Chapter 6: bond valuation and interest rates part 4 Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 3 theories of the term structure of interest rates

A
  1. liquidity preference theory
  2. expectations theory
  3. market segmentation theory
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2
Q

what is the liquid preference theory

A

refers to the demand for money, considered as liquidity
posits that investors must be paid a liquid premium in order to be compensated for the interest rate risk inherent in holding less liquid, longer-term debt

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3
Q

what is the expectations theory

A

suggests that longer-term interest rates are the result of expectations of future short-term interest rates or

in other words, the interest rates of various maturities are dependant on each other

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4
Q

what is market segmentation theory

A

suggest that different markets exist for securities of different maturities that therefore the two ends of the yield curve can have different factors affecting them

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5
Q

what are risk premiums

A

more risky bonds

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6
Q

what would a BBB- rate corporate bond show

A

will have their own yield curve
- will plot at higher YTM at every maturity than government bonds
because of the additional default risk that BBBs carry

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7
Q

the yield spread is what

A

the difference between the YTM on a BB-rated corporate bond and the government of Canada bond of the same maturity

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8
Q

what does the yield spread represent

A

the default risk premium investors demand for investing in more risky corporate bonds

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9
Q

when does the yield spread widen

A

during recessions

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10
Q

when does the yield spread narrow

A

during times of economic expansion

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11
Q

what is RF

A

is the risk-free rate

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12
Q

more here page 9

A

page 9

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13
Q

what are debt ratings

A

risk agencies, such as the dominion bond rating service (DBRS), standard and poors (S&P) and MOddy’s assign all publicly traded bonds a risk rating

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14
Q

what are the interest rate determinants

A

risk, liquidity and bond features

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15
Q

the greater the default risk

A

the higher the required YTM

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16
Q

the less liquid the bond

A

the higher the required YTM

17
Q

call features do what to the YTM

A

generally increase the required YTM

18
Q

extendable bonds do what to the YTM

A

generally have lower required YTMs

19
Q

Retractable bonds do what to the YTM

A

generally have lower required YTMs

20
Q

what are T-bills

A

short-term obligations of the government

21
Q

what are the characteristics of T-bills

A
  1. initial term to maturity of one year or less
  2. issued at a discount to face value
    • face value being paid at maturity
  3. the difference between the discounted issue price and the face value is treated as interest income
22
Q

what is the equation for T-bills

A

see page 11

23
Q

what are zero coupon bonds

A

bonds issued at a discount which pay no coupons and mature at par or face value

24
Q

what is a good feature about zero coupon bonds

A

since no coupons are paid, there is no reinvestment rate risk

25
Q

what is the formula for zero coupon bonds

A

see 12

26
Q

what are floating rate bonds

A

have coupon rates that float with some reference rate such as
1. the yield on treasury bills

since the coupon rate floats, or is variable, the market will typically be close to the bond’s face value

27
Q

what are real return bonds

A

are issued by the gov. of Canada to protect investors against unexpected inflation

28
Q

what are some characteristics of real return bonds

A

each period the face value is gorse dup by the inflation rate
- the coupon is then paid on the grossed up face value

29
Q

what are Canada savings bonds (CSBs)

A

issued by the government of Canada as either

  1. regular interest bonds (interest paid annually)
  2. compound interest bonds (interest compounds over the life of the bond)
30
Q

is there a secondary market for Canada savings bonds?

A

no,

instead they are redeemable at any chartered bank in Canada at their face value

31
Q

what is the interest rate parity

A

demonstrates why differences in interest rates between countries should be offset by forward exchange rates

32
Q

in interest rate parity if no arbitrage opportunities exist, what equation should be used

A

F / S = 1 + K (domestic) / 1 + K foreign

F = current forward exchange rate (domestic units for foreign units)
S = current spot exchange rate
K domestic = domestic interest rate
K foreign = foreign interest rate

33
Q

more information on interet rate praitiy

A

get more info