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Reading 67: Introduction to the Measurement of Interest Rate

Session 16: Fixed Income: Analysis and Valuation
Reading 67: Introduction to the Measurement of Interest Rate Risk

LOS c: Describe positive convexity, negative convexity, and their relation to bond price and yield.

 

 

Negative convexity for a callable bond is most likely to be important when the:

A)
price of the bond approaches the call price.
B)
bond is first issued.
C)
market interest rate rises above the bond's coupon rate.


 

Negative convexity illustrates how the relationship between the price of a bond and market yields changes as the bond price rises and approaches the call price. The convex curve that we generally see for non-callable bonds bends backward to become concave (i.e., exhibit negative convexity) as the bond approaches the call price.

Negative convexity is most likely to be observed in:

A)
zero coupon bonds.
B)
callable bonds.
C)
treasury bonds.


All noncallable bonds exhibit the trait of being positively convex and callable bonds have a negative convexity.  Callable bonds have a negative convexity because once the yield falls below a certain point, as yields fall, prices will rise at a decreasing rate, thus giving the curve a negative convex shape.

TOP

Which of the following statements best describes the concept of negative convexity in bond prices? As interest rates:

A)
fall, the bond's price increases at a decreasing rate.
B)
fall, the bond's price increases at an increasing rate.
C)
rise, the bond's price decreases at a decreasing rate.


Negative convexity occurs with bonds that have prepayment/call features. As interest rates fall, the borrower/issuer is more likely to repay/call the bond, which causes the bond’s price to approach a maximum. As such, the bond’s price increases at a decreasing rate as interest rates decrease.

TOP

Positive convexity means that:

A)
as interest rates change, bond prices will increase at an increasing rate and decrease at a decreasing rate.
B)
the graph of a callable bond flattens out as the market value approaches the call price.
C)
the price of a fixed-coupon bond is inversely related to changes in interest rates.


Positive convexity refers to the principle that for a given change in market yields, bond price sensitivity is lowest when market yields are high and highest when market yields are low.

Although the statements that begin, the graph of a callable bond . . . and the price of a fixed-coupon bond . . . are true, they are not the best choices to describe positive convexity.

TOP

Which of the following bonds bears the greatest price impact if its yield declines by one percent? A bond with:

A)
30-year maturity and selling at 70.
B)
30-year maturity and selling at 100.
C)
10-year maturity and selling at 70.


There are three features that determine the magnitude of duration:

  1. The lower the coupon, the greater the bond price volatility.
  2. The longer the term to maturity, the greater the price volatility.
  3. The lower the initial yield, the greater the price volatility.

The bond with the 30-year maturity will have a greater price impact than the 10-year maturity. The bond selling at the greatest discount will have a large price impact, a discount means that the coupon payments are low or the initial yield is low. So, the bond with the 30-year maturity and selling at 70 will have the greatest price volatility.


TOP

Non-callable bond prices go up faster than they go down. This is referred to as:

A)
negative convexity.
B)
inverse features.
C)
positive convexity.


When bond prices go up faster than they go down, it is called positive convexity.

TOP

How does the price-yield relationship for a putable bond compare to the same relationship for an option-free bond? The price-yield relationship is:

A)
the same for both bond types.
B)
more convex at some yields for the putable bond than for the option-free bond.
C)
more convex for a putable bond than for an option-free bond.


Since the holder of a putable has an incentive to exercise his put option if yields are high and the bond price is depressed, this puts a lower limit on the price of the bond when interest rates are high. The lower limit introduces a higher convexity of the putable bond compared to an option-free bond when yields are high.

TOP

Can a fixed income security have a negative convexity?

A)
Yes.
B)
Only when the price/yield curve is linear.
C)
No.


Yes, fixed income securities can have a negative security. The only type of fixed income security with a negative convexity will be callable bonds. 

TOP

Jayce Arnold, a CFA candidate, is studying how the market yield environment affects bond prices. She considers a $1,000 face value, option-free bond issued at par. Which of the following statements about the bond’s dollar price behavior is most likely accurate when yields rise and fall by 200 basis points, respectively? Price will:

A)
decrease by $124, price will increase by $149.
B)
increase by $149, price will decrease by $124.
C)
decrease by $149, price will increase by $124.


As yields increase, bond prices fall, the price curve gets flatter, and changes in yield have a smaller effect on bond prices. As yields decrease, bond prices rise, the price curve gets steeper, and changes in yield have a larger effect on bond prices. Thus, the price increase when interest rates decline must be greater than the price decrease when interest rates rise (for the same basis point change). Remember that this applies to percentage changes as well.

TOP

How does the price-yield relationship for a callable bond compare to the same relationship for an option-free bond? The price-yield relationship is:

A)
concave for low yields for the callable bond and always convex for the option-free bond.
B)
concave for the callable bond and convex for an option-free bond.
C)
the same for both bond types.


Since the issuer of a callable bond has an incentive to call the bond when interest rates are very low in order to get cheaper financing, this puts an upper limit on the bond price for low interest rates and thus introduces the concave relationship between yields and prices.

TOP

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