The Valuation of Fixed Income Securities

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The Valuation of Fixed Income Securities

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Title: The Valuation of Fixed Income Securities


1
Chapter 16
  • The Valuation of Fixed Income Securities

2
Current Value
  • The current value of a bond the present value of
    cash flows
  • Interest and principal
  • discounted back to the present
  • at the going rate of interest on comparable debt

3
Comparable Debt
  • Same term to maturity
  • Same risk class

4
Comparable Debt
  • Comparable bonds
  • can have different coupons,
  • can have different prices, and
  • have same yields.

5
Perpetual Bond
  • The perpetual bond illustrates the process of
    valuation
  • P PMT / i 80/0.1 800

6
Perpetual Bond
  • Illustrates the inverse relationship between
  • bond prices, and
  • changes in interest rates.

7
Valuation
  • Valuation of a bond that pays interest and
    matures
  • Unknown PV
  • PMT 100
  • FV 1000
  • N 3
  • I 10

Answer 1,000
8
Same Bond at a Discount
  • Unknown PV
  • PMT 100
  • FV 1000
  • N 3
  • I 12
  • The discount is the result of interest rates
    rising.

Answer 952
9
Same Bond at a Premium
  • Unknown PV
  • PMT 100
  • FV 1000
  • N 3
  • I 8
  • The premium is the result of interest rates
    declining.

Answer 1,052
10
Relationship
  • The inverse relationship between
  • bond prices and
  • interest rates.

11
The Inverse Relationship
  • 10 3 year bond
  • I PB
  • 4 1,167
  • 8 1,052
  • 10 1,000
  • 12 952
  • 14 907

12
Fluctuations in Bond Prices
  • Prices of bonds with lower coupons fluctuate
    more.
  • Prices of bonds with longer terms to maturity
    fluctuate more.

13
Zero Coupon Bond Pricing
  • Unknown PV
  • PMT 0
  • FV 1000
  • N 10
  • I 7

Answer 508
14
The Current Yield
  • Annual interest payment/Price of the bond
  • Current flow of interest (as a )
  • 100 / 952 10.5

15
The Yield to Maturity
  • The rate that equates
  • the present value of the cash inflows,
  • the interest payment and principal repayment
  • the cash outflow
  • the cost of the bond

16
Yield to Maturity
  • Unknown I
  • PV 952
  • PMT 100
  • FV 1000
  • N 3

Answer 12
17
Current Yield and Yield to Maturity
  • Current yield exceeds yield to maturity
  • if bond sells for a premium.
  • Yield to maturity exceeds the current yield
  • if the bond sells for a discount.

18
Current Yield and Yield to Maturity
  • The current yield does not consider the premium
    or discount.
  • The premium reduces the yield to maturity.
  • The discount increases the yield to maturity.

19
Yield to Call
  • Substitutes
  • the anticipated call date for the maturity date.
  • the principal plus the call penalty for the
    principal repayment.
  • A call will most likely occur
  • after interest rates have declined.

20
Fluctuations in Yields
  • The yield spread between bonds of different
    quality increases when interest rates rise.

21
Fluctuations in Yields
22
The Reinvestment Assumption
  • Yield to maturity assumes all cash inflows are
    reinvested at the yield to maturity.
  • If the assumption holds, the realized rate and
    the yield to maturity are the same.

23
The Reinvestment Assumption
  • If yields decrease, the realized rate over the
    lifetime of the bond
  • less than the yield to maturity.
  • If yields increase, the realized rate over the
    lifetime of the bond
  • exceeds the yield to maturity.

24
The Reinvestment Assumption
25
Duration
  • The average time required to collect
  • the interest and principal repayment
  • Weights the present value of each payment by the
    timing of the payment

26
Duration
  • A measure of price volatility
  • The larger the numerical value, the greater is
    the price volatility

27
Duration
  • Duration facilitates comparisons of price
    volatility of bonds with
  • different coupons and
  • different terms to maturity

28
Duration
  • Duration facilitates managing reinvestment rate
    risk.
  • Acquiring bonds whose duration matches when the
    funds will be needed erases reinvestment rate
    risk.

29
Convexity and Duration
  • Duration may be used to forecast change in a
    bonds price.
  • The forecast becomes less accurate the greater
    the change in interest rates.

30
Convexity and Duration
  • Duration forecasts along a straight line.
  • Actual price changes are convex.

31
Convexity and Duration
Actual Prices
Forecasted Prices
32
Management of Bond Portfolios
  • Bond swapping
  • The laddered strategy
  • The barbell strategy
  • The matching strategy
  • The swapping of variable for fixed payments

33
Features of Preferred Stock
  • Fixed dividend payments
  • Payment from earnings
  • Not a legal obligation
  • Cumulative preferred stock
  • Non-cumulative preferred stock
  • Arrearage

34
Valuation of Preferred Stock
  • The fixed dividend implies the model for
    valuation of bonds applies.
  • Valuation of perpetual preferred stock
  • P D / k

35
Valuation of Preferred Stock with Finite Life
  • The same model used for bond valuation present
    value of dividends and the repayment of par value

36
Preferred Stock
  • Prices fluctuate inversely with changes in
    interest rates.
  • Preferred stock prices tend to fluctuate more
    than bond prices.

37
Comparisons of Bonds and Preferred Stock
  • Both make fixed payments.
  • Both use the same valuation model.
  • Bonds are debt, but preferred stock is equity.
  • Virtually all bonds have a maturity date
    preferred stock may be perpetual.

38
Comparisons of Bonds and Preferred Stock
  • Bonds are riskier than preferred stock
  • from the issuing company's perspective.
  • Preferred stock is riskier than bonds
  • from the investor's perspective.

39
Analysis of Preferred Stock
  • Based on the capacity of the company to pay the
    dividend
  • Times-dividend-earned ratio
  • Earnings after taxes / preferred dividend payment

40
Analysis of Preferred Stock
  • Earnings per preferred share
  • Earnings after taxes / number of preferred shares
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