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6#
发表于 2011-10-2 00:10
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A swap can be thought of as a pairs trade between a fixed rate bond and a floating rate bond with the same maturities (in this case, maturity = the maturity or tenor of the swap).
So the duration of the swap (from the perspective of the fixed rate receiver) = duration of the fixed bond minus duration of the floating bond.
The duration of the floating rate is usually close to zero and pretty much always < 1. If the floating rate bond reset rates daily, it would have zero duration. The duration of a floating instrument at anyone time is approximately length of time (in years) to to the next rate reset. For annual-pay bonds, it averages out as 0.5, for semi-annual pay bonds, it averages out to 0.25.
If you're reciving floating rates, it's the reverse (so a swap is one way to acquire a negative duration instrument; another way is to short a bond future, or to sell a bond/borrow money).
A fixed pay bond + a short swap (i.e. receive floating) with the same tenor will reduce the duration of the portfolio (assuming there is just a bond in the portfolio) to about 0.25 by converting the fixed bond into a floating bond (that assumes that the fixed rates of the swap = the fixed rates of the paying bond; if not, then you get a duration of 0.25 + the duration of a bond with coupon payments = difference between floating rates).
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at Monday, March 14, 2011 at 04:09PM by bchadwick. |
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