1 / 39

CHAPTER TWO: Time Value of Money and Term Structure of Interest

CHAPTER TWO: Time Value of Money and Term Structure of Interest. Yes ! is the expected rate of return , i.e., the mean of the discount rates for different terms. Discounted Cash Flow Formula. ?. No ! is the discount rate that cannot be used for so long period. Let.

Télécharger la présentation

CHAPTER TWO: Time Value of Money and Term Structure of Interest

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CHAPTER TWO: Time Value of Money and Term Structure of Interest

  2. Yes ! is the expected rate of return, i.e., the mean of the discount rates for different terms Discounted Cash Flow Formula ? No ! is the discount rate that cannot be used for so long period Let

  3. Term Structure of Interest Rates • Our objective is to value riskless cash flows. • Given the rich set of fixed-income securities traded in the market, their prices provide the information needed to value riskless cash flows at hand.

  4. Forms of Interest Rates • In this market, this information on the time value of money is given in several different forms: • Spot interest rates • Price of discount bonds (e.g., zero-coupon bonds and STRIPS) • Prices of coupon bonds • Yield-to-maturity (an average of spot interest rates) • Forward interest rates • The form in which this information is expressed depends on the particular market.

  5. Determination of Interest Rate • Four basic factors • Capital production ability—— the more the capital’s expected return, the higher the interest rates and vice versa. • Uncertainty of capital production ability—— the more the uncertainty, the higher the risk premium required and the higher the interest rates and vice versa. • Time preference of consumption—— the stronger preference to current consumption, the higher the risk premium required and the higher the interest rates and vice versa. • Risk aversion—— the more the risk aversion, the higher the risk premium required and the lower the risk-free interest rates.

  6. Theory of Real Interest Rates • Real interest rates are determined by supply and demand of funds in the economy. • 3 factors in determining real interest rates: • Aggregate endowments • Aggregate investment opportunities • Aggregate preferences for different consumption path

  7. Consider a representative investor: • Has endowment of ( e0, e1) • Faces a bond market with interest rate r.

  8. He maximizes his utility over his consumption now and later: Where b is the bond holding, u’>0 and u”<0

  9. The optimality condition is Thus, the real interest rate is given by Relative risk aversion coefficient

  10. Nonlinear technology Time 1 b(1+r) -(1+RC) b Time 0 Investment opportunity set

  11. Linear technology Time 1 (1+r)b -(1+RC) b Time 0

  12. More generally, consider consumption grow at random rate. Investors maximize their expected utility over many periods. • Where is his holdings of discount bonds, is future endowments, is future consumption, both can be uncertain.

  13. The Benchmark of Interest — Yield to Maturity (YTM) ? No! YTM varies with different financial instruments, because the exposure of financial instruments are quite different and the required risk premiums differ from each other. — Risk-free interests ? Yes! Risk-free interest varies with terms . It’s called the term structure of interests.

  14. Nominal and real interest rates • Compound interest — interest earned on interest already earned — nominal interest rate = real interest rate+ inflation — real interest rate = pure time value+ risk premium — Continuously compounding — simple rate of return annually — times of interest payments annually — compounding rate of interest payments annually Let Continuously compounding

  15. Financial Risks and Risk-free Security • Basic financial risks: — Default risk — Liquidity risk — Purchase power risk — Interest risk — Foreign exchange risk — Other market risks — Risk-free security: • Substitute in reality: Treasury

  16. — Treasury Yield Curve • Treasury yield curve usually has three forms: upward, flat and downward. • Zero-coupon rates set —Bills are zero coupon while notes and bonds have coupons. —Zero-coupon rates set can be obtained by conversion.

  17. Conversion example: Treasury maturity par coupon rate current price A 1 year 1,000 0 910.50 B 2 years 1,000 10% 982.10

  18. — Shapes of Yield Curve downward upward flat • Some theories for the shapes of yield curve — Unbiased expectations theory — Liquidity preference theory — Market segment theory — Preferred habitat theory

  19. Forward Interest A mini case: —There is a no-dividend stock and its expected return is 15%. The current price is . One year’s risk-free rate . What is one year’s forward price of this stock? ?

  20. Suppose forward price F = $106 per share Replicating Stock Using risk-free bond and forward contract Position Immediate Cash Flow Cash Flow in the Future Short sell $100 risk-free bond  $105 +$100 Short sell one stock forward at $106 per share 0 106 – S1 Buy one stock at $100 per share  $100 S1 Net Cash Flow 0 $1 Stock forward price = $105 per share Arbitrage

  21. Proposition! Forward price of a risky asset is not the expectation of the future spot price of the asset.

  22. The Forward Price for a Traded Asset • The forward price for a traded asset without interim income is: F=SerT • The forward price for a traded asset with deterministic dividend rate is:F=Se(r-q)T • The above equation can be obtained through the following arbitrage strategy: • Buy spot e-qT of the asset and reinvest income from the asset in the asset. • Short a forward contract on one unit of the asset.

  23. F 0 T Se-qT The Forward Price for a Traded Asset • The holding of the asset grows at rate q so that e-qT x eqT ,or exactly one unit of the asset, is held at time T. Under the terms of the forward contract, the asset is sold for F at time T, leading to the following cash flow: Se-qT=Fe-rT F=Se(r-q)T

  24. 0 1 2 3 n — Zero-coupon rates & forward interest rates • Forward interest rates are the expectation of future risk-free spot interest rates.

  25. Zero-coupon rates Discount factors Forward rates • Zero-coupon rates, discount factors & • forward interest rates

  26. Valuation of FRA • An FRA is equivalent to an agreement where interest at a predetermined rate, RK, is exchanged for interest at the market rate, R. • Reference rate R • Interest rate RK to be earned • Time period between T1 and T2 • Notional amount L

  27. Valuation Rule of FRA • FRA has the cash flow: L(R- RK)(T2-T1) at T2 • An FRA can be valued by assuming that the forward interest rate is certain to be realized. • The value of the FRA promising RK is: • L(RF -RK)(T2-T1)P(0,T2) • P(0,T2) is the price of zero discount bond maturing at T2 with notional 1. • Is there anything special about this rule?

  28. FRA: Cash Flow Decomposition Floating rate deposit Starting t1 ending t2 Buying an FRA Fixed rate Loan Starting t1 ending t2 = +

  29. FRA: Cash Flow Decomposition

  30. 0 2 n t 1 0 1 2 n t Swap Price — Interest rate swap Cash Flow of Buyer Cash Flow of Seller

  31. —Interest Rate Swap • Quotation for LIBOR

  32. 0 1 2 … n t — Pricing Par Bonds

  33. Par Par*i Par*i Par*i 0 1 2 …. n t Par*i Par*i Par*i Par 0 1 2 … n t Par*fn Par*f1 Par Par*f2 0 1 2 … n t Par*fn Par Par*f1 Par*f2 — Zero-coupon pricing technique Investment Cash Flow Financing Cash Flow

  34. Par Par 0 1 2 … n t 0 1 2 … n t 0 1 2 … n t Par*f1 Par*f1 Par*fn Par*fn Par Par*f2 Par*f2 Par Par 0 1 2 … n t Par — Further illustration of composition & decomposition NPV = 0 • Decomposition of finance cash flow = 0 + =

  35. Swap as Sequence of FRA • Calculate forward rates for each of the LIBOR rates that will determine swap cash flows. • Calculate swap cash flows on the assumption that the LIBOR rates will equal the forward rate. • Set the swap value equal to the present value of these cash flows.

  36. 1 2 0 1 2 n t 3 Swap Decomposition of FRAs

  37. P1 i1 i1 i1 P1 0 1 2 …. n t i1 i1 i1 P1 0 1 2 …. n t i2 i2 i2 P2 P2 0 1 2 …. n t i2 i2 i2 P2 Currency Swap • Fixed interest rate currency swap

  38. Pricing Currency Swap as Sequence of Currency Forwards • Currency forward contract can be priced as if the forward price of the underlying asset is realized. • Forward price for a foreign currency can be thought of as a stock with price S and paying dividend with known rate of foreign currency interest rate rf • Forward price of a foreign currency is S*exp((rd-rf)T) Where rd is the interest rate for domestic currency, and rfis the interest rate for foreign currency.

  39. Summary of Chapter Two • Time Value of Money  Term Structure of Interest • Risk-free Rates are Benchmark and Market Expectation • Forward Price is not the Expectation of Future Spot Price for Risky Assets • Forward Price for traded asset • Replication  Composition & Decomposition

More Related