Chapter 12: Bond yield curve Flashcards
1
Q
What does the yield curve represent?
A
How bond yields vary with term to redemption
2
Q
Name and explain the four theories of the yield curve
LIME
A
- Liquidity preference theory
* Investors prefer liquid assets to illiquid ones. Long-dated stocks are less liquid than short-dated stocks.
* Therefore, investors require a liquidity risk premium to compensate them for investing in longer-dated stocks
* The yield curve should be more upwards sloping (or less downwards sloping than of the expectation theory alone - Inflation risk premium theory
* Yield curve will slope upwards or be less downwards sloping because investors need a higher yield to compensate them for holding longer-dated stocks which are more vulnerable to inflation risk than short-dated stocks - Market segmentation theory
* Yields at each term to redemption are determined by supply and demand from investors with liabilities of than term
* Banks and GI influence demand for short-term bonds
* Pension funds and LI influence demand for long-term bonds - Expectation theory
* Describes the shape of the yield curve being determined by economic factors, which drive the market’s expectation for future short-term interest rates. * The government uses the short-term interest to influence inflation.
* If short-term interest rates are expected to increase, the yield curve will be upwards sloping
3
Q
Factors influencing the yield curve
A
- Inflation
- ST interest rates
- Exchange rates
- Fiscal deficit
- Returns on alternative investments
- Institutional cashflows
- Other economic factors (e.g., credit worthiness downgrading)
- Overseas bonds