Chapter 17: The term structure of interest rates Flashcards

1
Q

8 Desirable characteristics of a term structure model

A
  • The model should be arbitrage free
  • Interest rates should ideally be positive.
  • Interest rates should be mean-reverting
  • Bonds and derivative contracts should be easy to price.
  • It should produce realistic interest rate dynamics.
  • It should fit historical interest rate data adequately.
  • It should be easy to calibrate to current market data.
  • It should be flexible enough to cope with a range of derivatives
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2
Q

General SDE for r(t)

A

dr(t) = a(t, r(t))dt + b(t, r(t)) dW(t)

  • a(t, r) is the drift
  • b(t, r) is the volatility
  • W(t) is a standard Brownian motion under the real-world measure P.
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3
Q

Market price of risk (expression)

A

γ(t, T) = {m(t, T) - r(t)} / S(t, T)

γ(t, T) represents the excess expected return over the risk-free rate per unit of volatility in return for an investor taking on this volatility.

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4
Q

Risk premium on a bond

A

γ(t, T) S(t, T) = m(t, T) - r(t)

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5
Q

5 Desirable Properties of:

the one-factor Vasicek model

A
  • arbitrage free
  • does not prescribe the short rate process
  • is tractable (allows closed form analytical solutions to a wide range of derivatives)
  • encompasses mean reversion
  • allows for a wide range of yield curves
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6
Q

6 Properties of:

Cox-Ingersoll-Ross model

A

Same as Vasicek:

  • Incorporates mean reversion
  • Arbitrage free
  • Time homogeneous

Different from Vasicek:

  • Does not allow negative interest rates
  • More involving to implement than Vasicek model (linked to the chi-squared distribution)
  • Volatility depends on the level of the rates: it is high/low when rates are high/low
  • It is a one factor model
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7
Q

Time homogeneous

A

The future dynamics of r(t) only depend upon the current value of r(t) rather than what the present time t actually is.

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8
Q

Vasicek Model: L

A

L = μ - σ²/α²

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9
Q

Vasicek Model: β

A

β = σ² / 2α

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10
Q

Auxiliary process for solving the Vasicek differential equation

A

Xt = r exp{at}

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11
Q

Value at redemption of a company according to the merton model

A

value at redemption = min(F(t), L)

Where F(t) is the gross value of the company at time t and L is the outstanding debt/bonds

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12
Q

3 limitations of 1-factor term structure models

A
  • Not perfect correlation across maturities
  • Different volatility phases
  • Pricing complex derivatives
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13
Q

Gain on a risk-free portfolio

A

dV(t) = r(t)V(t) dt

where r(t) is the return on the risk-free asset.

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14
Q

6 Deficiencies of the Vasicek Term Structure Model

A
  • Does not prevent negative interest rates
  • Is difficult to use to obtain humped yield curves
  • Has a lack of time dependence of parameters which is not compatible with empirical evidence
  • Gives, in the long run, spot rates normally distributed - which is not compatible with empirical evidence
  • Implies perfect instantaneous correlation of bond prices, which is not compatible with empirical evidence
  • Will need to be re-parameterised as the yield curve evolves.
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15
Q

Compare the properties of the Vasicek and the Cox-Ingersoll-Ross models for interest rates

A
  • Vasicek and CIR both encompass mean reverting short rates
  • Both generate arbitrage-free yield curves
  • In both models, the parameters are time invariant
  • Vasicek permits negative rates, CIR does not
  • Vasicek is more mathematically tractable
  • CIR enforces a non-negative lower bound on yields.
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16
Q

Properties of the Hull White model

A
  • Arbitrage Free
  • Mean reversion of rates
  • Ease of calculation of bonds and certain derivative contracts
  • Goodness of fit to historical data
  • Ease of calibration to current market data

NOT:

  • Positive interest rates
  • Realistic dynamics
  • Flexible enough to cope with a range of derivative contracts.
17
Q

R(t, T)

A

R(t, T) =

- ln[ B(t,T) ] / { T-t }

18
Q

B(t, T)

A

B(t, T) =
exp[ - R(t, T) (T-t) ]

=
exp{ - int_t^T( f(t,u) du ) }

19
Q

F(t,T,S)

A

F(t,T,S) =

ln{B(t,T) / B(t,S)} / (S-T)