New York University
Debt Markets - Key Concepts
Brief Overview of Key Concepts of Debt Markets
July 5th, 2001
Linda
Debt Markets - Key Concepts
• Inverse relationship of Price vs. Yield
• Sensitivity measures - duration/delta, convexity
• Example 30 year zero vs. high coupon bond
• Importance of Yield curve shape, non-parallel shifts
• Benchmark Yields and Credit Spreads vs. trading on Price basis
Price vs. Yield Relationship
P = (C/Y) + [(100 - C/Y) / (1+ Y/2)^N]
Where:
• C = annual $ coupon paid semi-annually
• Y = annual yield
• N = Number of semi-annual coupons paid in N/2 years
Price vs. Yield Relationship
example
[pic]
Price vs. Yield Relationship
30-yr. 6% coupon example
|Price |Yield |
|115.45 |5.0% |
|100.00 |6.0% |
|87.53 |7.0% |
Price vs. Yield Relationship
Important relationships for convex function:
• The 1st partial derivative (slope of the tangent of the Price vs. Yield curve) is negative:
dP/dY < 0
• The 2nd partial derivative (convexity) is positive:
d2P/dY2 > 0
Price vs. Yield Relationship:
Duration Measures
Macaulay's Duration:
• Average time for a security to payback the original investment on a discounted basis
• Weighted-average time to each cash flow
• Measures price-elasticity with respect to yield
• D = [(I+Y)/Y) - [(I+Y) + T(c-Y)] / c[(I+Y)T-I]+Y
Where:
c = Coupon rate per payment period
Y = Yield per payment period
T = Number of payment periods
• Note that this is per payment period
Price vs. Yield Relationship:
30-yr. Bond Duration Comparison
[pic]
Important Duration Rules
• Macaulay Duration for a zero coupon bond = Term to maturity
• Holding maturity constant, duration increases as the coupon rate decreases
• Holding all else constant, as yield increases the duration of a coupon paying bond decreases
• Holding all else constant, duration increases as maturity increases
Price vs. Yield Relationship:
Other Duration Measures
Modified Duration:
• percentage change in price for a change in yield
• Mod D = (dP/P) dy
• Mod D = Mac D (I +y/m)
where:
• y =annual yield
• m = number of coupons paid per year
Price vs. Yield Relationship:
Other Duration Measures
Dollar Duration:
• = slope of tangent to the P/Y curve at a specific yield
• = dP/dY, divide by 100 for percentage yield change -e.g. from 6.0% to 7.0%
DV01:
• $ change in bond price for a I BPS (0.01%) change in yield
• = dP/dY x.0001 per $100 par, can adjust scale for notional amount to reflect PVBP position value per basis point PVBP = Mod D * Price
*Note: All duration measures are related to the slope of the tangent to the Price vs. Yield curve
The Importance of the Yield Curve
Term Structure of Interest Rates:
• Usually upwardly sloping - rates increase as term increases
• May have hedged portfolio duration but still have exposures at different maturity levels
Non-parallel yield curve shifts:
• Fixed income assets will re-price based upon movement in rates relative for each assets' maturity.
• Cash rates vs. medium term rates vs. long term rates may behave very differently
• Seemingly hedged portfolio suddenly not very hedged
Benchmarking and Spreads
Many debt securities priced as a spread to a benchmark
• Typical benchmarks include on-the-run US Treasuries, other major sovereigns, LIBOR, etc.
• Spreads are generally quoted in basis points above the benchmark yield
• Different debt securities are generally analyzed and compared on a yield and spread basis across the same maturity or duration bucket and credit level
• Need to be able to adjust from yield/spread basis to price adjustment - most pricing systems such as Bloomberg will convert from yield to price
• Example - Mexico Par A (Brady w/ US Treasury 0 collateral) stripped yield/duration comparison to Mexican 5-yr.
Trading on Yield/Spreads vs. Price Basis
• Remember the Price/Yield Relationship - as prices approach 0 Yield approaches infinity
• Therefore for low quality debt, yield basis becomes meaningless and the securities are quotes on a price basis
• These are generally high yield category bonds which are in default or have a high probability of default
• This high credit risk results in the bond trading more like equity becoming price driven by factors relating to the issuer and are not very interest rate sensitive
• Many low credit rated emerging markets bonds appear to trade on a price basis similar to high yield (junk bonds)
• Example - Nigeria bond trading at a stripped yield of 35.9%, priced at 53.0 with a collateral value of 40.9!
Debt Markets Additional Notes
• Debt Markets account for more dollar value than equity markets but are much less liquid (except benchmarks)
• Aside from the markets for major benchmarks such as US Treasuries, most investors are institutional with buy-and-hold strategies
• Many bonds do not have a liquid secondary market
• Result - arbitrage opportunities may appear to exist but can't always short the bond
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