Ch05-Interest Rate Risk Management
Ch05-Interest Rate Risk Management
Ch05-Interest Rate Risk Management
Content
!! Interest Risk Measurement !! Maturity Model (Homework) !! Duration Model !! Repricing Model !! Convexity !! Managing Interest Rate Risk
2
Introduction
!! MM theory suggests that: The firm should find the NPV of the prospective real asset first as if it is being financed exclusively by stockholders; and if it is positive, then the appropriate asset financing should take advantage of existing financial market imperfections. !! This resource allocation process seems to work well with a non-financial firm, but not a financial firm or a bank.
!!Why?
3
Introduction
!! The banks assets are as much financial as its liabilities. But more fundamentally, as we saw in Chapter 2, the basic premise for the existence of banks is rooted in financial market inefficiencies, and this premise is at odds with the MM theory. !! Indeed, such inefficiencies signify a joint consideration of investment and financing decisions, and the computation of the cost of capital (as suggested by, for instance, MM) as a cutoff rate becomes less meaningful for a bank than for the nonfinancial firm. !! Furthermore, any investment project cannot be considered in isolation or by itself. Instead, its impact on the owners must be analyzed in the context of other investments of the firm.
4
Introduction
!! Bank management practice that focuses on joint consideration of (a) investment-financing decisions, and (b) an investment proposal with existing investments (rather than the proposal in itself ) is consistent with the above conceptual implications. !! Hence, this chapter concentrates on bank management practice that emphasizes asset-liability management, rather than consideration of a single project. !! In turn, the asset-liability management practice has highlighted the risk (rather than return) dimension. Its objective has been to optimize three components of risk: liquidity risk, credit risk, and interest rate risk.
5
Repricing Model
!! (Funding) Gap model can be called the repricing model. !! The repricing model is essentially a book value accounting cash flow analysis on the repricing gap between the interest earned on an FIs assets and the interest paid on its liabilities over some particular period. !! The objective of this approach is to stabilize or increase the expected net interest income (NII). !! At a given point, NII is managed by dividing the planning period into several intervals, and for each interval a gap is determined, where the gap is the difference between the dollar amount of rate-sensitive assets (RSAs) and the dollar amount of rate-sensitive liabilities (RSLs).
8
Repricing Model
!! The US Federal Reserve requires US commercial banks to report quarterly (on schedule RC-J of the call report) the repricing gaps for assets and liabilities with these maturities: (1)! One day, (2)! More than one day to three months, (3)! More than three months to six months, (4)! More than six months to twelve months, (5)! More than one year to five years, and (6)! More than five years.
9
Repricing Model
!! Rate sensitivity in this context means the time to repricing of the asset or liability. More simply it means how long the FI manager has to wait to change the posted interest rates on any asset or liability. !! While the cumulative gap over the whole balance must by definition be zero, the advantage of the repricing model lies in its information value and its simplicity in pointing to an FIs net interest income exposure (or earnings exposure) to interest rate changes at different maturity buckets.
10
Repricing Model
!! Specifically, let: !! NIIi = Change in NII in the ith bucket. !! GAPi = The dollar sizze of the gap between the book value of assets and liabilities in maturity bucket i. !! Ri = The change in the level of interest rates impacting assets and liabilities in the ith bucket. !! Formula: NIIi = GAPi x Ri = (RSAi RSLi) x Ri
11
Repricing Model
Assets Liabilities Gaps (1) One day (2) More than one day to three months (3) More than three months to six months (4) More than six months to twelve months (5) More than one year to five years (6) More than five years $20 30 70 90 40 10 $260
12
$30 40 85 70 30 5 $260
Repricing Model
!! The one-day gap indicates a negative $10 million difference between assets and liabilities being repriced in one day. !! Assets and liabilities that are repriced each day are likely to be interbank borrowings and loans or repurchase agreements. !! Thus, this gap indicates that a rise in the overnight rate would lower the banks net interest income because the bank has more rate sensitive liabilities and assets in this bucket.
13
Repricing Model
!! In the first bucket, the gap is negative $10 million and the overnight rate rises by 1 percent so that the annualized change in the banks future net interest income is:
Repricing Model
!! A common cumulative gap of particular interest is the one-year repricing gap estimated from the table above as: CGAP = (-$10) + (-$10) + (-$15) + $20 = -$15 !! If Ri is the average rate change affecting assets and liabilities that can be repriced within a year, the cumulative effect on the banks net interest income is:
15
Repricing Model
!! Bank management uses the above gap information against expectations of interest rate changes either to hedge net interest income or to speculatively change the size of the gap for each time interval. !! Hedging removes the volatility of net interest income by either changing the dollar amount of assets and liabilities sensitive to interest rate changes or using less traditional instruments such as forwards, futures, option contracts, and interest rate swaps.
16
Repricing Model
!! Speculation focuses on improving profitability in the wake of the anticipated interest rate change. If the anticipated change does not materialize, profitability is likely to worsen. !! For example, if management expects an interest rate increase in a given time interval, it may move its gap in the positive direction, that is, decrease the maturity of its assets and/or increase the maturity of its liabilities belonging to longer time intervals.
17
Repricing Model
18
Repricing Model
!! Strength of Repricing Model !! Its calculations are easy. !! Its results are readily understandable. !! Many asset/liability software programs are available to produce a gap report and analyze a banks general interest rate sensitivity.
19
Repricing Model
!! Weakness of Repricing Model !! It ignores the market value effect. !! It ignores the time value of money within each interval; thus assets and liabilities may mature at the front or the back of an interval and are still lumped together without differentiation within that interval. !! It assumes a parallel shift in the term structure of interest rates. !! It ignores the problem of runoffs, which is periodic cash flow of interest and principal amortization payments on long-term assets.
20
Duration Model
!! Duration is the weighted-average time to maturity of a series of cash flows, using the relative present values of the cash flows as the weights.
N N
! PV
t =1 N t =1
"t
t
D=
=
t
! CF
t =1
" DF t
! PV
!! CFt = Cash flow received on the security at end of period t !! N = The last period in which the cash flow is received !! DFt = The discount factor = (1 / (1+R)t, where R is the yield or current level of interest rates in the market !! PVt = The present value of the cash flow at the end of period t, which equals CFt x DFt
21
22
$1 + R' # & 2
!! And:
L L L DL = X1L D1 + X 2 L D2 + + X nL Dn
!! Where:
X1 j + X 2 j + + X nj = 1 and j = A, L
24
!R (1 + R )
!! This gap is measured in years and reflects the degree of duration mismatch in an FIs balance sheet. Specifically, the larger this gap in absolute terms, the more exposed the FI is to interest rate shocks. !! .The size of the interest rate shock = !R !! The size of the FI, A: The larger the scale of the FI, the larger the dollar size of the potential net worth exposure from any given interest rate shock. !! The larger the shock, the greater the FIs exposure.
26
(1 + R)
!! The adjusted duration gap will be: !! The change in the banks equity value will be as follows:
!! A 1% interest rate increase will reduce the equity value by $2.55 mln.
27
28
Convexity
!! In the duration and gap analysis, we focused on interest rate risk that would arise from the parallel shift of the term structure of interest rate. !! In many instances, the term structure does not have a parallel shift. In fact, the slope of the term structure changes at different rates because the change in interest rates for different maturities is not constant !! Convexity reflects the rate of change in the bond price increase (decrease) as a result of the rate of change in the interest rate decrease (increase). !! A larger value of convexity suggests greater sensitivity of the bond price to a given change in its interest rate. !! A smaller convexity value means less bond price sensitivity to its interest rate change..
30
34