Chapter 18: Term structure of interest rates Flashcards
1
Q
Term structure
A
how interest rates for different maturities are related
2
Q
Yield curve theories
A
- Expectations theory - yong-term rate determined purely by expectations of current and future interest rates
- Liquidity theory - Investors will require additional yield for less liquid (longer term bonds)
- Market segmentations theory - yields at each terms will be determined by supply and demand at that term.
3
Q
Difference between a spot, short and foward rate
A
- A spot rate refers to the current price or bond yield over a period (T-t)
- A short rate refers to the instantaneous bond yield - it is the limit of the spot rate
- Forward rate refers to the price or yield for the same instrument at some point in the future
4
Q
Desirable characteristics for a term structure model
A
- Should be arbitage free
- Interest rates should ideally be positive - otherwise there is no incentive to save - but this condition is economy dependent
- The short rate r(t) and other rates should exhibit mean reverting behaviour - for consistency with emperical evidence
- Should either give rise to simple formulae for bond and option prices, or make it straightforward to compute prices using numerical techniques
- Should produce realistic dynamics - emperical evidence and yield curves
- Fit historic data adequately
- Can it be caliberated easily using market data
4
Q
Desirable characteristics for a term structure model
A
- Should be arbitage free
- Interest rates should ideally be positive - otherwise there is no incentive to save - but this condition is economy dependent
- The short rate r(t) and other rates should exhibit mean reverting behaviour - for consistency with emperical evidence
- Should either give rise to simple formulae for bond and option prices, or make it straightforward to compute prices using numerical techniques
- Should produce realistic dynamics - emperical evidence and yield curves
- Fit historic data adequately
- Can it be caliberated easily using market data
- Is the model flexible enough to cope properly with a range of derivative contracts