Interest Rate and Maturity Flashcards

1
Q

Bonds with the same maturity can have different interest rates due to?

A

1) Default risk
2) Liquidity
3) Income tax considerations

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2
Q

What is default risk?

A

Default occurs when the issuer of a bond is unable or unwilling to make interest payments.

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3
Q

Name a default-free bond

A

Government treasury bonds.

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4
Q

What is the risk premium?

A

The spread between interest rates on bonds with default risk and interest rates on default-free bonds

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5
Q

What does the risk premium show?

A

Indicates how much additional interest people must earn to be willing to hold the risky bond.

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6
Q

What are investment-grade securities?

A

Bonds with relatively low risk of default + have a rating of Baa (or BBB) and above.

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7
Q

What are junk bonds?

A

High-yield bonds with ratings below Baa (or BBB) that have higher default risk.

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8
Q

Distinguish the liquidity between government and corporate bonds

A

Government bonds are more liquid than corporate bonds.

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9
Q

Why are treasury bonds highly liquid?

A

Because they are widely traded, easiest to sell and the cost of selling them is low.

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10
Q

Why do municipal bonds have lower interest than treasury bonds?

A

Because their interest payments are exempt from federal income taxes.

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11
Q

What is a yield curve?

A

A plot of the YTM on bonds with different maturity but the same risk, liquidity, and tax considerations

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12
Q

What does an upward sloping yield curve indicate?

A

Long-term interest rates are above short-term interest rates.

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13
Q

What does a downward sloping yield curve indicate?

A

Long-term interest rates are below short-term interest rates.

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14
Q

What theories explain the term structure of interest rates?

A

1) Expectations theory
2) Segmented markets theory
3) Liquidity premium theory

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15
Q

Expectations theory

A

The interest rate on a long-term bond will equal the average of the short-term interest rates that people expect to occur over the life of the long-term bond.

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16
Q

What are the three key points about the term structure of interest rates?

A

1) Interest rates move together
2) If short-term is low, upward slope
3) Yield curves tend to be upward

17
Q

Does the expectation theory satisfy all three points of term structure?

A

No, only the first and second.

18
Q

What are the assumptions of the expectation theory?

A

Investors do not prefer one bond over another (perfect substitutes) + expected return is the same

19
Q

Segmented market theory

A

Sees markets for different maturity bonds as completely separate and segmented → the interest rate on a bond is determined only by the supply and demand of that bond.

20
Q

What are the assumptions of the segmented market theory?

A

Investors have preferences between bonds (there are no substitutes) – short-term bonds with less risk are preferred.

21
Q

Does the segmented market theory satisfy all three points of term structure?

A

No, only the last one.

22
Q

Liquidity premium theory

A

The interest rate on a long-term bond will equal an average of short-term expected interest rates plus a liquidity premium.

23
Q

What is a liquidity premium?

A

A form of additional compensation offered to investors to encourage investment in long-term assets.

24
Q

What are the assumptions of the liquidity premium theory?

A

Bonds are imperfect substitutes and investors prefer short-term assets.

25
Q

Does the liquidity premium theory satisfy all three points of term structure?

A

Yes.

26
Q

What is the preferred habitat theory?

A

Assumes investors have a preference for bonds of different maturity: investors will buy bonds that do not have the preferred maturity only if they earn a higher return.