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Kay Giesecke
Yield curve
A bond is specied by its face value F , the coupon rate c, the coupon frequency m and the maturity T For a bond (F, c, m, T ) with price P , the YTM is the IRR In the previous chapter, we xed a bond with maturity T and considered the bond price P as a function P () of the yield Now we consider bonds in a given quality class (e.g. treasury bonds, AAA corporate bonds) but with dierent maturities The yield curve displays the yield as a function (T ) of maturity T Normal curve is increasing Inverted curve is decreasing Relative pricing information
Kay Giesecke
Kay Giesecke
Consider a zero coupon bond with face value F that matures i years F from now; its price P is given by P = F di = (1+ si )i For i > 0 we nd the corresponding spot rate si via si = F P
1 i
Given the prices of zero bonds with various maturities, we can construct the spot rate curve
Kay Giesecke
Kay Giesecke
Forward rates
We consider the interest rate that is available for borrowing money in the future, under terms agreed upon today The forward rate ft1 ,t2 between time t1 0 and t2 > t1 is the annual interest rate for money held over the time period [t1 , t2 ]. This rate is agreed upon today. Clearly f0,t = st for all t. For a set of spot rates (si ) based on annual compounding, the forward rate fi,j between years i and j > i satises (1 + sj )j = (1 + si )i (1 + fi,j )j i so that the forward rate implied by the spot rates is given by fi,j = (1 + sj ) (1 + si )i
j
1 j i
Kay Giesecke
Forward rates
Arbitrage argument Consider two ways of investing a dollar for j years at the currently available rates Invest in a j year account. A dollar will grow to (1 + sj )j . Invest in a i year account for some i < j . At i, take out the (1 + si )i and invest in a j i year account that accrues interest at an annual rate fi,j that you agree upon today. A dollar will grow to (1 + si )i (1 + fi,j )j i . In the absence of arbitrage opportunities and transaction costs, we must have (1 + sj )j = (1 + si )i (1 + fi,j )j i
Kay Giesecke
Short rates
The short rate ri at year i is the forward rate fi,i+1 Short rates are as fundamental as spot rates, since a complete set of short rates fully species the term structure: (1 + si )i = (1 + r0 )(1 + r1 ) (1 + ri1 ) and also (1 + fi,j )j i = (1 + ri )(1 + ri+1 ) (1 + rj 1 )
Kay Giesecke
Compounding conventions
Above we considered spot rates, forward rates and short rates based on annual compounding All these rates can also be dened based on discrete compounding several times a year and continuous compounding Problem: Express the rates under continuous compounding
Kay Giesecke
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Compounding conventions
Solution The accumulation factor is est t with st the spot rate for [0, t] For t1 0 and t2 > t1 the forward rate ft1 ,t2 satises exp(st2 t2 ) = exp(st1 t1 ) exp(ft1 ,t2 (t2 t1 )) and therefore ft1 ,t2 Assuming that
d dt st
st2 t2 st1 t1 = t2 t1
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Expectations dynamics
Forecasting future spot rates Suppose the expectations about future spot rates implied by current spot rates will actually be fullled We can forecast next years spot rate curve from the current one, and this curve implies another set of expectations for the following year. If these are fullled, too, we can predict ahead once again, generating spot rate curve dynamics Let (si ) be the current spot rate curve. If expectations will actually be fullled, then the j year spot rate available next year will be equal to the forward rate f1,1+j implied by (si ), given by f1,1+j = (1 + s1+j ) 1 + s1
1+j
1 j
1,
0<jn
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Expectations dynamics
Forecasting future spot rates Here is an example: s1 Current 1yr Forecast Calculate the forecast rates using annual compounding 6.00 s2 6.45 s3 6.80 s4 7.10 s5 7.36 s6 7.56 s7 7.77
Kay Giesecke
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Expectations dynamics
Forecasting future spot rates Here is an example: s1 Current 1yr Forecast 6.00 6.90 s2 6.45 7.20 s3 6.80 7.47 s4 7.10 7.70 s5 7.36 7.88 s6 7.56 8.06 s7 7.77
Since the j year spot rate available next year will be equal to the forward rate f1,1+j implied by (si ), next years spot rate forecast is f1,2 (1 + s2 )2 = 1 = 0.069 1 + s1 (1 + s3 ) 1 + s1
3
1 2
f1,3 =
1 = 0.0720
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Expectations dynamics
Invariance theorem Suppose you have to invest a xed amount in Treasuries for n years, without withdrawing funds before n Multitude of choices whose values depend on future rates Theorem. Suppose interest rates evolve according to expectations dynamics. Then, with annual compounding, a sum invested in the interest rate market for n years will grow by a factor of (1 + sn )n independent of the investment and reinvestment strategy, so long as all funds are fully invested. Interpret this in terms of the short rates, which do not change under expectations dynamics: every investment earns the relevant short rates over its duration
Kay Giesecke
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Expectations dynamics
Invariance theorem Proof for n = 2. You have two choices: Invest into a 2 year zero that will have grown to (1 + s2 )2 after 2 years Invest into a 1 year zero that will have grown to (1 + s1 ) after a year, and then reinvest into another 1 year zero at the then current 1 year spot rate. Under expectations dynamics, this rate will be equal to todays forward rate f1,2 for next year (the short rate r1 ), and so the investment will have grown after 2 years to (1 + s1 )(1 + f1,2 ) = (1 + s2 )2 by the denition of the forward rate f1,2 A similar argument applies for any n.
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For a spot rate curve (si ), the present value of an investment (x0 , x1 , . . . , xn ) is given by
n
PV =
i=0
xi di
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Duration
Above, we considered the duration of a bond as a measure for its sensitivity to yield changes (maturity xed) In the context of the term structure, other measures of sensitivity can be constructed For a given short rate curve (si ), we consider a parallel shift in the curve (si + ) for some hypothetical instantaneous change Note that the shifted spot rates apply for the same periods as the original rates This generalizes a change in the yield to a non-at term structure of spot rates
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Duration
We are interested in the response of the bond price to a parallel shift Consider the cash stream (x0 , x1 , . . . , xn ), whose price P () as a function of the shift is equal to
n
P () =
i=0
xi (1 + si + )
i
i xi (1 + si )
i+1
=0
i=1
which has units of time but is not a weighted average of cash ow times
Kay Giesecke
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Fisher-Weil Duration
We now consider the case with continuous compounding The price P () of the cash stream (x0 , x1 , . . . , xn ) at times (t0 , t1 , . . . , tn ) Rn + is equal to
n
P () =
i=0
xi e(si +)ti
where si is the spot rate applying to [0, ti ] The relative price sensitivity is given by the Fisher-Weil duration DF W 1 dP () = P (0) d 1 = PV
n
ti xi esi ti
i=0
=0
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Immunization
The term structure perspective leads to a more robust method of portfolio immunization, which does not require the selection of bonds with a common yield We construct an immunization portfolio that Matches the present value of our obligations Matches the quasi-modied or Fisher-Weil duration of the obligations This gives protection against parallel shifts in the spot rate curve; keep in mind that other shifts are possible as well
Kay Giesecke