Chapter 21 Flashcards

1
Q

Measures of Recent Economic Activity

A

GDP, employment, housing, retail sales, industrial surveys, trade balance

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2
Q

Measures of inflation

A

CPI, producer price index, GDP price deflator

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3
Q

Measures of future economic activity

A

index of leading indicators, consumer confidence

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4
Q

Monetary Policy

A

he control of the quantity of money available in an economy and the channels by which new money is supplied.

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5
Q

Interest Rate Policy

A

Sets the official short term interest rate (overnight rate) which is the interest rate at which financial institutions can borrow and lend one-day funds among themselves

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6
Q

Open Market Operations

A

Involve the purchase or sale of T-bills or government bonds by the BOC which influences the overall money supply (BOC sells securities, money supply decreases; BOC buys securities, money supply increases)

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7
Q

Fiscal Policy

A

Fiscal policy guides the spending a government undertakes to provide goods and services and determines the way in which the government finances these expenditures

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8
Q

How is government spending financed?

A

Taxation and borrowing (issuing t-bill/bonds)

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9
Q

Quality Spread Theory

A

This theory is based on the view that credit spreads are affected by the economic cycle. During an economic recovery, the perception of the quality and safety of non-Government of Canada issues improves. As more money moves into non-Government of Canada issues, the price relative to Canada bonds rises and spreads begin to tighten

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10
Q

Interest Rate Volatility Theory

A

According to this theory, in times of high interest rate volatility, yield spreads on callable bonds widen, and yield spreads on putable bonds narrow

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11
Q

Which bonds are affected most by change in interest rates?

A

long term + lower coupon

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12
Q

Duration

A

a way of measuring how much bond prices are likely to change if and when interest rates move

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13
Q

Macaulay Duration

A

tells the weighted average time that a bond needs to be held so that the total present value of the cash flows received is equal to the current market price paid for the bond.

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14
Q

Modified Duration

A
  • a measure of the approximate percentage price change for a 100 basis point change in yield

= Macaulay duration/ (1 + (y/k))
where y = yield, and k = # coupon payments per year

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15
Q

Portfolio Modified Duration

A

The modified duration of a portfolio of bonds is a weighted average of the modified durations of the individual bonds

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16
Q

Convexity

A

A measure of the curvature in the relationship between bond prices and bond yields that demonstrates how the duration of a bond changes as the interest rate changes

17
Q

Debt Security Active Strategy

A

investor forms expectations and shifts assets around to take full advantage of those expectations

18
Q

Debt Security Passive Strategy

A

investor’s portfolio is designed to approximate a market index or to reduce the requirement to make decisions based on expectations

19
Q

Debt Security Dedicated Strategy

A

designed to meet specific targets and goals

20
Q

Types of Active Debt Security Stategies

A
  1. interest rate strategy
  2. yield curve strategies
  3. intermarket spread strategies
  4. intramarket spread strategies
21
Q

Interest Rate Strategy

A

Active investors can attempt to exploit differences between their own interest rate forecast and the forecast embedded in market interest rates

22
Q

Yield Curve Strategies

A

are designed by positioning bonds along the maturity spectrum to take advantage of expected changes in the shape of the curve

23
Q

Bullet Portfolio

A

portfolio is built with one or more bonds with roughly equal durations

24
Q

Barbell portfolio

A

portfolio portfolio is built with one or more bonds with short durations combined with one or more bonds with long durations, the average duration equals that of the bullet portfolio

25
Q

Intermarket Spread Strategies

A

designed to capitalize on the difference in yield spreads and expected changes in yield spreads between different sectors of the bond market

26
Q

Intramarket Spread Strategies

A
  • Involve swapping bonds that are largely similar
  • Reason for swap could be based on mispriced securities or relative value differences, or swapping securities for a higher yield
27
Q

Passive Strategies

A
  1. indexation

2. laddering

28
Q

Stratified sampling approach

A

Takes a market index and divides it into parts called cells, each cell represents a different portfolio characteristic, such as duration, coupon, maturity, sector, credit rating, or call features

29
Q

Optimization

A

Builds on the stratified sampling approach by using mathematical programming to optimize the portfolio based on the stated return objectives and constraints

30
Q

The Macaulay duration of a zero-coupon bond (including strip bonds) is _______ to the bond’s term to maturity (in years)

A

equal

31
Q

The Macaulay duration of a coupon bond is always _____ than the bond’s term to maturity. All else being equal, the _____ the coupon, the longer the Macaulay duration, and the _____ the term to maturity, the longer the Macaulay duration

A

less
smaller
longer

32
Q

The real value of Macaulay duration is that it can be used to:

A

calculate modified durations, which is a much more useful measure of bond price volatility

33
Q

All else being equal, the longer the term to maturity, the ________ the modified duration

A

greater

34
Q

All else being equal, the lower the coupon rate, the _______ the modified duration

A

greater

35
Q

All else being equal, the lower the yield, the _______the modified duration

A

greater

36
Q

Modified duration is always ______ than the term to maturity

A

less