Rate Level Risk

  

Categories: Bonds

Bond trading is like dating. The attractiveness of what you have changes based on your options. If you’re a busker in the subway, you’ll put up with more nonsense from a significant other than you will have once you become a millionaire-globe-hopping rock star.

Similarly, the attractiveness of a particular bond depends on what else is out there. To put it another way, the value of a bond changes as the overall interest rate environment changes.

A return of 3% on a bond looks fine when the average rate for that maturity sits at 2%. However, in an environment when you can get 5% for the same amount of risk, those 3% bonds start to look bad. You might start ignoring their texts and removing their pictures from your Facebook page.

The rate-level risk describes this situation. It refers to the fact that bond values fluctuate based on the overall interest rate environment. You buy the 3% bond at at a time when it looks like a good investment, based on the return you can get elsewhere for similar risk. If that environment changes, however (if overall rates rise), suddenly that bond doesn't seem as valuable.

Fundamentally, rate-level risk refers to the risk to bond prices related to changes in the overall rate environment. So the risks don't have anything to do with that particular bond. The risks completely stem from the chances that something will change in the general market situation.

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Finance: What is call protection, and ho...2 Views

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And finance Allah shmoop what is called protection and how

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does it work So you wish this term was about

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preventing those annoying telemarketers who call you right in the

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middle of dinner hoping to sell you X and satellite

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subscriptions But it's not Call protection has to do with

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is paying at least full par value principle if not

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a percent or two premium above that figure when they

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this happening Like isn't it a good thing that bonds

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get called back by the people who borrow the money

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and then get fully paid off Well the answer No

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not always Let's say a bond is issued in a

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high interest rate environment like the Fed is trying to

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cool inflation so they have short term high interest rates

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government bonds or in this case and say it's five

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year paper That's a yielding ten percent But then inflation

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that six percent paper a few years later pays only

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four percent and that five year eight percent paper is

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now down Teo five percent Well the company that issued

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its bond paying ten percent interest could refinance that bond

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today at only seven percent interest And they do Right

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so they're saving three points of interest Unusually you know

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like a billion dollars of Borrow They call the bonds

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bond gets one o two or a thousand twenty to

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percent a year in interest for a while You can't

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interest by having those lovely ten percent yielding Bonds called

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