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Reading 32: Hedging Mortgage Securities to Capture Relati

 

LOS e: Contrast a two-bond hedge that takes account of yield curve level and twist changes with a duration hedge.

Q1. A given mortgage security is trading at par. The expected average price change from a projected change in a given market yield is 1 for the mortgage security and 0.4 and 2.0 for hedging instrument one and two respectively. The expected average price change from a projected twist in the yield curve is 0.4 for the mortgage security and 0.3 and 0.5 for hedging instrument one and two respectively. What positions in hedging instruments one and two should a manager take to hedge the price of the mortgage security from the projected market changes? For every dollar of face value of the mortgage security:

A)   buy $2.5 of hedging instrument one and $0.5 of hedging instrument two.

B)   sell $0.75 of hedging instrument one and $0.35 of hedging instrument two.

C)   sell $2.5 of hedging instrument one and $0.5 of hedging instrument two.

 

Q2. When a one-bond hedge is inadequate for hedging a mortgage security and a two-bond hedge is required, all of the following are necessary assumptions for using a two-bond hedge EXCEPT:

A)   reliable assumptions in the Monte Carlo simulations of interest rates.

B)   the security’s price change given a small change in yield.

C)   the yield curve will shift in a parallel fashion.

 

 

Q3. In contrast to a one-bond hedge, a two bond hedge relies:

A)   more on duration measures and less on simulations of interest rates.

B)   more on duration measures and more on simulations of interest rates.

C)   less on duration measures and more on simulations of interest rates.

 

Q4. In contrast to hedging a Treasury security with a one-bond hedge, when hedging mortgage securities, a two-bond hedge:

A)   is more appropriate and requires more assumptions.

B)   is less appropriate and requires fewer assumptions.

C)   is more appropriate and requires fewer assumptions.

[2009] Session 10 - Reading 32: Hedging Mortgage Securities to Capture Relati

 

 

LOS e: Contrast a two-bond hedge that takes account of yield curve level and twist changes with a duration hedge. fficeffice" />

Q1. A given mortgage security is trading at par. The expected average price change from a projected change in a given market yield is 1 for the mortgage security and 0.4 and 2.0 for hedging instrument one and two respectively. The expected average price change from a projected twist in the yield curve is 0.4 for the mortgage security and 0.3 and 0.5 for hedging instrument one and two respectively. What positions in hedging instruments one and two should a manager take to hedge the price of the mortgage security from the projected market changes? For every dollar of face value of the mortgage security:

A)   buy $2.5 of hedging instrument one and $0.5 of hedging instrument two.

B)   sell $0.75 of hedging instrument one and $0.35 of hedging instrument two.

C)   sell $2.5 of hedging instrument one and $0.5 of hedging instrument two.

Correct answer is B)

To answer this, we set up the following two equations and two unknowns.

(NH1)(0.4) + (NH2)(2.0) = -1.0
(NH1)(0.3) + (NH2)(0.5) = -0.4,

where NH1 and NH2 are the positions to take in hedging instruments one and two respectively. Multiplying the second equation by 4 and subtracting it from the first gives (NH1)(-0.8)=0.6, and thus NH1=-0.75. Substituting this into either expression and solving NH2 gives NH2=-0.35.

(-0.75)(0.4)+(-0.35)(2)=-1
(-0.75)(0.3)+(-0.35)(0.5)=-0.4

 

Q2. When a one-bond hedge is inadequate for hedging a mortgage security and a two-bond hedge is required, all of the following are necessary assumptions for using a two-bond hedge EXCEPT:

A)   reliable assumptions in the ffice:smarttags" />Monte Carlo simulations of interest rates.

B)   the security’s price change given a small change in yield.

C)   the yield curve will shift in a parallel fashion.

Correct answer is C)

A usual reason a two-bond hedge is required is that the yield curve is expected to shift in a non-parallel fashion.

 

Q3. In contrast to a one-bond hedge, a two bond hedge relies:

A)   more on duration measures and less on simulations of interest rates.

B)   more on duration measures and more on simulations of interest rates.

C)   less on duration measures and more on simulations of interest rates.

Correct answer is C)

The usual reason a two-bond hedge is needed is that a duration-based approach is inadequate. Simulations of interest rates play more of a role in cases where a duration-based strategy is inadequate.

 

Q4. In contrast to hedging a Treasury security with a one-bond hedge, when hedging mortgage securities, a two-bond hedge:

A)   is more appropriate and requires more assumptions.

B)   is less appropriate and requires fewer assumptions.

C)   is more appropriate and requires fewer assumptions.

Correct answer is A)

Because there is not a bullet payment at maturity, a two-bond hedge is usually more appropriate for mortgage securities. More assumptions are needed for such a hedge such as prepayment rates and whether the average-price method yields usable results.

 

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