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Corporate
Finance FIN 622
VU
Lesson
06
TERM
STRUCTURE OF INTEREST
RATES
The
relationship between long tem &
short-term rates is known as Term
Structure.
Interest
rates in short & long terms
are different. Term structure
tells us nominal interest
rate on default
free
securities. When long-term
rate is greater than short term
then the term structure will be
upward
sloping
and when short-term rate is greater
than the long term, the term
structure will be downward
sloping.
The
term structure of interest rates,
also known as the yield
curve, is a very common bond
valuation
method.
There
are three main patterns
created by the term structure of interest
rates:
1) Normal
Yield Curve:
As its
name indicates, this is the yield
curve shape that forms
during normal market conditions,
wherein
investors
generally believe that there
will be no significant changes in the
economy, such as in
inflation
rates,
and that the economy will
continue to grow at a normal rate. During
such conditions, investors
expect
higher
yields for fixed income
instruments with long-term
maturities that occur
farther into the future.
In
other
words, the market expects
long-term fixed income
securities to offer higher yields than
short-term
fixed
income securities. This is a normal
expectation of the market because short-term
instruments generally
hold
less risk than long-term
instruments; the farther into the
future the bond's maturity, the more time
and,
therefore,
uncertainty the bondholder faces before being paid
back the principal. To invest in
one
instrument
for a longer period of time, an investor
needs to be compensated for undertaking
the additional
risk.
Remember
that as general current interest
rates increase, the price of a
bond will decrease and
its yield will
increase.
2) Flat
Yield Curve:
These
curves indicate that the market
environment is sending mixed signals to
investors, who are
interpreting
interest
rate movements in various
ways. During such an
environment, it is difficult for the
market to determine
whether
interest rates will move significantly in
either direction farther into the
future. A flat yield curve
usually
occurs
when the market is making a transition
that emits different but
simultaneous indications of what
interest
rates
will do. In other words,
there may be some signals
that short-term interest rates
will raise and other
signals
that
long-term interest rates
will fall. This condition
will create a curve that is
flatter than its normal
positive
slope.
When the yield curve is
flat, investors can maximize
their risk/return tradeoff by
choosing fixed-income
securities
with the least risk, or
highest credit quality. In the rare
instances wherein long-term interest
rates
decline,
a flat curve can sometimes
lead to an inverted
curve.
3) Inverted
Yield Curve:
These
yield curves are rare,
and they form during extraordinary
market conditions wherein the
expectations
of
investors are completely the inverse of
those demonstrated by the normal
yield curve. In such
abnormal
market
environments, bonds with maturity
dates further into the
future are expected to offer
lower yields
than
bonds with shorter maturities.
The inverted yield curve
indicates that the market currently
expects
interest
rates to decline as time moves
farther into the future,
which in turn means the
market expects yields
of
long-term bonds to decline.
Remember, also, that as
interest rates decrease,
bond prices increase
and
yields
decline.
You
may be wondering why
investors would choose to
purchase long-term fixed-income
investments when
there
is an inverted yield curve,
which indicates that
investors expect to receive
less compensation for
taking
on
more risk. Some investors,
however, interpret an inverted curve as
an indication that the economy
will
soon
experience a slowdown, which causes
future interest rates to give
even lower yields. Before
a
slowdown, it is
better to lock money into
long-term investments at present
prevailing yields, because
future
yields
will be even lower.
REAL
VS NOMINAL INTEREST RATES:
The
nominal interest rate is the amount, in
money terms, of interest
payable.
For
example, suppose household deposits
$100 with a bank for 1 year
and they receive interest of
$10.
At the
end of the year their
balance is $110. In this case, the
nominal interest rate is 10%
per annum.
19
Corporate
Finance FIN 622
VU
The
real interest rate, which
measures the purchasing power of interest
receipts, is calculated by
adjusting
the nominal rate charged to
take inflation into
account.
If
inflation in the economy has
been 10% in the year, then the
$110 in the account at the end of
the
year
buys the same amount as the $100
did a year ago. The
real interest rate, in this
case, is zero.
After
the fact, the 'realized' real
interest rate, which has
actually occurred,
is:
ir = in --
p
where
p = the actual inflation rate
over the year.
The
expected real returns on an
investment, before it is made,
are:
ir = in --
pe
where:
in =
nominal interest rate
ir =
real interest rate
pe =
expected or projected inflation over the
year.
Market
interest rates
There is a
market for investments which
ultimately includes the money
market, bond market,
stock
market
and currency market as well
as retail financial institutions like
banks.
Exactly
how these markets function
is a complex question. However,
economists generally agree
that
the
interest rates yielded by any investment
take into account:
The
risk-free cost of capital
Inflationary
expectations
The
level of risk in the investment
The
costs of the transaction
Risk-free
cost of capital
The
risk-free cost of capital is the real
interest on a risk-free loan. While no loan is
ever entirely risk-
free,
bills issued by major nations are
generally regarded as risk-free
benchmarks.
This
rate incorporates the deferred consumption
and alternative investments elements of
interest.
Inflationary
expectations
According
to the theory of rational expectations,
people form an expectation of what will
happen to
inflation
in the future. They then
ensure that they offer or
ask a nominal interest rate
that means they
have
the appropriate real interest rate on
their investment.
This
is given by the formula:
in = ir +
pe
Where:
in =
offered nominal interest
rate
ir =
desired real interest
rate
pe =
inflationary expectations
Risk
The
level of risk in investments is taken into
consideration. This is why very volatile
investments like
shares
and junk bonds have higher
returns than safer ones
like government bonds.
The
extra interest charged on a risky
investment is the risk premium. The required risk premium
is
dependent
on the risk preferences of the
lender.
If an investment is
50% likely to go bankrupt, a risk-neutral lender
will require their returns to
double.
So for
an investment normally returning $100
they would require $200 back. A
risk-averse lender would
require
more than $200 back
and a risk-loving lender less
than $200. Evidence suggests
that most
lenders
are in fact
risk-averse.
Generally
speaking a longer-term investment carries a
maturity risk premium, because long-term
loans
are
exposed to more risk of default
during their
duration.
Liquidity
preference
Most
investors prefer their money to be in
cash than in less fungible
investments. Cash is on hand to be
spent
immediately if the need arises, but
some investments require time or effort
to transfer into spend
able
20
Corporate
Finance FIN 622
VU
form.
This is known as liquidity
preference. A 10-year loan, for
instance, is very illiquid compared to a
1-
year
loan. A 10-year US Treasury bond,
however, is liquid because it can
easily be sold on the
market.
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