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Bond Prices and Yields

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Title: Bond Prices and Yields


1
Chapter 11
  • Bond Prices and Yields

2
11.1 Bond Characteristics
3
Bond Characteristics
  • Face or par value
  • Coupon rate
  • Zero coupon bond
  • Compounding and payments
  • Accrued Interest
  • Indenture

4
Treasury Notes and Bonds
  • T Note maturities range up to 10 years
  • T bond maturities range from 10 30 years
  • Bid and ask price
  • Quoted in points and as a percent of par
  • Accrued interest
  • Quoted price does not include interest accrued

5
Listing of Treasury Issues
6
Treasury Notes and Bonds
  • Accrued interest
  • Interest that accrues between coupon payment
    dates
  • Accrued interest(annual coupon payment)/2 days
    since last coupon payment/days separating coupon
    payments, if semiannually paid
  • Example
  • Coupon rate 8, 40 days have passed since the
    last coupon payment, if semiannually paid
  • The accrued interest on the bond
    810000.540/1828.79

7
Corporate Bonds
  • Most bonds are traded over the counter
  • Registered (record)
  • Bearer bonds (without record)
  • Call provisions (price?)
  • Convertible provision (conversion value)
  • Put provision (putable bonds) (price?)
  • Floating rate bonds (yield spread fixed)
  • Preferred Stock (cumulate, not tax deductible,
    offsetting tax adv , 30 of dividend taxed)

8
Listing of Corporate Bonds
9
Corporate Bonds
  • Coupon, maturity, price, yield to maturity,
    rating
  • Call provisions (price?)
  • Allowing the issuer to repurchase the bond at a
    specified call price before the maturity date
  • Refunding retire high-coupon debt and issue new
    bonds at a lower coupon rate
  • Call option valuable to the firm, higher coupon
    and promised yields to maturity than non-callable
    bonds

10
Corporate Bonds
  • Put provision (puttable bonds) (price?)
  • Give the option to the bondholder to extend the
    bonds life, when the coupon rate exceeds current
    market yield
  • Floating rate bonds (yield spread fixed)
  • Interest payments tied to some measure of current
    market rate. Yield spread fixed if financial
    health kept.

11
Corporate Bonds
  • Convertible provision (conversion value)
  • Give bondholders an option to exchange each bond
    for a specified number of shares of common stock
  • Conversion ratio, Market conversion value
  • Preferred Stock (cumulate, not tax deductible,
    offsetting tax adv)
  • International bonds
  • Foreign bonds issued by a borrower from a
    country other than the one in which the bond is
    sold
  • Eurobonds bonds issued in the currency of one
    country but sold in other national markets.

12
Corporate Bonds
  • International Governments and Corporations
  • Foreign bonds
  • Foreign Issuer , Denominated in local currency
  • Yankee bonds (in USA)
  • Samurai bonds (in JAPAN)
  • Bulldog bonds (in UK)
  • Eurobonds
  • Foreign issuer, denominated in foreign currency

13
Innovative Bonds
  • Inverse Floaters (suffer doubly and benefit
    doubly)
  • The coupon rate falls when market rate rises
  • Asset-backed bonds
  • Income from a specified group of assets is used
    to service the debt

14
Innovative Bonds
  • Indexed Bonds
  • Payments are tied to a general price index or the
    price of a particular commodity
  • Example Treasury inflation protected securities
    (TIPS), par value tied to general level of
    prices, coupon payments and final repayment of
    par value increase in direct proportion to the
    Consumer Price Index.
  • risk-free real rate

15
11.2 BOND PRICING
16
Bond Pricing
  • Value a security, discount its expected cash
    flows by the appropriate discount rate
  • Bond value present value of coupons present
    value of par value

17
Bond Pricing
  • PB Price of the bond
  • Ct interest or coupon payments
  • T number of periods to maturity
  • r semi-annual discount rate or the
    semi-annual yield to maturity

18
Bond Pricing
  • Price coupon annuity factor (r, T)
  • Par value PV factor (r, T)
  • annuity factor (r, T)
  • PV factor (r, T)

19
Price of 8, 10-yr. with yield at 6
1
1
20
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P
1000
40
20
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B
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03
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)
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77
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148
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B
Coupon 41,000 40 (Semiannual) Discount Rate
3 (Semiannual) Maturity 10 years or 20
periods Par Value 1,000
20
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

21
Bond Prices and Yields
  • Coupon rate8, semiannual, face value1000
  • Maturity 1-yr , 10-yr, 20-yr, 30-yr
  • Market interest rate, 4--12

22
Bond Prices and Yields
TIME TO MATURITY MARKET INTEREST RATE MARKET INTEREST RATE MARKET INTEREST RATE MARKET INTEREST RATE MARKET INTEREST RATE
TIME TO MATURITY 4 6 8 10 12
1 ?-1,038.83 ?-1,019.13 ?-1,000.00 ?-981.41 ?-963.33
10 ?-1,327.03 ?-1,148.77 ?-1,000.00 ?-875.38 ?-770.60
20 ?-1,547.11 ?-1,231.15 ?-1,000.00 ?-828.41 ?-699.07
30 ?-1,695.22 ?-1,276.76 ?-1,000.00 ?-810.71 ?-676.77
23
The Inverse Relationship Between Bond Prices and
Yields
24
Bond Prices and Yields
  • Issued at par value
  • Secondary market, price move in accordance with
    market forces, fluctuate inversely with the
    market interest rate
  • Interest rate fluctuations, main source of risk
    in fixed-income market
  • Maturity, key factor of sensitivity
  • Longer maturity, greater sensitivity

25
Bond pricing between coupon dates
  • Invoice price flat price accrued interest

26
11.3 BOND YIELDS
27
Yield to Maturity
  • Measure of rate of return that accounts for both
    current income and the price increase over the
    life
  • Total return current income and price change
  • Average rate of return (bought now and held until
    maturity)
  • YTM is the discount rate that makes the present
    value of a bonds payments equal to its price

28
Yield to Maturity
  • Solve the bond formula for r

29
Yield to Maturity Example
  • 10 yr Maturity Coupon Rate 7
  • Price 950
  • Solve for r semiannual rate r 3.8635

30
Yield to Maturity example
  • 8 coupon, 30-year bond selling at 1,276.76

r 3, semiannual rate
31
Yield Measures
  • Bond Equivalent Yield (semiannual yield doubled,
    YTM)
  • 7.72 3.86 x 2 632
  • Effective Annual Yield (accounts for compound
    interest)
  • (1.0386)2 - 1 7.88 (1.03)2 - 1 6.09
  • Current Yield (annual coupon payment divided by
    bond price)
  • Annual Interest / Market Price
  • 70 / 950 7.37 80 / 1276.76 6.27
  • Coupon rate
  • 7 70/1000 8 80/1000

32
Yield Measures
  • YTM
  • internal rate of return
  • Compound rate of return over the life
    (assumption, all bond coupons can be reinvested
    at the yield)
  • Proxy for average return
  • Premium bonds (selling above par)
  • Coupon rate gt current yield gt YTM
  • Discount bonds (selling below par)
  • Coupon rate lt current yield lt YTM

33
Yield to Call
  • if the bond is callable
  • Example , Callable at 1100
  • The call provision allows the issuer to
    repurchase the bond at call price
  • Yield to Call
  • Call price replaces par
  • Time until call replaces time until maturity

34
Bond Prices Callable and Straight Debt
35
Yield to Call example
  • 8 coupon, 30-year bond selling at 1150,
    callable in 10 years at call price of 1100

yield to call yield to maturity
coupon payment 40 40
number of semiannual periods 20 60
final payment 1100 1000
price 1150 1150
36
Realized Compounded Yield versus YTM
  • Reinvestment Assumptions
  • All coupon are reinvested at an interest rate
    equal to YTM
  • With a reinvestment rate equal to YTM, the
    realized compound yield equal to YTM
  • Conventional YTM not equal realized compound
    return, if reinvestment rates can change over
    time
  • Example 2 year, selling at par (1000), coupon
    rate 10, annual pay

37
Growth of Invested Funds
38
Realized Compounded Yield versus YTM
  • If interest rate earned on the first coupon is
    less than 10., the final value of the investment
    will be less than 1210, realized compound return
    will be less than 10
  • Example
  • if reinvest interest rate 8

39
Realized Compounded Yield versus YTM
  • Horizon analysis
  • Forecasting the realized compound yield over
    various holding periods or investment horizons
  • Forecast of total return depends on forecasts of
    both the selling price of the bond and the rate
    to reinvest coupon income

40
Realized Compounded Yield versus YTM
  • Horizon analysis (Example)
  • 30-year, 7.5 annual payment coupon bond, sell
    for 980, YTM is 7.67, plan to hold for 20 years.
  • Forecast that YTM will be 8 when it is sold,
    reinvestment rate on the coupons will be 6
  • At the end of your investment horizon, the bond
    will have 10 years remaining, the forecast sales
    price (when YTM is 8) will be 966.45.
  • 20 coupon payments will grow with compound
    interest (6)to 2758.92
  • 980 investment will grow in 20 years to
    966.452758.923725.37

41
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42
Realized Compounded Yield versus YTM
  • When interest rates change, bond investors are
    subject to two sources of offsetting risk
  • Rate rise, bond prices fall, reduce the valued of
    the portfolio
  • Reinvested coupon income will compound more
    rapidly at those higher rates. The reinvestment
    rate risk will offset the impact of price risk

43
11.4 BOND PRICES OVER TIME
44
Holding-Period Return
  • HPR I ( P1 - P0 ) / P0
  • where
  • I interest payment
  • P1 price in one period
  • P0 purchase price

45
Holding-Period Return
  • Requires actual calculation of reinvestment
    income
  • Solve for the Internal Rate of Return using the
    following
  • Future Value sales price future value of
    coupons
  • Investment purchase price

46
Premium and Discount Bonds
  • Par bond
  • Coupon rate equals market interest rate (fair
    compensation, no further capital gain)
  • Discount Bond
  • Coupon rate is lower than market rate (need to
    earn price appreciation, built-in capital gain)
  • Bond price will increase to par over its maturity
  • Yield to maturity exceeds coupon rate

47
Premium and Discount Bonds
  • Discount Bond Example
  • Market rate when issuing, 7 , annual coupon rate
    7. when the market rate is 8
  • 3 years left, Bond price 70 annuity factor
    (8, 3) 1000 PV factor (8,3)974.23
  • 2 years left, Bond price 70 annuity factor
    (8, 2) 1000 PV factor (8, 2)982.17
  • HPR over this year
  • (982.17-974.2370)/974.238

48
Premium and Discount Bonds
  • Premium Bond
  • Coupon rate exceeds market rate (investors need
    to bid up the price above their par value,
    capital losses offset the large coupon payment,
    fair rate)
  • Coupon rate exceeds yield to maturity
  • Bond price will decline to par over its maturity

49
Premium and Discount Bonds over Time
50
YTM and HPR
  • YTM , measure of the average rate of return if
    the bond is held to maturity
  • If YTM is unchanged over the period, the HPR
    equals YTM
  • If YTM fluctuate, so will HPR.
  • Unanticipated changes in market rates will result
    in unanticipated changes in bond returns and HPR
    can be better or worse than YTM which it
    initially sells.

51
YTM and HPR
  • YTM depends on coupon, current price, par value.
    Observable today
  • HPR is a rate of return over a particular
    investment period and depends on the market price
    of the bond at the end of the holding period

52
Zero-coupon bond
  • No coupons and provides all returns in form of
    price appreciation
  • Provide only one cash flow on maturity date
  • US. Treasury bills
  • STRIPS (Treasury strips) break down the cash
    flows of a Treasury coupon bond to be paid by the
    bond into a series of independent securities,
    each security is a claim to one of the payments
    of the original bond

53
Zero-coupon bond
  • Prices of zeros over time
  • On maturity dates, sell par
  • Before maturity, sell at discounts from par,
    approach par value

54
The Price of a Zero-Coupon Bond over Time
55
11.5 DEFAULT RISK AND BOND PRICING
56
Default Risk and Ratings
  • Rating companies
  • Moodys Investor Service
  • Standard Poors
  • Fitch
  • Rating Categories
  • Investment grade
  • Speculative grade

57
Definitions of Each Bond Rating Class
58
Factors Used by Rating Companies
  • Coverage ratios
  • EBIT/INTEREST, ratio of earnings to all fixed
    cash obligations
  • Leverage ratios
  • D/E
  • Liquidity ratios
  • current asset/current liabilities
  • Profitability ratios
  • ROA, ROE
  • Cash flow to debt

59
Financial Ratios and Default Risk by Rating
Class, Long-Term Debt
60
Factors Used by Rating Companies
  • Z-score
  • Edward Altman
  • Used discriminant analysis to predict bankruptcy,
    get a score based on financial financial ratio

61
Discriminant Analysis
62
Bond Indentures
  • Indenture, contract between the issuer and the
    bondholder (Protective covenants)
  • Set of restrictions that protect the rights of
    the bondholders
  • Provisions relating to collateral, sinking funds,
    dividend policy, further borrowing

63
Bond Indentures
  • Sinking funds- Help ensure the commitment of the
    par value payment at the end of the bonds life,
    the firm agrees to establish a sinking fund to
    spread the payment burden over several years
  • The firm may repurchase a fraction of the
    outstanding bonds
  • May purchase a fraction of the outstanding at a
    special call price

64
Bond Indentures
  • Subordination of future debt
  • Restrict the amount of additional borrowing.
    Additional debt might be required to be
    subordinated in priority to existing debt
  • Dividend restrictions
  • Collateral

65
Default Risk and YTM
  • Promised yield and expected yield
  • The promised or stated yield will be realized
    only if the firm meets the obligations of the
    bond issue, maximum possible YTM
  • When a bond more subject to default risk, price
    will fall, its promised YTM will rise, default
    premium will rise.
  • Default premium is the difference between the
    promised yield on a corporate bond and the yield
    of an otherwise-identical government bond that is
    riskless in terms of default.

66
Default Risk and YTM
  • Risk structure of interest rates
  • Greater default risk, higher default premium
  • Default premiums
  • Yields compared to ratings
  • Yield spreads over business cycles

67
Yields on Long-Term Bonds, 1954 2006
68
Credit Risk and Collateralized Debt Obligations
(CDOs)
  • Major mechanism to reallocate credit risk in the
    fixed-income markets
  • First establish a legally distinct entity to buy
    and later resell a portfolio of bonds or other
    loans (Structured Investment Vehicle, SIV, often
    used to create the CDO
  • Raise funds by issuing short-term commercial
    paper, using the proceeds to buy corporate bonds
    or other forms of debt
  • Loans are pooled together and then split into a
    series of classes (tranche)

69
Credit Risk and Collateralized Debt Obligations
(CDOs)
  • Each tranche is given a different level of
    seniority in terms of its claims on the
    underlying loan pool, and each can be sold as a
    stand-alone security
  • Proceeds of the loans in the pool are distributed
    to pay interest to each tranche in order of
    seniority.
  • Priority structure implies the different exposure
    to credit risk.

70
Collateralized Debt Obligations
71
Collateralized Debt Obligations
  • Mortgage-backed CDOs were an Investment disaster
    in 2007
  • CDOs formed by pooling sub-prime mortgage loans
    made to individuals whose credit standing did not
    allow them to qualify for conventional mortgages.
    When home prices stalled in 2007, and interest
    rates on these typically adjustable-rate loans
    reset to market levels, mortgage delinquencies
    and home foreclosures soared, investors lost
    billions of dollars
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