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Interest Rate Markets Chapter 4

Interest Rate Markets Chapter 4. Types of Interest Rates. Repurchase rates Treasury rates LIBOR. The market for Repurchase Agreements

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Interest Rate Markets Chapter 4

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  1. Interest Rate MarketsChapter 4

  2. Types of Interest Rates • Repurchase rates • Treasury rates • LIBOR

  3. The market for Repurchase Agreements An integral part of trading T-bills and T-bill futures is the market for repurchase agreements or repos. Repos are used in much of the arbitrage trading in T-bills. In a repurchase agreement a borrower sells a security (in this case, T-bills) to another party for one price and commits to repurchase the security for another price at a future date. The buyer of the T-bills in a repo is said to enter into a reverse repurchase agreement., or reverse repo. The buyer’s transactions are just the opposite of the seller’s. The figure below demonstrates the transactions in a repo.

  4. Transactions in a Repurchase Agreement Date 0 - Open the Repo: T- Bill Party A Party B PO Date t - Close the Repo T-Bill Party A Party B Pt= P0(1+r0,t )

  5. Example: • T-bill FV = $1M. • P0 = $980,000. • The repo rate = 6%/annum • The repo is for: n = 4 days. • P1= P0 [1 + (repo rate)(n/360)] • = $980,000[1 + (.06)(4/360)] • = $980,653.33

  6. A repurchase agreement effectively allows the seller to borrow from the buyer using the security as collateral. The seller receives funds today that must be paid back in the future and relinquishes the security for the duration of the agreement. The interest on the borrowing is the difference between the initial sale price and the subsequent price for repurchasing the security. The borrowing rate in a repurchase agreement is called the repo rate.

  7. The buyer of a reverse repurchase agreement receives a lending rate called the reverse repo rate. The repo market is a competitive dealer market with quotations available for both borrowing and lending. As with all borrowing and lending rates, there is a spread between repo and reverse repo rates.

  8. The amount one can borrow with a repo is less than the market value of the security by a margin called a haircut. The size of the haircut depends on the maturity and liquidity of the security. For repos on T-bills, the haircut is very small, often only one-eighth of a point. It can be as high as 5% for repurchase agreements on longer-term securities such as Treasury bonds and other government agencies

  9. Most repos are held only overnight, so those who wish to borrow for longer periods must roll over their positions every day. However, there are some longer-term repurchase agreements, called term repos, that come in standardized maturities of one, two, and three weeks and one, two, three, and six months.Some other customized agreements also are traded.

  10. Zero Rates A zero rate, r, (spot rate), for maturity T is the rate of interest earned on an investment that provides a payoff only at time T. T need not be integer. US T-bills yield zero rates. US Gov long-term zero rate bonds are called: STRIPS

  11. Treasury Bill Quotes in the U.S. If B is the cash price of a Treasury bill that has ndays to maturity the quoted price is

  12. Quotes: The discount yield

  13. The Bond Equivalent yield (BEY)

  14. Example: n = 90days. FV = $1,000,000. d = 11%.

  15. The Discount yield and The Bond Equivalent Yield

  16. Forward Rates Forward rates are the zero rates implied by today’s term structure of interest rates. R1,2 R2 R1 0 T1 T2

  17. In the absence of arbitrage:

  18. Calculation of Forward RatesTable 4.5, page 85 Zero Rate for n an -year Investment n Year ( ) (% per annum) 1 3.0 2 4.0 3 4.6 4 5.0 5 5.3

  19. Upward vs Downward SlopingYield Curve • For an upward sloping yield curve: Fwd Rate > Zero Rate > Par Yield • For a downward sloping yield curve Par Yield > Zero Rate > Fwd Rate

  20. Forward Rate Agreements(Sec 4.7) • A forward rate agreement (FRA) is an agreement that a certain rate will apply to a certain principal during a certain future time period

  21. Theories of the Term Structure (P.93) Expectations Theory: forward rates equal expected future zero rates Market Segmentation: short, medium and long rates are determined independently of each other • Liquidity Preference Theory: forward rates are higher than expected future zero rates by a liquidity premium

  22. Treasury Bond Price Quotes in the U.S Cash price = Quoted price + Accrued Interest The accrued interest is the interest accumulated (but not paid out) from the last coupon payment through the current day. Last B Next Coupon Coupon

  23. A BOND is a promisory note to pay a certain cash flow in the future. Bond parameters: B = The bond quoted price. FV = The Face value (Par value) of the bond. M = Maturity date of the bond. t = The time index. t = 1,2,…,M. Ct = The cash paid to the bond holder by the end of period t. CR = The bond’s coupon rate.

  24. Bond parameters: Usually, the cash flow from the bond is a series of equal amounts – the coupons. Ct = C t = 1,2,…,M. The coupon payment is based on the FV and on the Coupon Rate CR: C = [CR][FV] FV = $1,000 CR = 7% C = $70, if paid annually; $35, if paid semiannually.

  25. Theoretical Bond Pricing: An example: FV = $100; M = 2 years; CR = 6% C/2 = $3, paid semiannually. p.81.

  26. Theoretical Bond Pricing: Example • To calculate the cash price of a bond, B, we discount each cash flow at the appropriate zero rate

  27. The Bond Yield to Maturity (YTM) • The bond YTM, y, is the discount rate that equals the bond’s market price to the present value of the cash flows from the bond. • Example: Assume that B = 98.39 • YTM is given by solving: to obtain: y=0.0676 or y = 6.76%.

  28. Bond Yield To Maturity (YTM) In the actual bond markets, the calculations are different from the theoretical bond pricing above. Mostly, the discounting is NOT continuous. Rather it is periodical and the YTM, y, is used in the calculation of the bond’s market price.

  29. Moreover, most bonds pay the same coupon annually. Thus, Ct = C for all periods. The above formula becomes:

  30. YTM, another interpretation:

  31. Many bonds pay the same coupon semiannually: or Ct = C/2 for all periods. The above formula becomes:

  32. Example 1: A 25-year T-bond with Face Value of $1,000 pays annual coupons at an 8% rate. M = 25; FV = $1,000; CR = 8%; c = $80. An investor who buys this T-bond will receive $80 every year from now until its maturity; plus $1,000 by the end of the 25th year of the bond’s life.

  33. The same bond with YTM = 8% is priced:

  34. Example 2: A 25-year T-bond with Face Value of $1,000 pays coupons at an 8% rate semiannually. M = 25; FV = $1,000; CR = 8%; m = 2; N = Mm = 50 and c = $40. An investor who buys this T-bond will receive $40 every six months from now until its maturity; plus $1,000 by the end of the 25th year of the bond’s life.

  35. Ct = C/2 = $40 for 50 periods. If YTM = 8% the above bond is priced:

  36. Example 2 revisited. Ct = C/2 = $40 for 50 periods. With YTM = 10%

  37. Example 2 revisited. Ct = C/2 = $40 for 50 periods. With YTM = 5%

  38. Result: When CR = y B = FV. The bond sells at par. When CR > y B > FV. The bond sells at a premium. When CR < y B < FV. The bond sells at a discount.

  39. A pure discount bond: Example 1 revisited: A consul: pays $80 annually, FOR EVER.

  40. DURATION IS THE WIEGHTED AVERAGE MATURITY OF A BOND. THE WEIGHTS ARE THE PROPORTIONS THAT THE DISCOUNTED CASH FLOWS ARE OF THE CURRENT BOND PRICE.

  41. DURATION Duration is a measure of the bond’s price volatility. The concept of Duration can be used for all assets, liabilities and off-balance sheet items. Duration applies for a single asset, a portfolio or the entire balance sheet. In computing Duration we consider both the timing and the magnitude of all cash flows associated with the security.

  42. Duration in continuous time(p.89) • Duration of a bond that provides cash flow c i at time t i is where Bis its price and y is its yield (continuously compounded) • In the continuous discounting case:

  43. DURATION INTERPRETED AS A MEASURE OF THE BOND PRICE SENSITIVITY

  44. The negative sign merely indicates that D changes in opposite direction to the change in the yield, y.

  45. DURATION as the bond’s price Elasticity Suppose that D = -7.51. The above interpretation means: If the Bond’s YTM, y, rises (falls) by 1% The Bond’s price will decrease (increase) by 7.51%

  46. DURATION: A CLOSED FORM FORMULA: N = The total number of payments. m = The number of payments every year. Φ = The fraction of the year to the next coupon payment.

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