Yield Curve Analysis.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Bond Valuation Chapter 8.
Advertisements

Chapter 2 Pricing of Bonds.
Term Structure of Interest Rates. Outline  Meaning of Term Structure of Interest Rates  Significance of Term Structure of Interest Rates  What is Yield.
Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives 6 th Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull Interest Rates Chapter 4.
CHAPTER 4 BOND PRICES, BOND YIELDS, AND INTEREST RATE RISK.
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.
Fin424 (Ch 5) 1 Risk and Term Structure 1. Factors affecting Yields to Maturity 2. Yield Curve 3. Theoretical Spot Rate Curve 4. Forward Rate 5. Determinants.
Session 3 Introduction to the Valuation of Debt Securities
Fi8000 Valuation of Financial Assets Fall Semester 2009 Dr. Isabel Tkatch Assistant Professor of Finance.
1 Bond Valuation Global Financial Management Campbell R. Harvey Fuqua School of Business Duke University
Bond Yields Fixed Income Securities. Outline Sources of Return for a Bond Investor Measures of Return/Yield Nominal Yield Current Yield Yield to Maturity.
1 Yield Curves and Rate of Return. 2 Yield Curves Yield Curves  Yield curves measure the level of interest rates across a maturity spectrum (e.g., overnight.
The Term Structure of Interest Rates
INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin CHAPTER 15 The Term Structure.
Understanding Interest Rates
Understanding Interest Rates
Chapter 4 Interest Rates
Duration and Yield Changes
Bond Portfolio Management Strategies: Basics II 02/25/09.
International Fixed Income Topic IA: Fixed Income Basics- Valuation January 2000.
CHAPTER 15 The Term Structure of Interest Rates. Information on expected future short term rates can be implied from the yield curve The yield curve is.
Drake DRAKE UNIVERSITY Fin 284 The Term Structure and Volatility of Interest Rates Fin 284.
Bond Portfolio Management Strategies: Basics 02/16/09.
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.
Factors Affecting Bond Yields and the Term Structure of Interest Rates
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.
Yield to Maturity
7-1 CHAPTER 7 Bonds and Their Valuation Key features of bonds Bond valuation Measuring yield Assessing risk.
Fixed Income Analysis Week 2 Measuring yields and returns
FFIEC Capital Markets Conference Portfolio Management and Theory Steve Mandel May 18-19, 2004.
Introduction to Fixed Income – part 2
Financial Risk Management of Insurance Enterprises
The Oxford Guide to Financial Modeling by Ho & Lee Chapter 8. Investment Grade Corporate Bonds: Option Adjusted Spreads The Oxford Guide to Financial Modeling.
Fixed Income Analysis Week 9 Bonds with Options
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Valuing Bonds.
Chapter 2 Pricing of Bonds. Time Value of Money (TVM) The price of any security equals the PV of the security’s expected cash flows. So, to price a bond.
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:
Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management First Canadian Edition By Reilly, Brown, Hedges, Chang 12.
The Fundamentals of Bond Valuation The present-value model Where: P m =the current market price of the bond n = the number of years to maturity C i = the.
Fixed Income Basics Finance 30233, Fall 2010 The Neeley School of Business at TCU ©Steven C. Mann, 2010 Spot Interest rates The zero-coupon yield curve.
1 CHAPTER TWO: Time Value of Money and Term Structure of Interest.
Copyright 2006, Jeffrey M. Mercer, Ph.D.1 Chapter 9: 3/23 Lecture Valuing Bonds with Embedded Options.
Definition of a Bond n A bond is a security that obligates the issuer to make specified interest and principal payments to the holder on specified dates.
1 Bond Portfolio Management Term Structure Yield Curve Expected return versus forward rate Term structure theories Managing bond portfolios Duration Convexity.
Fixed Income Basics - part 2 Finance 70520, Spring 2002 The Neeley School of Business at TCU ©Steven C. Mann, 2002 Forward interest rates spot, forward,
Yield Curve and Term Structure of Interest Rate. Base rate of interest –US Treasuries are “safer” than any other (US) debt security free of credit risk.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Bond Prices and Yields CHAPTER 10.
© 2010 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible Web site, in whole or in part.
Lecture 5 Valuing Bonds Professor Paul Howe. Professor Paul Howe.5-2 Lecture Outline 5.1 Bond Cash Flows, Prices, and Yields 5.2 Dynamic Behavior of Bond.
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Chapter 6 Valuing Bonds Topics Covered The Bond Market Interest Rates and Bond Prices Current Yield and Yield to Maturity.
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 6 Valuing Bonds. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Bond Cash Flows, Prices, and Yields Bond Terminology –Bond.
Dr. BALAMURUGAN MUTHURAMAN
Financial Risk Management of Insurance Enterprises Review of Bond Pricing.
Fundamentals of Futures and Options Markets, 8th Ed, Ch 4, Copyright © John C. Hull 2013 Interest Rates Chapter 4 1.
Lecture 16 (cont’d …) Fixed Income Securities Valuation & Arbitrage Investment Analysis.
PowerPoint to accompany Chapter 6 Bonds. Copyright © 2011 Pearson Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Ltd) – / Berk/DeMarzo/Harford.
Chapter 6: Pricing Fixed-Income Securities 1. Future Value and Present Value: Single Payment Cash today is worth more than cash in the future. A security.
Chapter 3 Understanding Interest Rates. Present Value : Discounting the Future A dollar paid to you one year from now is less valuable than a dollar paid.
Chapter 5 Factors Affecting Bond Yields and the Term Structure of Interest Rates.
Computational Finance 1/37 Panos Parpas Bonds and Their Valuation 381 Computational Finance Imperial College London.
THE ARBITRAGE-FREE VALUATION FRAMEWORK CHAPTER 8 © 2016 CFA Institute. All rights reserved.
Interest Rates What they mean and where they come from? Chapter Chapter
Fixed income securities valuation Spot rates and forward rates and bond equivalent yields 1.
Introduction to the Valuation of Debt Securities by Frank J. Fabozzi
Chapter 2 Pricing of Bonds
Fi8000 Valuation of Financial Assets
Fuqua School of Business Duke University
CHAPTER 10 Bond Prices and Yields.
Bond Valuation Chapter 6.
Presentation transcript:

Yield Curve Analysis

Yield Curve Definitions What is Yield? A bond’s yield is a measure of its potential return given certain assumptions about how the future will unfold. We generally associate yield to maturity as our standard meaning for yield, but there are other forms of yield: Current Yield Yield to call Yield to worst

Yield Analysis - <YA>

Yield Curve Definitions What is a yield curve? A key function of the yield curve is to serve as a benchmark for pricing bonds and to determine yields in all other sectors of the debt market (corporates, agencies, mortgages, bank loans, etc.).

Yield Curve Analysis

Yield Curve Analysis

Yield Curve Analysis Four “classic” yield curves Upward sloping Downward sloping Flat Humped

Types of Yield Curve Shifts Parallel A flattening or steepening of the yield curve (i.e. a change in slope) A change in the curvature of the yield curve

Yield Curve Shifts An upward shift in the level is typically accompanied with a flattening of the yield curve and a decrease in its curvature. A downward shift in the level is typically accompanied with a steepening of the yield curve and an increase in its curvature.

Yield Curve Facts The yield curve changes shape and slope. The yield curve changes level. The yield curve is typically upward sloping. Short rates are more volatile than long rates.

Spot Rates

A Bond as a Package of Zeroes The traditional approach to bond valuation is to discount every cash flow of a fixed income security using the same interest or discount rate. where: C = coupon payment M = principal payment y = yield measure (typically YTM) n = number of periods over life of bond

A Bond as a Package of Zeroes Finance theory tells us that any security should be thought of as a package or portfolio of zero-coupon bonds. The proper way to view a 4-year, 6% coupon Sovereign is as a package of zero-coupon instruments. The 4-year security should be viewed as a package of 8 zero-coupon instruments that mature every six months for the next four years. M C C C C C C C C

Arbitrage-Free Valuation Approach This approach to valuation does not allow a market participant to realize an arbitrage profit by breaking apart or “stripping” a bond and selling the individual cash flows at a higher aggregate value than it would cost to purchase the security in the market. Arbitrage profits are possible when the sum of the parts is worth more than the whole or vice versa. Because this approach to valuation precludes arbitrage profits, we refer to it as the arbitrage-free valuation approach.

Sovereign Spot Rates To implement arbitrage-free valuation it is necessary to determine the theoretical rate that the Sovereign would have to pay on a zero-coupon security for each maturity. ‘Theoretical’ because most Sovereigns do not issue zero-coupon bonds, with the exception of short-term discount notes. Zero-coupon securities are created by dealer firms, such as Banc of America Securities. The name given to the zero-coupon Sovereign rate is the Sovereign spot rate.

More Definitions A spot rate is the rate used to discount a single expected future cash flow. Strip rates are created from Separate Trading of Interest and Principal. The most recently issued securities are used to create a theoretical spot curve…these are called the on-the-run or actives Treasury securities – I25. In practice the yield on the on-the-run Treasury is adjusted such that the bond is at par…this is the par yield.

On-the-run & off-the-run

Par Curve The par rate is the discount rate at which the bond’s price equals its par value. The reason for this adjustment is that the observed price and yield may reflect cheap repo financing available from an issue if it is “on special”.

Building the On-the-Run Curve Yields for missing maturities are interpolated using linear approximation. Yield (n) = Yield (lower) + (Yield (upper) - Yield (lower)) x (n-lower)/(upper-lower) What is the interpolated yield for a 4-year Treasury? Yield (4) = Yield (3) + (Yield (5) - Yield (3)) x (4-3)/(5-3) Yield (4) = 4.6437% + (4.6172% - 4.6437%) x (4-3)/(5-3) Yield (4) = 4.6305%

On/Off Run Curve

Theoretical Spot Rates The theoretical spot rates for Treasury securities represent the appropriate set of interest or discount rates that should be used to value default-free cash flows. A default-free theoretical spot rate can be constructed from the observed Treasury yield curve or par curve. The raw material for all yield curve analysis is the set of yields on the most recently issue (i.e. on the run) Treasury yields. The U.S. Treasury routinely issues seven securities – the 3- and 6-month T-bills, the 2-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year notes, and the 30-year bond.

Determining Spot Rates Suppose you observe the following data for three Treasury securities with annual compounding and exact maturities: In order to find the spot rates from this data, we need to “strip” the coupons from the bonds and value them as standalone instruments.

Determining Spot Rates The cash flow timeline from the stripped cash flows is as follows: 1 2 3 1-year bond -96.6463 +100 2-year bond -100.000 +3.8 +103.8 3-year bond -100.000 +4 +4 +104

Determining Spot Rates Spot rates are used to discount a single cash flow to be received at some specific date in the future. Since these bonds all have the same issuer, all cash flows received at t=1, must be discounted at the same rate. The 1-year zero coupon bond has only one cash flow, we can use its YTM as the discount factor for other t=1 cash flows, i.e. use 3.62% as the one-year spot rate Z1. The approach that we are employing to create a theoretical spot rate curve is called bootstrapping.

Determining Spot Rates We can use the one-year spot rate to discount the cash flows for the 2-year bond as follows: 100.000 = 3.8/(1 + Z1)1 + 103.8/(1 + Z2)2 100.000 = 3.8/(1.0362)1 + 103.8/(1 + Z2)2 100.000 – 3.93756 = 103.8/(1 + Z2)2 96.06244 = 103.8/(1 + Z2)2 1.080547194 = (1 + Z2)2 1.03949372 = 1 + Z2 Z2 = 3.949372%

Determining Spot Rates We can use the one- and two-year spot rates to discount the cash flows for the 3-year bond as follows: 100.000 = 4/(1 + Z1)1 + 4/(1 + Z2)2 + 104/(1 + Z3)3 100.000 = 4/(1.0362)1 + 4/(1.03949372)2 + 104/(1 + Z3)3 1.125079487 = (1 + Z3)3 Z3 = 4.0066406%

Valuing Bonds With Spot Rates We can use the spot rates to value other bonds issued by the same entity or by adding a credit spread to value bonds issued by another entity. Recall, Z1 = 3.62%, Z2 = 3.949%, Z3 = 4.007% Use these spots rates to calculate the value of a three-year, annual-pay, 5% coupon bond with the same risk characteristics as the previous bond. Bond Value = 5/(1 + Z1)1 + 5/(1 + Z2)2 + 105/(1 + Z3)3 102.778 = 5/(1.0362)1 + 5/(1.03949)2 + 105/(1.04007)3

Valuing Bonds With Spot Rates A coupon-bearing bond can be purchased and have the coupons stripped. If the stripped security, discounted at spot rates, is worth more than the coupon security, then dealers can engage in arbitrage to drive the prices back into equilibrium (by the coupon security and sell the stripped cash flows). This process of stripping and reconstitution assures that the price of a Treasury issue will not depart materially from its arbitrage-free value. Empirical evidence suggests that non-U.S. government issues have also moved toward their arbitrage-free value as stripping and reconstitution of cash flows has been allowed.

Strip Curve

Illustration of Spot/YTM Hypothetical Example: Valuation for 8%, 10-Year Treasury Using a Spot Curve Illustration of Spot/YTM The yield to maturity on this bond is 7.014%

Z-spread - OAS = Option cost in percentage terms Yield Spread Measures There are three yield spread measures commonly used in practice: Nominal Spread: an issue’s yield to maturity minus the yield to maturity of a Treasury security of similar maturity. Static Spread (Z-Spread): spread over the spot rates in a Treasury term structure. The same spread is added to all risk-free spot rates. Option Adjusted Spread (OAS): used when a bond has embedded options, this spread can be thought of as the difference between the static spread and the option cost. Z-spread - OAS = Option cost in percentage terms

95 = 4/(1.0362+SS)1 + 4/(1.03949+SS)2 + 104/(1.04007+SS)3 Yield Spread Measures Use the following information to calculate the nominal spread and static spread: Use the previous spot rates ( Z1 = 3.62%, Z2 = 3.949%, Z3 = 4.007%) to determine the spread for a 3-year, 4% annual coupon ABC Manufacturing bond trading at 95. The YTM on the ABC bond is 5.87% while the YTM on the three-year Treasury is 4%. The nominal spread is 187 basis points. Static spread: 95 = 4/(1.0362+SS)1 + 4/(1.03949+SS)2 + 104/(1.04007+SS)3 SS=187 basis points

The cost of the embedded option is: Yield Spread Measures Suppose you learn that the ABC Manufacturing bond is callable and that it has an option adjusted spread of 165 bp. The cost of the embedded option is: Z-spread (187 bp) - OAS (165 bp) = 22 basis points For callable bonds, the OAS will be less than the Z-spread since you receive compensation for writing the option to the issuer, i.e. you have allowed the issuer the right to call the bond and the issuer has paid you for this right. For putable bonds, the OAS will be greater than the Z-spread since you must pay for the right to put the bond back to the issuer.

Yield Spread Measures - Recap Typically, the Z-spread and nominal spread will be close for a standard, coupon-paying bond. The main factor causing any difference between the Z-spread and nominal spread is the shape of the Treasury spot curve. The steeper the curve the greater the difference. The option-adjusted spread is used to reconcile value with market price. OAS is model dependent, i.e. the computed OAS depends upon the model used (binomial, Monte Carlo simulation). OAS spread is used for bonds with embedded options. The option value is dependent on interest rate changes in the future. The Z-spread does not consider how the cash flows will change when interest rates change…zero volatility of interest rates.

Yield Analysis - DES

Yield Analysis – DES – call schedule

Yield Analysis - YTC

Yield Analysis - YAS

Forward Rates

Forward Rates A forward rate can be determined from the spot curve with the assumption of arbitrage-free valuation. For instance, suppose we find the spot curve to look like the graph below: If we have $100 to invest for three years do we want a three-year spot return? How about a one-year spot followed by two more years of spot returns…..

Forward Rates Graphically, we need to assess the time line of interest to us: The current one-year spot rate, z1, is 4.7599% and the current two-year spot rate, z2, is 4.6892%. z2 z1 1f1 4.6892% 4.7599%

Forward Rates Graphically, we need to assess the time line of interest to us: (1+ z1)*(1+1f1) = (1+z2)2 (1+ 0.047599)*(1+1f1) = (1+ 0.046892)2 (1.047599)*(1+1f1) = 1.09598286 1+1f1 = 1.046185477 1f1 = 4.6185477% 4.6892% 4.7599% 4.6185%

FRAs and Swap Rates

Swap Rates