L12 - BP Flashcards

1
Q

What are bonds?

A
  • Bonds are debt. Issuers are borrowers and holders are creditors.
  • The indenture is the contract between the issuer and the bondholder.
  • The indenture gives the coupon rate, maturity date, and par value.
  • Face or par value is typically £100 ($1000 in the US); this is the principal repaid at maturity.
  • The coupon rate determines the interest payment.
  • Interest is usually paid semiannually.
  • The coupon rate can be zero.
  • Interest payments are called “coupon payments”.
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2
Q

Different types of bonds?

A
  • Callable bonds can be repurchased before the maturity date.
  • Convertible bonds can be exchanged for shares of the firm’s common stock.
  • Puttable bonds give the bondholder the option to retire or extend the bond.
  • Floating rate bonds have an adjustable coupon rate
  • Of many types:
    • Straight bonds
    • Zero coupon bonds (pure discount bonds)
    • Perpetual bonds and preferred stock (dividend payments like coupons –> not always guarantee but have priority when dividends are paid)
    • Gilts
    • Corporate bonds
    • Eurobonds –> an international bond issued in Europe or elsewhere outside the country in whose currency its value is stated (usually the US or Japan).
    • Foreign bonds –> A foreign bond is a bond issued in a domestic market by a foreign entity in the domestic market’s currency as a means of raising capital.
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3
Q

What is the original formula for pricing a bond?

A
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4
Q

What is the formula for calculating the price of a bond by hand?

A
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5
Q

What is yield to maturity?

A
  • Yield to Maturity –> average interest rate you expect a bond to earn from buying it now and holding it till maturity
  • Bond equivalent yield = same as APR on the bond interest rate
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6
Q

What is the approximation formula for yield to maturity?

A
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7
Q

YTM vs Current Yield?

A
  • Current yield = annual coupon/ price of the bond (P)
    • whereas coupon rate = Annual coupon / Par value
  • If a bond is trading a discount
    • Price < par value
  • When bond is selling at par –> YTM = Coupon rate (based on approx, formula)
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8
Q

YTM vs HPR?

A
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9
Q

How does default risk relate to bond pricing?

A
  • more risk, require a higher return (yield)
  • spread widen during 2008 financial crisis
    • indication we are heading towards a recession
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10
Q

Overview of Term Structure?

A
  • Information on expected future short term rates can be implied from the yield curve
  • The yield curve is a graph that displays the relationship between yield and maturity
    • Term Structure –> structure of interest rates for discounting different cashflows of varying lengths
  • Three major theories are proposed to explain the observed yield curve
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11
Q

Different types of yield curves?

A
  1. Flat
  2. Rising
  3. Inverted
  4. Hump Shapred

Yield curve that reflects the YTM of zero-coupon bonds it is called a pure yield curve

  • If it reflects the YTM of coupon bonds it is called an on-the-run yield curve (usually those that have just been released and are close to par value)
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12
Q

How do we value coupon bonds using zero-coupon bonds?

A
  • Calculate yield curve under certainty (certainty of future interest rates)
    • Basically a geometric average of the two short term interest rates
  • 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.
    • What happens if a coupon bonds price is not equal to the sum of its zero coupons at PV?
      • If it is less, one could buy a coupon bond, strip it down into its zero-coupon components and sell them off in the market
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13
Q

What is the Short rate vs Spot Rate?

A
  • Spot rate: the rate offered today on zero-coupon bonds of different maturities.
    • In the previous example, the one-year spot rate is 5% and the two year spot rate is 6%.
    • Spot rate is the geometric average of the short rates
  • Short rate: the rate for given time interval (one year) offered at different points in time.
    • In the previous example, the first-year short rate is 5% (same as the spot!) and the second-year short rate is 7.01%.
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14
Q

What is the forward rate?

A
  • We assumed no uncertainty previously and that all future rates were known at time zero
    • In reality, we don’t have perfect knowledge of time n short rates at time zero
  • A forward rate is an interest rate applicable to a financial transaction that will take place in the future –> these are the market consensus about the future rates (may not actually be this)
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15
Q

How does the interest rates change under uncertainty?

A
  • 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
      • This is because a 2-year bond is priced of the expected short rates zero-coupon bonds
  • Investors require a risk premium to hold a longer-term bond
  • This liquidity premium compensates short-term investors for the uncertainty about future prices –> as majority of investors are short-term investors
    • f2 > E(r2)
      • f2 = E(r2) + liquidity premium
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16
Q

What is Segmented Market Theory?

A
  • Segmented market theory has its origin in the observation that many investors and issuers of debt seem to have a strong preference for debt of a certain maturity.
  • For instance insurance companies are more interested to invest in long-term bonds even when short-term rates are considerably higher than long-term rates. Same for the companies planning to invest in manufacturing plants or warehouses, they will be more interested in issuing long-term debt.
  • Market segmentation theory argues that investors are sufficiently risk averse that they operate only in their desired maturity spectrum
  • . No yield differential will induce them to change maturities.
17
Q

What is Expectations Theory?

A
  • yield curve inverted –> future short term interest rates are declining (investors expect the interest rate to fall in the near future)
    • e.g. heading towards recession so interest rates will be cut
  • yield curve rising –> expectations that future short term interest rates are rising
    • e.g. rising inflation
18
Q

What is Liquidity Premium Theory?

A
  • Long-term bonds are more risky
  • 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
  • Forward rates contain a liquidity premium and are not equal to expected future short-term rates

Why is it the hard to infer anything about the short term interest rate form the yield curve? (expand on this)

  • Looking at the graphs, the yield curve is meant to be derived from the expected future short term rate plus a liquidity premium
  • Yet as you can see the yield curves don’t seem to follow this pattern
19
Q

How can we interpret the Term Structure theories?

A
  • The yield curve rises as one moves to longer maturities
  • A longer maturity results in the inclusion of a new forward rate that is higher than the average of the previously observed rates. This could be because:
    • Markets are segmented
    • Higher expectations for forward rates
    • Liquidity premium