Yield and Yield Spread Measures for Floating-Rate Notes

Yield and Yield Spread Measures for Floating-Rate Instruments Floating-rate instruments, including floating-rate notes (FRNs or floaters) and most loans, are different from fixed-rate bonds. Rather than fixed coupon payments, they vary from period to period depending on the current level of a reference interest rate. For an FRN, PMT is a function of the MRR and the…

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Yield Spread Measures for Fixed-Rate Bonds and Matrix Pricing

In fixed-income security analysis, it is important to understand why bond prices and yields-to-maturity change. To do this, it is useful to decompose a yield-to-maturity into a base rate or benchmark and an issuer-specific spread.  The yield spread is the difference between the yield-to-maturity and the benchmark yield. Yield Spreads over the Benchmark Yield Curve The Z-spread over the…

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Other Yield Measures, Conventions, and Accounting for Embedded Options

Other Yield Measures and Conventions CYt = Annual coupont / Bond pricet The current yield is a crude measure of return because it focuses solely on interest income, ignoring the frequency of coupon payments, interest on interest (time value of money), and accrued interest. In addition to collecting and reinvesting coupon payments, the investor has a gain…

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Periodicity and Annualized Yields

Investors analysing bonds with various cash flow and maturity profiles seek a standardised yield measure to compare across different choices. Yield measures are usually annualised in order to allow a direct comparison. For capital market securities maturing in more than one year, investors want an annualised and compounded yield-to-maturity.  An annualised and compounded yield on a fixed-rate bond depends on the assumed number…

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Matrix Pricing

Matrix Pricing Process Unlike listed equity securities, most bonds are not actively traded, so there is often no current market price available to calculate yield-to-maturity. Matrix pricing also is used in underwriting new bonds to get an estimate of the required yield spread over the benchmark rate, or the difference in yield-to-maturity between the bond and…

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Relationships between Bond Prices and Bond Features

Inverse Relationship For any time-value-of-money calculation, a higher discount rate results in a lower present value for any fixed future cash flow and a lower discount rate results in a higher present value. Therefore, bond yields-to-maturity and prices move in opposite directions. Coupon Effect The size of bond coupon cash flows affects how much a bond’s price…

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Non-Sovereign, Quasi-Government, and Supranational Agency Debt

Government Agencies Government agencies are quasi-government entities that issue debt in order to fund the government-sponsored provision of specific public goods or services based on sovereign or local law. Local and Regional Government Authorities Non-sovereign government authorities may either issue debt for general purposes, which is repaid from local tax cash flows, or issue debt…

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Sovereign Debt

National or sovereign government issuers are distinguished by their legal authority to establish and maintain a country’s public goods and services and their ability to tax economic activity in their jurisdiction. Additional sources of repayment for their debt obligations include tariffs, usage fees, and cash flows from government-owned enterprises. The size and scope of public…

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