P 1: M S B P R C - D: A. Introduction
P 1: M S B P R C - D: A. Introduction
P 1: M S B P R C - D: A. Introduction
DURATION
A. Introduction
So far we have reviewed how risk free bonds are priced, and what rate of return
(ROR) we can expect them to pay in the future. In this note set we consider a related
question: how to assess the price sensitivity of a risk free bond (or a portfolio of such
bonds) to external changes in interest rates (the result, say, of a change in monetary
policy). An answer to this question will, in turn, lead us to the study of bond portfolio
risk management.
1. This issue of “risk management” is not only of concern to individual investors, but to
financial institutions as well.
Assets Liabilities
Assets Liabilities
What happened? These two bond prices reacted very differently to a rate decline. Both
assets and liabilities rose in value, but the value of the liabilities rose much faster.
1
B. The Setting for the Discussion: Default Free Bonds
1. Our analysis will be most precise only if we are also willing to assume either:
(i) the term structure is flat (so that internal rates of return (IRRs) on coupon
bonds = reinvestment rates of return (RRRs) on coupon bonds= r1=r2= … rT),
or
(ii) changes in interest rates represent uniform shifts of the term structure up or
down (i.e., the change in the rate, Δr, is identical for all maturities of discount
bonds). This amounts to assuming that rate changes do not cause the term
structure either to flatten out or to become more curved.
For the purposes of discussion we will typically assume the term structure is flat.
2. Our objective is to construct linear approximations to the true change in value resulting
from a change in rates. The accuracy of this approximation can be represented as follows
for a typical bond:
P0
Ptrue
Papprox
r r + r r, interest rate
If Δr > 0, our approximation will overstate the amount of the price change, while
If Δr < 0, our approximation will understate the amount of the price change.
4. To make this notion precise, all we need is an expression for the slope as it is the
fundamental measure of price sensitivity to a rate change.
2
We will begin the discussion with a consideration of the sensitivity of default free
discount bond prices to rate changes since discount bonds are the “building blocks” of all
bonds.
Thus
P0
T 1 r
T 1
MVT ,
r
Equivalently,
P0 T MVT
,
r 1 r (1 r ) T
P0 T
P0 ,
r 1 r
P 1
Tr
P0 1 r
The time to maturity, T, in the above expression is said to be the bond’s Macaulay
1
duration or simply its duration; the expression T is defined as modified duration,
1 r
written Dm
(ii) Writing the above expression slightly differently gives a measure of absolute
price changes:
P Dm P0 r
3
1000
P0 $630.17
1.08 6
Effects of Rate Changes
True Value True Change (i) Approx. Change (ii)
r = 7% 666.34 +36.17 35.00
r = 7.5% 647.96 +17.79 +17.50
r = 8% 630.17 0 0
r = 8.5% 612.95 -17.22 -17.50
r = 9.0% 596.27 -33.90 -35.00
6
P 630.17 (0.005) 17.5
1.08
2T 1
P r 1
2T MVT 1
r 2 2
1 1
T MV T
r
2T
r
1 1
2 2
T
P0
r
1
2
This is the same formula, except that r is an annual rate with r/2 the 6-month, per
T
period rate. T still represents Macaulay duration (measured in years), while 1 r
2
is modified duration, given r as the annual rate. All the formulae are adjusted
T
DM
accordingly; for example P Dm P0 r with r , etc.
1
2
4
Next, we consider the analogous notion for coupon bonds.
Since any coupon bond can be expressed as a portfolio of discount bonds, the
sensitivity to rate changes of a coupon bond must be expressible as the weighted
average of the price sensitivities of its constituent discount bonds.
where ct denotes the coupon payment in period t, and MVT denotes the bond’s
maturity (or par) value at date T. If this bond is priced to pay the prevailing rate, then
T
ct MVT
P0
t 1 1 r t
(1 r ) T
Rewriting this equation gives us
T
P0 ct 1 r
t
MVT (1 r ) T
t 1
P
2. We are again interested in measuring . As before, first consider infinitesimal
r
changes in r and compute
P T
tct 1 r T MVT (1 r ) T 1
t 1
r t 1
Thus
P 1 T t ct T MVT
r 1 r t 1 1 r t
1 r T
From which it follows that to an approximation,
P 1 T t ct T MVT
P0
r 1 r t 1 P0 1 r t
P0 1 r
T
or
P 1 T PV ct PV MVT
t T r
P0 1 r t 1 P0 P0
5
DMacaulay of a coupon bond
DM of a coupon bond
The expression within the braces { } is the measure of Macaulay duration for a
coupon bond. It represents the average of the durations (t) of the component cash flows
of a bond, each weighted by the present value of the component relative to the bond’s
total value (PV(ct)/P0). If we include the 1/(1+r) term, the expression, as before, is the
measure of modified duration.
a. Since every risk free security can be expressed as a portfolio of discount bonds,
the duration of a coupon bond must somehow be related to the duration of its
constituent discount bonds. This relationship is exactly captured in the duration
formula for a coupon bond
T 1
PV ct PV cT PV MVT
Dcoupon t T
bond t 1 P0 P0
PV ct
t
P0
c. Thus,
T
Dcoupon
bond
w
t 1
t t
6
where wt is the fraction of the bond’s value represented by t-period discount bonds in the
portfolio; i.e., it is a value weight.
This formula confirms our intuition: the duration of a coupon bond is the value-weighted
average of the durations of the equivalent portfolio of discount bonds.
ΔP0 = -DmP0Δr
This expression applies to all bonds. All that differs vis-à-vis coupon or discount
bonds is how D (or DM) is computed.
E. Example: The formula above suggests that, as with discount bonds, the higher a
bond’s duration measure, the more sensitive it will be to changes in the prevailing
rate. We illustrate this with an example:
1. You are asked to measure the relative interest rate sensitivity of two bonds. Bond #1 is
a 12% coupon bond with a 7 year maturity and a $1000 face value. Bond #2 is a zero
coupon bond also with a face value of $1,000 in 7 years. The prevailing IRR for bonds of
this type is also 12%. Determine the duration of each bond. If the IRR increases by 1%
what will be the capital loss suffered by each bond?
7
Year Cash Flow PV(12%) PV(13%)
We interpret this result to mean that Bond 1 is as price sensitive to interest rate
changes as a discount bond maturing in 5.1139 years.
If r = 13%
7
120 1000
P Bond1 t
$955.77
t 1 1.13 1.13 7
1000
P Bond 2 $425.06
1.137
8
P 7
0.01 0.0625 or 6.25%
P0 1.12
Not perfectly accurate, but then a change in rates from 12% to 13% is not a small change.
F. Portfolios of Bonds
By the same logic (a coupon bond is itself simply a portfolio of discount bonds),
N
Duration portfolio wi Di
i 1
where Di is the duration of the i-th bond type in the portfolio and wi is its value-weighted
proportion: i.e.,
value of bonds of duration Di
wi
value of all bonds in the portfolio
The same relationship holds, as well, for the modified duration measure; i.e.,
N
M
D portfolio wi DiM
i 1
2. Example: Consider the portfolio:
9
4M 6M
The D p ( 4) (3) 3.4
10M 10 M
That is, the value of this portfolio will be as sensitive to a rate change as a discount
bond maturing in 3.4 years.
G. Conclusion
Our focus is still risk free Treasury bonds, for which there is no doubt that all
coupon and principal payments will be made. For these securities the only risk is price
risk, which arises form changes in the prevailing rate. The measures of this price
sensitivity to rate changes are the quantities “duration” and “modified duration.”
P
DM r
P
and
P DM Pr
(a) As the bond coupon increases its duration decreases and the bond becomes
less sensitive to interest rate changes. Why?
(b) As the time to maturity T increases, duration increases and the bond’s price
becomes more sensitive to interest rate changes. Why?
Remark: Note that (b) above implies that with the passage of time a bond’s
duration measure will fall.
(c) As interest rates (r) increase, duration decreases and the bond becomes less
sensitive to further rate changes. Why?
Why do we care about these approximations when we can easily compute the price of a
bond (discount or coupon) for any market rate? The answer is that they become useful
when we wish to measure the sensitivity of a portfolio of many bonds to a rate change, or
when we need to construct a portfolio with a pre-chosen sensitivity. This is the subject of
our next class.
10
PART II: THE MANAGEMENT OF BOND PORTFOLIO RISK: A FIRST APPROACH—
BONDS ONLY
A. Introduction
1. Since interest rates may change, there is risk inherent in holding a portfolio of bonds.
If rates rise, in particular, the value of the portfolio will decline.
How do we hedge (insure) against such a potential loss? There are many
ways to do this but they all amount to the same thing conceptually: add to the
portfolio other securities whose price movements are opposite to those of the
securities already present. For the case of bonds, we need to acquire other securities
whose prices will rise as interest rates rise (and vise versa), thereby offsetting the
anticipated loss in value of the bonds. What is lost on the existing bond portfolio is
gained back on the other instruments, provided the correct amount of them has been
purchased. Of necessity, the offsetting position must be a short one. This is where our
duration notion proves to be useful.
The same relationship holds, as well, for the modified duration measure; i.e.,
N
M
D portfolio wi DiM
i 1
3. If we want to protect ourselves against small (!) interest rate changes, we would
like
D PM 0
This means that a change in rates will leave our portfolio’s value unaffected.
B. An Example
1. You are currently managing a $10M portfolio of type 1 bonds (reference the example
in Part I of this lecture), with D=5.1139 and DM= 1/1.12 (5.1139)= 4.566.
11
You are concerned that interest rates may rise to 13% and you wish to hedge against the
possible loss by selling short type 2 bonds with a duration of 7. What is the value of the
bonds to be shorted?
First, if you do not hedge at all, and rates rise as feared, the loss will be:
ΔP = -DM Δr P
= -4.566 (.01)($10M)
=-$456,600
2. To solve for the number of bonds to be shorted we need to modify our formula:
D P w1 D1 w2 D2 ... w N D N
N
By definition, VP ni Pi , where
i 1
ni = the number of bonds of type i,
Pi = the price of bonds of type i
n1 P1 n 2 P2 n N PN
4. Since w1 , w2 , and … w N
VP VP VP
Substituting we get:
nP n P n P
DP 1 1 D1 2 2 D2 .... N N D N
VP VP VP
Or
V P D P n1 P1 D1 n 2 P2 D2 ... n N PN D N (1)
or
10,000( 4.56)(1000)
n2
2827.18
or, n2 = -16,129.13; i.e., we need to short this many type 2 bonds
12
V2 = ( - 16,129.13)(452.35) = - $7,296,000.
Here we have solved for the number of bonds necessary to hedge. The simplicity of this
calculation makes clear the usefulness of the duration concept.
Question (1): How do we account for the cash proceeds of the short sale?
Question (3): Suppose the portfolio to be hedged contained bonds of many different
durations but with an overall duration of 4.56. Would the same hedge be effective?
5. There are other ways to hedge that will accomplish the same thing: futures contracts
could be sold or put options purchased. These alternatives will be considered shortly,
but the principle behind their use is the same: append to the portfolio a security whose
value will increase when rates rise.
1. Consider a pension fund manager with fairly well defined liabilities who needs
assurance that the cash flow from her investments will match these liabilities. This is
a special case of the general problem of investing, so as to guarantee the creation of a
future cash flow.
(i) Price Risk: as interest rates change, the bond’s price fluctuates and it may
have to be sold at a price different from expected.
(ii) (Coupon) reinvestment risk: coupons received from the bonds may end up
being reinvested at rates different from the returns expected at the time the
bond was purchased.
How should the pension manager take these risks into account? These are
offsetting risks, if the duration of the assets equals the duration of the liabilities.
13
II. Dassets = D liabilities
2. Just as there are two requirements, there are two alternative procedures by which they
may be satisfied:
Method 1: Buy zero coupon bonds (or equivalent coupon bond portfolios or “strips”) in
amounts that exactly match liabilities. This matches duration directly, but it is
very expensive to execute, and sufficient numbers of STRIPS may not be
available.
Method 2: More generally, acquire coupon bonds in amounts so as to match the duration
of the assets to the overall duration of the liabilities.
PV (liability) = $745.
You must invest $745 now to accumulate enough cash to pay off liability in 10 years.
Buying a bond with D=10 neutralizes price and reinvestment rate risk. The investment is
protected against a swing in rates in either direction.
At r = 10%, a 20-yr bond with $70 annual coupon has a price of $745 and a duration of
70 1000
20 1.1t
1.120 10 1
D t 20
t 1 745 745
1
What would this expression look like under semi-annual compounding? Would the
duration number differ? How so?
14
Accumulated value $70x1.109 = $165 $70x1.049 =$100 $70x1.169=$266
of interest $70x1.108 = $150 $70x1.048 =$96 $70x1.168=$229
payments received $70x1.107 = $136 $70x1.047 =$92 $70x1.167=$198
and reinvented at $70x1.106 = $124 $70x1.046 =$89 $70x1.166=$171
indicated interest $70x1.105 = $113 $70x1.045 =$85 $70x1.165=$147
rates $70x1.104 = $102 $70x1.044 =$82 $70x1.164=$127
$70x1.103 = $93 $70x1.043 =$79 $70x1.163=$99
$70x1.102 = $85 $70x1.042 =$76 $70x1.162=$94
$70x1.10 = $77 $70x1.04 =$73 $70x1.16=$91
$70 x 1 = $70 70 x 1 = $70 70 x 1 =$ 70
_______ ______ ______
Total $1115 $842 $1492
70 70 1070
Market value of the bond in 10th year ...
1 r 1 r 2
1 r 10
4. Immunization, however, is not entirely a passive strategy. One must recomputed the
duration of your portfolio as rates change, and alter its composition accordingly:
In order to match the duration of assets to that of liabilities, the manager therefore needs
to change periodically the composition of his portfolio to reflect changes in the duration
of his assets as rates change.
5. An important question: Why is it the case in this example that the coupon bond
provides more value than liability if rates either rise or fall?
Does this suggest an arbitrage opportunity? Yes! Such opportunities are associated
with parallel shifts of the term structure. Thus, exact parallel shifts cannot occur.
15
D. Another Example of Funding a Future Cash Flow
You are the chief financial officer of a film production company. Due to prior
commitments associated with the production of a series of films, you are obliged to
underwrite for the following series of future payments:
t=0 1 2 3 4 5
5M 5M 5M 5M 5M
You decide to prepare for these outlays by assembling a portfolio of 3 year maturity 6.5%
risk free coupon bonds and 5 year 7.5% maturity risk free coupon bonds. The term
structure is flat at r = 8%. How many bonds of each type should you buy, not only to fund
the obligation, but also to ensure against having to invest more in the future to make up
for any shortfall if rates change (by a small amount)?
and
16
Doutflows =
4.63 4.285 3.97 3.675 3.405
(1) ( 2) (3) ( 4) (5)
19.965 19.965 19.965 19.965 19.965
0.231 0.429 0.597 0.736 0.853
2.85
DBond 1 =
60.185 55.73 845.43
(1) ( 2) (3) 0.063 0.1159 2.638
961.345 961.345 961.345
2.82
DBond 2 =
69.44 64.3 59.54 55.13 731.63
(1) ( 2) (3) ( 4) (5)
980.04 980.04 980.04 980.04 980.04
0.0709 0.1312 0.1823 0.225 3.733
4.34
n1 = (56.90M—n2 (4253))/2711
17
19,965,000 = 20,177,670— 1509.3 n2 + 980.04 n2
- 212,670 = — 529.27 n2
n2 = 402
n1 =20,358
This is not a very satisfactory solution in the sense that it demands a lot of portfolio
changes along the way. Even if rates never change as t = 3 approaches, the chief financial
officer will have to gradually shift from type 1 to type 2 bonds. All this trading costs a lot
of money. There must be a better way!
E. Concluding Comments
By matching durations, price and reinvestment risks offset each other. This allows
us to fund a future cash flow and retain adequate funding in the face of small rate
changes. All large financial institutions will attempt to measure the overall duration
of their fixed income assets and liabilities on a regular basis. Some do this monthly,
others weekly, etc. The frequency of computation is often governed by the volatility
of interest rates. All this is an aspect of the “risk management” function.
18
PART III: A SECOND APPROACH: DYNAMIC IMMUNIZATION WITH INTEREST RATE
FUTURES CONTRACTS
A. Introduction
1. A drawback to immunizing via the duration of bond portfolios is the need to rebalance
in response to rate shifts. This may create large transaction costs as the number of bonds
bought or sold may end up being very large. Another way is to use interest rate futures.
(i) the composition of the bond portfolio can be maintained and duration
adjusted using the future contracts
(ii) transactions costs of trading futures is much less than bond trading costs.
These considerations are especially important when the bonds trade in “thin”
markets.
A futures contract is very similar to a forward; we briefly review forward contracts first.
The forward price is set so that it costs nothing to enter into such a contract (no
money exchanges hands at the contract’s signing except for a transactions fee).
T =0 1 2 3
-1P1 1,000,000
$1,000,000
1 P1 forward price $892,857
1.12
19
The actual price of the security at that time will be
$1,000,000
$884,956
1.13
Thus, at T=1:
So, if rates rise, the agent with the short position benefits (he gets to sell a security
to the buyer for more than its market value). Therein arises a hedging opportunity!
$1,000,000
The security in question is now worth: $900,901
1.11
So, if you expect rates to decline – take a long position in a forward contract. If
you expect them to rise, take a short position.
Answer: Aside from transactions costs, we can create the same payment structure
another way using only bonds:
20
t= 0 1 2
1,000
(Price of a 1 yr discount bond is $892.85 )
1.12
d. The problem with forward contracts for hedging is that offsetting payments are
not received until the contract expires. This leads to:
2. Futures Contracts
1. A futures contract is the same as a forward contract (the language “future price”
replaces the language “forward price” but the concept is the same), but with the
“making to market feature.”
3. These contracts for Treasury securities are exchange traded (very low transactions
costs). There is cash settlement only (no exchange of underlying securities).
Suppose the FP changes in successive days as interest rates move around according to:
21
So money is lost or received immediately upon the change in rates (very important
for hedging).
5. The same argument (as in the forward contract case) applies here to explain why
it costs nothing to enter into such a contract: the replicating portfolio costs
nothing to construct (save for transactions costs).
Further, the portfolio’s value will change in conformity to the buyer’s account
balance.
1. The futures price represents the price of a security to be issued in the future (its future
price). This security will have a duration. Thus
D
FP FPr *
1 r *
where FP = futures price
r* = prevailing interest rate
D =duration of the underlying security at maturity of the futures contract.
where Po* is the price of the underlying bond at contract maturity and t runs from
the first cash flow following maturity to its final payments.
The futures contract itself does not have a duration. The futures price, however, and its
sensitivity to rate changes depend on the duration and yield of the underlying security
that is expected to prevail at the contract maturity date.
2. Consider a T-Bill Futures contract calling for the delivery of $1M face value of T-bills
having 90 days remaining until maturity.
An example
1,000,000
where futures price is found as: 972,065
1.12 0.25
22
For simplicity, we assume annual cash flows and compounding of funds.
Objective: hold $10M in Bond C and mimic price action of “Bonds Only” Portfolio using
T-bill futures.
Vp = PcNc+FPTBillNTbill
23
Portfolio Characteristics for the Current Example
Portfolio 1 Portfolio 2
(Bonds Only) (Short T-Bill Futures)
Portfolio WA 59.5% --
Weights WC 40.5% 100%
WCASH ~0 ~0
Number of NA 6,773 0
Instruments NC 8,899 21,971
NTbill -- (148)
* (148972,065)
As the table below demonstrates, immunization is achieved with bond the “Bonds Only”
and “Bonds & T-Bill” strategies.
24
Effect of a 1% increase in Yield on Realized Portfolio Returns
Portfolio 1 Portfolio 2
Cost of Immunization
D. Caveats
1. Our discussion has ignored a number of institutional details which are relevant for
bond traders. For instance:
(i) Both buyer and seller of a futures contract must establish margin accounts.
(ii) Some contracts allow the contract to be settled at expiration by the delivery of any
of a number of specified financial instruments. This applies to all CBOT Treasury
Note and Bond futures contracts. If you have shorted one of these contracts you
will want to deliver with the cheapest bond available that satisfies the contract’s
terms.
(iii) Most traders will close out the contract before expiration by taking the offsetting
position in the futures markets. The number of futures contracts outstanding that
have not been closed with an offsetting position is referred to as open interest.
25
E. Speculating with Futures and the Construction of a Market Neutral Position:
Long-Term-Capital Management
(Case Discussion)
We now have a second approach to the management of such risk using interest rate
futures contracts. This method is to be preferred as it minimizes transaction costs relative
to a bonds only approach. It has, however, recently fallen out of favor and has been
supplanted by Eurodollar futures contracts. We turn to this topic next.
26
PART IV: SWAPS AND THE EURODOLLAR MARKET: A THIRD
PERSPECTIVE ON INTEREST RATE RISK MANAGEMENT
A. The Context of our Discussion: The Eurodollar Market and the LIBOR rate.
1. A Eurodollar is a U.S. $ (USD) denominated deposit held outside the U.S. The primary
market for these deposits is in London.
a. This market developed in the 1960s and 1970s to avoid US banking regulations.
(i) Europe typically has less financial regulations. (This is a recent topic of
discussion with regard to the equity IPO market.)
(ii) Often there are beneficial tax advantages to doing USD-denominated transactions
overseas.
2. The instruments: fixed and floating rate deposits over various maturities: CDs, time
deposits, etc.
(ii) The London Interbank Bid Rate (LIBID) is the rate at which major banks will accept
USD deposits from each other.
4. LIBOR is the lowest defaultable rate in the sense of being the rate at which highly rated
commercial banks can borrow and lend. As such it provides benchmark rates for
overnight, 1 week and 2-12 month deposits.
(i) Offshore rates exist for a number of other currencies: the Yen, SF, pound sterling,
Euro, etc.
5. Most interest rate derivatives and many bond issuances are linked to LIBOR, in
particular, floating rates on bonds, forward contracts and swaps.
a. Example: How would a floating rate loan based on, say, the 6 month LIBOR work?
27
Amount of Loan: $100 M
Terms: LIBOR + .5%
The TED spread is the difference, and is thought to be an indication of the financial
health of the banking sector.
7. Many organizations price securities using the term structure of LIBOR rates as a stand-in
for the U.S. Treasure term structure. They do this as the LIBOR rates are more relevant
for their borrowing activities.
For many purposes the Eurodollar market has become the stand-in replacement for the
Treasury market. All the concepts – a term structure, forward rates, forward contracts, and
futures contracts – have their counterpart in the Eurodollar market.
28
29
B. The Notion of a Swap
1. Forward Contracts allow borrowers to remove interest rate risk over a specific future time
period, say i periods ahead for n periods.
This requires continually signing such contracts if we wish to remove such risk on a
regular basis. A convenient way to do this is via a SWAP.
- One party pays a fixed rate payment and receives a variable floating rate payment.
- The counterparty pays the floating rate and receives the fixed rate payment.
Assets Liabilities
$100M $100M
10 year loan at 8% 6 mo. CDs at 5%
30
Every 6 months the Bank has to refinance the CDs, whose rates are typically tied to
LIBOR.
Suppose, for simplicity, the CD rate is the LIBOR rate. Consider a SWAP whereby the Bank
exchanges their variable liability for a fixed rate liability at 9%.
Now the bank only has to worry about the “credit risk” of the borrower and the SWAP dealer .
1. What is actually swapped? It is the fixed and floating rate payments (“coupons”) on a
given principal that are exchanged.
31
2. Time Horizon: specified by the SWAP contract: In principal it can be for any time
period: 1 year, 5 years, 10 years, etc.
0.1
X pays Y: $50 M = $2.5 million.
2
1. It is that rate which equates the PV of the two payment streams. It is computed as the
result of a three step procedure:
Step 1: Compute the floating rate payments using the forward LIBOR rates.
Step 2: Discount the floating rate payments using the LIBOR “term structure” to obtain
the present value of the expected floating rate payments.
Step 3: Adjust the Fixed Rate to bring about equality in the two present values.
This is an NPV = 0 procedure within the universe of LIBOR securities. It thus costs
“nothing,” aside from transactions fees, to enter into such contracts.
E. An Example:
1. Consider a 1.5 year SWAP with three payments exchanged. Notional Amount $100 M.
Although LIBOR rates are available only up to one year, forward LIBOR rates are
available from Bloomberg or Reuters since LIBOR forward contracts are traded.
We need r0.5LIBOR , f
0.5 0.5
LIBOR
, f
1 0.5
LIBOR
,
32
C0.5float C1float C1.5float
Thus,
r0.5
LIBOR
C float
0.5 100 M
2 0.925 M
f LIBOR
C1float 100 M 0.5 0.5 1.1 M
2
1 f 0.5
LIBOR
C float
1.5
100 M 1.36 M
2
2. Next we discount these at the corresponding “spot” LIBOR rates. Problem: LIBOR spot
rates are available only up to one year.
This is another sense of “Bootstrapping” except that it uses forward rates to construct
spot rates (rather than the reverse as earlier).
r LIBOR 0.0185
1 0.5 1 1.00925
2 2
2
r LIBOR r LIBOR f LIBOR
1 1 1 0.5 1 0.5 0.5
2 2 2
0.022
1.009251 1.02035 r1
LIBOR
0.02049
2
3
r LIBOR r LIBOR f LIBOR f LIBOR
1 1.5 1 0.5 1 0.5 0.5 1 1 0.5
2 2 2 2
0.022 0.0272
1.009251 1 1.03423 r1.5
LIBOR
0.02256
2 2
= 3.309572M
3. Lastly, we compute the SWAP rate, where we discount the fixed payments at the same
term structure of LIBOR rates:
33
3
S S S
PV FIXED
t 1 r LIBOR
1 0. 5 rLIBOR
2
r LIBOR
3
1 1.5
1
1
2
2 2
3.309572 M = 2.9377 S
S = 1.1265
S= 2(1.1265) = 2.2531M
This is the SWAP rate. It is a no arbitrage rate within the scope of the LIBOR family of
rates.
F. Conclusion
We have illustrated the notion of a SWAP contract as another device for managing interest rate
risk. Next we will see how the writing of such contracts can allow us to hedge bond portfolio
price risk. A current issue in the SWAP market: the financial integrity of the banks participating
in the Eurodollar market.
1. Notice that entering into a SWAP contract is a zero NPV investment from the perspective
of either party. Thus, swap contracts cannot, at signing, enhance the value of the firms
undertaking them.
2. However, as LIBOR rates evolve (if they depart from the forward LIBOR rates at
signing), then one of the counterparties will suffer a loss while the other will experience a
gain.
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