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The Duration Measure

The document discusses bond duration and convexity measures. It defines Macaulay duration as a weighted average of the time until bond cash flows are received. Modified duration approximates the percentage change in bond price from a small change in yield. Convexity measures the curvature in the bond's price-yield relationship. Portfolio duration is the market value weighted average of the durations of the bonds in the portfolio, and estimates the percentage change in the portfolio's value from an interest rate change.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
23 views

The Duration Measure

The document discusses bond duration and convexity measures. It defines Macaulay duration as a weighted average of the time until bond cash flows are received. Modified duration approximates the percentage change in bond price from a small change in yield. Convexity measures the curvature in the bond's price-yield relationship. Portfolio duration is the market value weighted average of the durations of the bonds in the portfolio, and estimates the percentage change in the portfolio's value from an interest rate change.
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The Duration Measure

• Since price volatility of a bond varies


inversely with its coupon and directly with
its term to maturity, it is necessary to
determine the best combination of these two
variables to achieve your objective
• A composite measure considering both
coupon and maturity would be beneficial
The Duration Measure
n n
C t (t )
t 1 (1  i )
t  t  PV (C ) t
D n  t 1
Ct

price
t 1 (1  i )
t

Developed by Frederick R. Macaulay, 1938


Where:
t = time period in which the coupon or principal payment occurs
Ct = interest or principal payment that occurs in period t
i = yield to maturity on the bond
Macaulay Duration
• the weighted average term to
maturity of the cash flows from
a bond.
• a measure of bond price
volatility with respect to interest
rates.
Characteristics of Macaulay
Duration
• Duration of a bond with coupons is always less
than its term to maturity because duration gives
weight to these interim payments
– A zero-coupon bond’s duration equals its maturity
• There is an inverse relationship between duration
and coupon
• There is a positive relationship between term to
maturity and duration, but duration increases at a
decreasing rate with maturity
• There is an inverse relationship between YTM and
duration
• Sinking funds and call provisions can have a
dramatic effect on a bond’s duration
Modified Duration and Bond Price
Volatility
An adjusted measure of duration can be used
to approximate the price volatility of an
option-free (straight) bond
Macaulay duration
modified duration 
YTM
1
Where: m
m = number of payments a year
YTM = nominal YTM
Modified Duration and Bond Price
Volatility
• Bond price movements will vary proportionally with
modified duration for small changes in yields
• An estimate of the percentage change in bond prices equals
the change in yield time modified duration
P
 100   Dmod  i
Where: P
P = change in price for the bond
P = beginning price for the bond
Dmod = the modified duration of the bond
i = yield change in basis points divided by 100
Trading Strategies Using Modified
Duration
• Longest-duration security provides the maximum price
variation
• If you expect a decline in interest rates, increase the average
modified duration of your bond portfolio to experience
maximum price volatility
• If you expect an increase in interest rates, reduce the average
modified duration to minimize your price decline
• Note that the modified duration of your portfolio is the market-
value-weighted average of the modified durations of the
individual bonds in the portfolio
Sample Problem
• Talmart Corporation bonds have a $1,000
face value and will mature in 4 years. The
bonds have a 7% coupon rate. Interest is
paid annually and the required rate of return
is 6 percent for these bonds.
1. Bond Price
2. Macaulay Duration
3. Modified Duration
Bond Price
Macaulay Duration
Modified Duration

Mod :
3.64 / 1.06

= 3.43
Bond Convexity
• Modified duration is a linear approximation
of bond price change for small changes in
market yields
P
 100   Dmod  i
P

• However, price changes are not linear, but a


curvilinear (convex) function
Price-Yield Relationship for Bonds
• The graph of prices relative to yields is not a
straight line, but a curvilinear relationship
• This can be applied to a single bond, a portfolio of
bonds, or any stream of future cash flows
• The convex price-yield relationship will differ
among bonds or other cash flow streams
depending on the coupon and maturity
• The convexity of the price-yield relationship
declines slower as the yield increases
• Modified duration is the percentage change in
price for a nominal change in yield
Modified Duration
dP
Dmod  di
P
For small changes this will give a good
estimate, but this is a linear estimate on the
tangent line
Determinants of Convexity
The convexity is the measure of the curvature
and is the second derivative of price with
resect to yield (d2P/di2) divided by price
Convexity is the percentage change in dP/di
for a given change in yield
2
d P
2
Convexity  di
P
Determinants of Convexity
• Inverse relationship between coupon and convexity
• Direct relationship between maturity and convexity
• Inverse relationship between yield and convexity
Modified Duration-Convexity Effects

• Changes in a bond’s price resulting from a


change in yield are due to:
– Bond’s modified duration
– Bond’s convexity
• Relative effect of these two factors depends
on the characteristics of the bond (its
convexity) and the size of the yield change
• Convexity is desirable
Duration and Convexity
for Callable Bonds
• Issuer has option to call bond and pay off with
proceeds from a new issue sold at a lower yield
• Embedded option
• Difference in duration to maturity and duration to
first call
• Combination of a noncallable bond plus a call
option that was sold to the issuer
• Any increase in value of the call option reduces
the value of the callable bond
Option Adjusted Duration
• Based on the probability that the issuing
firm will exercise its call option
– Duration of the non-callable bond
– Duration of the call option
Convexity of Callable Bonds
• Noncallable bond has positive convexity
• Callable bond has negative convexity
Limitations of Macaulay and
Modified Duration
• Percentage change estimates using modified
duration only are good for small-yield
changes
• Difficult to determine the interest-rate
sensitivity of a portfolio of bonds when
there is a change in interest rates and the
yield curve experiences a nonparallel shift
• Initial assumption that cash flows from the
bond are not affected by yield changes
Bond Price Change in Duration
and Convexity
• Est. of ∆Price from Duration
= D*(∆ in YLD/100)

• Est. of ∆Price from Convexity


= ½ x PRICE x Convexity x (∆YLD)2
Illustration (from Book)
Given:
• 18 year bond, 12% coupon, 9%YTM
• Price = 126.50 Dmod = 8.38 Conv =107.70

Required: Find changes in duration, convexity and


the combined effects of a bond which
has a yield change of -100BP.
Solution: For 100bp
Duration Change: -8.38 x (-100/100) = 8.38%
+8.38 x 126.50 = +10.60
Convexity Change:
½ x (126.50) x 107.70 x (0.01)2 = .68

Combined effect:
126.50 + 10.60 + .68 = 137.78
Sample Problem
Given:
• 10 year bond, 10% coupon, 8%YTM
• Price = 150.00 Dmod = 7.35 Conv =102.20

Find changes in duration, convexity and


the combined effects of a bond which
has a yield change of -200BP.
Effective Duration
• Measure of the interest rate sensitivity of an asset
• Use a pricing model to estimate the market prices
surrounding a change in interest rates

Effective Duration Effective Convexity


P   P  P   P   2 P
2
2 PS PS
P- = the estimated price after a downward shift in interest rates
P+ = the estimated price after a upward shift in interest rates
P = the current price
S = the assumed shift in the term structure
Effective Duration
• Effective duration greater than maturity
• Negative effective duration
• Empirical duration
Sample Problem
• Stone & Co 9% of 10 are option free
and selling at 106 to yield 8.5%. Let's
change rates by 50 bps. The new price
for the increase in 50 bps would be 104
and the new price for a decrease in
rates would be 109. Compute for the
effective duration.
Solution

= 109 - 104 / 2 *(106) * (.005)


= 5 / 1.06
= 4.717

This means that for a 100 basis point


change, the approximate change would be
4.717%
Price Change in Effective Duration
• - duration x change in yield x 100

Sample Problem:
With duration of 4.717, effect the
approximate changes:
:small movement in rates = 20 bps inc
: large movement in rates = 250 bps inc
Solution
• small percentage increase of 20bps
• Percentage Price Change
= - 4.717 x (+0.0020) x 100 = -.943%

• large change of 250 bps increase


• Percentage Price Change
= -4.717. (+0.0250) x 100 = -11.79%
Empirical Duration
• Actual percent change for an asset in
response to a change in yield during a
specified time period
Portfolio Duration
=equal to the weighted average of the durations
of the bonds in the portfolio. The weight is
proportional to how much of the portfolio
consists of a certain bond.

Portfolio Duration = w1D1 + w2D2 ...+ wkDk


Sample Problem
Consider the 3 bonds to determine portfolio
duration:

Issuer Market Value Yield Maturity Duration

Stone & Co. 6,000,000 7% 10 5.5


Zack Stores 3,400,000 9% 15 7.8
Yankee Corp. 1,535,000 5% 20 12
Solution:
• Total market valve of $10,935,000
• Find the weighted average of each bond
Stone & Co. =6,000,000 / 10,935,000 = .548
Zack Stores =3,400,000 / 10,935,000 = .311
Yankee Corp.= 1,535,000 / 10935,000 = .14
• Portfolio duration
.548(5.5) + .311(7.8) + .14 (12) = 7.119
If rates change by 100 bps the portfolio's value will
change by approximately by 7.119%
Percentage Price Change in
Portfolio Duration
= -duration x change in yield x market value

Sample Problem:
Assume the same portfolio value with 50
bps change yield, how much would be the
dollar change?
Solution:
• Stone & Co = -5.5 x .005 x 6,000,000 =
165,000
Zack Stores = -7.8 x .005 x 3,400,000 =
132,600
Yankee Corp = -12 x .005 x 1,535,000 =
92,100

• So the dollar change for a 50 bp change would


be equal to approximately $389,700
Yield Spreads With Embedded
Options
• Static Yield Spreads
– Consider the total term structure
• Option-Adjusted Spreads
– Consider changes in the term structure and
alternative estimates of the volatility of interest
rates

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