Chapter 2: Pricing of Bonds
Complications (continued) with more shit on it
Complications (continued) with more shit on it
-the expected cash flows -the appropriate required yield
Determining the price of any financial instrument requires an estimate of
A bonds price changes in the opposite direction from the change in the required yield. The reason is that as the required yield increases (decreases0, the present value of the cash flow decreases (increases)
Notes
Premium
a bond whose price is above its par value is said to be selling at a
When an investor purchases a bond between coupon payments, the investor must compensate the seller of the bond for the coupon interest earned from the time of the last coupon payment to the settlement date of the bond
accrued interest
The price of a bond without accrued interest is called
clean price
The security from which the inverse floater is created is called the
collateral
accrued interest is based on a 360-day year, with each month having 30 days
corporate and municipal bonds
For both types of bonds (par or discount) the price will equal what at the maturity date
par value
Also this ***** always uses semiannual bonds and never specifies it at all so keep that in mind
Also this ***** always uses semiannual bonds and never specifies it at all so keep that in mind
Accrued interest is the amount that a bond buyer who purchases a bond between coupon payments must pay the bond seller. The amount represents the coupon interest earned from the time of the last coupon payment to the settlement date of the bond.
Notes
The price of an inverse floater depends on the price of the collateral from which it is created and the price of the floater.
Notes
Discount
When a bond sells below its par value, it is said to be selling at a
What equals the collaterals price minus the floaters price
inverse floater
a floater may have a maximum coupon rate called a what or a minimum coupon rate called a what
-cap -floor
Reasons for the change in the price of a bond (Look at slide for more detail if needed) (Bonds with only a fixed coupon rate)
-change credit quality of the issuer -change in the time to maturity of a bond -change in the required yield
From the collateral needed to make an inverse floater what two bonds are created
-floater -inverse floater
The Cash Flow is not known for what two types of securities and what does it depend on
-floating rate -inverse floating rate Depends on the reference rate in the future
Complications
-next coupon payment isn't exactly six months (semiannually) -cash flows are unknown -appropriate required yield may not be known -wont have the same discount rate for all coupons
A bond will be priced below, at par, or above par depending the bond's coupon rate and the required yield required by investors. When the coupon rate is equal to the required yield, the bond will sell at its par value. When the coupon rate is less (greater) than the required yield, the bond will sell for less (more) than its par value.
Notes
For a zero-coupon bond, there are no coupon payments.The price of a zero-coupon bond is equal to the present value of the maturity value, where the number of periods used to compute the present value is double the number of years and the discount rate is a semiannual yield
Notes
Over time, the price of a premium or discount bond will change even if the required yield does not change.Assuming that the credit quality of the issuer is unchanged, the price change on any bond can be decomposed into a portion attributable to a change in the required yield and a portion attributable to the time path of the bond.
Notes
The price of a bond is the present value of the bond's expected cash flows, the discount rate being equal to the yield offered on comparable bonds. For an option-free bond, the cash flows are the coupon payments and the par value or maturity value. The higher (lower) the required yield, the lower (higher) the price of a bond.
Notes
The price of a floating-rate bond will trade close to par valueif the spread required by the market does not change and there are no restrictions on the coupon rate.
Notes
The discount bond increases in price as it approaches maturity, assuming that the required yield does not change
Notes For a premium bond the opposite occurs
The discount bond increases in price as it approaches maturity, assuming that the required yield does not change.
Notes For a premium bond, the opposite occurs. For both bonds, the price will equal par value at the maturity date.
The amount that the buyer pays the seller is the agreed-upon price plus accrued interest
The amount that the buyer pays the seller is the agreed-upon price plus accrued interest
-periodic coupon interest payments to the maturity date -the par (or maturity) value at maturity
The cash flows for a bond that the issuer cannot retire prior to its stated maturity date consist of
1)The spread over the reference rate 2)any restrictions that may be imposed on the resetting of the coupon rate
The price of a floater depends on
In general, an inverse floater is created from what
fixed rate security
The amount that the buyer pays the seller is the agreed-upon price plus accrued interest
full price or dirty price
A fundamental property of a bond is that its
price changes in the opposite direction from the change in the required yield
The coupon rate of a floating rate of security (or floater) is equal to what plus what
reference rate + spread (margin)
When yields in the marketplace rise above the coupon rate at a given point in time
the price of the bond falls so that an investor buying the bond can realizes capital appreciation
For a bond selling at par value, the coupon rate equals what
the required yield