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Chapter 5 Factors Affecting Bond Yields and the Term Structure of Interest Rates.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 5 Factors Affecting Bond Yields and the Term Structure of Interest Rates."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 5 Factors Affecting Bond Yields and the Term Structure of Interest Rates

2 U.S. Treasuries Viewed as having zero default risk Largest and most liquid market Lowest rate (yield) Rate (yield) is the base or benchmark rate

3 Treasury yields Minimum yield investors will accept Other bonds trade at spreads over the treasury yield Examples of current U.S. Treasury rates

4 Risk Premium Non-Treasury bonds trade at a spread above Treasuries:  Yield on non-Treasury=yield on Treasury + spread or  Yield on non-Treasury = yield on Treasury + risk premium The spread is stated in basis points The spread is compensation for risk. Alternative spread measures include yield spreads and yield ratios

5 Spread determinants Type of issuer Issuer’s perceived credit risk Maturity or term Embedded options Liquidity

6 Types of Issuers U.S. Government U.S. Government Agency Municipal Government Credit (domestic and foreign corporations)  Industrial, utility, finance, noncorporate Foreign Government

7 Perceived credit worthiness Default risk measure the probability that principal and interest will not be repaid Higher default risk results in higher yields The spreads between treasuries and corporates with the same maturity are called credit spreads

8 Embedded options Spreads reflect any embedded options Options include:  calls  puts  conversion options Spreads will be:  lower if the option is good for the buyer  higher if the option is good for the seller

9 Taxability Interest income is taxed at ordinary income rates Some interest is exempt from federal taxes  After tax yield = pretax yield (1-tax rate)  Equivalent taxable yield =tax exempt yield/(1-Tax rate) Qualified Municipal bonds are tax-exempt Muni bonds types  general obligation (GO)  revenue bonds AAA GO bond is benchmark for Munis

10 Liquidity and Financeability Liquidity  Related to depth and breadth of market  Investors demand compensation for illiquidity Financeability  demand by dealers to cover short positions “On the run” vs. “Off the run” Treasuries Corporate spreads  credit and liquidity driven

11 Term Structure Maturity (or term) plays an important role in yield determination Yield curve  Depiction of maturity and yield  Represent a specific risk class  Treasury yield curve is most common

12 Theoretical Spot Rate Curve Treasury Bond valuation:  portfolios of zero coupon securities.  Each cash flow should be discounted by the appropriate yield  Cannot use yields on coupon bonds.  Need a zero coupon yield curve. There are no zero coupon Treasuries with maturities > 1 year so a curve must be constructed

13 Constructing the Spot Rate Curve Which securities?  On the run Treasuries  On the run and selected off the run Treasuries  All Treasuries  Treasury coupon strips Must use increasingly rigorous methods as securities are added

14 Bootstrapping with “On the run” Treasuries Use the “On the run” Treasury yields  3 month, 6 month, 2, 5, 10, 30 par yields Extrapolate to fill in curve every six months Bootstrap starting with the six month yield See example in class: Problem: Big gaps between observed yields

15 Other methods Bootstrapping with “Off the run” Use all Treasuries  Sophisticated screening and statistical fitting techniques  Exponential splining  Most used method.  The theoretical spot yield curve is generated and provided for analysts.

16 Example using theoretical spot rates (exhibit 5-7) PeriodYearCash FlowSpot Rate (%)PV of $1 atPV of CF 10.555.250.9744214.872107 2155.50.9471884.735942 31.555.760.9183514.591756 4256.020.8881564.440782 52.556.280.8567244.283619 6356.550.8242064.12103 73.556.820.7907573.953783 8456.870.7632563.81628 94.557.090.7307183.653589 10557.20.7019523.509758 115.557.260.6756973.378483 12657.310.6500283.250138 136.557.430.6224483.112238 14757.480.5978892.989446 157.557.540.5739192.869594 16857.670.5476252.738125 178.557.80.5217662.608831 18957.790.5026652.513325 199.557.930.4777292.388643 20101058.070.45326847.59317 Theoretical Value = 115.4206

17 Forward rates Yield curve provides consensus estimate of future spot rates Consider two alternatives  Buy a one year instrument  Buy two six month instruments consecutively  Investor should be indifferent between strategies

18 Exhibit 5-8: Two alternative one year investments

19 Calculating forward rates Invest $100 in each strategy Alternative 1 payoff at end of year  $100(1 + z 2 ) 2 Alternative 2 payoff at end of year  $100(1 + z 1 )(1+f) Investors are indifferent if:  $100 (1 + z 2 ) 2 = $100(1 + z 1 )(1+f)  f = ((1 + z 2 ) 2 /(1 + z 1 )) -1

20 Yield Curve Shapes

21 Yield curve theories Pure Expectations Liquidity Preferred Habitat Market Segmentation

22 Pure expectations Forward rates = expected future rates Term structure reflects expectations only Upward sloping – rising future rates Flat – rates won’t change Downward sloping – falling future rates Why? Shortcomings

23 Interpretations of the Theory broadest interpretation local expectations form of the pure expectations theory return to maturity interpretation

24 Liquidity Considers issues other than expectations Investors prefer shorter maturities Demand a premium for longer terms Forward rates reflect  Future expectations  Risk or liquidity premium Changes interpretation of YC shapes

25 Preferred Habitat Term structure influenced by  Expectations  Risk premiums Risk Premiums influenced by  Relative supply and demand in different maturities  Can be positive or negative  Can explain all yield curve shapes

26 Market segmentation Like PH supply/demand in maturity sectors influence rates Investors/borrowers will not shift across maturities YC shape influenced by supply/demand in maturity classes

27 Main yield curve influences Ilmanen (1996) finds three main influences  Market expectations  Bond risk premiums  Convexity Bias


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