Topic 4 - Behaviour of interest rates

    Cards (50)

    • Wealth
      The total resources owned by the individual, including all assets
    • Expected Return
      The return expected over the next period on one asset relative to alternative assets
    • Risk
      The degree of uncertainty associated with the return on one asset relative to alternative assets
    • Liquidity
      The ease and speed with which an asset can be turned into cash relative to alternative assets
    • Supply and demand determine bond prices (and bond yields)
    • Bond supply curve
      The relationship between the price and the quantity of bonds people are willing to sell, all else equal
    • Bond demand curve
      The relationship between the price and the quantity of bonds that investors demand, all else equal
    • The bond supply curve slopes upward
    • The bond demand curve slopes downward
    • Factors that shift bond supply
      • Changes in government borrowing
      • Change in general business conditions
      • Changes in expected inflation
    • Any increase in the government's borrowing needs
      Increases the quantity of bonds outstanding, shifting the bond supply curve to the right
    • As business conditions improve
      The bond supply curve shifts to the right
    • When expected inflation rises
      The cost of borrowing falls, shifting the bond supply curve to the right
    • Factors that shift bond demand
      • Wealth
      • Expected inflation
      • Expected returns and expected interest rates
      • Risk relative to alternatives
      • Liquidity relative to alternatives
    • Increases in wealth
      Shift the demand for bonds to the right
    • Declining inflation
      Means promised payments have higher value - bond demand shifts right
    • If the return on bonds rises relative to the return on alternative investments

      Bond demand shifts right
    • When interest rates are expected to fall
      Prices are expected to rise shifting bond demand to the right
    • If bonds become less risky relative to alternative investments

      Demand for bonds shifts right
    • The more liquid the bond
      The higher the demand
    • If bonds become more liquid relative to alternative investments

      Demand for bonds shifts right
    • Increase in expected inflation
      Reduces the real cost of borrowing shifting bond supply to the right, but lowers real return on lending, shifting bond demand to the left
    • Business-cycle downturn
      Shifts bond supply to the left and bond demand to the left
    • Default risk

      The chance that the bond's issuer may fail to make the promised payment
    • Inflation risk

      Investors cannot be sure of what the real value of payments will be
    • Interest-rate risk

      Arises from a bond-holder's investment horizon, which may be shorter than the maturity date of the bond
    • Risk Premium
      The spread between the interest rates on bonds with default risk and the interest rates on (same maturity) Treasury bonds
    • Base interest rate
      The minimum interest rate or base interest rate that investors will demand for investing in a non-Treasury security. It also refereed to as the benchmark interest rate
    • UK Treasury bonds have usually been considered default-free bonds
    • When corporations or governments fail to meet their payments, the price of their bonds decreases
    • Bondholders care about the real interest rate, not just the nominal interest rate
    • Components of the interest rate
      • The real interest rate
      • Expected inflation
      • Compensation for inflation risk
    • The longer the term of the bond, the larger the price change for a given change in the interest rate
    • Factors that cause different interest rates on bonds with the same maturity
      • Default risk
      • Liquidity
      • Tax considerations
    • Default is one of the most important risks a bondholder faces
    • Bond rating services

      Moody's, Standard&Poor's, Fitch
    • Investment-grade bonds
      Bonds with a very low risk of default, reserved for most government issuers and corporations that are among the most financially sound
    • Speculative grade bonds
      Bonds issued by companies and countries that may have difficulty meeting their bond payments but are not at risk of immediate default
    • Highly speculative bonds
      Debts that are in serious risk of default
    • Bonds with grades below investment grade are often referred to as junk bonds or high-yield bonds
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