Study Session 16 Reading 54
Study Session 16 Reading 54
This reading covers the risk and return characteristics of fixed-rate bonds. The focus is on the
widely used measures of interest rate risk—duration and convexity. These statistics are used
extensively in fixed-income analysis. The following are the main points made in the reading:
The three sources of return on a fixed-rate bond purchased at par value are (1) receipt of
the promised coupon and principal payments on the scheduled dates, (2) reinvestment of
coupon payments, and (3) potential capital gains, as well as losses, on the sale of the
bond prior to maturity.
For a bond purchased at a discount or premium, the rate of return also includes the effect
of the price being “pulled to par” as maturity nears, assuming no default.
The total return is the future value of reinvested coupon interest payments and the sale
price (or redemption of principal if the bond is held to maturity).
The horizon yield (or holding period rate of return) is the internal rate of return between
the total return and purchase price of the bond.
Coupon reinvestment risk increases with a higher coupon rate and a longer reinvestment
time period.
Capital gains and losses are measured from the carrying value of the bond and not from
the purchase price. The carrying value includes the amortization of the discount or
premium if the bond is purchased at a price below or above par value. The carrying value
is any point on the constant-yield price trajectory.
Interest income on a bond is the return associated with the passage of time. Capital gains
and losses are the returns associated with a change in the value of a bond as indicated by
a change in the yield-to-maturity.
The two types of interest rate risk on a fixed-rate bond are coupon reinvestment risk and
market price risk. These risks offset each other to a certain extent. An investor gains from
higher rates on reinvested coupons but loses if the bond is sold at a capital loss because
the price is below the constant-yield price trajectory. An investor loses from lower rates
on reinvested coupon but gains if the bond is sold at a capital gain because the price is
above the constant-yield price trajectory.
Market price risk dominates coupon reinvestment risk when the investor has a short-term
horizon (relative to the time-to-maturity on the bond).
Coupon reinvestment risk dominates market price risk when the investor has a long-term
horizon (relative to the time-to-maturity)—for instance, a buy-and-hold investor.
Bond duration, in general, measures the sensitivity of the full price (including accrued
interest) to a change in interest rates.
Yield duration statistics measuring the sensitivity of a bond’s full price to the bond’s own
yield-to-maturity include the Macaulay duration, modified duration, money duration, and
price value of a basis point.
Curve duration statistics measuring the sensitivity of a bond’s full price to the benchmark
yield curve are usually called “effective durations.”
Macaulay duration is the weighted average of the time to receipt of coupon interest and
principal payments, in which the weights are the shares of the full price corresponding to
each payment. This statistic is annualized by dividing by the periodicity (number of
coupon payments or compounding periods in a year).
Modified duration provides a linear estimate of the percentage price change for a bond
given a change in its yield-to-maturity.
Approximate modified duration approaches modified duration as the change in the yield-
to-maturity approaches zero.
Effective duration is very similar to approximate modified duration. The difference is that
approximate modified duration is a yield duration statistic that measures interest rate risk
in terms of a change in the bond’s own yield-to-maturity, whereas effective duration is a
curve duration statistic that measures interest rate risk assuming a parallel shift in the
benchmark yield curve.
Key rate duration is a measure of a bond’s sensitivity to a change in the benchmark yield
curve at specific maturity segments. Key rate durations can be used to measure a bond’s
sensitivity to changes in the shape of the yield curve.
Bonds with an embedded option do not have a meaningful internal rate of return because
future cash flows are contingent on interest rates. Therefore, effective duration is the
appropriate interest rate risk measure, not modified duration.
The effective duration of a traditional (option-free) fixed-rate bond is its sensitivity to the
benchmark yield curve, which can differ from its sensitivity to its own yield-to-maturity.
Therefore, modified duration and effective duration on a traditional (option-free) fixed-
rate bond are not necessarily equal.
During a coupon period, Macaulay and modified durations decline smoothly in a “saw-
tooth” pattern, assuming the yield-to-maturity is constant. When the coupon payment is
made, the durations jump upward.
Macaulay and modified durations are inversely related to the coupon rate and the yield-
to-maturity.
Time-to-maturity and Macaulay and modified durations are usually positively related.
They are always positively related on bonds priced at par or at a premium above par
value. They are usually positively related on bonds priced at a discount below par value.
The exception is on long-term, low-coupon bonds, on which it is possible to have a lower
duration than on an otherwise comparable shorter-term bond.
The presence of an embedded call option reduces a bond’s effective duration compared
with that of an otherwise comparable non-callable bond. The reduction in the effective
duration is greater when interest rates are low and the issuer is more likely to exercise the
call option.
The presence of an embedded put option reduces a bond’s effective duration compared
with that of an otherwise comparable non-putable bond. The reduction in the effective
duration is greater when interest rates are high and the investor is more likely to exercise
the put option.
The duration of a bond portfolio can be calculated in two ways: (1) the weighted average
of the time to receipt of aggregate cash flows and (2) the weighted average of the
durations of individual bonds that compose the portfolio.
The first method to calculate portfolio duration is based on the cash flow yield, which is
the internal rate of return on the aggregate cash flows. It cannot be used for bonds with
embedded options or for floating-rate notes.
The second method is simpler to use and quite accurate when the yield curve is relatively
flat. Its main limitation is that it assumes a parallel shift in the yield curve in that the
yields on all bonds in the portfolio change by the same amount.
Money duration is a measure of the price change in terms of units of the currency in
which the bond is denominated.
The price value of a basis point (PVBP) is an estimate of the change in the full price of a
bond given a 1 bp change in the yield-to-maturity.
Modified duration is the primary, or first-order, effect on a bond’s percentage price
change given a change in the yield-to-maturity. Convexity is the secondary, or second-
order, effect. It indicates the change in the modified duration as the yield-to-maturity
changes.
Money convexity is convexity times the full price of the bond. Combined with money
duration, money convexity estimates the change in the full price of a bond in units of
currency given a change in the yield-to-maturity.
Convexity is a positive attribute for a bond. Other things being equal, a more convex
bond appreciates in price more than a less convex bond when yields fall and depreciates
less when yields rise.
Effective convexity is the second-order effect on a bond price given a change in the
benchmark yield curve. It is similar to approximate convexity. The difference is that
approximate convexity is based on a yield-to-maturity change and effective convexity is
based on a benchmark yield curve change.
Callable bonds have negative effective convexity when interest rates are low. The
increase in price when the benchmark yield is reduced is less in absolute value than the
decrease in price when the benchmark yield is raised.
The change in a bond price is the product of (1) the impact per basis-point change in the
yield-to-maturity and (2) the number of basis points in the yield change. The first factor is
estimated by duration and convexity. The second factor depends on yield volatility.
The investment horizon is essential in measuring the interest rate risk on a fixed-rate
bond.
For a particular assumption about yield volatility, the Macaulay duration indicates the
investment horizon for which coupon reinvestment risk and market price risk offset each
other. The assumption is a one-time parallel shift to the yield curve in which the yield-to-
maturity and coupon reinvestment rates change by the same amount in the same
direction.
When the investment horizon is greater than the Macaulay duration of the bond, coupon
reinvestment risk dominates price risk. The investor’s risk is to lower interest rates. The
duration gap is negative.
When the investment horizon is equal to the Macaulay duration of the bond, coupon
reinvestment risk offsets price risk. The duration gap is zero.
When the investment horizon is less than the Macaulay duration of the bond, price risk
dominates coupon reinvestment risk. The investor’s risk is to higher interest rates. The
duration gap is positive.
Credit risk involves the probability of default and degree of recovery if default occurs,
whereas liquidity risk refers to the transaction costs associated with selling a bond.
For a traditional (option-free) fixed-rate bond, the same duration and convexity statistics
apply if a change occurs in the benchmark yield or a change occurs in the spread. The
change in the spread can result from a change in credit risk or liquidity risk.
In practice, there often is interaction between changes in benchmark yields and in the
spread over the benchmark.