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The Term Structure of Interest Rates

Chapter 12

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Chapter 12. The Term Structure of Interest Rates. Overview of Term Structure. The relationship between yield to maturity and maturity . Yield curve - a graph of the yields on bonds relative to the number of years to maturity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 12

The Term Structure

of Interest Rates

Page 2: Chapter 12

The relationship between yield to maturity and maturity.

Yield curve - a graph of the yields on bonds relative to the number of years to maturity

Information on expected future short term rates can be implied from yield curve.

Three major theories are proposed to explain the observed yield curve.

Page 3: Chapter 12
Page 4: Chapter 12

Measure of rate of return that accounts for both current income and the price increase over the life

YTM is the discount rate that makes the present value of a bond’s payments equal to its price◦ Proxy for average return

Page 5: Chapter 12

Solve the bond formula for r

1 (1 )(1 )

T

TtTt

t

BParValueCP

rr

Page 6: Chapter 12
Page 7: Chapter 12

Yields on different maturity bonds are not all equal◦ Need to consider each bond cash flow as a

stand-alone zero-coupon bond when valuing coupon bonds

◦ Example: 1-year maturity T-bond paying semiannual coupons can be split into a 6-month maturity zero and a 12-month zero. If each cash flow can be sold off as a separate security, the value of the whole bond should be the same as the value of its cash flows bought piece by piece.

Page 8: Chapter 12

Bond stripping and bond reconstitution offer opportunities for arbitrage

Law of one price, identical cash flow bundles must sell for identical prices

Value each stripped cash flow◦ discount by using the yield appropriate to its

particular maturity

Page 9: Chapter 12
Page 10: Chapter 12

Treat each of the bond’s payments as a stand-alone zero-coupon security (bond stripping : portfolio of three zeros)

Pure yield curve◦ Relationship between YTM and time to maturity for

zero-coupon bonds On-the-run yield curve

◦ Plot of yield as a function of maturity for recently issued coupon bonds selling at or near par value

1 2 3

100 100 11001082.17

1 5% 1 6% 1 7%P

Page 11: Chapter 12
Page 12: Chapter 12

If interest rates are certain Considering two strategies

◦ Buying the 2-year zero, YTM=6%, hold until maturity. Price=890

◦ Invest 890 in a 1-year zero, YTM=5%. Reinvest the proceeds in another 1-year bond

Page 13: Chapter 12

◦ The proceeds after 2 years to either strategy must be equal

22890(1 6%) 890(1 0.5) (1 )r

2 7.01%r

Page 14: Chapter 12

Spot rate◦ The rate that prevails today for a time period

corresponding to the zero’s maturity Short rate

◦ For a given time interval (e.g. 1 year) refers to the interest rate for that interval available at different points in time

2-year spot rate is an average (geometric) of today’s short rate and next year’s short rate

22 1 2

1

22 1 2

(1 ) (1 ) (1 )

1 (1 ) (1 )

y r r

y r r

Page 15: Chapter 12

An upward sloping yield curve is evidence that short-term rates are going to be higher next year

When next year’s short rate (r2=7.01%) is greater than this year’s short rate, the average of the two rates is higher than today’s rate

22 1 2

1

22 1 2

(1 ) (1 ) (1 )

1 (1 ) (1 )

y r r

y r r

Page 16: Chapter 12
Page 17: Chapter 12

When interest rate with certainty, all bonds must offer identical rates of return over any holding period

Calculate HPR for 1-year maturity zero-coupon bond (YTM=5%)

The first 1-year HPR for 2-year maturity zero-coupon bond (YTM=6%)

Page 18: Chapter 12

For 1-year maturity bond◦ Rate of return=(1000-952.38)/952.38=5%

For 2-year maturity bond◦ Price of today=890◦ One year later, when next year’s interest

rate=7.01%, sell it for 1000/1.0701=934.49◦ Rate of return=(934.49-890)/890=5%

Page 19: Chapter 12

No access to short-term interest rate quotations for coming years---infer future short rates from yield curve of zeros

Two alternatives get same final payoff◦ 3-year zero

◦ 2-year zero, reinvest in 1-year bond

3100*(1 1.0966) 131.87

23100*(1 1.08995) * 1 r

233 2 3100*(1 ) 100* 1 * 1y y f

Page 20: Chapter 12

fn = one-year forward rate for period n

yn = yield for a security with a maturity of n

11

(1 )(1 )

(1 )

nn

n nn

yf

y

11(1 ) (1 ) (1 )n n

n n ny y f

Page 21: Chapter 12

future short rates are uncertain Forward interest rate

◦ defined as the break-even interest rate that equates the return on an n-period zero-coupon bond to that of an (n-1)-period zero-coupon bond rolled over into a 1-year bond in year n

◦ Calculated from today’s data, interest rate that actually will prevail in the future need not equal the forward rate.

Page 22: Chapter 12

4 yr = 8.00% 3yr = 7.00% fn = ?

(1.08)4 = (1.07)3 (1+fn)

(1.3605) / (1.2250) = (1+fn)

fn = .1106 or 11.06%

Page 23: Chapter 12

12.3 12.3 Interest Rate Uncertainty and

Forward Rates

Page 24: Chapter 12

What can we say when future interest rates are not known today

Suppose that today’s rate is 5% and the expected short rate for the following year is E(r2) = 6% then:

The rate of return on the 2-year bond is risky for if next year’s interest rate turns out to be above expectations, the price will lower and vice versa

22 1 2(1 ) (1 ) [1 ( )] 1.05 1.06

1000898.47

1.05 1.06

y r E r

p

Page 25: Chapter 12

Short-term-horizon investors◦ If invest only for 1 yearcertain return=(1000-952.38)/952.38=5%◦ If invest for 2-year zero, if expect the 1-year rate

be 6% at the end of the first year the price will be 1000/1.06=943.4 the first-year’s expected rate of return also is

5%=(943.4-898.47)/898.47 but the 2nd year’s rate is risky, 943.4 is not certain

If >6%, bond price<943.4 If <6%, bond price>943.4

2-year bond must offer an expected rate of return greater than riskless 5% return , sell at price lower than 898.47

Page 26: Chapter 12

If the investors will hold the bond when it falls to 881.83 ◦ Expected holding period return for the first year =(943.4-881.83)/881.83=7%◦ risk premium=7%-5%=2%◦ Forward rate:

Liquidity premium compensates short-term investors for the uncertainty about the price at which they will be able to sell their long-term bonds

2

2 2

1000881.83

1 5% (1 )

8% 6%

f

f E r

n nliquidity premium f E r

Page 27: Chapter 12

Short-term Investors require a risk premium to hold a longer-term bond

This liquidity premium compensates short-term investors for the uncertainty about future prices

If most individuals are short-term investors, bonds must have prices that make f2 greater than E(r2)

Page 28: Chapter 12

Wish to invest a full 2-year period◦ Purchase 2-year zeros at 841.75,

guaranteed YTM=8.995%◦ If roll over two 1-year investments, an

investment of 841.75 grow in 2 years to be

◦ The investor will require

◦ Offered as a reward for bearing interest rate risk

2841.75*1.08*(1 )r

22 2

2 2

1.08* 1 (1.08995) 1.08*(1 )E r f

E r f

Page 29: Chapter 12

Wish to invest a full 2-year period◦ Purchase 2-year zeros at 890,

guaranteed YTM=6%◦ If roll over two 1-year investments, an

investment of 841.75 grow in 2 years to be

◦ The investor will require

◦ Offered as a reward for bearing interest rate risk

2890*1.05*(1 )r

22 2

2 2

1.05* 1 (1.06) 1.05*(1 )E r f

E r f

Page 30: Chapter 12

12.412.4Theories of the Term

Structure

Page 31: Chapter 12

Expectations theories Liquidity Preference theories

◦ Upward bias over expectations Market Segmentation

Page 32: Chapter 12

Observed long-term rate is a function of today’s short-term rate and expected future short-term rates.

Forward rates that are calculated from the yield on long-term securities are market consensus expected future short-term rates.

◦ An upward-sloping yield curve if investors anticipate increases in interest rates

◦ Upward slope means that the market is expecting higher future short term rates

◦ Downward slope means that the market is expecting lower future short term rates

2 2E r f

Page 33: Chapter 12

Short-term investors dominate the market

Forward rates contain a liquidity premium and are not equal to expected future short-term rates.

Investors will demand a premium for the risk associated with long-term bonds.

The yield curve has an upward bias built into the long-term rates because of the risk premium.

2 2f E r

Page 34: Chapter 12

Short- and long-term bonds are traded in distinct markets.

Trading in the distinct segments determines the various rates.

Observed rates are not directly influenced by expectations.

Page 35: Chapter 12

Expected One-Year Rates in Coming Years

Year Interest Rate

0 (today) 8%

1 10%

2 11%

3 11%

8% 10% 11% 11%

Page 36: Chapter 12

PVn = Present Value of $1 in n periods

r1 = One-year rate for period 1

r2 = One-year rate for period 2

rn = One-year rate for period n

1 2

1

(1 )(1 )...(1 )nn

PVr r r

Page 37: Chapter 12

1

1000925.93

(1 8%)PV

2

1000841.75

(1 8%)(1 10%)PV

3

1000758.33

(1 8%)(1 10%)(1 11%)PV

Price of 1-year maturity bond

Price of 2-year maturity bond

Price of 3-year maturity bond

Page 38: Chapter 12

1

1000925.93

(1 )y

22

1000841.75

(1 )y

33

1000758.33

(1 )y

YTM is average rate that is applied to discount all of the bond’s payments

Page 39: Chapter 12

Time to Maturity Price of Zero* Yield to Maturity

1 $925.93 8.00%

2 841.75 8.995

3 758.33 9.660

4 683.18 9.993

* $1,000 Par value zero

Page 40: Chapter 12

8% 10% 11% 11%

y1=8%

y2=8.995%

y3=9.660%

y4=9.993%

expectedShort rate

in each year

YTM for various maturities

(Current spot rate)

Page 41: Chapter 12

YTM, average of the interest rates in each period (geometric)

22

1000 1000841.75

(1 8%)(1 10%) (1 )y

22(1 ) (1 8%)(1 10%)y

1

22 1 21 (1 )(1 )y r r

1

44 1 2 3 41 (1 )(1 )(1 )(1 )y r r r r

Page 42: Chapter 12

12.4 12.4 Interpreting the Term

Structure

Page 43: Chapter 12

Direct relationship between YTM and forward rate

Under certainty

Uncertain

The yield curve is upward sloping at any maturity date, n, for which the forward rate for the coming period is greater than the yield at that maturity

1

1 21 (1 )(1 ) (1 ) nn ny r r r

1

1 21 (1 )(1 ) (1 ) nn ny r f f

Page 44: Chapter 12

If yield curve is rising, must exceed Example

◦ YTM on 3-year zero is 9%, YTM on 4-year zero

◦ If then◦ If , then

1nf ny

13 4

4 41 (1 9%) (1 )y f

4 9%,f 4 39%y y

4 9%f 4 39%y y

Page 45: Chapter 12

Given an upward-sloping yield curve, What account for the higher forward rate?

Expectations of increases in can result in rising yield curve; converse is not true .

n nf E r liquidity premium

nE r

Page 46: Chapter 12
Page 47: Chapter 12