Bond Valuation and Risk

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Bond Valuation and Risk

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Normally, if a bond is called, the bondholder is paid a premium over the face ... of $964.54. The bond is callable in one year at a premium of 3% over the face value. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bond Valuation and Risk


1
Bond Valuation and Risk
  • Chapter 8

2
Bond Values
  • Bond values are discussed in one of two ways
  • The dollar price
  • The yield to maturity
  • These two methods are equivalent since a price
    implies a yield, and vice-versa

3
Bond Pricing
T
Par Value
å
C
PB
T
t



T

r
(
)
1
t
r
(
)
1

t
1
  • PB Price of the bond
  • Ct interest or coupon payments in each period
  • T number of periods to maturity
  • r discount rate or yield to maturity

4
Bond Pricing
Coupon rate at 8 (paid semi-annually), 10-yr.
maturity with yield at 6 , par value
1000 Coupon 4 1,000 40
(Semiannual) Discount Rate 3
(Semiannual) Maturity 10 years or 20
periods Par Value 1,000
5
Bond Rate of Return
  • There are several ways that we can describe the
    rate of return on a bond
  • Coupon rate
  • Current yield
  • Yield to maturity
  • Yield to call

6
The Coupon Rate
  • The coupon rate of a bond is the stated rate of
    interest that the bond will pay
  • The coupon rate does not normally change during
    the life of the bond, instead the price of the
    bond changes as the coupon rate becomes more or
    less attractive relative to other interest rates
  • The coupon rate determines the dollar amount of
    the annual interest payment

7
The Current Yield
  • The current yield is a measure of the current
    income from owning the bond
  • It is calculated as
  • Annual Coupon
    Payment
  • Current Yield
  • Bond
    Price

8
The Yield to Maturity
  • The yield to maturity is the average annual rate
    of return that a bondholder will earn under the
    following assumptions
  • The bond is held to maturity
  • The interest payments are reinvested at the YTM
  • The yield to maturity is the same as the bonds
    internal rate of return (IRR)

9
The Yield to Maturity
  • To calculate the yield to maturity, we solve the
    bond price equation for the interest rate, given
    the bond's price
  • Yield to maturity differs from the current yield
    of a bond.
  • Using financial calculator to calculate yield to
    maturity.

n
i
PV
FV
PMT
10
The Yield to Call
  • Most corporate bonds, and many older government
    bonds, have provisions which allow them to be
    called if interest rates should drop during the
    life of the bond
  • Normally, if a bond is called, the bondholder is
    paid a premium over the face value (known as the
    call premium)
  • The YTC is calculated exactly the same as YTM,
    except
  • The call premium is added to the face value, and
  • The first call date is used instead of the
    maturity date

11
Calculating Bond Yield Measures
  • As an example of the calculation of the bond
    return measures, consider the following
  • You are considering the purchase of a 2-year bond
    (semiannual interest payments) with a coupon rate
    of 8 and a current price of 964.54. The bond
    is callable in one year at a premium of 3 over
    the face value. Calculate the various return
    measures.

12
Calculating Bond Yield Measures (cont.)
Timeline if not called
Timeline if called
13
Calculating Bond Yield Measures (cont.)
  • The yields for the example bond are
  • Current yield 80/964.54 8.294
  • YTM 5 per period, or 10 per year
  • YTC 7.42 per period, or 14.84 per year

14
Bond Prices and Yields
  • Prices and Yields (required rates of return) have
    an inverse relationship
  • When yields get very high, the value of the bond
    will be very low
  • When yields approach zero, the value of the bond
    approaches the sum of the cash flows.

15
The Inverse Relationship Between Bond Prices and
Yields
16
Relationship between Coupon Rate, Required
Return, and Price
  • If the coupon rate of a bond is below the
    investors required rate of return, the present
    value of the bond should be below par value
    (discount bond)
  • If the coupon rate equals the required rate of
    return, the price of the bond should be equal to
    par value
  • If the coupon rate of a bond is above the
    required rate of return, the price of the bond
    should be above par value (premium bond)

17
Relationship between Coupon Rate, Required
Return, and Price
18
Sensitivity of Bond Prices to Interest Rate
Movements
  • If bonds are not held to maturity, future prices
    are most sensitive to changes in the risk-free
    rate
  • A measurement of bond price sensitivity can
    indicate the degree to which the market value of
    bond holdings may decline in response to an
    increase in interest rates

19
Sensitivity of Bond Prices to Interest Rate
Movements (contd)
  • Bond price elasticity
  • Measures the sensitivity of bond prices to
    changes in the required rate of return
  • The price sensitivity is greater for declining
    interest rates than rising interest rates
  • Bond price elasticity is always negative

20
Computing Bond Price Elasticity
  • A 15-year bond has a yield to maturity of 7
    percent and a coupon rate of 10 percent. The
    current price of this bond is 1,273.24. If the
    yield to maturity increases to 9 percent, the new
    price of the bond is 1,080.61. What is this
    bonds bond price elasticity?

21
Duration
  • It is difficult to compare bonds with different
    maturities and different coupons, since bond
    price changes are related in opposite ways to
    these variables
  • Macaulay developed a way to measure the average
    term to maturity that also takes the coupon rate
    into account
  • This measure is known as duration, and is a
    better indicator of volatility than term to
    maturity alone

22
Duration
  • Duration measures the life of a bond on a present
    value basis
  • The longer the bonds duration, the greater its
    sensitivity to interest rates

23
Computing the Duration of A Bond
  • A bond has two years remaining to maturity, a
    1,000 par value, a 9 percent coupon rate, and a
    10 percent yield to maturity. What is the
    duration of this bond?

24
Modified duration
  • Modified duration can be used to estimate the
    percentage change in a bonds price in response
    to a 1 percentage point change in bond yields
  • The estimate of modified duration should be
    applied such that the bond price moves in the
    opposite direction from the change in bond yields
  • The percentage change in a bonds price in
    response to a change in yield is

25
Computing the Modified Duration of A Bond
  • A bond has two years remaining to maturity, a
    1,000 par value, a 9 percent coupon rate, and a
    10 percent yield to maturity. What is the
    modified duration of this bond? Interpret the
    modified duration for this bond.
  • A 1 percent increase in bond yields leads to a
    1.75 percent decline in the price of the bond.

26
Computing the Price Change of A Bond in Response
to A Change in Yield
  • In the previous example, assume that bond yields
    rise by 0.3 percentage point. What is an estimate
    of the percentage drop in the bonds price?
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