Chapter 06
Chapter 06
Chapter 06
Valuing Bonds
3
The Bond Market (6.1)
6
Sample Treasury Bond Quotes
7
Cash Flows to an investor in the 3.625%
coupon bond maturing in the year of 2013
8
The Bond Market (continued)
12
Bond Pricing
• A bond is a package of two investments: an annuity
+ a final repayment.
PVBond PVCoupons + PVParValue
=
PVBond =coupon × ( Annuity Factor ) + par value × ( Discount Factor )
1 − (1 + r ) − t
where Annuity Factor =
r
1
and Discount Factor =
(1 + r )t
13
Bond Pricing: Example
• What is the value of a 3-year annuity that pays $90 each
year and an additional $1,000 at the date of the final
repayment? Assume a discount rate of 4%.
14
Bond Prices vs. Interest Rates
What is the present value of a 4% coupon bond with face
value $1,000 that matures in 3 years? Assume a discount rate of 5%.
What is the present value of this same bond at a discount rate of 2%?
15
Bond Prices vs. Interest Rates
• When the interest rate rises, the PV of the
payment to be received by the bondholders falls.
▫ A decline in the interest rate increases the PV of
those payments and results in a higher bond
price.
• Interest rate risk is the risk in bond prices due
to fluctuations in interest rate.
▫ This risk is higher for distant cash flows than for
near-term cash flows.
16
The value of the 3.625% bond falls as
interest rates rise
17
Interest rate of 10-year U.S. Treasury
bonds, 1900-2010
18
Bond prices as a function of interest rate
19
Maturity Risk Premium
• Interest rate risk is part of maturity risk premium.
▫ It shows that bond prices would drop when interest
rates rise.
• Now suppose that interest rates decline. When the
short-term bonds mature, they will have to be
replaced with lower-yielding bonds.
▫ In addition, many of the remaining long-term bonds
may be called, and as calls occur, the investor will
have to replace high coupon bonds with low coupon
bonds.
▫ The risk of an income decline due to a drop in interest
rates is called reinvestment risk. 20
Yield to Maturity (6.3)
22
Yield to Maturity (continued)
23
Yield to Maturity (continued)
24
Same Example
25
Yield to Maturity (continued)
Face − PV
Coupon +
YTM = t
Face + PV
2
26
How bond prices change as they approach
maturity, assuming constant yield
27
Rates of Return (6.4)
Coupon Income + P1 − P0
Rate of Return =
P0
▫ P0: the price paid for the bond initially
▫ P1: the sell price of the bond
28
Rate of Return: Example
29
The Yield Curve (6.5)
30
The Yield Curve: Example, May 2010
31
The Yield Curve (continued)
32
Indexed Bond
• From chapter 5, we know that in the presence of
inflation, an investor’s real interest rate is
always less than the nominal interest rate.
34
Indexed Bond (continued)
Year 1 Year 2
Nominal cash flows $30 × 1.05 = $31.5 $1,030 × 1.05 × 1.04 =
$1,124.76
35
U.K. Indexed and Nominal Bonds
36
Risk of Default (6.6)
38
Risk of Default (continued)
40
Risk of Default (continued)
41
Yield spread b/w corporate and 10-year
Treasury bonds
42
Steps to minimize default risk
• Seniority
▫ Some bonds are subordinated.
• Security
▫ Use of collateral, the assets that are set as security
for the bonds.
▫ Secured debt.
• Protective covenants
▫ Conditions imposed on borrowers to protect
lenders from unreasonable risks.
43
Variations in Corporate Bonds
• Zero-coupon bonds
▫ These bonds do not pay coupon and are often
issued at prices well below face value.
• Floating-rate bonds
▫ The coupon rate changes over time and is often
tied to some measure of current market rates.
• Convertible bonds
▫ When the bonds mature, the bondholders can
choose to exchange the bond for a specified
number of common stocks. 44