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 12 Spread Trades Relative price would change: 30 year bond would be relatively cheaper than the 2 year note short 30 year bond and long two year note Assume we want to short $100m par amount of 30 year bond. To eliminate the parallel shift risk, we need to long of par amount 2 year note Assume that the repo rate using the 2 year note as collateral is 5%, and reverse repo rate using the 30 bond as collateral is 4.9%
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 13 Trading Spreads … TraderRepo Dealer Trader Deliver two year note Borrow Cash Buy 2 Y note Borrow 30 Y bond Post cash as collateral Sell 30 Y bond ON 12/2/05 TraderRepo DealerTrader ON 12/4/05 Unwind the Position Sell the 2Y note Buy 30Y Bond Payback cash plus int Collect 2Y note Receive Cash plus int Return 30Y bond
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 14 Summary: On 12/2/2005 Borrow enough cash to buy the $641m par 2Y note (and post it as collateral): (100.4360+0.03022)*10,000*641=(643,988,470) Borrow 30Y bond and sell it (then post the cash as collateral): (108.8405+0.408654)*10,000*100 = 109,249.154 Net Cash Flow: 0 Note: usually repo dealers take haircut
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 15 On 12/4/04 Sell 2Y note: for the par amount $641m, (100.5967+0.0604)*10,000*641= 645.212,011 Repay the repo dealer: 643,988,470*(1+2*0.05/360)= (644,167,356) Collect cash plus interest from the repo dealer: 109,249,254*(1+ 2*0.049/360) =109,278,894 Buy the 30Y bond to cover the short position: (109.8701+0.4567)*10,000*100 =(110,326,800) Net:(3,251)
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 16 Spread Trades Profit & loss depends on: bid-ask spreads repo rates if the security that is long can earn a special repo rate, which is much higher, then the deal would have made money haircut
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 17 Substitution swap Inter-market swap Rate anticipation swap Pure yield pickup Tax swap Active Bond Management: Swapping Strategies
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comm 324 --- W. Suo Slide 18 Yield Curve Ride Maturity Yield to Maturity % 3M 6M 9M 1.50 1.25 0.75
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