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1 Topic 8 (Ch. 16) 1 Topic 8 (Ch. 16)

1 Topic 8 (Ch. 16) - PowerPoint Presentation

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1 Topic 8 (Ch. 16) - PPT Presentation

Managing Bond Portfolios Interest rate risk Interest rate sensitivity Duration Convexity Immunization 2  Interest Rate Risk An inverse relationship exists between bond prices and yields and interest rates can fluctuate substantially ID: 533258

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Slide1

1

Topic 8 (Ch. 16) Managing Bond Portfolios

Interest rate risk

Interest rate sensitivity

Duration

Convexity

ImmunizationSlide2

2

 Interest Rate Risk

An inverse relationship exists between bond prices and yields, and interest rates can fluctuate substantially.

As interest rates rise and fall, bondholders experience capital losses and gains. These gains or losses make fixed-income investments risky.

Determinants of interest rate risk

: E.g. The percentage change in price corresponding to changes in YTM for 4 bonds that differ according to coupon rate, initial YTM, and time to maturity.

Interest rate sensitivitySlide3

3Slide4

4

Observations:

Bond prices and yields are inversely related: as yields increase, bond prices fall; as yields fall, bond prices rise.

An increase in a bond’s YTM results in a smaller price decline than the price gain associated with a decrease of equal magnitude in yield. The price curve is convex. Slide5

5

Prices of long-term bonds tend to be more sensitive to interest rate changes than prices of short-term bonds.

Compare the interest rate sensitivity of bonds A and

B,

which are identical except for maturity. Bond B, which has a longer maturity than bond A, exhibits greater sensitivity to interest rate changes. Slide6

6

The sensitivity of bond prices to changes in yields increases at a decreasing rate as maturity increases

(i.e. interest rate risk is less than proportional to

bond maturity)

.

Although bond B has six times the maturity of bond A, it has less than six times the interest rate sensitivity. Although interest rate sensitivity seems to increase with maturity, it does so less than proportionally as bond maturity increases. Slide7

7

Interest rate risk is inversely related to the bond’s coupon rate.

Prices of high-coupon bonds are less sensitive to changes in interest rates than prices of low-coupon bonds.

Consider bonds B and C, which are alike in all respects except for coupon rate.

The lower-coupon bond C exhibits greater sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Slide8

8

The sensitivity of a bond’s price to a change in its yield is inversely related to the YTM at which the bond currently is selling.

Consider bonds

C

and D are identical except for the YTM at which the bonds currently sell. Bond C, with a higher YTM, is less sensitive to changes in yields. Conclusions: Maturity,

coupon rate

, and

initial YTM

are major determinants of interest rate risk. Slide9

9

Why do we need duration?

Consider a 20-year 8% coupon bond and a 20-year zero-coupon bond.

The 20-year 8% bond makes many coupon payments, most of which come years before the bond’s maturity date.

Each of these payments may be considered to have its own “maturity date,” and the effective maturity of the bond is thus some sort of average of the maturities of

all the cash flows paid out by the bond. Duration Slide10

10

By contrast, the zero-coupon bond makes only one payment at maturity. Its time to maturity is thus a well-defined concept.

The time to maturity of a bond is not a perfect measure of the long- or short-term nature of the bond.

We need a measure of the average maturity of the bond’s promised cash flows to serve as a useful summary statistic of the effective maturity of the bond. We would like also to use the measure of as a guide to the sensitivity of a bond to interest rate changes, because we know that price sensitivity depends on time to maturity. Slide11

11

Macaulay’s duration

:

The weighted average of the times to each coupon or principal payment made by the bond.

The weight associated with each payment time clearly should be related to the “importance” of that payment to the value of the bond.

Thus, the weight applied to each payment time should be the proportion of the total value of the bond accounted for by that payment. This proportion is just the present value of the payment divided by the bond price.Slide12

12

Macaulay’s duration

:

where t: the time to each cash flow (coupon or principal) : the weight associated with the

cash flow made at time

t

(

CF

t

)

y

: the bond’s YTM

T

: time to maturity.Slide13

13

Example 1

:

An 8% coupon, 2-year maturity bond with par value of $1,000 paying 4 semiannual coupon payments of $40 each.

The YTM on this bond is 10% (i.e. 5

% per half-year). Slide14

14

Note

:

D

<

T

(time to maturity) = 2 yearsSlide15

15

Example 2

:

An zero-coupon, 2-year maturity bond with par value of $1,000.

The YTM on this bond is 10% (i.e. 5% per half-year).

Note

:

D

=

T

(time to maturity) = 2 yearsSlide16

16

When interest rates change, the proportional change in a bond’s price (

P

) can be related to the change in its YTM (

y

) according to the following rule:Notes: 1. Modified duration: 2. Slide17

17

The percentage change in bond price is just the product of modified duration and the change in the bond’s YTM.

Because the percentage change in the bond price is proportional to modified duration, modified duration is a natural measure of the bond’s exposure to changes in interest rates. Slide18

18

Example:

An 8% coupon, 2-year maturity bond with par value of $1,000 paying 4 semiannual coupon payments of $40 each.

The initial YTM on this bond is 10% (i.e. 5

% per half-year). Now, suppose that the bond’s semiannual yield increases by 1 basis point (i.e. 0.01%) to 5.01%. Calculate the new value of the bond and the percentage change in the bond’s price. Slide19

19Slide20

20

Alternatively, using the equation:

Note

:

Because we use a half-year interest rate of 5%, we also need to define duration in terms of a number of half-year periods to maintain consistency of units.

half-yeas. Slide21

21

What determines duration?

Rules

:

The duration of a zero-coupon bond equals its time to maturity.

We have seen that a zero-coupon, 2-year maturity bond has D = 2 years.   Slide22

22

Bond duration versus bond maturity:Slide23

23

Holding maturity constant, a bond’s duration is higher when the coupon rate is lower.

We have seen that a coupon bond has a lower duration than a zero with equal maturity because coupons early in the bond’s life lower the bond's weighted average time until payments.

This property is attributable to the impact of early coupon payments on the average maturity of a bond’s payments. The higher these coupons, the higher the weights on the early payments and the lower is the weighted average maturity of the payments.

e.g.

Compare the durations of the 3% coupon and 15% coupon bonds, each with identical yields of 15%. Slide24

24

Holding the coupon rate constant, a bond’s duration generally increases with its time to maturity.

Duration always increases with maturity for bonds selling at

par

or at a

premium to par. For some deep-discount bonds, duration may fall with increases in maturity. e.g. Compare the relations between bond duration and bond maturity for the following 3 bonds: (i) 15%

coupon YTM = 6% (premium bond)

(ii) 15% coupon YTM = 15% (selling at par)

(iii) 3% coupon YTM = 15% (deep-discount bond)Slide25

25

Note:

For the zero-coupon bond, maturity and duration are equal.

However, for coupon bonds duration increases by less than a year with a year’s increase in maturity. The slope of the duration graph is less than 1.0.

Although long-maturity bonds generally will be high-duration bonds, duration is a better measure of the long-term nature of the bond because it also accounts for coupon payments.

Time to maturity is an adequate statistic only when the bond pays no coupons; then, maturity and duration are equal. Slide26

26

Holding other factors constant, the duration of a coupon bond is higher when the bond’s YTM is lower.

At lower yields the more distant payments made by the bond have relatively greater present values and account for a greater share of the bond's total value.

Thus, in the weighted-average calculation of duration the distant payments receive greater weights, which results in a higher duration measure.

e.g.

Compare (i) the duration of the 15% coupon, 6% YTM bond and (ii) the duration of the 15% coupon, 15% YTM bond.Slide27

27

The duration of a level

perpetuity

is:

D = (1 + y)/y. e.g. At a 10% yield, the duration of a perpetuity that pays $100 once a year forever is: (1 + 10%)/(10%) = 11 years

At an 8% yield, the duration is:

(1 + 8%)/8% = 13.5 years.Slide28

28

The duration of a level

annuity

is:

where

T: the number of payments y: the annuity’s yield per payment period. e.g. A 10-year annual annuity with a yield of 8% will

have duration:

Slide29

29

The duration of a

coupon bond

equals:

where

c: the coupon rate per payment period T: the number of payment periods y: the bond’s yield per payment period.

Slide30

30

e.g.

A 10% coupon bond (par = $1,000) with 20 years until maturity, paying coupons semiannually, would have a

5%

semiannual coupon and 40 payment periods.

If the YTM were 4% per half-year period, the bond’s duration would be: = 19.74 half-years = 9.87 years Slide31

31

For coupon bonds selling at par value (i.e.

c

=

y

), the duration becomes:where T: the number of payment periods y: the bond’s yield per payment period.Slide32

32

The duration rule for the impact of interest rates on bond prices is only an

approximation

.

Recall: The percentage change in the value of a bond approximately equals the product of modified duration times the change in the bond’s yield:  ConvexitySlide33

33

If this were

exactly

so, a graph of the percentage change in bond price as a function of the change in its yield would plot as a straight line, with slope equal to

-D*.

Yet, the relationship between bond prices and yields is not linear. The duration rule is a good approximation for small changes in bond yield, but it is less accurate for larger changes. Slide34

34

Bond price convexity: 30-year maturity, 8% coupon bond; initial yield to maturity = 8%.

Slide35

35

The two lines are tangent at the initial yield.

Thus, for small changes in the bond’s YTM, the duration rule is quite accurate.

However, for larger changes in yield, the duration rule becomes progressively less accurate.Slide36

36

The duration approximation (the straight line) always understates the value of the bond.

It underestimates the increase in bond price when the yield falls, and it overestimates the decline in price when the yield rises.

This is due to the curvature of the true price-yield relationship.

Curves with shapes such as that of the price-yield relationship are said to be

convex, and the curvature of the price-yield curve is called the convexity of the bond. Slide37

37

Mathematically

:

Thus,

D* is the slope

of the price-yield curve expressed as a

fraction of the bond price.

Slide38

38

Similarly, the convexity of a bond equals the

second derivative

of the price-yield curve divided by bond price:

The convexity of noncallable bonds is positive since the slope increases (i.e. becomes less negative) at higher yields; that is, .Slide39

39

The formula for the convexity of a bond

:

where

P: bond price y: the bond’s yield per payment period

CF

t

: cash flow (coupon or par value) paid to the

bondholder at time

t

T:

the number of payment periodsSlide40

40

Adjustments for frequency of coupon payments per year:

If the coupons occur every 1/2 year, the convexity measure is in number of (i.e. 1/4) years.

To adjust the convexity to number of years, the convexity must be divided by 4.

In general, if the cash flows occur m times per year, the convexity is adjusted by dividing by m2

.

Slide41

41

Example 1

:

An 8% coupon, 30-year maturity bond with par value of $1,000 paying 30

annual

coupon payments of $80 each. The bond sells at an initial YTM of 8% annually.  bond price = $1,000. Slide42

42

Slide43

43

Example 2

:

A 6% coupon, 5-year maturity bond with par value of $1,000 paying 10

semiannual

coupon payments of $30 each. The bond sells at an initial YTM of 9% (i.e. 4.5% per half-year). Slide44

44Slide45

45

Convexity allows us to improve the duration approximation for bond price changes

:

The first term on the right-hand side is the same as the duration rule and the second term is the modification for convexity.

For a bond with positive convexity, the second term is positive, regardless of whether the yield rises or falls.

This insight corresponds to the fact that the duration rule always underestimates the new value of a bond following a change in its yield. Slide46

46

Recall the example

:

An 8% coupon, 30-year maturity bond with par value of $1,000 paying 30

annual

coupon payments of $80 each. The bond sells at an initial YTM of 8% annually.  bond price = $1,000. Slide47

47

If the bond’s yield increases from 8% to 10%, the bond price will fall to:

= $811.46.Slide48

48

The duration rule

:

which is considerably more than the bond price actually falls.

The duration-with-convexity rule is more accurate:Slide49

49

Note

:

If the change in yield is small, the convexity term, which is multiplied by , will be extremely small and will add little to the approximation.

In this case, the linear approximation given by the duration rule will be sufficiently accurate.

Thus, convexity is more important as a practical matter when potential interest rate changes are large.Slide50

50

Bonds

A

and B have the same duration at the initial yield, but bond

A

is more convex than bond B. Bond A enjoys greater price increases and smaller price decreases when interest rates fluctuate by larger amounts. Why do investors like convexity? Slide51

51Slide52

52

When interest rates are high, the price-yield curve for a callable bond is convex, as it would be for a straight bond.

But, as rates fall, there is a ceiling on the possible price: The callable bond cannot be worth more than its call price.

In this region, the price-yield curve lies

below

its tangency line, and the curve is said to have negative convexity.Duration and convexity of callable bondsSlide53

53

Price-yield curve for a callable bond

:Slide54

54

In the region of negative convexity, interest rate increases result in a larger price decline than the price gain corresponding to an interest rate decrease of equal magnitude.

If rates rise, the bondholder loses, as would be the case for a straight bond.

But, if rates fall, rather man reaping a large capital gain, the investor may have the bond called back from her. Slide55

55

Effective duration for callable bonds

:

where

P

: bond price r: interest rateNote: We do not compute effective duration relative to a change in the bond’s own YTM. (The denominator is ; not .)

This is because for callable bonds, which may be called early, the YTM is often not a relevant statistic. Slide56

56

Example

:

A callable bond with a call price of $1,050 is selling today for $980.

If the interest rate moves up by 0.5%,

the bond price will fall to $930. If it moves down by 0.5%, the bond price will rise to $1,010.  = assumed increase in rates - assumed decrease in rates =

0.5% - (-0.5%)

= 1% = 0.01Slide57

57

= price at 0.5% increase in rates

- price at 0.5% decrease in rates

= $930 - $l,010 = -$80

i.e. the bond price changes by 8.16% for a 1% swing

in rates around current values.Slide58

58

A strategy used by a firm to meet its future obligations which fluctuate with interest rates.

Example

: An insurance company issues a guaranteed investment contract (GIC) for $10,000. Essentially, GICs are zero-coupon bonds issued by the insurance company to its customers. If the GIC has a 5-year maturity and a guaranteed interest rate of 8%, the insurance company is obligated to pay $10,000  (1.08)5 = $14,693.28 in 5 years.

  ImmunizationSlide59

59

Suppose that the insurance company chooses to fund its obligation with $10,000 of 8%

annual

coupon bonds, selling at par value ($1,000), with 6 years to maturity.

As long as the market interest rate stays at 8%, the company has fully funded the obligation.Slide60

60

Payment Number

Years Remaining until Obligation

Accumulated Value of Invested Payment

 

 

 

 

A. Rates remain at 8%

 

 

 

1

4

800 × (1.08)

4

1,088.39

2

3

800 × (1.08)

3

1,007.77

3

2

800 × (1.08)

2

933.12

4

1

800 × (1.08)

1

864.00

5

0

800 × (1.08)

0

800.00

Sale of bond

0

10,800/1.08

10,000.00

 

 

 

 

14,693.28 Slide61

61

However, if interest rates change, two offsetting influences will affect the ability of the fund to grow to the targeted value of $14,693.28.

If interest rates rise, the fund will suffer a capital loss, impairing its ability to satisfy the obligation.

However, at a higher interest rate, reinvested coupons will grow at a faster rate, offsetting the capital loss.

In other words, fixed-income investors face two offsetting types of interest rate risk:

price risk and reinvestment rate risk. Slide62

62

If the portfolio duration is chosen appropriately, these two effects will cancel out exactly.

When the portfolio duration is set equal to the investor’s horizon date, the accumulated value of the investment fund at the horizon date will be unaffected by interest rate fluctuations.

For a horizon equal to the portfolio’s duration, price risk and reinvestment risk exactly cancel out.Slide63

63

Recall

:

For coupon bonds selling at par value, the duration becomes:

 The duration of the 6-year maturity bonds used to fund the GIC is:Slide64

64Slide65

65

We can also analyze immunization in terms of

present values

as opposed to future values: Slide66

66

If the obligation was immunized, why is there any surplus in the fund?

The answer is

convexity

.

The coupon bond has greater convexity than the obligation it funds. Thus, when rates move substantially, the bond value exceeds the present value of the obligation by a noticeable amount. Slide67

67Slide68

68

Rebalancing immunized portfolios

As interest rates and asset durations change, a manager must rebalance the portfolio of fixed-income assets continually to realign its duration with the duration of the obligation.

Even if interest rates do not change, asset durations

will

change solely because of the passage of time. Thus, even if an obligation is immunized at the outset, as time passes the durations of the asset and liability will generally fall at different rates. Without portfolio rebalancing, durations will become unmatched and the goals of immunization will not be realized. Slide69

69

Example

:

A portfolio manager faces an obligation of $19,487 in 7 years, which at a current market interest rate of 10%, has a present value of $10,000 [= $19,487/(1 + 10%)

7]. Right now, suppose that the manager wishes to immunize the obligation by holding only 3-year zero-coupon bonds and perpetuities paying annual coupons. At current interest rates, the perpetuities have a duration of (1 + 10%)/10% = 11 years. The duration of the zero is simply 3 years.Slide70

70

Let

w

:

the zero’s weight 1 – w: the perpetuity’s weight The duration of a portfolio is the weighted average of the durations of the assets comprising the portfolio. To achieve the desired portfolio duration of 7 years, the manager would have to choose appropriate values for the weights of the zero and the perpetuity in the overall portfolio: Slide71

71

The manager invests:

(i) $5,000 (= $10,000

 0.5) in the zero-coupon bond [the face value of the zero will be $5,000  (1.10)3 = $6,655]

(ii) $5,000 (= $10,000

 0.5)

in the perpetuity,

providing annual coupon payments of $500 per year

indefinitely.

The portfolio duration is then 7 years, and the position is immunized.Slide72

72

Next year, even if interest rates do not change, rebalancing will be necessary.

The present value of the obligation has grown to $11,000 [= $19,487/(1 + 10%)

6

], because it is 1 year closer to maturity.

The manager’s funds also have grown to $11,000:(i) The zero-coupon bonds have increased in value from $5,000 to $5,500 [= $6,655/(1.10)2] with the passage of time.

(ii) The perpetuity has paid its annual $500 coupon

and still is worth $5,000 [= $500/10%]. Slide73

73

However, the portfolio weights must be changed.

The zero-coupon bond now will have duration of 2 years, while the perpetuity remains at 11 years.

The obligation is now due in 6 years. The weights must now satisfy the equation:Slide74

74

The manager must invest a total of $11,000  5/9 = $6,111.11 in the zero.

This requires that the entire $500 coupon payment be invested in the zero and that an additional $111.11 of the perpetuity be sold and invested in the zero in order to maintain an immunized position.

Slide75

75

Note 1

:

Rebalancing of the portfolio entails transaction costs as assets are bought or sold, so one cannot rebalance continuously.

In practice, an appropriate compromise must be established between the desire for perfect immunization, which requires continual re­balancing, and the need to control trading costs, which dictates less frequent rebalancing. Slide76

76

Note 2

:

Why not simply buy a zero-coupon bond that provides a payment in an amount exactly sufficient to cover the projected cash outlay?

If we follow the principle of cash flow matching, we automatically immunize the portfolio from interest rate movement because the cash flow from the bond and the obligation exactly offset each other.

Once the cash flows are matched, there is no need for rebalancing. Slide77

77

However, cash flow matching is not more widely pursued probably because:

 Immunization strategies are appealing to firms that do not wish to bet on general movements in interest rates, but these firms may want to immunize using bonds that they perceive are undervalued.

However, cash flow matching places so many more constraints on the bond selection process that it can be impossible to pursue a strategy using only “underpriced” bonds. Slide78

78

 Sometimes, cash flow matching is simply not possible.

To cash flow match for a pension fund that is obligated to pay out a perpetual flow of income to current and future retirees, the pension fund would need to purchase fixed-income securities with maturities ranging up to hundreds of years.

Such securities do not exist, making exact cash flow matching infeasible.