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Com 4FJ3 Fixed Income Analysis Week 4 Measuring Price Risk – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Com 4FJ3


1
Com 4FJ3
  • Fixed Income Analysis
  • Week 4
  • Measuring Price Risk

2
Basics of Price Risk
  • As YTM changes, bond prices change
  • Bond prices move in the opposite direction to the
    change in yield
  • Not all bonds react the same amount to a given
    change in yield
  • For large changes in yield, an increase has a
    higher change than a decrease

3
Time to Maturity Effect
4
Time to Maturity
  • All else held constant the longer the time to
    maturity the larger the price volatility of a
    bond with respect to changing yields
  • Intuition if I am paying a premium to lock in an
    above average current yield, I am willing to pay
    more to lock it in for a longer period of time

5
Coupon Rate
  • Consider two bonds, A and B
  • 1,000 face value maturity 10 years
  • YTM 9
  • Coupon rate A 5 B 10
  • Initial Prices PVcoupons PVface
  • A 325 415 740
  • B 650 415 1,065
  • What change in price if YTM ? 8?

6
Coupon Rate
  • Price A, 8 340 456 796
  • Change (796 - 740) / 740 7.6
  • Price B, 8 680 456 1136
  • Change (1,136 - 1,065) / 1,065 6.7
  • In general, the larger the coupon payment, the
    less the change in price with a change in yield.

7
Effect of YTM
8
Level of YTM
  • As the level of interest rates rise, the
    sensitivity of bond prices to changes in the
    yield falls
  • Intuition a change from 2 to 2.1 is much more
    significant than a change from 16 to 16.1 as a
    fraction of total return

9
Price Value of a Basis Point
  • One measure of price change is the dollar change
    in the price of a bond for a 1 basis point
    increase in the required yield
  • Also known as dollar value of an 01
  • Stated based on the pricing convention of quotes
    per 100 of face value
  • p63 5 year 9 coupon par bond, 3.96

10
Yield Value of a Price Change
  • Pricing conventions used to quote prices in 32nds
    or 8ths of a point (fraction of a dollar per 100
    of face value)
  • This measure converts the minimum price change
    into the effective change to YTM
  • 5 year 9 par bond -? 99.875
  • New YTM 9.032
  • Yield value of an 8th 3.2 basis points

11
Macaulays Duration
  • First published in 1938
  • A bond can be considered to be a package of zero
    coupon bonds
  • By taking a weighted average of the maturity of
    those zero coupon bonds, you can approximate the
    price sensitivity of the portfolio that the bond
    represents

12
Macaulays Duration
  • The average time that you wait for each payment,
    weighted by the percentage of the price that each
    payment represents.
  • Captures the effect of maturity, coupon rate and
    yield on interest rate risk.
  • The higher the duration the greater the level of
    interest rate risk in an investment.

13
Duration Calculation
  • Two bonds
  • YTM 8
  • Maturity 3 years
  • Coupon rate
  • A 6
  • B 10
  • Face Value 1,000
  • Find the duration.

14
Price Elasticity
  • Using calculus on the price equation

15
Modified Duration
  • From the last line of the previous equation, the
    right hand side is
  • -1/(1y) x Macaulays duration
  • The negative of this is called Modified Duration
  • Modified duration Macaulays duration/(1y)
  • Often used to approximate percentage price
    changes
  • Duration in years D in six month periods/2
  • use 6 month rate for (1y) in modified duration

16
Alternate Method
  • From the annuity formula for the price of a bond
    we can get a formula for modified duration
    instead of calculating weighted average (per 100
    of face value)

17
Properties of Duration
  • Increases with time to maturity
  • Increases as coupon rate decreases to a maximum
    of time to maturity for a zero coupon bond
  • Decreases as YTM increases due to face value
    having less weight in portfolio
  • Modified Duration is similar, but lower max

18
Approximate Price Change
  • The change in price for a given change in yield
    can be calculated using modified duration (a.k.a.
    volatility)
  • The approximate percentage change in price -
    modified duration x change in yield
  • Given MD 7.66, calculate change in price for a
    50 basis point increase in yield
  • DP -7.66 x 0.5 -3.83

19
Dollar Price Change
  • The approximate dollar price change is simply the
    approximate percent price change times the price
  • Given the bond on the previous slide, if the
    initial price was 102.5 the decrease in value is
    3.83
  • In dollar terms, 3.926

20
How Close is This?
  • For small yield changes, the approximation is
    reasonable, p. 70 example, for a 1 basis point
    increase on a 25 year 6 coupon bond with an
    initial yield of 9, the forecast change is
    -0.0747 actual is -0.0746
  • For large changes it is not as good
  • Reason duration is a linear approximation of the
    price/yield relationship

21
Portfolio Duration
  • Since duration is simply a weighted average of
    the time to the coupon payments and face value,
    portfolio duration is simply the weighted average
    of the durations of the individual bonds
  • Portfolio managers look at the contribution to
    portfolio duration to assess their interest rate
    risk of a single bond issue

22
Convexity
Tangent line for estimated price
23
Convexity
  • Due to the shape of the yield curve, the
    predicted price will always be lower than the
    actual price
  • How close the approximation is depends on how
    convex the price/yield relationship is for a
    given bond

24
Measuring Convexity
  • Convexity is based on the rate of change of slope
    in the price/yield relationship
  • That means that we need the second derivative of
    the price of a bond
  • This is the dollar convexity

25
Convexity Measure
  • The convexity measure is the second derivative of
    the price divided by the price

26
Convexity Example
27
Price Change Example
  • Given 25 year, 6 bond yielding 9
  • Required yield increases to 11
  • Mod. Duration 10.62
  • change due to duration -10.62 x 2-21.24
  • Convexity in years 178
  • change due to convexity 1/2 x 178 x 0.0223.66
  • Forecast change -21.24 3.66 -17.58
  • Actual change -18.03

28
Alternate Calculation
  • We could also take the second derivative of the
    annuity based price formula
  • Divide by price for convexity measure
  • Divide by m2 to convert to years

29
Note on Convexity
  • Different writers compute the convexity measure
    differently
  • One method moves the ½ into the measure

30
Value of Convexity
Price
Bond A
Bond B
Yield
31
Value of Convexity
  • Two bonds offering the same duration and yield,
    but with different convexity
  • Bond A will outperform bond B if the required
    yield changes
  • Bond A should have a higher price
  • Increase in value of A over B should be related
    to the volatility of interest rates

32
Positive Convexity
  • As required yields increase convexity will
    decrease
  • As yields increase the slope of the tangent line
    will become flatter
  • Implication
  • as yield increases, prices fall and duration
    falls
  • as yield decreases, prices rise and duration rises

33
Properties of Convexity
  • For a given yield and maturity, the lower the
    coupon rate, the higher the convexity
  • For a given yield and modified duration, the
    higher the coupon rate, the higher the convexity
  • Although coupon rate has an impact on the
    convexity it has a bigger impact on duration

34
Effective Duration
  • If a bond has embedded options, that will change
    the bonds price sensitivity to changes in
    required yields
  • The value of a call option on the bond decreases
    as yields increase, and increases as yields
    decrease
  • Effective duration can be calculated to account
    for the fact that expected cash flows may change
    in yields change

35
Duration vs. Time
  • With plain vanilla bonds, duration can be seen as
    a measure of time
  • With more complex instruments, this link is
    broken
  • Modified duration is a measure of the bonds
    price volatility with respect to changes in the
    required yield

36
Duration of Floaters
  • A floating rate bond usually trades near par
    since the coupon rate adjusts to changes in
    interest rates
  • Therefore a floaters duration is near zero
  • An inverse floater has a high duration (possibly
    greater than its maturity) since, when interest
    rates go up its coupon payments go down,
    exaggerating the impact of a change in yields
  • A double floater could have a negative duration

37
Approximating Duration
  • Instead of using duration to approximate price
    changes, we can use price changes to approximate
    duration
  • Potentially useful for complex instruments as a
    measure of price volatility

P- price if yield down P price if yield up P0
original price
38
Approximating Convexity
  • We can also approximate convexity using a similar
    method

P- price if yield down P price if yield up P0
original price
39
Changing Yield Curve
  • What happens if the shape of the yield curve
    changes?
  • It is possible that prices on 30 year bonds could
    change while short term rates are stable
  • Duration calculations can change to key rate
    durations, duration vectors, partial durations,
    etc.
  • Key rate durations are illustrated in the text
    they are calculated using the approximation
    formula
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