Lecture 6 - Interest Rates and Bond Valuation
Lecture 6 - Interest Rates and Bond Valuation
Lecture 6 - Interest Rates and Bond Valuation
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Learning Goals
1. Describe interest rate fundamentals, the term structure of
interest rates, and risk premiums.
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2-2
Learning Goals (cont.)
5. Apply the basic valuation model to bonds and
describe the impact of required return and time to
maturity on bond values.
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Interest Rates and Required Returns: Interest
Rate Fundamentals
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Interest Rates and Required Returns: Interest
Rate Fundamentals (cont.)
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The Real Rate of Interest
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Supply–Demand Relationship
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Nominal or Actual Rate of Interest (Return)
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Nominal or Actual Rate of Interest (cont.)
r1 = RF + RP1
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Nominal or Actual Rate of Interest (cont.)
• For the moment, ignore the risk premium, RP1, and focus
exclusively on the risk-free rate. The risk free rate can be
represented as:
RF = r* + IP
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Nominal or Actual Rate of Interest (example)
• Marilyn Carbo has $10 that she can spend on candy costing $0.25
per piece.
• She could buy 40 pieces of candy ($10.00/$0.25) today.
• The nominal rate of interest on a 1-year deposit is currently 7%,
and the expected rate of inflation over the coming year is 4%.
• If Marilyn invested the $10, how many pieces of candy could she buy
in one year?
– In one year, Marilyn would have (1 + 0.07) $10.00 = $10.70
– Due to inflation, one piece of candy would cost (1 + 0.04) $0.25 = $0.26
– As a result, Marilyn would be able to buy $10.70/$0.26 = 41.2 pieces
– This 3% increase in buying power (41.2/40) is Marilyn’s real rate of return
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Impact of Inflation
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Term Structure of Interest Rates
• The term structure of interest rates is the relationship between
the maturity and rate of return for bonds with similar levels of
risk.
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Term Structure of Interest Rates: Yield
Curves (cont.)
• A normal yield curve is an upward-sloping yield curve
indicates that long-term interest rates are generally higher than
short-term interest rates.
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U.S. Treasury Yield Curves
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U.S. Treasury Yield Curves
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Theories of Term Structure
• Expectations Theory
– Expectations theory is the theory that the yield
curve reflects investor expectations about future
interest rates
– An expectation of rising interest rates results in an
upward-sloping yield curve
– An expectation of declining rates results in a
downward-sloping yield curve.
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Theories of Term Structure (cont.)
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Theories of Term Structure (cont.)
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Theories of Term Structure
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Theories of Term Structure
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Risk Premium: Issue and Issuer Characteristics
• The nominal interest rates on a number of classes of long-term
securities in May 2017 were as follows:
Security Nominal interest rate
5-Year U.S. Treasury notes 1.81%
Corporate bonds:
Investment grade (High Quality) 3.37
High-yield (Speculative) 7.67
• Because the U.S treasury bond is risk-free, we can calculate the risk
premium of other securities as follows:
Security Risk premium
Corporate bonds:
Investment grade 3.37% – 1.81% = 1.56%
High-yield 7.67% – 1.81% = 5.86%
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Risk Premium:
Issue and Issuer Characteristics (cont.)
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Corporate Bonds
• A bond is a long-term debt instrument indicating that a
corporation has borrowed a certain amount of money and
promises to repay it in the future under clearly defined terms.
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Legal Aspects of Corporate Bonds (cont.)
• Subordination in a bond indenture is the stipulation that
subsequent creditors agree to wait until all claims of the senior
debt are satisfied.
• Also, the greater the default risk of the issuing firm, the
higher the cost of the issue.
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General Features of a Bond Issue
• The conversion feature of convertible bonds allows
bondholders to change each bond into a stated number of
shares of common stock.
– Bondholders will exercise this option only when the market price of
the stock is greater than the conversion price.
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General Features of a Bond Issue (cont.)
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Corporate Bonds: Bond Prices
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Data on Selected Bonds
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Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s Bond Ratings
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RAM Holdings (formerly known as Rating
Agency Malaysia Berhad) Ratings
Corporate Bond Long-Term Ratings
AAA An entity rated AAA has a superior capacity to meet its financial obligations. This is the highest long-term CCR
assigned by RAM Ratings.
AA An entity rated AA has a strong capacity to meet its financial obligations. The entity is resilient against adverse
changes in circumstances, economic conditions and/or operating environments.
A An entity rated A has an adequate capacity to meet its financial obligations. The entity is more susceptible to
adverse changes in circumstances, economic conditions and/or operating environments than those in higher-rated
categories.
BBB An entity rated BBB has a moderate capacity to meet its financial obligations. The entity is more likely to be
weakened by adverse changes in circumstances, economic conditions and/or operating environments than those in
higher-rated categories. This is the lowest investment-grade category.
BB An entity rated BB has a weak capacity to meet its financial obligations. The entity is highly vulnerable to adverse
changes in circumstances, economic conditions and/or operating environments.
B An entity rated B has a very weak capacity to meet its financial obligations. The entity has a limited ability to
withstand adverse changes in circumstances, economic conditions and/or operating environments.
C An entity rated C has a high likelihood of defaulting on its financial obligations. The entity is highly dependent on
favourable changes in circumstances, economic conditions and/or operating environments, the lack of which would
likely result in it defaulting on its financial obligations.
D An entity rated D is currently in default on either all or a substantial portion of its financial obligations, whether or
not formally declared. The D rating may also reflect the filing of bankruptcy and/or other actions pertaining to the
entity that could jeopardise the payment of financial obligations.
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Malaysian Rating Corporation Berhad
(MARC) Ratings
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Characteristics and Priority of Lender’s
Claim of Traditional Types of Bonds
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Characteristics and Priority of Lender’s
Claim of Traditional Types of Bonds (cont.)
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Characteristics of Contemporary Types of
Bonds
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International Bond Issues
• Companies and governments borrow internationally by
issuing bonds in two principal financial markets:
– A Eurobond is a bond issued by an international
borrower and sold to investors in countries with currencies
other than the currency in which the bond is denominated.
– In contrast, a foreign bond is a bond issued in a host
country’s financial market, in the host country’s currency,
by a foreign borrower.
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Example: Valuation of Assets by Celia Sargent
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Eg. Valuation of Assets by Celia Sargent (cont.)
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Basic Valuation Model
• The value of any asset is the present value of all future cash
flows it is expected to provide over the relevant time period.
• The value of any asset at time zero, V0, can be expressed as
where
v0 = Value of the asset at time zero
CFT = cash flow expected at the end of year t
r = appropriate required return (discount rate)
n = relevant time period
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Bond Valuation: Bond Fundamentals
• As noted earlier, bonds are long-term debt
instruments used by businesses and government to
raise large sums of money, typically from a diverse
group of lenders.
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Bond Valuation: Basic Bond Valuation
Where
B0 = value of the bond at time zero
I= annual interest paid in dollars
n= number of years to maturity
M= par value in dollars
rd = required return on a bond
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Bond Valuation: Basic Bond Valuation (cont.)
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Bond Valuation: Basic Bond Valuation (cont.)
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Bond Valuation: Bond Value Behavior
• The required return is likely to differ from the coupon interest rate
because either
1. economic conditions have changed, causing a shift in the basic cost of
long-term funds, or
2. the firm’s risk has changed.
• Increases in the basic cost of long-term funds or in risk will raise the
required return; decreases in the cost of funds or in risk will lower the
required return.
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Bond Valuation: Bond Value Behavior (cont.)
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Bond Valuation: Bond Value Behavior (cont.)
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Bond Values and Required Returns
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Bond Valuation: Bond Value Behavior (cont.)
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Time to Maturity and Bond Values
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Yield to Maturity (YTM)
• The yield to maturity (YTM) is the rate of return that investors earn if
they buy a bond at a specific price and hold it until maturity. (Assumes
that the issuer makes all scheduled interest and principal payments as
promised.) It is essentially the bond’s IRR based on the current price.
• Note that the yield to maturity will only be equal if the bond is selling
for its face value ($1,000) and that rate will be the same as the bond’s
coupon rate.
• A bond will trade at a premium (trading above its par value) when
coupon rate > prevailing interest rates. This is because investors want a
higher yield, and will pay more for it
• For discount bonds (trading below its par value), coupon rate <
prevailing interest rates.
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Yield to Maturity (YTM) (cont.)
The Mills Company bond, which
currently sells for $1,080, has a
10% coupon interest rate and
$1,000 par value, pays interest
annually, and has 10 years to
maturity. What is the bond’s
YTM?
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Yield to Maturity (YTM): Semiannual Interest
and Bond Values
• The procedure used to value bonds paying interest semiannually is
similar to that shown in Chapter 5 for compounding interest more
frequently than annually, except that here we need to find present
value instead of future value. It involves
1. Converting annual interest, I, to semiannual interest by dividing I by 2.
2. Converting the number of years to maturity, n, to the number of 6-month
periods to maturity by multiplying n by 2.
3. Converting the required stated (rather than effective) annual return for
similar-risk bonds that also pay semiannual interest from an annual rate, rd, to
a semiannual rate by dividing rd by 2.
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Yield to Maturity (YTM): Semiannual Interest
and Bond Values
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Yield to Maturity (YTM): Semiannual Interest
and Bond Values
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Summary
Summary of key
valuation definitions
and formulas for any
asset and for bonds
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