Free Web Hosting Provider - Web Hosting - E-commerce - High Speed Internet - Free Web Page
Search the Web

[Home] [Papers] [Courses] [Lectures]
Active bond portfolio management strategies

Jamal Munshi, Sonoma State Univesity, 1992
All rights reserved

first a note on yield curve implications for coupon bond valuation
  • suppose zeroes of term [.5,1.1.5,2] years yield [5%,5.5%,5.6%,6%]. What the equilibrium price of a 2 year 10% coupon bond that makes semi-annual payments?
  • half year yields: k6 = (1+k12)^(6/12) - 1
  • = [2.44948974, 2.54950976, 2.56904652, 2.64575131]
  • cash flows per 6 month period = 5,5,5,105
  • PV of these cash flows at these discount rates
  • = [4.88045379, 4.75447784, 4.63362677, 94.5856794]
  • bond price today is the sum of these present values = 108.854238
  • moral: present values computed at yield curve rates and not at constant rate
the repo dealer
  • active bond managers make use of repo dealers because these dealers stand to lend and borrow treasuries
  • in each roundtrip transaction with the repo dealer you will incur his spread as a transaction cost. the spread is referred to as the dealer's "hair cut" because it is very thin.
  • a typical bond strategy of long A and short B goes like this:
  • 1. borrow cash from the repo dealer and buy A in the market
  • 2. lend A to the repo dealer for the term of the strategy to offset the cash borrowed ("hair cut" cost)
  • 3. post margin cash with dealer and borrow B
  • 4. sell B in the market
  • to close out the strategy
  • collect A from the dealer and sell in the market paying the dealer cash plus haircut
  • buy B in the market and deliver to the repo dealer
  • receive cash (less haircut) for B from the dealer
yield curve strategy
  • currently the spread between 30-year and 2-year treasuries is 100 bp and stephanie expects that the yield curve will become steeper in the coming months.
  • she wishes to profit from this forecast without taking interest rate risk
  • the strategy will gain if the curve steepens and lose if it flattens but should have no response to changes in interest rate levels without a slope change
  • her strategy is to long the short and short the long
  • to protect herself from interest rate risk she makes these trades in amounts that are inversely proportional to the dP value of these bonds
  • the dP value is derived from the P/k elasticity of the bonds:
  • recall: D = (dP/P)/((dk/(1+k)), so dP = D*P*dk/(1+k)
  • example: P2 = 91, P30 = 100, D2 = 2, D30 = 15, k2=5%, k30=6%
  • dP2 = 2*91*.01/1.05 = 1.73, dP30 = 15*100*.01/1.06 = 14.15
  • the ratio = 14.15/1.73 = 8.16
  • so if she goes long $1 million in 30-year bonds she should short about $8 million in 2-year notes
  • now she can profit from yield curve steepening but is immunzied against parallel shifts in the yield curve
  • stephanie is "exposed" because a flattening of the yield curve could wipe her out. this is the nature of active strategies.
using strips to leverage price appreciation
  • consider the 30-year 6% bonds with P = 100 and D = 14 years
  • brian is sure that the yield curve will make a downward parallel shift and wishes to profit from this projection
  • his strategy is to go long $1 million in 30 year treasury strips which he buys for 17.40 each
  • if rates fall by 1%, the value of his treasury strip rises by dP = DP/(1+k)
  • the strips have D = 30, so dP/P = 30*.01/1.06 = 28%
  • with the coupons, D = 14, and dP/P = 14*.01/1.06 = 13%
  • so brian is able to double his price appreciation by using strips
  • of course if the rates move against him he will lose