section 7 Flashcards
for fixed income / bond portfolios what two objectives can be in mind for managing?
1) matching some future liability (e.g. pension fund or insurance company)
2) achieving or surpassing a benchmark (a bond index usually)
what is cash matching and dedication
the purchase of bonds by investing institutions (e.g. a pension fund) so that the cash received from the coupons and principal at each period exactly matches each cash outflow from the institutions.
what risk does catch matching and dedication not carry
no reinvestment rate risk and no interest rate risk (since no bonds have to be sold before maturity) - so shifts in the yield curve do not have adverse effects.
What is duration and immunisation as an approach ?
matching the duration of the portfolio with the liability duration
choose a bond portfolio with the same duration as the liability it is intended to meet - the portfolio is then ‘immunised’ from changes in interest rates
what is duration?
the average maturity of a bond within a bond portfolio
what is the equation for calculating bond duration within a portfolio?
(% of portfolio (by value) of bond A X bond duration) + (% of portfolio (by value) of bond B X bond duration)
what risks does duration offset?
Reinvestment risk and price risk
in immunisation / duration approach to FI when are bonds sold?
at their duration rather than held to redemption
what may need to happen with immunisation approach
may need to be re-balanced
what assumption is immunisation based on?
that there is a flat yield curve and that any shifts in that curve are parallel and occur before any payments are made to bondholders
what is a bullet or focused portfolio in terms of immunisation
if the portfolio of bonds is formed with individual durations similar to the desired duration
what is a barbell portfolio in terms of immunisation
if the portfolio of bonds is formed with bonds with much smaller and much larger durations than the target duration
what is credit risk management
in anticipation of a change in bond quality rating a manager may trade some bond issues.
for example they may sell bonds expected to deteriorate in credit rating or buy bonds in sectors that are expected to outperform at certain stages of the economic cycle.
In doing either of these actions the manager is managing these anticipated changes in credit risk in order to outperform indices and enhance bond portfolio returns
what is riding the yield curve
enhancing returns by identifying and overweighting issues that trade in a portion of the maturity spectrum that is currently undervalued.
e.g. two year bonds are currently undervalued relative to one yr bonds. buy underpriced 2 year bond hold for one year and then sell at the one year price - picking up the additional price gain
what is liability driven investing
match pension fund assets to obligations usually using swaps and derivatives to hedge out inflation and interest rate risk.
Investment will meet liability