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Chapter 11. The Level & Structure of Interest Rates

Chapter 11. The Level & Structure of Interest Rates. Loanable funds market Risk Structure of Interest Rates. I. Loanable Funds Market. determine equilibrium interest rate overall level of interest rates but still many different interest rates. Demand for LF.

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Chapter 11. The Level & Structure of Interest Rates

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  1. Chapter 11.The Level & Structure of Interest Rates • Loanable funds market • Risk Structure of Interest Rates

  2. I. Loanable Funds Market • determine equilibrium interest rate • overall level of interest rates • but still many different interest rates

  3. Demand for LF • behavior of issuers & borrowers • interest rate is cost of borrowing • it is the price of loanable funds • demand is downward sloping

  4. i DLF LF

  5. what shifts demand? • tax rules • favorable tax treatment for interest payments increase demand • mortgage interest deductible • bond interest deductible for issuer

  6. expected profitability • increases will encourage investment & borrowing -- increase demand • increases w/ economic expansion, decreases w/ recession

  7. government borrowing • deficits increase demand • surpluses decrease demand

  8. Supply of LF • behavior of savers, lenders, bond buyers • interest rate is reward for saving • postpone present consumption • supply curve is upward sloping

  9. i SLF DLF LF

  10. what shifts supply? • tax rules • favorable treatment of interest income • pensions tax exempt interest

  11. income & wealth • increases will increase amount and % of saving • rate of time preference • people more/less willing to postpone consumption

  12. FOMC policy • if Fed buys Treasuries, increase supply of LF

  13. Example • Fed sell Treasuries • decrease SLF • Federal gov’t runs a deficit • increase DLF

  14. i SLF interest rate rises DLF LF

  15. What is i? • benchmark interest rate • or base interest rate • minimum rate acceptable to lenders • all other rates compared to benchmark • Treasury yield -- default-free, highly liquid

  16. III. Risk Structure of Interest Rates • different interest rates on assets with same maturity • why? • assets have different characteristics

  17. measurement • difference between two interest rates • spread • measured in • percentage points • basis points • 1 percentage pt. = 100 basis pts.

  18. example 1 • 3 mo. Tbill .95% • 3 mo. Commercial paper 1.02 % • spread .07 percentage pts. 7 basis pts.

  19. example 2 • 10 yr Tnote 3.85% • 10 BAA corporate 5.02% • spread • 1.07 percentage pts. • 107 basis pts.

  20. 3/5/2004 • 3 mo Tbill .95% • 3 mo Commerical Paper 1.02% • 10 yr. Tnote 3.85% • 10 yr. AAA corporate 4.31% • 10 yr. BAA corporate 5.02% • 10 yr. AAA muni 3.47% • 30 yr. mortgage 5.36%

  21. Patterns • Baa always the highest yield • Municipal’s always the lowest (1940) • Baa > AAA > U.S. > municipal • size of the spread varies

  22. Risk premium • base interest rate + risk premium = interest rate on corporate debt

  23. size of risk premium • issuer • default/credit risk • liquidity • maturity (chapter 12) • options • tax treatment

  24. Issuer • spreads exist among different issuers • but usually a function of other factors

  25. Default risk/ credit risk • risk of not receiving timely payment of principal and interest • depends on • creditworthiness of issuer • structure of bond

  26. U.S. government debt • zero default risk • backed by “full faith and credit” of U.S. government • why? • power to tax largest economy • power to issue stable currency

  27. Other issuers • private • foreign • municipal • all have some default risk • rated for default risk

  28. Bond ratings • bond issuer pays rating agency • Moody’s, S&P • high credit rating • low default risk • bond ratings may change over time

  29. default risk & yield • investors are risk averse higher default risk lower credit rating higher yield

  30. so default risk explains BAA Corp yields AAA Corp yields Treasury yields < <

  31. default risk is not constant! • varies over the business cycle • higher in recessions • lower in expansions • Baa vs. Treasury bond yield • 12/99 191 basis pts. • 2/03 307 basis pts. • 3/04 107 basis pts.

  32. Bond ratings (p. 400) S&P Moody’s Investment grade High Yield

  33. B. Liquidity • how quickly/cheaply can bond be sold for cash? lower yield higher liquidity

  34. liquidity is not rated • Treasuries most liquid • depends on size of issuer • related to default risk • bonds in default very illiquid • higher-rated bonds tend to be more liquid

  35. Embedded Options • special rights granted to holder or issuer of bond • affect on yield spread depends on option • beneficial to issuer? • beneficial to holder?

  36. options for issuer • increase yield relative to option-free bond • call provision • issuer has right to pay off bond early • issuer often calls bonds when interest rate falls

  37. options for holder • decrease yield relative to an option-free bond • put provision • holder has right to sell back bond early • holder more likely to exercise right at higher interest rates

  38. issuer options • must offer higher yield to get special rights • holder options • must accept lower yield in exchange for special rights

  39. Tax treatment • depends on the issuer • municipal • Treasury • corporate

  40. municipal bond interest • exempt from federal income tax • possibly exempt from state income tax • if issuer & bondholder are in same state

  41. Treasury bond interest • exempt from state income tax Corporate bond interest • fully taxable

  42. more favorable tax treatment lower before-tax yield

  43. tax treatment explains muni yields Treasury yields Corp yields < <

  44. example 1 • 10 yr. municipal Baa bond, 6% • 10 yr. corporate Baa bond, 8% • tax rate 28% • after tax yield? muni = 6% corporate = 8%(1-.28) = 5.76%

  45. example 2 • 10 yr. municipal Baa bond, 6% • tax rate 28% • what corporate yield would make investors indifferent? corp. yield (1-.28) = 6% corp. yield = 8.33% equivalent taxable yield

  46. example 3 • 10 yr. municipal Baa bond, 6% • 10 yr. corporate Baa bond, 8% • what tax rate makes investor indifferent? 8% (1- t) = 6% t = 25%

  47. impact of tax rates • higher tax brackets derive more benefit from muni’s • changing tax rates will affect the corporate-municipal yield spread • IRS rulings could make muni debt taxable

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