MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 2: Fixed income securities

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 2: Fixed income securities"

Transcription

1 MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 2: Fixed income securities A. Salo, T. Seeve Systems Analysis Laboratory Department of System Analysis and Mathematics Aalto University, School of Science

2 Overview Financial instruments Annuities Bonds Duration Immunization Links 2/41

3 This lecture Simple loan (see Lecture 1) Interest is compounded by adding it to the principal There are cash flows only at the start and the end of the loan period Fixed income securities can have cash flows in the middle as well In this lecture, we derive valuation formulas for several types of fixed income securities 3/41

4 Overview Financial instruments Annuities Bonds Duration Immunization Links 4/41

5 Financial instruments Financial instrument = A tradable asset Cash, evidence of ownership, contract to receive cash or other financial instruments Security = A financial instrument which is traded in a well developed market Fixed income security = A security which provides non-random and preagreed cash flow Yet the issuer may default Sovereign failures, bankruptcy,... In this case, the income may be discontinued, delayed 5/41

6 Examples of financial instruments Savings deposits Money market instruments Short term loans (1 yr or less) by corporations and financial intermediaries Eurodollar deposits Bonds U.S. Treasury T-bills < 1yr, notes 2-10 yrs, bonds > 10 yrs Municipal bonds (issued by e.g. by cities) Corporate bonds Mortgages Annuities 6/41

7 Quality ratings Bonds offer a fixed cash flow unless the issuer defaults Ratings provided by credit rating agencies The Big Three : Moody s, Standard & Poor s, Fitch U.S. Treasury securities have historically been considered least risky Ratings grouped into grades of High, Medium, Speculative and Default danger High, medium = Investment grade Baa3 or higher (Moody s), BBB- or higher (S&P, Fitch) Other = Junk bonds 7/41

8 Market for future cash Fixed income securities define the time value of money Markets are very well developed Sovereign states, organizations, individuals can raise capital Most securities are highly liquid Market prices for these securities reflect 1. Time value of money 2. Risk premium (= compensation for the risk that the issuer defaults) 8/41

9 Overview Financial instruments Annuities Bonds Duration Immunization Links 9/41

10 Perpetual annuity Receive A e annually forever starting in a year s time r = interest rate The net present value of this cash flow is P = P = A r k=1 A (1 + r) k = A 1 + r r = A 1 + r + P 1 + r If A = e and r = 0.1, then P = e /0.1= e k=1 A (1 + r) k 10/41

11 Cash flows of finite length Get A e annually for the next n years Future cash flows discounted with interest rate r Present value P = = P = A r n k=1 A (1 + r) k A (1 + r) k k=1 }{{} A r ( 1 1 (1 + r) n A (1 + r) k k=n+1 }{{} 1 (1+r) n ) k=1 A (1+r) k = 1 (1+r) n A r 11/41

12 Examples of streams with finite life Get A = e annually for 20 years Interest rate r = 0.1 P = e 0.1 ( ) 1 1 ( ) 20 = e PV only e less than that of the corresponding perpetual annuity on slide 10 For high interest rates, only those cash flows that occur in the relatively near future are significant 12/41

13 Example: Consumer credit Loan P = e Compounded monthly at the nominal rate 12% p.a. r = 0.12/12 = 0.01 Amortize (=pay back) in 3 years in equal monthly payments (n = 36) What are the monthly payments A? Finite life stream with unknown A Solving the pricing equation on slide 11 for A gives A = r(1 + r)n P (1 + r) n 1 = 0.01( ) e ( ) e 1 Amortization table Loan at n + 1 = (Loan at n) (Amortization at n) 13/41

14 Example: Consumer credit n Loan capital Interest Amort. Payment n Loan ca. Inter. Amort. Paym /41

15 Overview Financial instruments Annuities Bonds Duration Immunization Links 15/41

16 Bonds as examples of fixed income securities A bond pays its face value (also known as par value) on the maturity date E.g. pay face value 100 e at Most bonds pay periodic coupon payments as well Coupon rate defined as a percentage of face value E.g., coupon rate 9% p.a. receive 9 e on every 1st of January until Coupon rates are often close to the prevailing interest rate when the bond is issued Historically, actual coupons were attached to the bond certificates Bond issuer Raises capitals by receiving the selling price Is liable for the payment of coupons and face value 16/41

17 Bond yield Yield (To Maturity)(YTM) = IRR of a bond p.a. at its current price (i) Face value F (ii) m coupon payments p.a., each payment C/m (iii) n periods (payments) left to maturity If the current price is P, then YTM is the rate λ > 0 such that P = P = F n [1 + (λ/m)] n + C/m [1 + (λ/m)] k k=1 }{{} F [1 + (λ/m)] n + C λ Finite life stream ( 1 1 [1 + (λ/m)] n ) 17/41

18 Bond yield As with IRR in general, YTM (λ) is computed numerically The previous formula is exact when valuing bonds at period shifts Adjustment needed for pricing between coupon payments Accrued interest (AI) Linear interpolation: AI = Days since last coupon Days in period Coupon payment Consider a bond which has face value e, coupon rate 9 % with coupon payments every Feb 15 and Aug 15. If this bond is bought on May 5, there are 83 days since last coupon payment and 99 days until next payment AI = % e = 20.52e 18/41

19 Example of bond quotes U.S. Treasury Quotes Wednesday, January 13, 2016 Treasury Notes & Bonds Maturity Coupon Bid Asked Chg Asked yield 1/31/ /31/ /15/ /15/ /29/ /29/ /31/ /31/ /30/ /30/ /15/ /15/ /31/ Coupon: Annual rate (%) Ask and bid prices: % of face value Chg: Daily change in asked price Asked yield: yield to maturity at asked price 19/41

20 Price-yield curve 20/41

21 Price-yield curve 21/41

22 Price-yield curve Yield λ = 0 if and only if the price equals the total cash flow, that is, P = F + nc/m Yield λ equals the coupon rate if and only if price P = face value F For large coupon rates, an increase in the yield λ reduces the price P more than for small coupon rates Coupons are a much larger share of the total cash flow For bonds of longer maturity, the price-yield curve is steeper Steeper curve bond prices are more sensitive to the interest rate 22/41

23 Overview Financial instruments Annuities Bonds Duration Immunization Links 23/41

24 Duration Consider the cash flow (c 0, c 1,..., c n ) which gives c i at time t i, i = 0,..., n The duration of this cash flow is D = PV (t 0)t 0 + PV (t 1 )t PV (t n )t n, PV where PV (t i ), i = 0, 1,..., n is the present value of c i and PV = PV (t 0 ) + + PV (t n ) This is the PV weighted average of the payment times t 0, t 1,..., t n of the cash flow (c 0, c 1,..., c n ) i-th weight = share of the PV (ti ) out of the total PV By definition, these weights add up to one 24/41

25 Duration Duration is a measure of the bond s average maturity If there are no coupons, then duration = maturity If there are coupons, then duration < maturity For two bonds with the same total cash flow (i.e., coupons + face value),the duration is shorter for the one with higher coupon rate 25/41

26 Macaulay duration What interest rate r should one use when computing duration? Macaulay duration: r = YTM D = PV = n k=1 k m n k=1 c k (1+ λ m )k, where PV c k (1 + λ m )k For bonds (derived in exercises) D = 1 + y my 1 + y + n(c y) mc[(1 + y) n 1] + my, where m = periods/years y = λ/m = per period yield n = periods left c = coupon rate 26/41

27 Modified duration The present value of cash flow c k is c k PV k = [1 + (λ/m)] k dpv k dλ = (k/m)c k [1 + (λ/m)] k+1 = (k/m)pv k 1 + (λ/m) The price sensitivity of a bond is n P = PV k dp dλ = k=1 n k=1 (k/m)pv k 1 + (λ/m) = 1 n k=1 (k/m)pv k P 1 + (λ/m) P dp dλ = (λ/m) DP = D MP, where D M is the modified duration D M = D/[1 + (λ/m)] 27/41

28 Applying of modified duration Consider a bond such that Maturity 30 y, no coupons (i.e., coupon rate 0 %) Price P equals face value Assume that interest rates rise from 10 % to 11% λ λ + λ, λ = 0.1, λ = 0.01 No coupons D = Maturity D M = 30/[ ] Linear approximation: P P P D M P λ D M λ = = 27.27% Price sinks by 27 % if the interest rate rises by 1% 28/41

29 Application of modified duration Consider the previous bond with Maturity 30 y, coupon rate 10 %, 2 coupons per year Price = face value Macaulay duration D = D M = 9.938/[1 + (0.1/2)] 9.47 Price change P P D M λ = = 9.47% The relatively decline in price is now much less because of the coupon payments 29/41

30 Duration of a portfolio Portfolio of bonds = a collection consisting of a set of m bonds Price P = P 1 + P 2 + P m Pi = price of bond i = 1, 2,..., m Theorem (Duration of a portfolio) Suppose there are m fixed-income securities with prices and durations of P i and D i, respectively, i = 1, 2,..., m, all computed using the same yield. Then the price P and duration D of the portfolio consisting of the aggregate of these securities are P = P 1 + P P m D = w 1 D 1 + w 2 D w m D m, where w i = P i /P, i = 1, 2,..., m 30/41

31 Duration of a portfolio Proof. Outline for the case of two securities A and B n D A PVk A = t k P A D B = P A D A + P B D B = k=0 n k=0 PV B k t k P B n ) t k (PV k A + PV k B k=0 PA D A + P B D B n k=0 P A + P B = t ( k PV A k + PVk B ) n k=0 PV k A + PV k B }{{} =D D = PA P DA + PB P DB 31/41

32 Overview Financial instruments Annuities Bonds Duration Immunization Links 32/41

33 Immunization Immunization makes the present value of the portfolio insensitive (immune) to interest rate changes Cash flows from unimmunized portfolios involve reinvestment risk E.g., 10 y bond vs. a series of 1 y bonds purchased each year at the prevailing interest rate Principle: Buy another portfolio of equal NPV whose value mimics that of the portfolio to be immunized as a function of interest rates If there are zero coupon bonds with many enough maturities, then perfect matching is possible This is difficult, however, because zero coupon bonds are uncommon and it is hard to find bonds whose maturities would coincide with those of the cash flows of the portfolio The other method is to use duration 33/41

34 Immunization Task: Immunize portfolio with duration D and price P Bonds A and B available for immunization Buy A and B for volumes V A and V B such that P = V A + V B D = w A D A + w B D B, where w i = V i P, i = A, B In practice, more than two bonds would used Helps diversify risk (of default) Leads to more variables than equations multiple solutions are possible 34/41

35 Example: Immunization A company is liable to pay 1 million e in 10 years No coupons Duration 10 y Immunize using the following three bonds whose face value is 100 e and which pay two coupons per year Bond Coupon rate Maturity (y) Price (e) YTM Duration (y) 1 6% % % % % % 9.61 The PV of the liability at the prevailing rate is P = e e [1 + (0.09/2)] 20 35/41

36 Example: Immunization If we use bonds 1 & 2 { P = V 1 + V 2 D = V 1 P D 1 + V 2 P D 2 { V1 = P D D 1 D 1 D V 1 = P D 1 D D 1 D { V1 P = V 2 P 2 = 69 = 4241 units of bond # = 1078 units of bond # 2 36/41

37 Example: Immunization If we use bonds 2 & 3 No solution with positive amounts of bonds (weighted average of D 2 = 6.54 and D 3 = 9.61 less than D = 10 with all positive weights) { V2 = P D 3 D D 3 D V 3 = P V { V2 P 2 = V 3 P 3 = = issue 465 units of bond # = purchase 4673 units of bond # 3 37/41

38 Example: Immunization Percent yield Price Bond 1 Shares Value Price Bond 2 Shares Value Obligation Value Surplus /41

39 Overview Financial instruments Annuities Bonds Duration Immunization Links 39/41

40 Links Bloomberg bond rates Yle news on Finnish governmental bonds Information on credit ratings Credit ratings of Finland Euro area yield curves Russia government bonds 10-year government bond spreads Debt structure of Stora Enso S&P credit rating of Stora Enso List of sovereign debt crises List of stock market crashes and bear markets 40/41

41 Overview Financial instruments Annuities Bonds Duration Immunization Links 41/41

MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 3: Term structure of interest rates

MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 3: Term structure of interest rates MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 3: Term structure of interest rates A. Salo, T. Seeve Systems Analysis Laboratory Department of System Analysis and Mathematics Aalto University, School of Science Overview

More information

Investment Science. Part I: Deterministic Cash Flow Streams. Dr. Xiaosong DING

Investment Science. Part I: Deterministic Cash Flow Streams. Dr. Xiaosong DING Investment Science Part I: Deterministic Cash Flow Streams Dr. Xiaosong DING Department of Management Science and Engineering International Business School Beijing Foreign Studies University 100089, Beijing,

More information

Bond Valuation. FINANCE 100 Corporate Finance

Bond Valuation. FINANCE 100 Corporate Finance Bond Valuation FINANCE 100 Corporate Finance Prof. Michael R. Roberts 1 Bond Valuation An Overview Introduction to bonds and bond markets» What are they? Some examples Zero coupon bonds» Valuation» Interest

More information

CHAPTER 14. Bond Characteristics. Bonds are debt. Issuers are borrowers and holders are creditors.

CHAPTER 14. Bond Characteristics. Bonds are debt. Issuers are borrowers and holders are creditors. Bond Characteristics 14-2 CHAPTER 14 Bond Prices and Yields Bonds are debt. Issuers are borrowers and holders are creditors. The indenture is the contract between the issuer and the bondholder. The indenture

More information

I. Introduction to Bonds

I. Introduction to Bonds University of California, Merced ECO 163-Economics of Investments Chapter 10 Lecture otes I. Introduction to Bonds Professor Jason Lee A. Definitions Definition: A bond obligates the issuer to make specified

More information

Bond Prices and Yields

Bond Prices and Yields Bond Characteristics 14-2 Bond Prices and Yields Bonds are debt. Issuers are borrowers and holders are creditors. The indenture is the contract between the issuer and the bondholder. The indenture gives

More information

Lecture 20: Bond Portfolio Management. I. Reading. A. BKM, Chapter 16, Sections 16.1 and 16.2.

Lecture 20: Bond Portfolio Management. I. Reading. A. BKM, Chapter 16, Sections 16.1 and 16.2. Lecture 20: Bond Portfolio Management. I. Reading. A. BKM, Chapter 16, Sections 16.1 and 16.2. II. Risks associated with Fixed Income Investments. A. Reinvestment Risk. 1. If an individual has a particular

More information

Fixed income security. Face or par value Coupon rate. Indenture. The issuer makes specified payments to the bond. bondholder

Fixed income security. Face or par value Coupon rate. Indenture. The issuer makes specified payments to the bond. bondholder Bond Prices and Yields Bond Characteristics Fixed income security An arragement between borrower and purchaser The issuer makes specified payments to the bond holder on specified dates Face or par value

More information

Economics 173A and Management 183 Financial Markets

Economics 173A and Management 183 Financial Markets Economics 173A and Management 183 Financial Markets Fixed Income Securities: Bonds Bonds Debt Security corporate or government borrowing Also called a Fixed Income Security Covenants or Indenture define

More information

I. Asset Valuation. The value of any asset, whether it is real or financial, is the sum of all expected future earnings produced by the asset.

I. Asset Valuation. The value of any asset, whether it is real or financial, is the sum of all expected future earnings produced by the asset. 1 I. Asset Valuation The value of any asset, whether it is real or financial, is the sum of all expected future earnings produced by the asset. 2 1 II. Bond Features and Prices Definitions Bond: a certificate

More information

Reading. Valuation of Securities: Bonds

Reading. Valuation of Securities: Bonds Valuation of Securities: Bonds Econ 422: Investment, Capital & Finance University of Washington Last updated: April 11, 2010 Reading BMA, Chapter 3 http://finance.yahoo.com/bonds http://cxa.marketwatch.com/finra/marketd

More information

Bond Valuation. Capital Budgeting and Corporate Objectives

Bond Valuation. Capital Budgeting and Corporate Objectives Bond Valuation Capital Budgeting and Corporate Objectives Professor Ron Kaniel Simon School of Business University of Rochester 1 Bond Valuation An Overview Introduction to bonds and bond markets» What

More information

Fixed Income Securities: Bonds

Fixed Income Securities: Bonds Economics 173A and Management 183 Financial Markets Fixed Income Securities: Bonds Updated 4/24/17 Bonds Debt Security corporate or government borrowing Also called a Fixed Income Security Covenants or

More information

ACF719 Financial Management

ACF719 Financial Management ACF719 Financial Management Bonds and bond management Reading: BEF chapter 5 Topics Key features of bonds Bond valuation and yield Assessing risk 2 1 Key features of bonds Bonds are relevant to the financing

More information

Interest Rates & Bond Portfolio Management

Interest Rates & Bond Portfolio Management Interest Rates & Bond Portfolio Management I. Background & Motivation. A. Bond Portfolio managers are interest rate timers. 1. If you expect rates to decline, buy bonds. 2. If you expect rates to rise,

More information

Deterministic Cash-Flows

Deterministic Cash-Flows IEOR E476: Foundations of Financial Engineering Fall 215 c 215 by Martin Haugh Deterministic Cash-Flows 1 Basic Theory of Interest Cash-flow Notation: We use (c, c 1,..., c i,..., c n ) to denote a series

More information

Chapter 4. Characteristics of Bonds. Chapter 4 Topic Overview. Bond Characteristics

Chapter 4. Characteristics of Bonds. Chapter 4 Topic Overview. Bond Characteristics Chapter 4 Topic Overview Chapter 4 Valuing Bond Characteristics Annual and Semi-Annual Bond Valuation Reading Bond Quotes Finding Returns on Bond Risk and Other Important Bond Valuation Relationships Bond

More information

Solution to Problem Set 2

Solution to Problem Set 2 M.I.T. Spring 1999 Sloan School of Management 15.15 Solution to Problem Set 1. The correct statements are (c) and (d). We have seen in class how to obtain bond prices and forward rates given the current

More information

JEM034 Corporate Finance Winter Semester 2017/2018

JEM034 Corporate Finance Winter Semester 2017/2018 JEM034 Corporate Finance Winter Semester 2017/2018 Lecture #1 Olga Bychkova Topics Covered Today Review of key finance concepts Present value (chapter 2 in BMA) Valuation of bonds (chapter 3 in BMA) Present

More information

MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 4: Applied interest rate analysis

MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 4: Applied interest rate analysis MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 4: Applied interest rate analysis A. Salo, T. Seeve Systems Analysis Laboratory Department of System Analysis and Mathematics Aalto University, School of Science Overview

More information

: Corporate Finance. Corporate Decisions

: Corporate Finance. Corporate Decisions 380.760: Corporate Finance Lecture 6: Corporate Financing Professor Gordon M. Bodnar 2009 Gordon Bodnar, 2009 Corporate Decisions Investment decision vs. financing decision until now we have focused on

More information

Valuing Bonds. Professor: Burcu Esmer

Valuing Bonds. Professor: Burcu Esmer Valuing Bonds Professor: Burcu Esmer Valuing Bonds A bond is a debt instrument issued by governments or corporations to raise money The successful investor must be able to: Understand bond structure Calculate

More information

Chapter 5. Valuing Bonds

Chapter 5. Valuing Bonds Chapter 5 Valuing Bonds 5-2 Topics Covered Bond Characteristics Reading the financial pages after introducing the terminologies of bonds in the next slide (p.119 Figure 5-2) Bond Prices and Yields Bond

More information

CHAPTER 5 Bonds and Their Valuation

CHAPTER 5 Bonds and Their Valuation 5-1 5-2 CHAPTER 5 Bonds and Their Valuation Key features of bonds Bond valuation Measuring yield Assessing risk Key Features of a Bond 1 Par value: Face amount; paid at maturity Assume $1,000 2 Coupon

More information

Chapter 16. Managing Bond Portfolios

Chapter 16. Managing Bond Portfolios Chapter 16 Managing Bond Portfolios Change in Bond Price as a Function of Change in Yield to Maturity Interest Rate Sensitivity Inverse relationship between price and yield. An increase in a bond s yield

More information

Chapter 3 Mathematics of Finance

Chapter 3 Mathematics of Finance Chapter 3 Mathematics of Finance Section R Review Important Terms, Symbols, Concepts 3.1 Simple Interest Interest is the fee paid for the use of a sum of money P, called the principal. Simple interest

More information

Fixed Income Investment

Fixed Income Investment Fixed Income Investment Session 1 April, 24 th, 2013 (Morning) Dr. Cesario Mateus www.cesariomateus.com c.mateus@greenwich.ac.uk cesariomateus@gmail.com 1 Lecture 1 1. A closer look at the different asset

More information

CHAPTER 8. Valuing Bonds. Chapter Synopsis

CHAPTER 8. Valuing Bonds. Chapter Synopsis CHAPTER 8 Valuing Bonds Chapter Synopsis 8.1 Bond Cash Flows, Prices, and Yields A bond is a security sold at face value (FV), usually $1,000, to investors by governments and corporations. Bonds generally

More information

Bond Analysis & Valuation Solutions

Bond Analysis & Valuation Solutions Bond Analysis & Valuation s Category of Problems 1. Bond Price...2 2. YTM Calculation 14 3. Duration & Convexity of Bond 30 4. Immunization 58 5. Forward Rates & Spot Rates Calculation... 66 6. Clean Price

More information

AFM 371 Winter 2008 Chapter 26 - Derivatives and Hedging Risk Part 2 - Interest Rate Risk Management ( )

AFM 371 Winter 2008 Chapter 26 - Derivatives and Hedging Risk Part 2 - Interest Rate Risk Management ( ) AFM 371 Winter 2008 Chapter 26 - Derivatives and Hedging Risk Part 2 - Interest Rate Risk Management (26.4-26.7) 1 / 30 Outline Term Structure Forward Contracts on Bonds Interest Rate Futures Contracts

More information

A Guide to Investing In Corporate Bonds

A Guide to Investing In Corporate Bonds A Guide to Investing In Corporate Bonds Access the corporate debt income portfolio TABLE OF CONTENTS What are Corporate Bonds?... 4 Corporate Bond Issuers... 4 Investment Benefits... 5 Credit Quality and

More information

CHAPTER 4 Bonds and Their Valuation Key features of bonds Bond valuation Measuring yield Assessing risk

CHAPTER 4 Bonds and Their Valuation Key features of bonds Bond valuation Measuring yield Assessing risk 4-1 CHAPTER 4 Bonds and Their Valuation Key features of bonds Bond valuation Measuring yield Assessing risk 4-2 Key Features of a Bond 1. Par value: Face amount; paid at maturity. Assume $1,000. 2. Coupon

More information

CHAPTER 14. Bond Prices and Yields INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS. Copyright 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

CHAPTER 14. Bond Prices and Yields INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS. Copyright 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 14 Bond Prices and Yields INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS 14-2 Bond Characteristics

More information

Lecture 4. The Bond Market. Mingzhu Wang SKKU ISS 2017

Lecture 4. The Bond Market. Mingzhu Wang SKKU ISS 2017 Lecture 4 The Bond Market Mingzhu Wang SKKU ISS 2017 Bond Terminologies 2 Agenda Types of Bonds 1. Treasury Notes and Bonds 2. Municipal Bonds 3. Corporate Bonds Financial Guarantees for Bonds Current

More information

Lecture 8 Foundations of Finance

Lecture 8 Foundations of Finance Lecture 8: Bond Portfolio Management. I. Reading. II. Risks associated with Fixed Income Investments. A. Reinvestment Risk. B. Liquidation Risk. III. Duration. A. Definition. B. Duration can be interpreted

More information

BOND ANALYTICS. Aditya Vyas IDFC Ltd.

BOND ANALYTICS. Aditya Vyas IDFC Ltd. BOND ANALYTICS Aditya Vyas IDFC Ltd. Bond Valuation-Basics The basic components of valuing any asset are: An estimate of the future cash flow stream from owning the asset The required rate of return for

More information

Disclaimer: This resource package is for studying purposes only EDUCATION

Disclaimer: This resource package is for studying purposes only EDUCATION Disclaimer: This resource package is for studying purposes only EDUCATION Chapter 6: Valuing stocks Bond Cash Flows, Prices, and Yields - Maturity date: Final payment date - Term: Time remaining until

More information

FINS2624 Summary. 1- Bond Pricing. 2 - The Term Structure of Interest Rates

FINS2624 Summary. 1- Bond Pricing. 2 - The Term Structure of Interest Rates FINS2624 Summary 1- Bond Pricing Yield to Maturity: The YTM is a hypothetical and constant interest rate which makes the PV of bond payments equal to its price; considered an average rate of return. It

More information

More Actuarial tutorial at 1. An insurance company earned a simple rate of interest of 8% over the last calendar year

More Actuarial tutorial at   1. An insurance company earned a simple rate of interest of 8% over the last calendar year Exam FM November 2005 1. An insurance company earned a simple rate of interest of 8% over the last calendar year based on the following information: Assets, beginning of year 25,000,000 Sales revenue X

More information

KEY CONCEPTS AND SKILLS

KEY CONCEPTS AND SKILLS Chapter 5 INTEREST RATES AND BOND VALUATION 5-1 KEY CONCEPTS AND SKILLS Know the important bond features and bond types Comprehend bond values (prices) and why they fluctuate Compute bond values and fluctuations

More information

Chapter 5. Bonds, Bond Valuation, and Interest Rates

Chapter 5. Bonds, Bond Valuation, and Interest Rates Chapter 5 Bonds, Bond Valuation, and Interest Rates 1 Chapter 5 applies Time Value of Money techniques to the valuation of bonds, defines some new terms, and discusses how interest rates are determined.

More information

Chapter 5. Interest Rates and Bond Valuation. types. they fluctuate. relationship to bond terms and value. interest rates

Chapter 5. Interest Rates and Bond Valuation. types. they fluctuate. relationship to bond terms and value. interest rates Chapter 5 Interest Rates and Bond Valuation } Know the important bond features and bond types } Compute bond values and comprehend why they fluctuate } Appreciate bond ratings, their meaning, and relationship

More information

INTRODUCTION TO YIELD CURVES. Amanda Goldman

INTRODUCTION TO YIELD CURVES. Amanda Goldman INTRODUCTION TO YIELD CURVES Amanda Goldman Agenda 1. Bond Market and Interest Rate Overview 1. What is the Yield Curve? 1. Shape and Forces that Change the Yield Curve 1. Real-World Examples 1. TIPS Important

More information

Lecture #1. Introduction Debt & Fixed Income. BONDS LOANS (Corporate) Chapter 1

Lecture #1. Introduction Debt & Fixed Income. BONDS LOANS (Corporate) Chapter 1 Lecture #1 Introduction Debt & Fixed Income BONDS LOANS (Corporate) Chapter 1 Fed, State, Local BONDS: Six sectors: U.S. Treasury Sector o Issued by U.S. Government o T-Bills, Notes, Bonds o The largest

More information

Bonds and Their Valuation

Bonds and Their Valuation Chapter 7 Bonds and Their Valuation Key Features of Bonds Bond Valuation Measuring Yield Assessing Risk 7 1 What is a bond? A long term debt instrument in which a borrower agrees to make payments of principal

More information

Chapter 4 Interest Rate Measurement and Behavior Chapter 5 The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates

Chapter 4 Interest Rate Measurement and Behavior Chapter 5 The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates Chapter 4 Interest Rate Measurement and Behavior Chapter 5 The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates Fisher Effect (risk-free rate) Interest rate has 2 components: (1) real rate (2) inflation premium

More information

Finance Concepts I: Present Discounted Value, Risk/Return Tradeoff

Finance Concepts I: Present Discounted Value, Risk/Return Tradeoff Finance Concepts I: Present Discounted Value, Risk/Return Tradeoff Federal Reserve Bank of New York Central Banking Seminar Preparatory Workshop in Financial Markets, Instruments and Institutions Anthony

More information

FUNDAMENTALS OF THE BOND MARKET

FUNDAMENTALS OF THE BOND MARKET FUNDAMENTALS OF THE BOND MARKET Bonds are an important component of any balanced portfolio. To most they represent a conservative investment vehicle. However, investors purchase bonds for a variety of

More information

Chapters 10&11 - Debt Securities

Chapters 10&11 - Debt Securities Chapters 10&11 - Debt Securities Bond characteristics Interest rate risk Bond rating Bond pricing Term structure theories Bond price behavior to interest rate changes Duration and immunization Bond investment

More information

RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH INVESTING IN BONDS

RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH INVESTING IN BONDS RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH INVESTING IN BONDS 1 Risks Associated with Investing in s Interest Rate Risk Effect of changes in prevailing market interest rate on values. As i B p. Credit Risk Creditworthiness

More information

Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates

Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates Economics 301: Money and Banking 1 1.1 Goals Goals and Learning Outcomes Goals: Explain factors that can cause interest rates to be different for bonds of different

More information

FINC3019 FIXED INCOME SECURITIES

FINC3019 FIXED INCOME SECURITIES FINC3019 FIXED INCOME SECURITIES WEEK 1 BONDS o Debt instrument requiring the issuer to repay the lender the amount borrowed + interest over specified time period o Plain vanilla (typical) bond:! Fixed

More information

Corporate Finance. Dr Cesario MATEUS.

Corporate Finance. Dr Cesario MATEUS. Corporate Finance Dr Cesario MATEUS www.cesariomateus.com Session 1 13.03.2015 Module Introduction to Corporate Finance The Objective Function in Corporate Finance Present Value and Related Metrics Risk

More information

Investments. Session 10. Managing Bond Portfolios. EPFL - Master in Financial Engineering Philip Valta. Spring 2010

Investments. Session 10. Managing Bond Portfolios. EPFL - Master in Financial Engineering Philip Valta. Spring 2010 Investments Session 10. Managing Bond Portfolios EPFL - Master in Financial Engineering Philip Valta Spring 2010 Bond Portfolios (Session 10) Investments Spring 2010 1 / 54 Outline of the lecture Duration

More information

Solutions For the benchmark maturity sectors in the United States Treasury bill markets,

Solutions For the benchmark maturity sectors in the United States Treasury bill markets, FIN 684 Professor Robert Hauswald Fixed-Income Analysis Kogod School of Business, AU Solutions 1 1. For the benchmark maturity sectors in the United States Treasury bill markets, Bloomberg reported the

More information

7. Bonds and Interest rates

7. Bonds and Interest rates 1 7. Bonds and Interest rates Fixed income may seem boring, but it s not. It s a huge and very dynamic market. Much larger than equities. Bond traders can take on similar levels of risk and earn similar

More information

Lecture 3. Chapter 4: Allocating Resources Over Time

Lecture 3. Chapter 4: Allocating Resources Over Time Lecture 3 Chapter 4: Allocating Resources Over Time 1 Introduction: Time Value of Money (TVM) $20 today is worth more than the expectation of $20 tomorrow because: a bank would pay interest on the $20

More information

Debt. Last modified KW

Debt. Last modified KW Debt The debt markets are far more complicated and filled with jargon than the equity markets. Fixed coupon bonds, loans and bills will be our focus in this course. It's important to be aware of all of

More information

LECTURE 2. Bond Prices, Yields and Portfolio Management (Chapters 10 & 11)

LECTURE 2. Bond Prices, Yields and Portfolio Management (Chapters 10 & 11) LECTURE 2 Bond Prices, Yields and Portfolio Management (Chapters 10 & 11) Bond Basics - Money Terms: Amount o Face Value / Par Value ($1,000) o Market Value quoted as a % of Par or the Face Value (priced

More information

Money and Banking. Lecture I: Interest Rates. Guoxiong ZHANG, Ph.D. September 11th, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Antai

Money and Banking. Lecture I: Interest Rates. Guoxiong ZHANG, Ph.D. September 11th, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Antai Money and Banking Lecture I: Interest Rates Guoxiong ZHANG, Ph.D. Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Antai September 11th, 2018 Interest Rates Are Important Source: http://www.cartoonistgroup.com Concept of

More information

INTRODUCTION TO YIELD CURVES. Amanda Goldman

INTRODUCTION TO YIELD CURVES. Amanda Goldman INTRODUCTION TO YIELD CURVES Amanda Goldman Agenda 1. Bond Market and Interest Rate Overview 1. What is the Yield Curve? 1. Shape and Forces that Change the Yield Curve 1. Real-World Examples 1. TIPS Important

More information

Copyright 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Bonds

Copyright 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Bonds Copyright 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Bonds What is a Bond? Debt securities that may pay a rate of interest based upon the face amount or par value of the bond Bond investors receive

More information

Fixed Income Investment

Fixed Income Investment Fixed Income Investment Session 4 April, 25 th, 2013 (afternoon) Dr. Cesario Mateus www.cesariomateus.com c.mateus@greenwich.ac.uk cesariomateus@gmail.com 1 Lecture 4 Bond Investment Strategies Passive

More information

CHAPTER 16: MANAGING BOND PORTFOLIOS

CHAPTER 16: MANAGING BOND PORTFOLIOS CHAPTER 16: MANAGING BOND PORTFOLIOS 1. The percentage change in the bond s price is: Duration 7.194 y = 0.005 = 0.0327 = 3.27% or a 3.27% decline. 1+ y 1.10 2. a. YTM = 6% (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) PV of CF

More information

Global Financial Management

Global Financial Management Global Financial Management Bond Valuation Copyright 24. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. See Credits for permissions. Latest Revision: August 23, 24. Bonds Bonds are securities that establish a creditor

More information

CHAPTER 14. Bond Prices and Yields INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS. Copyright 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

CHAPTER 14. Bond Prices and Yields INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS. Copyright 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 14 Bond Prices and Yields McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 14-2 Bond Characteristics Bonds are debt. Issuers are borrowers and holders are

More information

1.2 Horizon rate of return: return from the bond investment over a time horizon

1.2 Horizon rate of return: return from the bond investment over a time horizon MATH 4512 Fundamentals of Mathematical Finance Topic One Bond portfolio management and immunization 1.1 Duration measures and convexity 1.2 Horizon rate of return: return from the bond investment over

More information

An Introduction to Bonds

An Introduction to Bonds An Introduction to Bonds Agenda Bond basics Different types of bonds Bond features Yield and tax considerations Bond risks Credit quality Bond investing strategies and client suitability Defining Characteristics

More information

FIN 6160 Investment Theory. Lecture 9-11 Managing Bond Portfolios

FIN 6160 Investment Theory. Lecture 9-11 Managing Bond Portfolios FIN 6160 Investment Theory Lecture 9-11 Managing Bond Portfolios Bonds Characteristics Bonds represent long term debt securities that are issued by government agencies or corporations. The issuer of bond

More information

BOND NOTES BOND TERMS

BOND NOTES BOND TERMS BOND NOTES DEFINITION: A bond is a commitment by the issuer (the company that is borrowing the money) to pay a rate of interest for a pre-determined period of time. By selling bonds, the issuing company

More information

Summary. Chapter 6. Bond Valuation

Summary. Chapter 6. Bond Valuation Summary Chapter 6 Bond Valuation Learning objectives: This chapter will help you understand the important concepts relating to bonds and bond investing including bonds valuation. It will also take you

More information

Foundations of Finance

Foundations of Finance Lecture 9 Lecture 9: Theories of the Yield Curve. I. Reading. II. Expectations Hypothesis III. Liquidity Preference Theory. IV. Preferred Habitat Theory. Lecture 9: Bond Portfolio Management. V. Reading.

More information

MGT201 Financial Management All Subjective and Objective Solved Midterm Papers for preparation of Midterm Exam2012 Question No: 1 ( Marks: 1 ) - Please choose one companies invest in projects with negative

More information

Manual for SOA Exam FM/CAS Exam 2.

Manual for SOA Exam FM/CAS Exam 2. Manual for SOA Exam FM/CAS Exam 2. Chapter 6. Variable interest rates and portfolio insurance. c 2009. Miguel A. Arcones. All rights reserved. Extract from: Arcones Manual for the SOA Exam FM/CAS Exam

More information

Money and Banking. Lecture I: Interest Rates. Guoxiong ZHANG, Ph.D. September 12th, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Antai

Money and Banking. Lecture I: Interest Rates. Guoxiong ZHANG, Ph.D. September 12th, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Antai Money and Banking Lecture I: Interest Rates Guoxiong ZHANG, Ph.D. Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Antai September 12th, 2017 Interest Rates Are Important Source: http://www.cartoonistgroup.com Concept of

More information

Bond duration - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bond duration - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Page 1 of 7 Bond duration From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia In finance, the duration of a financial asset, specifically a bond, is a measure of the sensitivity of the asset's price to interest rate

More information

Bond Analysis, Portfolio Strategies, and Trade Executions AAII Washington, DC Chapter December 6, 2008

Bond Analysis, Portfolio Strategies, and Trade Executions AAII Washington, DC Chapter December 6, 2008 Bond Analysis, Portfolio Strategies, and Trade Executions AAII Washington, DC Chapter December 6, 2008 Presented by Bob Pugh, CFA President, Insight Wealth Management www.insightwealth.com This slide show,

More information

5-yr Investment Grade Corporate CDS Markit (bps) 500

5-yr Investment Grade Corporate CDS Markit (bps) 500 Treasury Yield Curve (percent) 2-yr/1-yr Treasury Spread (bps) % 7. 35 6. 3 25 5. 2 4. 15 3. 2. 1. Treasury Curve 'A' Composite 1 5-5. 1-yr 5-yr 1-yr 3-yr The Treasury yield curve is derived from available

More information

Savings and Investment. July 23, 2014

Savings and Investment. July 23, 2014 Savings and Investment July 23, 2014 Personal Financial Planning Process The personal financial planning process includes four main elements: Setting financial goals; Financial assessment; Developing and

More information

Review Class Handout Corporate Finance, Sections 001 and 002

Review Class Handout Corporate Finance, Sections 001 and 002 . Problem Set, Q 3 Review Class Handout Corporate Finance, Sections 00 and 002 Suppose you are given a choice of the following two securities: (a) an annuity that pays $0,000 at the end of each of the

More information

CHAPTER 9 DEBT SECURITIES. by Lee M. Dunham, PhD, CFA, and Vijay Singal, PhD, CFA

CHAPTER 9 DEBT SECURITIES. by Lee M. Dunham, PhD, CFA, and Vijay Singal, PhD, CFA CHAPTER 9 DEBT SECURITIES by Lee M. Dunham, PhD, CFA, and Vijay Singal, PhD, CFA LEARNING OUTCOMES After completing this chapter, you should be able to do the following: a Identify issuers of debt securities;

More information

BOND VALUATION. YTM Of An n-year Zero-Coupon Bond

BOND VALUATION. YTM Of An n-year Zero-Coupon Bond BOND VALUATION BOND VALUATIONS BOND: A security sold by governments and corporations to raise money from investors today in exchange for promised future payments 1. ZERO COUPON BONDS ZERO COUPON BONDS:

More information

MATH 4512 Fundamentals of Mathematical Finance

MATH 4512 Fundamentals of Mathematical Finance MATH 4512 Fundamentals of Mathematical Finance Solution to Homework One Course instructor: Prof. Y.K. Kwok 1. Recall that D = 1 B n i=1 c i i (1 + y) i m (cash flow c i occurs at time i m years), where

More information

1. Draw a timeline to determine the number of periods for which each cash flow will earn the rate-of-return 2. Calculate the future value of each

1. Draw a timeline to determine the number of periods for which each cash flow will earn the rate-of-return 2. Calculate the future value of each 1. Draw a timeline to determine the number of periods for which each cash flow will earn the rate-of-return 2. Calculate the future value of each cash flow using Equation 5.1 3. Add the future values A

More information

First Trust Intermediate Duration Preferred & Income Fund Update

First Trust Intermediate Duration Preferred & Income Fund Update 1st Quarter 2015 Fund Performance Review & Current Positioning The First Trust Intermediate Duration Preferred & Income Fund (FPF) produced a total return for the first quarter of 2015 of 3.84% based on

More information

3. Time value of money. We will review some tools for discounting cash flows.

3. Time value of money. We will review some tools for discounting cash flows. 1 3. Time value of money We will review some tools for discounting cash flows. Simple interest 2 With simple interest, the amount earned each period is always the same: i = rp o where i = interest earned

More information

Lecture 9. Basics on Swaps

Lecture 9. Basics on Swaps Lecture 9 Basics on Swaps Agenda: 1. Introduction to Swaps ~ Definition: ~ Basic functions ~ Comparative advantage: 2. Swap quotes and LIBOR zero rate ~ Interest rate swap is combination of two bonds:

More information

Understanding Interest Rates

Understanding Interest Rates Understanding Interest Rates Leigh Tesfatsion (Iowa State University) Notes on Mishkin Chapter 4: Part A (pp. 68-80) Last Revised: 14 February 2011 Mishkin Chapter 4: Part A -- Selected Key In-Class Discussion

More information

FINS2624: PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT NOTES

FINS2624: PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT NOTES FINS2624: PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT NOTES UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES Chapter: Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS Bond Pricing 3 Bonds 3 Arbitrage Pricing 3 YTM and Bond prices 4 Realized Compound Yield

More information

MBF1223 Financial Management Prepared by Dr Khairul Anuar

MBF1223 Financial Management Prepared by Dr Khairul Anuar MBF1223 Financial Management Prepared by Dr Khairul Anuar L4 Bonds & Bonds Valuation www.mba638.wordpress.com Bonds - Introduction A bond is a debt instrument issued by a borrower which has borrowed a

More information

You will also see that the same calculations can enable you to calculate mortgage payments.

You will also see that the same calculations can enable you to calculate mortgage payments. Financial maths 31 Financial maths 1. Introduction 1.1. Chapter overview What would you rather have, 1 today or 1 next week? Intuitively the answer is 1 today. Even without knowing it you are applying

More information

Bonds. 14 t. $40 (9.899) = $ $1,000 (0.505) = $ Value = $ t. $80 (4.868) + $1,000 (0.513) Value = $

Bonds. 14 t. $40 (9.899) = $ $1,000 (0.505) = $ Value = $ t. $80 (4.868) + $1,000 (0.513) Value = $ Bonds Question 1 If interest rates in all maturities increase by one percent what will happen to the price of these bonds? a. The price of shorter maturity bond and the long maturity bond will fall by

More information

Chapter Seven 9/25/2018. Chapter 6 The Risk Structure and Term Structure of Interest Rates. Bonds Are Risky!!!

Chapter Seven 9/25/2018. Chapter 6 The Risk Structure and Term Structure of Interest Rates. Bonds Are Risky!!! Chapter Seven Chapter 6 The Risk Structure and Term Structure of Interest Rates Bonds Are Risky!!! Bonds are a promise to pay a certain amount in the future. How can that be risky? 1. Default risk - the

More information

Lectures 1-2 Foundations of Finance

Lectures 1-2 Foundations of Finance Lectures 1-2: Time Value of Money I. Reading A. RWJ Chapter 5. II. Time Line A. $1 received today is not the same as a $1 received in one period's time; the timing of a cash flow affects its value. B.

More information

3. Time value of money

3. Time value of money 1 Simple interest 2 3. Time value of money With simple interest, the amount earned each period is always the same: i = rp o We will review some tools for discounting cash flows. where i = interest earned

More information

FIXED INCOME I EXERCISES

FIXED INCOME I EXERCISES FIXED INCOME I EXERCISES This version: 25.09.2011 Interplay between macro and financial variables 1. Read the paper: The Bond Yield Conundrum from a Macro-Finance Perspective, Glenn D. Rudebusch, Eric

More information

Corporate Finance. Dr Cesario MATEUS.

Corporate Finance. Dr Cesario MATEUS. Corporate Finance Dr Cesario MATEUS www.cesariomateus.com Session 1 06.02.2015 Module Introduction to Corporate Finance The Objective Function in Corporate Finance Present Value and Related Metrics Risk

More information

Financial Market Analysis (FMAx) Module 3

Financial Market Analysis (FMAx) Module 3 Financial Market Analysis (FMAx) Module 3 Bond Price Sensitivity This training material is the property of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and is intended for use in IMF Institute for Capacity Development

More information

Chapter 3: Debt financing. Albert Banal-Estanol

Chapter 3: Debt financing. Albert Banal-Estanol Corporate Finance Chapter 3: Debt financing Albert Banal-Estanol Debt issuing as part of a leverage buyout (LBO) What is an LBO? How to decide among these options? In this chapter we should talk about

More information

MBF2253 Modern Security Analysis

MBF2253 Modern Security Analysis MBF2253 Modern Security Analysis Prepared by Dr Khairul Anuar L9: Bonds and Bonds Valuation www.notes638.wordpress.com What is Bond Market? The bond market is a financial market where participants buy

More information