Bonds, Bond Prices and the Determination of Interest Rates

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Bonds, Bond Prices and the Determination of Interest Rates

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Title: Bonds, Bond Prices and the Determination of Interest Rates


1
Chapter 6
  • Bonds, Bond Prices and the Determination of
    Interest Rates

2
Bonds and Interest Rates Topics
  • Types of bonds and their prices
  • Measures of bond yields
  • Supply and demand in the bond market
  • Why bonds are risky

3
1. Types of Bonds
  • 1.1. Zero-coupon or discount bond
  • Promise a single payment on a future date
  • Treasury bill
  • 1.2. Fixed-payment loan
  • Sequence of fixed payments
  • Mortgage or car loan
  • 1.3. Coupon bond
  • periodic interest payments principal repayment
    at maturity
  • U.S. Treasury Bonds and most corporate bonds
  • 1.4. Consol (Consolidated Stock perpetuities )
  • periodic interest payments forever, principal
    never repaid
  • U.K. government has some outstanding

4
1.1 Bond Prices Zero-Coupon or Discount
Bonds
  • Price of 100 face value zero-coupon bond
  • Where i is the interest rate in decimal form and
    n is time until the payment is made in the same
    time units as the interest rate

5
1.1 Bond Prices Zero-Coupon or Discount
Bonds
  • Assume i5
  • Price of a One-Year Treasury Bill.
  • Price of a Six-Month Treasury Bill

6
1.1 Bond Prices Zero-Coupon or Discount
Bonds
  • Given maturity (n), the price of a bond and
    the interest rate move in opposite directions

7
1.2 Bond Prices Fixed Payment Loans
  • Value of a Fixed Payment Loan
  • Value is the sum of the present value of the
    payments.
  • The interest rate rises and the value of the
    fixed-payment loan move in opposite directions.

8
1.3 Bond Prices Coupon Bonds
  • Price of Coupon Bond
  • Present value of coupon payments
  • Present value of face value

The interest rate rises and the price of the
coupon bond move in opposite directions.
9
1.4 Bond Prices Consols
  • Why? Page 124, footnote 2

The interest rate rises and the price of the
consol move in opposite directions.
10
2. Bond Yields Definition
  • The interest rate or return to an investor ,
    implicit in the bonds price.

11
2.1 Bond Yields Yield to Maturity
  • Price of 1yr 5 Coupon Bond
  • Price of Coupon Bond X (1 i) 105
  • Yield to maturity The value of i that solves
    this equation.

12
Bond Yields Yield to Maturity
  • If Bond Price 100 (par), Yield to maturity
    the coupon rate
  • If Bond Price gt100 (par), Yield to maturity lt
    the coupon rate
  • If Bond Price lt100 (par), Yield to maturity gt
    the coupon rateBond Price ? ? Yield to maturity?

13
2.2 Bond Yields Current Yield
Current Yield Part of the Return arising
solely from the coupon payments.
14
Bond Yields Current Yield
  • Example
  • 1yr, 5 coupon bond selling for 99
  • Current Yield , or 5.05
  • Note
  • Yield to maturity
    , i 0.0606, or 6.06

15
Bond Yields Comparisons
Relationship among Coupon Rate, Current Yield,
Yield to Maturity
16
2.3 Bond Yields Holding Period Returns
  • The holding period return is the return to
    holding a bond and selling it before maturity.
  • Holding period return can differ from the yield
    to maturity.

17
2.3 Bond Yields Holding Period Returns
  • Examples
  • 10 year bond
  • 6 coupon rate
  • Purchase at face value, 100
  • Hold for one year and then sell it

18
2.3 Bond Yields Holding Period Returns
  • What if the interest rate falls to 5 (Pb
    107.11)
  • 1yr Holding Period Return
  • 1-yr Holding Period Return 13.11

19
2.3 Bond Yields Holding Period Returns
  • What if the interest rate rises to 7
  • 1yr Holding Period Return
  • 1-yr Holding Period Return ?0.52

20
2.3 Bond Yields Holding Period Returns
  • Holding Period Return
  • Current Yield Capital Gain (as a )

21
  • A bond mutual fund reports great returns much
    higher than interest rates were
  • Whats going on?
  • Chances are interest rates fell, so the holding
    period return gt interest rate

22
3. Bond Market Determination of Interest
Rates
  • Consider
  • 1yr, Zero-coupon (discount) Bond

Know P ? compute i. Focus on how market
determines P.
23
3.1 Bond Market Supply
  • The Bond supply curve is the relationship
    between the price and the quantity of bonds
    people are willing to sell, all other things
    being equal.

24
3.1 Bond Market Supply
  • Investor Higher the price, the more tempting it
    is to sell a bond they currently hold.
  • Company seeking to finance a project Higher
    the price at which they can sell bonds, the
    cheaper it is to borrow.
  • Conclusion Supply curve slopes up.
  • For a 100 one-year zero-coupon bond, the
    supply will be higher at 95 than it will be at
    90, all other things being equal.

25
3.2 Bond Market Demand
  • The bond demand curve is the relationship
    between the price and quantity of bonds that
    investors demand, all other things being equal.

26
3.2 Bond Market Demand
  • InvestorsThe lower the price bondholders must
    pay for a fixed-dollar payment on a future date,
    the more likely they are to buy a bond
  • Conclusion Demand curve slopes down
  • For a 100 one-year zero-coupon bond, the
    demand will be higher at 90 than it will be at
    95, all other things being equal.

27
3.3 Bond Market Equilibrium
  • Supplyslopes up
  • Demandslopes down
  • Equilibrium supplydemand

28
3.4 Bond Market Shifting the Supply
Curve
  • These all shift supply to the right
  • Increase in the governments borrowing.
  • An improvement in business conditions
  • Increase in expected inflation
  • Each of these lowers bond prices, increasing
    interest rates.

29
3.4 Bond Market Shifting the Supply
Curve
When borrowers desire for funds increases, the
supply curve shifts to the right. This lowers
bond prices, raising interest rates.
30
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31
3.5 Bond Market Shifting the Demand
Curve
  • These all shift demand to the right
  • An increases in wealth shift
  • Reduction in expected inflation
  • Fall in expected future interest rates
  • Rise in expected return on bonds relative to
    alternatives.
  • Fall in riskiness of bonds relative to
    alternatives
  • Increase in bond liquidity relative to
    alternatives
  • Each of these raises bond prices, lowering
    interest rates.

32
3.5 Bond Market Shifting the Demand
Curve
When bonds become more attractive for investors,
the demand curve shifts to the right. This
raises bond prices, lowering interest rates.
33
Factors that Shift Bond Demand to the Right (I)
34
Factors that Shift Bond Demand to the Right (II)
35
3.6 Bond Market Examples
  • Increases in Expected Inflation
  • Business-Cycle Downturn

36
3.6.1 Bond Market Increase in Expected
Inflation
1) Shift S right 2) Shifts D right Drives P
down, increasing the interest rates
37
3.6.2 Bond Market Business-Cycle
Downturn
  • Shift S left
  • Shift D left
  • Drives P up,
  • decreasing i.

38
  • There are times when investors
  • Flee risky bonds
  • Buy Treasury bonds
  • Fall 1998
  • Russia defaulted
  • Investors got worried about all risky bonds
  • Demand for Treasury bonds rose.

39
4. Why Bonds are Risky
  • Default Risk Issuer may not make promised
    payments
  • Inflation Risk
  • Inflation could turn out to be greater than
    expected.
  • Interest-Rate Risk Interest rate may rise
    between the time of purchase and the time you
    sell the bond.

40
  • Loans to students at truck-driving school are
    risky.
  • Lenders face high default risk.
  • How do you find borrowers who stop making paying?

41
  • Inflation creates risk that nominal return will
    be less than you expected.
  • If i6 and ?6 ? r0!
  • TIPS Treasury Inflation Protection Securities
  • Pay a real interest rate
  • Plus change in the CPI
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