Session 15: Fixed Income: Basic Concepts Reading 62: Risks Associated with Investing in Bonds
LOS c: Explain how features of a bond (e.g., maturity, coupon, and embedded options) and the level of a bond's yield affect the bond's interest rate risk.
If a portfolio manager anticipates a major increase in market interest rates, the most appropriate trading strategy is to purchase:
A) |
long-maturity bonds with low coupon rates. | |
B) |
high yield bonds with high coupon rates. | |
C) |
short-maturity bonds with high coupon rates. | |
The price volatility of non-callable bonds is inversely related to the level of market yields. As yields increase, bond prices fall, and the price curve gets flatter. Bonds with higher duration will change more in price. Longer maturity bonds with lower coupon rates are more sensitive to interest rate risk and their price will decrease more than short term, high coupon rate bonds. High yield ("junk") bonds with high coupons become more risky in high interest rate environments and therefore would not be appropriate. |