Fixed Income: Duration


Kevin Crotty
BUSI 448: Investments

Where are we?

Last time:

  • Equity asset pricing models
  • Multifactor models

Today:

  • Interest rate risk
  • Duration

Fixed Income Topics

  • Interest rate risk
    • Duration
    • Convexity
  • Credit risk
    • Leverage
    • Ratings
    • Credit default swaps
  • Reinvestment risk

Bond pricing refresher

\[ P = \frac{CF_1}{(1+y/m)}+\frac{CF_2}{(1+y/m)^2}+...+\frac{CF_T}{(1+y/m)^T} \]

  • \(m\): number of payments per year
  • \(y/m\): per period yield (i.e., the discount rate)

For bonds, the cash flows are usually fixed coupon payments, so this reduces to:

\[ P = \frac{C}{(1+y/m)}+\frac{C}{(1+y/m)^2}+...+\frac{C+FACE}{(1+y/m)^T}\]

where \(C\) is the coupon payment of the bond.

Interest Rate Risk

Duration defined

\[ P = \frac{C}{(1+DR)} + \frac{C}{(1+DR)^2}+ \frac{C}{(1+DR)^3}+ ... + \frac{C+FACE}{(1+DR)^T} \]

We can rewrite this as:

\[ P = PV(CF_{t_1}) + PV(CF_{t_2})+ PV(CF_{t_3})+ ... + PV(CF_{t_T}) \]

where \(t_1\) is the time of the first cash-flow in years.

Now divide both sides by \(P\):

\[ 1 = \frac{PV(CF_{t_1})}{P} + \frac{PV(CF_{t_2})}{P}+ \frac{PV(CF_{t_3})}{P}+ ... + \frac{PV(CF_{t_T})}{P} \]

Each term on the RHS is a weight!

Duration defined

  • Duration is a weighted-average time to cash flows.
  • The weights are the fraction of the total PV (the price) that is due to the cash flows at each time.

\[\text{duration}=\left[\frac{PV(CF_{t_1})}{P} \right] \cdot t_1 + \left[\frac{PV(CF_{t_2})}{P} \right] \cdot t_2 + ... + \left[\frac{PV(CF_{t_T})}{P} \right] \cdot t_T \]

Duration visualized

What happens to duration as:

  • Maturity increases?
  • Coupon rate increases?

Duration and the bond pricing function

How good is this approximation?

Consider two bonds with

  • Same YTM of 10%
  • Same coupon rate of 5%
  • Different maturities of 5 and 10 years

Let’s look at how well the duration approximation works for different yield change magnitudes.

Drawbacks of duration

  • Duration is a linear approximation.
  • It can be improved using curvature of pricing function (convexity).
  • Also, price risk is not the only risk associated with rate changes.
    • reinvestment risk!

Duration and reinvestment risk

Consider a rate decline from 10% to 9%

Reinvestment risk

The risk that interest payments cannot be reinvested at the same rate.

  • If rates fall
    • bond prices rise
    • but the value of reinvested coupons falls.

When investment horizon matches duration, reinvestment risk and interest rate risk cancel out!

An example

  • Suppose you need to pay out $X at year 5 (think of a pension company).

  • What is your investment strategy, using bonds, that ensures that you can meet your obligation?

  • Best bet is to buy a zero-coupon bond maturing in 5 years

  • If unavailable, buy a bond with duration of 5 years

Duration tells us three very useful things

  • Effective maturity of a bond
  • Interest rate risk (sensitivity of bond prices to rate changes)
  • Horizon at which interest rate risk and reinvestment risk cancel out

For next time: Convexity