INTEREST RATES 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Interest Rates.
Advertisements

Interest Rates Chapter 4.
 The Effective Annual Rate (EAR) ◦ Indicates the total amount of interest that will be earned at the end of one year ◦ The EAR considers the effect of.
Fin351: lecture 3 Bond valuation The application of the present value concept.
Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives 6 th Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull Interest Rates Chapter 4.
Chapter 2 Applying Time Value Concepts Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. Edited by Laura Lamb, Department of Economics, TRU 1.
Finance 1: Background 101. Evaluating Cash Flows How would you value the promise of $1000 to be paid in future? -from a friend? -from a bank? -from the.
CHAPTER 4 BOND PRICES, BOND YIELDS, AND INTEREST RATE RISK.
Review of Time Value of Money. FUTURE VALUE Fv = P V ( 1 + r) t FUTURE VALUE OF A SUM F v INVESTED TODAY AT A RATE r FOR A PERIOD t :
Interest Rate Markets Chapter 5. Chapter Outline 5.1 Types of Rates 5.2Zero Rates 5.3 Bond Pricing 5.4 Determining zero rates 5.5 Forward rates 5.6 Forward.
© Paul Koch 1-1 Chapter 4. Interest Rates - Term Structure Risks A. Hedging interest rate exposure - more complicated than hedging exposure to the price.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Bond Prices Zero-coupon bonds: promise a single future payment, e.g., a U.S. Treasury Bill. Fixed payment loans, e.g., conventional mortgages. Coupon Bonds:
Valuation Under Certainty Investors must be concerned with: - Time - Uncertainty First, examine the effects of time for one-period assets. Money has time.
I.N. Vestor is the top plastic surgeon in Tennessee. He has $10,000 to invest at this time. He is considering investing in Frizzle Inc. What factors will.
The application of the present value concept
Chapter 4 Interest Rates
Interest Rates Chapter 4
2.1 Swaps Lecture Types of Rates Treasury rates LIBOR rates Euribor rates.
Method 3: Pricing of Coupon Bond Pricing of coupon bond without knowing the yield to maturity.
1 Money & Banking Week 4 Debt Instruments & Interest Rates.
Interest Rates and Rates of Return
Chapter 7: Bond Markets.
Interest Rate Markets.
Chapter 5 Bond Prices and Interest Rate Risk 1Dr. Hisham Abdelbaki - FIN Chapter 5.
Part IV Financial Markets. Part IV Financial Markets.
Chapter 8 Valuing Bonds. 8-2 Chapter Outline 8.1 Bond Cash Flows, Prices, and Yields 8.2 Dynamic Behavior of Bond Prices 8.3 The Yield Curve and Bond.
Yield Curves and Term Structure Theory. Yield curve The plot of yield on bonds of the same credit quality and liquidity against maturity is called a yield.
Chapter 5 Money market Dr. Lakshmi Kalyanaraman 1.
BOND PRICES AND INTEREST RATE RISK
The Application of the Present Value Concept
1 Interest Rates Chapter 4. 2 Types of Rates Treasury rates LIBOR rates Repo rates.
Interest Rates Chapter 4 1 Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives 7th Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull 2008.
3.1 The Determination of Forward & Futures Prices.
Money and Capital Markets 6 6 C h a p t e r Eighth Edition Financial Institutions and Instruments in a Global Marketplace Peter S. Rose McGraw Hill / IrwinSlides.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Valuing Bonds.
Chapter 2 Bond Prices and Yields FIXED-INCOME SECURITIES.
6-1 Lecture 6: Valuing Bonds A bond is a debt instrument issued by governments or corporations to raise money The successful investor must be able to:
Chapter 4: Interest Rates
Interest Rates Finance (Derivative Securities) 312 Tuesday, 8 August 2006 Readings: Chapter 4.
© Prentice Hall, Chapter 4 Foundations of Valuation: Time Value Shapiro and Balbirer: Modern Corporate Finance: A Multidisciplinary Approach to.
P.V. VISWANATH FOR A FIRST COURSE IN FINANCE 1. 2 What are the determinants of interest rates and expected returns on financial assets? How do we annualize.
6-0 The Valuation of Bond using DCF. 6-1 The Size of Bond vs. Stock Markets Daily trading volume of US stock markets: $10 billion Treasury Bond : $300.
Topics Covered Future Values Present Values Multiple Cash Flows Perpetuities and Annuities Inflation & Time Value.
Bonds 1 AWAD RAHEEL.  Bond Characteristics ◦ Reading the financial pages  Interest Rates and Bond Prices  Current Yield and Yield to Maturity  Bond.
1 CHAPTER TWO: Time Value of Money and Term Structure of Interest.
Fundamentals of Futures and Options Markets, 7th Ed, Ch 4, Copyright © John C. Hull 2010 Interest Rates Chapter 4 1.
Bond Valuation Professor Thomas Chemmanur. 2 Bond Valuation A bond represents borrowing by firms from investors. F  Face Value of the bond (sometimes.
CHAPTER 5 BOND PRICES AND INTEREST RATE RISK. Learning Objectives Explain the time value of money and its application to bonds pricing. Explain the difference.
Interest Rates Chapter 4 1 Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives 7th Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull 2008.
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Chapter 6 Valuing Bonds Topics Covered The Bond Market Interest Rates and Bond Prices Current Yield and Yield to Maturity.
CHAPTER 5 BOND PRICES AND INTEREST RATE RISK. Copyright© 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.2 The Time Value of Money: Investing—in financial assets or in real.
Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives 6 th Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull Interest Rates Chapter 4.
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Chapter 6 Valuing Bonds Topics Covered The Bond Market Interest Rates and Bond Prices Current Yield and Yield to Maturity.
Interest Rates R. Srinivasan. Introduction Interest rates are the back-bone of valuation of virtually all financial instruments, especially the derivatives.
Interest Rates Chapter 4 Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives 7th International Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull
Fundamentals of Futures and Options Markets, 8th Ed, Ch 4, Copyright © John C. Hull 2013 Interest Rates Chapter 4 1.
Interest Rates CHAPTER 4. Types of Rates  There are 3 types of rates that are used in the current derivative markets.  Treasury Rates  LIBOR Rates.
Chapter 5 :BOND PRICES AND INTEREST RATE RISK Mr. Al Mannaei Third Edition.
082SIS52 Ryu Soo-hyun. Money Market  Money Market - Subsection of fixed income market - financial market for short-term borrowing & lending - provides.
PowerPoint to accompany Chapter 6 Bonds. Copyright © 2011 Pearson Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Ltd) – / Berk/DeMarzo/Harford.
Interest Rate Markets Chapter 5. Types of Rates Treasury rates LIBOR rates Repo rates.
Interest Rates Chapter 4. Interest Rate Defines the amount of money a borrower promises to pay a lender. –Mortgage rates, deposit rates, prime borrowing.
Interest Rates What they mean and where they come from? Chapter Chapter
Interest Rates Chapter 4
Chapter 8 Valuing Bonds.
Interest Rates Chapter 4 (part1)
Chapter 4 Interest Rates
Presentation transcript:

INTEREST RATES 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

INTEREST RATE  An interest rate is the amount of money a borrower promises to pay the lender. Depends on  Inflation  Risk premium (credit default risk) 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

TYPES OF RATES  Treasury rates (the rates an investor earns on Treasury bills or bonds)  LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate) rates: rate of interest at which the bank or other financial institutions is prepared to make a large wholesale deposits with other banks.  LIBID (London Interbank Bid Rate) the rate at which the bank will accept deposits from other banks.  Repo (Repurchasing Agreement) rates: The price at which securities are sold and the price at which they are repurchased is referred to as repo rate. 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

MEASURING INTEREST RATES  The compounding frequency used for an interest rate is the unit of measurement  The difference between quarterly and annual compounding is analogous to the difference between miles and kilometers BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI9/16/2009

CONTINUOUS COMPOUNDING (PAGE 77)  In the limit as we compound more and more frequently we obtain continuously compounded interest rates  $100 grows to $ 100e RT when invested at a continuously compounded rate R for time T  $100 received at time T discounts to $ 100e -RT at time zero when the continuously compounded discount rate is R BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI9/16/2009

MEASURING INTEREST RATE  Effect of the compounding frequency on the value of $1000 at the end of 10 year when the interest rate is 5% per year 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI Compounding frequencyValue of $1000 at the end of 10 year Annually (m=1) Semi-annual (m=2) Quarterly (m=4) Monthly (m=12) Weekly (m=52) Daily (m=365) Continuous

EFFECT OF COMPOUNDING FREQUENCY  Effect of compounding frequency: How much you should invest in order to get $1000 at the end of 10 year when the interest rate is 5% per year 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

FUTURE VALUE OF MONEY 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

FUTURE VALUE AND INTEREST EARNED  Future Value and Interest Earned 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

FREQUENCY OF COMPOUNDING  Interest rates are usually stated in the form of an annual percentage rate with a certain frequency of compounding. Since the frequency of compounding can differ, it is important to have a way of making interest rates comparable. This is done by computing effective annual rate (EFF), defined as the equivalent interest rate, if compounding were only once per year. 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

CONVERSION FORMULAS (PAGE 77)  What if we want to find the equivalent interest rate, if compounding is done continuously? Define R c : continuously compounded rate R m : equivalent rate with compounding m times per year BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI9/16/2009

PURE DISCOUNT BONDS (ZERO- COUPON BONDS) A zero rate (or spot rate), for maturity T is the rate of interest earned on an investment that provides a payoff only at time T  Discount bonds, also called zero-coupon bonds, are securities which “make a single payment at a date in the future known as maturity date. The size of this payment is the face value of the bond. The length of time to the maturity date is the maturity of the bond” (Campbell, Lo, MacKinley (1996)). 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

PURE DISCOUNT BOND  The promised cash payment on a pure discount bond is called its face value or par value. Yield (interest rate) on a pure discount bond is the annualized rate of return to investors who buy it and hold it until it matures. 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

EXAMPLE 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

BOND PRICING  To calculate the cash price of a bond we discount each cash flow at the appropriate zero rate  The theoretical price of a two-year bond providing a 6% coupon semiannually is 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

BOND YIELD  The bond yield is the discount rate that makes the present value of the cash flows on the bond equal to the market price of the bond  Suppose that the market price of the bond in our example equals its theoretical price of  The bond yield is given by solving to get y = or 6.76%. 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

PAR YIELD  The par yield for a certain maturity is the coupon rate that causes the bond price to equal its face value.  In our example we solve 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

PAR YIELD (CONTINUED) In general if m is the number of coupon payments per year, d is the present value of $1 received at maturity and A is the present value of an annuity of $1 on each coupon date 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

BOOTSTRAP METHOD TO CALCULATE DISCOUNT FACTOR  A discount function is a set of discount factors, where each discount factor is just a present value multiplier. For example, d(1.0) is the present value of $1 dollar received in one year. The key idea is that each d(x) can be solved as one variable under one equation because we already solved for shorter-term discount factors.  The most popular approach is to use bootstrap method 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

BOOTSTRAP : EXAMPLE 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

DISCOUNT FACTOR 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

DETERMINING TREASURY ZERO RATES 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI

TREASURY ZERO RATE CURVE 9/16/2009BAHATTIN BUYUKSAHIN,CELSO BRUNETTI