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Published byPaulina Woods Modified over 9 years ago
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Fixed Income
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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
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Who uses fixed income? Retail investors Retirement accounts Pensions
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Types of Fixed Income Annuities Tax-Exempt Bonds Taxable Bonds MBSs, CDOs, CMOs, MSRs
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Annuities Sold by financial institutions Accept and grow funds Payment later Accumulation phase Annuitization phase
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Structure Principal + Accumulated Returns Guaranteed Index Based Tax Benefits
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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?
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PV of Annuity Formula 0AAA A A AA A F i Discounting to Present Time
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FV of Annuity
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Present Value of an Annuity Use Future Value to get Present Value Discount
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Present Value of an Annuity Substitute in the Future Value
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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
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Components of Bonds Interest rate (Coupon) Principal Maturity Date Issue Price At par Face Value Intrinsic Value
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Types of Bonds Zero Coupon Convertible Callable Non-Callable
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Zero Coupon No regular coupon payments Issued at a discount to market Market price converges to face value
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Convertible They are bonds with an embedded call option Allows bondholders to convert debt into equity Attractive conversion
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Callable Company can call back bonds from debt holders Interest rate decrease ReFi Usually traded at a premium
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Features of Bonds Credit Quality Yield Pricing Duration
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Credit Quality Each bond has a credit rating Indicates likelihood of default Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch
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Ratings
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Yield Amount of return an investor will realize on a bond Nominal Yield Current Yield Yield Curve
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Treasury Yield Curve
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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
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Pricing Formula (Basic)
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Pricing Formula (Annuity Incorporation)
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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
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Duration Formula
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Types of Bonds Treasuries TIPS Municipalities Sovereign Corporate Many More…..
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Bond Market Size
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