Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
11-Interest Rate Risk Review Interest Rates are determined by supply and demand, are moving all the time, and can be difficult to forecast. The yield curve is generally upward sloping Interest Rate Risk: The uncertainty surrounding future interest rates. Our Focus Unforeseen parallel shifts in the yield curve Unforeseen changes in the slope of the yield curve Where We are Going Dollar Gap Method to understand the impact of interest rate risk on bank profits Simple, and requires some ad-hoc assumptions Not discussed in Bodie-Kane-Marcus Duration Method to understand the impact of interest rate risk on the value of bank shareholder equity More elegant and mathematically intense The focus of the reading in Bodie-Kane-Marcus Used extensively as well by bond traders Interest Rate Risk Banks assets Generally long-term, fixed rate Bank liabilities Generally short term, variable rate Impact on profits: Rates increase Interest received stays fixed Interest paid increases Profits decrease Interest-Rate Sensitive An asset or liability whose rate is reset within some “short period of time” e.g. 0-30 days, 1-year, etc. Interest rate sensitive assets: Short-term bond rolled over into other short-term bonds Variable rate loans Interest rate sensitive liabilities: Short-term deposits Interest-Rate Risk Example Assets: 50 billion 5B IRS; rate = 8% per year Liabilities: 40 billion 24B IRS; rate = 5% per year Profits ($billion) 50(.08)-40*(.05) = 2 Parallel Shift in Yield Curve Suppose all rates increase by 1% Assets IRS (5B): rate = 9% Not IRS (45B): rate = 8% Liabilities IRS (24B): rate = 6% Not IRS (16B): rate = 5% Profits After Rate Increase Interest Expenses ($billion) 16(.05)+24(.06)=2.24 Interest revenues ($billion) 5*(.09)+45*(.08)=4.05 Profits Before: 2 billion After:4.05-2.24=1.81 billion Decrease: 0.19 billion or 9.5% drop in profits (1.81/2)-1=.095 Gap Analysis Gap = IRSA – IRSL IRSA = dollar value of interest rate sensitive assets IRSL = dollar value of interest rate sensitive liabilities Gap From Previous Example IRSA (millions) = 5 IRSL (millions) = 24 Dollar Gap (millions): 5 – 24 = -19 Change in profits= Dollar Gap Di From previous example: Change in profits (millions) -19 .01 = -0.19 Gap Analysis If the horizon is long enough, virtually all assets are IRS If the horizon is short enough, virtually all assets become non-IRS No standard horizon Dollar Gap Summary Dollar GAP Negative Negative Positive Positve Zero Di Increase Decrease Increase Decrease Either DProfits Decrease Increase Increase Decrease Zero What is the right GAP? One of the most difficult questions bank managers face Defensive Management Reduce volatility of net interest income Make Gap as close to zero as possible Aggressive Management Forecast future interest rate movements If forecast is positive, make Gap positive If forecast is negative, make Gap negative Problems with Gap Time horizon to determine IRS is ambiguous Ignores differences in rate sensitivity due to time horizon Focus on profits rather than shareholder wealth Building a Bank Suppose you are in the process of creating a bank portfolio. Shareholder equity: $25 million You’ve raised $75M in deposits (liabilities) You’ve purchased $100M in 30-yr annual coupon bonds (assets) Bank Equity and Interest Rates Assets 30-yr bonds – – – FV: $100M Coupon rate: 1.8% YTM=1.8% Liabilities Deposits – – $75M Paying 1% per year Annual profits: $1.8M - $0.75M = $1.05M Rate on bonds is fixed – no matter how rates change. Rate on deposits resets every year. Gap Analysis IRSA – IRSL = 0 – 75M = -75M Assume rates increase by 10 basis points We must now pay 1.1% on deposits Change in profits: -75M(.001) = -75,000 – Profits down 7% = 75K/1.05M Gap Analysis One Solution: To protect profits from interest rate increases, sell your holdings in the long term bonds and buy shorter term bonds But since yield curve is usually upward sloping (liquidity risk-premiums), shorter term bonds will usually earn lower yields. Result: Lower profits Manager’s Objective Managers should probably not be concerned about protecting profits. Instead, should be concerned about protecting value of shareholder equity: the value shareholders would get if they sold their shares. Market Value of Bank Assets Before Rates Increase: Assets =$100M After rate increase? – – - Bank is earning 1.8% on 30-yr bonds Other similar 30-year bonds are paying a YTM of 1.9% Market value of bank assets: - - N=30, YTM=1.9%, PMT=1.8M, FV=100M Value = $97.73M Market Value of Bank Liabilities Liability of $75.75M due in one year – – Principal and interest Depositors will “redeposit” principal with you at new rate in 1-year Market Value of liabilities = amount I would have to put away now at current rates to pay off liability in one year = present value Before rates increase: 75.75/1.01=$75M After rates increase: 75.75/1.011=$74.93M Market Value of Equity PV(assets) – PV(liabilities) One way to think of it: – – – – Assume 1 individual were to purchase the bank After purchasing the bank she plans to liquidate When she sells assets, she will get PV(assets) But of these assets, she will have to set aside some cash to pay off liabilities due in 1 year, PV(liabilities) Market Value of Equity One way to think of it (continued) – – – When considering a purchase price, she shouldn’t pay more than PV(assets)-PV(liabilities) But current shareholders also have the option to liquidate rather than sell the bank Current shareholders shouldn’t take anything less than PV(assets) - PV(liabilities) Interest Rates and Bank Equity Before rates increase: equity=$25M After rates increase: 97.73-74.93=$22.8M Change in equity: 22.8M-25M = -2.2M A 10 basis point increase in rates leads to a drop in equity of 8.8% (22.8/25-1=-.088) Solutions Sell long term bonds and buy short-term bonds – – – Problem: Many assets of banks are non-tradable loans (fixed term) – more on this later. Some bank loans are tradeable: securitized mortgages How much do we want to hold in long vs. short bonds? Refuse to grant long-term fixed rate loans – – Problem: No clients – no “loan generation fees” Bank wants to act as loan broker Solutions What should be our position in long versus short-term bonds? How much interest rate risk do we want? Longer term bonds earn higher yields, but the PVs of such bonds are very sensitive to interest rate changes. We need a simple way to measure the sensitivity of PV to interest rate changes. PV and Yields $30,000,000.00 $25,000,000.00 $20,000,000.00 PV $15,000,000.00 $10,000,000.00 $5,000,000.00 $0.00 0 0.02 0.04 0.06 y 0.08 0.1 0.12 Modified Duration DPV D * PV Dy or rather DPV D * PV Dy Duration: a measure of the sensitivity of PV to changes in interest rates: larger the duration, the more sensitive Bank managers choose bank portfolio to target the duration of bank equity. Duration and Change in PV Let DPV = “change in present value” The change in PV for any asset or liability is approximately DPV D* PV Dy D* " Modified Duration" Dy change in yields (parallel shift of yield curve) Example From before: – – Original PV of 30-year bonds: $100M When YTM increased 10 bp, PV dropped to 97.73 DPV=97.73M -100M = -2.27M Duration Approximation PV 100 M Dy 0.001 D * 23.02 (you don' t know how to find D * yet) ΔPV -23.02 .001 100 M 2.30 M Example From before: – – Original PV of liabilities: $75M When rate increased 10 bp, PV dropped to 74.93M DPV=74.93M -75M = -0.074M Duration Approximation PV 75 M Dy 0.001 D * 0.99 (you don' t know how to find D * yet) ΔPV -0.99 .001 75 M 0.074 M Example Change in bank equity using duration approximation: DE DA DL 2.30 M (0.07 M ) 2.23M Before, the change in equity was -2.20. Modified Duration Modified Duration is defined as D D 1 y * where “D” is called “Macaulay’s Duration” Macaulay’s Duration Let t be the time each cash flow is received (paid) Then duration is simply a weighted sum of t T D t wt t 1 The weights are defined as CFt /(1 y )t wt Bond Price Example Annual coupon paying bond – – Price=$1000 Time when cash is received: – matures in 2 years, par=1000, coupon rate =10%, YTM=10% t1=1 ($100 is received), t2=2 ($1100 is received) weights: 100 /(1.10) w1 0.0909, 1000 1100 /(1.10)2 w2 0.9091 1000 Example Macaulay’s Duration: D 0.0909 1 0.9091 2 1.91 Modified Duration: 1.91 D 1.74 1.10 *