chapter 6: bond valuation and interest rates part 3 Flashcards

1
Q

what is the yield to call (YTC/kc)

A

if a bond has a call feature, the issuer can call (or force the investor to sell the bond back to them) before the maturity stated on the bond indenture

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2
Q

how long are called bonds initially protected from a call

A

for a period of a few years
ex 5,7, or 10
after which the issuer may call the bond

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3
Q

how do you calculate the YTC yield to call

A
  1. replace the maturity date with the first call date
  2. the face value with the call premium (CP)
  3. and the time to maturity (n) with the number of periods until expected call (c)
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4
Q

what is the calculator method to calculate the YTC

A

(2nd) (CLRTVM) 30 (PMT) -1030(PV) 1050 (FV) 10 (N) (CPT) (I/Y) -

then multiply by 2 to annualize

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5
Q

wat is the current yield

A

a bond’s current yield (CY) is the yield on the bond’s current market price provide by the annual coupon

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6
Q

what does the current yield not consider

A

potential capital gains or losses

– it snot a true measure of return to the bondholder

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7
Q

what is interest

A

it is the “price” of borrowed money

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8
Q

how is interest measured in

A

basis points or

1/100th of 1% (eg. 250 basis points is 2.5%)

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9
Q

when do interest rates rise

A

when the demand for loanable funds rise

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10
Q

when do interest rates fall

A

when the demand for loanable funds fall

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11
Q

what is the risk-free interest rate

A

it is an abstract concept,

usually the yield on short-term government treasury bills is used as a proxy for practical purposes

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12
Q

what is the risk-free interest rate comprised of

A

two components

  1. the real rate
  2. expected inflation rate
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13
Q

what is the real rate

A

compensation for deferring consumption

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14
Q

what is the expected inflation rate

A

compensation for the expected loss of purchasing power over the term of the short-term T-bill

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15
Q

What are Canadian interest rates heavily influenced by

A

change in interest rates in other countries

macroeconomic factors (bot domestic and global play an important role )

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16
Q

what is the interest rate parity theory (IRP)

A

states that foreign exchange forward rates will be established tat equalize the yield an investor can earn
- whether investing domestically or in a foreign jurisdiction

17
Q

a country with both high inflation and high interest rates will have what

A

a depreciation currency

18
Q

what is the term structure of interest rates

A

the set of rates (YTM) for all maturities of a given risk-class of debt securities at a given point in time

19
Q

what are the 3 typical yield curves

A
  1. upward sloping or normal (1994)
  2. downward sloping or inverted (1990)
  3. flat (1998)
  • for gov. of Canada bonds