Fixed-income securities : valuation, risk management and portfolio strategies

書誌事項

Fixed-income securities : valuation, risk management and portfolio strategies

Lionel Martellini, Philippe Priaulet and Stéphane Priaulet

(Wiley finance series)

Wiley, c2003

  • : pbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This textbook will be designed for fixed-income securities courses taught on MSc Finance and MBA courses. There is currently no suitable text that offers a 'Hull-type' book for the fixed income student market. This book aims to fill this need. The book will contain numerous worked examples, excel spreadsheets, with a building block approach throughout. A key feature of the book will be coverage of both traditional and alternative investment strategies in the fixed-income market, for example, the book will cover the modern strategies used by fixed-income hedge funds. The text will be supported by a set of PowerPoint slides for use by the lecturer First textbook designed for students written on fixed-income securities - a growing market Contains numerous worked examples throughout Includes coverage of important topics often omitted in other books i.e. deriving the zero yield curve, deriving credit spreads, hedging and also covers interest rate and credit derivatives

目次

About the Authors xix Preface xxi Acknowledgments xxv Notation xxvii Part I Investment Environment 1 Bonds and Money-Market Instruments 3 1.1 Bonds 3 1.1.1 General Characteristics of Bonds 3 1.1.2 Bonds by Issuers 17 1.2 Money-Market Instruments 25 1.2.1 Definition 25 1.2.2 The Role of the Central Bank 25 1.2.3 T-Bills 26 1.2.4 Certificates of Deposit 28 1.2.5 Bankers' Acceptances 29 1.2.6 Commercial Papers 29 1.2.7 Interbank Deposits 30 1.2.8 Repo and Reverse Repo Market Instruments 30 1.3 End of Chapter Summary 32 1.4 References and Further Reading 33 1.4.1 Books and Papers 33 1.4.2 Websites and Others 33 1.5 Problems 34 1.5.1 Problems on Bonds 34 1.5.2 Problems on Money-Market Instruments 36 1.6 Appendix: Sector Breakdown of the Euro, the UK and the Japan Corporate Bond Markets 37 2 Bond Prices and Yields 41 2.1 Introduction to Bond Pricing 41 2.2 Present Value Formula 43 2.2.1 Time-Value of Money 43 2.2.2 The Mathematics of Discounting 43 2.2.3 Nominal versus Real Interest Rates 45 2.2.4 Time Basis and Compounding Frequency Conventions 46 2.2.5 Continuous Compounding 47 2.3 Taxonomy of Rates 49 2.3.1 Coupon Rate and Current Yield 49 2.3.2 Yield to Maturity 49 2.3.3 Spot Zero-Coupon (or Discount) Rate 51 2.3.4 Forward Rates 52 2.3.5 Bond Par Yield 54 2.4 End of Chapter Summary 54 2.5 References and Further Reading 54 2.6 Problems 55 Part II Term Structure of Interest Rates 3 Empirical Properties and Classical Theories of the Term Structure 63 3.1 Definition and Properties of the Term Structure 63 3.1.1 What Kind of Shape Can It Take? 65 3.1.2 How Does It Evolve over Time? 68 3.2 Classical Theories of the Term Structure 81 3.2.1 The Pure Expectations Theory 82 3.2.2 The Pure Risk Premium Theory 83 3.2.3 The Market Segmentation Theory 85 3.2.4 The Biased Expectations Theory: An Integrated Approach 86 3.2.5 Illustration and Empirical Validation 86 3.2.6 Summary and Extensions 87 3.3 End of Chapter Summary 88 3.4 References and Further Reading 89 3.4.1 On the Empirical Behavior of the Yield Curve 89 3.4.2 On the Principal Component Analysis of the Yield Curve 90 3.4.3 On the Classical Theories of the Term Structure of Interest Rates 90 3.5 Problems 91 4 Deriving the Zero-Coupon Yield Curve 96 4.1 Deriving the Nondefault Treasury Zero-Coupon Yield Curve 96 4.1.1 How to Select a Basket of Bonds? 96 4.1.2 Direct Methods 97 4.1.3 Indirect Methods 103 4.2 Deriving the Interbank Zero-Coupon Rate Curve 130 4.2.1 How to Select the Basket of Instruments? 130 4.2.2 Interpolation Methods 132 4.2.3 Least Squares Methods Based on Rates 132 4.2.4 Least Squares Methods Based on Prices 133 4.3 Deriving Credit Spread Term Structures 136 4.3.1 Disjoint Methods 136 4.3.2 Joint Methods 137 4.4 End of Chapter Summary 142 4.5 References and Further Reading 144 4.6 Problems 146 4.7 Appendix: A Useful Modified Newton's Algorithm 155 Part III Hedging Interest-Rate Risk 5 Hedging Interest-Rate Risk with Duration 163 5.1 Basics of Interest-Rate Risk: Qualitative Insights 163 5.1.1 The Five Theorems of Bond Pricing 163 5.1.2 Reinvestment Risk 164 5.1.3 Capital Gain Risk 165 5.1.4 Qualifying Interest-Rate Risk 166 5.2 Hedging with Duration 167 5.2.1 Using a One-Order Taylor Expansion 167 5.2.2 Duration, $Duration and Modified Duration 170 5.2.3 How to Hedge in Practice? 173 5.3 End of Chapter Summary 175 5.4 References and Further Reading 176 5.4.1 Books 176 5.4.2 Papers 176 5.5 Problems 177 6 Beyond Duration 182 6.1 Relaxing the Assumption of a Small Shift 182 6.1.1 Using a Second-Order Taylor Expansion 182 6.1.2 Properties of Convexity 185 6.1.3 Hedging Method 187 6.2 Relaxing the Assumption of a Parallel Shift 188 6.2.1 A Common Principle 188 6.2.2 Regrouping Risk Factors through a Principal Component Analysis 192 6.2.3 Hedging Using a Three-Factor Model of the Yield Curve 195 6.3 End of Chapter Summary 199 6.4 References and Further Reading 200 6.5 Problems 201 Part IV Investment Strategies 7 Passive Fixed-Income Portfolio Management 213 7.1 Straightforward Replication 213 7.2 Replication by Stratified Sampling 214 7.3 Tracking-Error Minimization 216 7.3.1 Optimization Procedure 216 7.3.2 Bond Return Covariance Matrix Estimation 217 7.4 Factor-Based Replication 226 7.5 Derivatives-Based Replication 229 7.6 Pros and Cons of Stratified Sampling versus Tracking-Error Minimization 230 7.7 End of Chapter Summary 230 7.8 References and Further Reading 231 7.8.1 Books and Papers 231 7.8.2 Websites 231 7.9 Problems 231 8 Active Fixed-Income Portfolio Management 233 8.1 Market Timing: Trading on Interest-Rate Predictions 233 8.1.1 Timing Bets on No Change in the Yield Curve or "Riding the Yield Curve" 234 8.1.2 Timing Bets on Interest-Rate Level 236 8.1.3 Timing Bets on Specific Changes in the Yield Curve 238 8.1.4 Scenario Analysis 251 8.1.5 Active Fixed-Income Style Allocation Decisions 255 8.2 Trading on Market Inefficiencies 268 8.2.1 Trading within a Given Market: The Bond Relative Value Analysis 269 8.2.2 Trading across Markets: Spread and Convergence Trades 276 8.3 End of Chapter Summary 282 8.4 References and Further Reading 283 8.4.1 On Active Fixed-Income Strategies 283 8.4.2 On Active Asset Allocation Decisions 284 8.4.3 Others 286 8.5 Problems 286 9 Performance Measurement on Fixed-Income Portfolios 293 9.1 Return Measures 293 9.1.1 Arithmetic Rate of Return 293 9.1.2 Geometric Rate of Return 294 9.2 Risk-Adjusted Performance Evaluation 295 9.2.1 Absolute Risk-Adjusted Performance Evaluation 296 9.2.2 Relative Risk-Adjusted Performance Evaluation 299 9.3 Application of Style Analysis to Performance Evaluation of Bond Portfolio Managers: An Example 309 9.3.1 Alpha Analysis 310 9.3.2 Passive Versus Active Managers 313 9.4 End of Chapter Summary 314 9.5 References and Further Reading 315 9.5.1 Books and Papers 315 9.5.2 Websites 316 9.6 Problems 316 Part V Swaps and Futures 10 Swaps 325 10.1 Description of Swaps 325 10.1.1 Definition 325 10.1.2 Terminology and Conventions 325 10.2 Pricing and Market Quotes 326 10.2.1 Pricing of Swaps 326 10.2.2 Market Quotes 333 10.3 Uses of Swaps 334 10.3.1 Optimizing the Financial Conditions of a Debt 335 10.3.2 Converting the Financial Conditions of a Debt 336 10.3.3 Creating New Assets Using Swaps 337 10.3.4 Hedging Interest-Rate Risk Using Swaps 339 10.4 Nonplain Vanilla Swaps 342 10.4.1 Accrediting, Amortizing and Roller Coaster Swaps 342 10.4.2 Basis Swap 343 10.4.3 Constant Maturity Swap and Constant Maturity Treasury Swap 343 10.4.4 Forward-Starting Swap 344 10.4.5 Inflation-Linked Swap 344 10.4.6 Libor in Arrears Swap 344 10.4.7 Yield-Curve Swap 345 10.4.8 Zero-Coupon Swap 345 10.5 End of Chapter Summary 346 10.6 References and Further Reading 346 10.6.1 Books and Papers 346 10.6.2 Websites 347 10.7 Problems 347 11 Forwards and Futures 353 11.1 Definition 353 11.2 Terminology, Conventions and Market Quotes 354 11.2.1 Terminology and Conventions 354 11.2.2 Quotes 356 11.3 Margin Requirements and the Role of the Clearing House 358 11.4 Conversion Factor and the Cheapest-to-Deliver Bond 359 11.4.1 The Cheapest to Deliver on the Repartition Date 360 11.4.2 The Cheapest to Deliver before the Repartition Date 361 11.5 Pricing of Forwards and Futures 362 11.5.1 Forward-Spot Parity or How to Price a Forward Contract? 362 11.5.2 The Forward Contract Payoff 364 11.5.3 Relation between Forward and Futures Prices 365 11.6 Uses of Forwards and Futures 365 11.6.1 Pure Speculation with Leverage Effect 365 11.6.2 Fixing Today the Financial Conditions of a Loan or Investment in the Future 366 11.6.3 Detecting Riskless Arbitrage Opportunities Using Futures 367 11.6.4 Hedging Interest-Rate Risk Using Futures 368 11.7 End of Chapter Summary 370 11.8 References and Further Reading 371 11.8.1 Books and Papers 371 11.8.2 Websites of Futures Markets and of the Futures Industry Association 371 11.9 Problems 372 11.10 Appendix: Forward and Futures Prices Are Identical When Interest Rates Are Constant 375 Part VI Modeling The Term Structure of Interest Rates and Credit Spreads 12 Modeling the Yield Curve Dynamics 381 12.1 The Binomial Interest-Rate Tree Methodology 382 12.1.1 Building an Interest-Rate Tree 382 12.1.2 Calibrating an Interest-Rate Tree 384 12.2 Continuous-Time Models 387 12.2.1 Single-Factor Models 388 12.2.2 Multifactor Models 392 12.3 Arbitrage Models 396 12.3.1 A Discrete-Time Example: Ho and Lee's Binomial Lattice 396 12.3.2 Arbitrage Models in Continuous Time 401 12.4 End of Chapter Summary 406 12.5 References and Further Reading 407 12.6 Problems 411 12.7 Appendix 1: The Hull and White Trinomial Lattice 413 12.7.1 Discretizing the Short Rate 413 12.7.2 Calibrating the Lattice to the Current Spot Yield Curve 416 12.7.3 Option Pricing 419 12.8 Appendix 2: An Introduction to Stochastic Processes in Continuous Time 420 12.8.1 Brownian Motion 420 12.8.2 Stochastic Integral 423 12.8.3 Stochastic Differential Equations (SDE) 425 12.8.4 Asset Price Process 426 12.8.5 Representation of Brownian Martingales 426 12.8.6 Continuous-Time Asset Pricing 427 12.8.7 Feynman-Kac Formula 431 12.8.8 Application to Equilibrium Models of the Term Structure 432 13 Modeling the Credit Spreads Dynamics 437 13.1 Analyzing Credit Spreads 438 13.1.1 Ratings 438 13.1.2 Default Probability 440 13.1.3 The Severity of Default 441 13.2 Modeling Credit Spreads 441 13.2.1 Structural Models 442 13.2.2 Subsequent Models 446 13.2.3 Reduced-Form Models 448 13.2.4 Historical versus Risk-Adjusted Probability of Default 450 13.3 End of Chapter Summary 452 13.4 References and Further Reading 453 13.4.1 Books and Papers 453 13.4.2 Websites 454 13.5 Problems 455 Part VII Plain Vanilla Options and More Exotic Derivatives 14 Bonds with Embedded Options and Options on Bonds 459 14.1 Callable and Putable Bonds 459 14.1.1 Institutional Aspects 459 14.1.2 Pricing 460 14.1.3 OAS Analysis 467 14.1.4 Effective Duration and Convexity 468 14.2 Convertible Bonds 470 14.2.1 Institutional Aspects 470 14.2.2 Valuation of Convertible Bonds 473 14.2.3 Convertible Arbitrage 479 14.3 Options on Bonds 482 14.3.1 Definition 482 14.3.2 Uses 483 14.3.3 Pricing 487 14.4 End of Chapter Summary 491 14.5 References and Further Reading 492 14.5.1 On Callable and Putable Bonds 492 14.5.2 On Convertible Bonds 492 14.5.3 On Options on Bonds 493 14.6 Problems 494 14.7 Appendix: Bond Option Prices in the Hull and White (1990) Model 498 14.7.1 Call on Zero-Coupon Bond 499 14.7.2 Call on Coupon Bond 499 15 Options on Futures, Caps, Floors and Swaptions 500 15.1 Options on Futures 500 15.1.1 Definition and Terminology 500 15.1.2 Pricing and Hedging Options on Futures 502 15.1.3 Market Quotes 505 15.1.4 Uses of Futures Options 508 15.2 Caps, Floors and Collars 508 15.2.1 Definition and Terminology 508 15.2.2 Pricing and Hedging Caps, Floors and Collars 510 15.2.3 Market Quotes 514 15.2.4 Uses of Caps, Floors and Collars 516 15.3 Swaptions 520 15.3.1 Definition and Terminology 520 15.3.2 Pricing and Hedging Swaptions 521 15.3.3 Market Quotes 526 15.3.4 Uses of Swaptions 526 15.4 End of Chapter Summary 527 15.5 References and Further Reading 528 15.5.1 Books and Papers 528 15.5.2 Websites 529 15.6 Problems 529 15.7 Appendix 1: Proof of the Cap and Floor Formulas in the Black (1976) Model 534 15.8 Appendix 2: Proof of the Swaption Formula in the Black (1976) Model 535 15.9 Appendix 3: Forward and Futures Option Prices Written on T-Bond and Libor in the Hull and White (1990) Model 536 15.9.1 Options on Forward Contracts 536 15.9.2 Options on Futures Contracts 537 15.10 Appendix 4: Cap, Floor and Swaption Prices in the Hull and White (1990) Model 539 15.10.1 Cap and Floor 539 15.10.2 Swaption 540 15.11 Appendix 5: Market Models (BGM/Jamshidian Approach) 541 15.11.1 Why Define New Variables? 541 15.11.2 Building New Variables 542 15.11.3 The Dynamics of L(t, ) and K(t, t + ) 543 15.11.4 Pricing of Caps 545 15.11.5 Calibration of the Model 546 16 Exotic Options and Credit Derivatives 548 16.1 Interest-Rate Exotic Options 548 16.1.1 Barrier Caps and Floors 548 16.1.2 Bounded Caps, Floors, Barrier Caps and Floors 550 16.1.3 Cancelable Swaps 551 16.1.4 Captions and Floortions 551 16.1.5 Choosercaps and Flexicaps-and-Floors 551 16.1.6 Contingent Premium Caps and Floors 553 16.1.7 Extendible Swaps 554 16.1.8 Incremental Fixed Swaps 554 16.1.9 Index Amortizing Bonds and Swaps 555 16.1.10 Marked-to-Market Caps 557 16.1.11 Moving Average Caps and Floors 557 16.1.12 N-Caps and Floors 558 16.1.13 Q-Caps and Floors 558 16.1.14 Range Accrual Swaps 559 16.1.15 Ratchet Caps and Floors 560 16.1.16 Reflex Caps and Floors 561 16.1.17 Rental Caps and Floors 562 16.1.18 Rolling Caps and Floors 562 16.1.19 Spread Options 563 16.1.20 Subsidized Swaps 563 16.1.21 Pricing and Hedging Interest-Rate Exotic Options 565 16.2 Credit Derivatives 565 16.2.1 The Significance of Credit Derivatives 565 16.2.2 Types of Credit Derivatives 567 16.3 End of Chapter Summary 575 16.4 References and Further Reading 575 16.4.1 On Interest-Rate Exotic Options 575 16.4.2 On Credit Derivatives 576 16.4.3 On Numerical Methods (See the Appendix 2) 576 16.4.4 Websites and Others 577 16.5 Problems 577 16.6 Appendix 1: Pricing and Hedging Barrier Caps and Floors in the Black Model 580 16.6.1 Barrier Cap Formulas 580 16.6.2 Barrier Floor Formulas 581 16.6.3 Barrier Cap and Floor Greeks 581 16.7 Appendix 2: Numerical Methods 583 16.7.1 Monte Carlo Simulations 583 16.7.2 Finite-Difference Methods 585 Part VIII Securitization 17 Mortgage-Backed Securities 593 17.1 Description of MBSs 593 17.1.1 Definition 593 17.1.2 The Amortization Mechanism 593 17.1.3 The Prepayment Feature 596 17.1.4 Typology of MBS 596 17.2 Market Quotes and Pricing 598 17.2.1 Market Quotes 599 17.2.2 Pricing of MBS 600 17.3 End of Chapter Summary 603 17.4 References and Further Reading 604 17.4.1 Books and Papers 604 17.4.2 Websites 605 17.5 Problems 605 18 Asset-Backed Securities 607 18.1 Description of ABSs 607 18.1.1 Definition 607 18.1.2 Credit Enhancement 607 18.1.3 Cash-Flow Structure 608 18.2 Market Quotes and Pricing 610 18.3 CAT Bonds and CAT Derivatives 612 18.4 End of Chapter Summary 615 18.5 References and Further Reading 615 18.6 Problems 616 Subject Index 617 Author Index 629

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