PRIN.OF CORPORATE FINANCE
13th Edition
ISBN: 9781260013900
Author: BREALEY
Publisher: RENT MCG
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Textbook Question
Chapter 3, Problem 36PS
Prices and spot interest rates Look one more time at Table 3.6.
a. Suppose you knew the
b. Suppose that you could buy bond C in large quantities at $1.040 rather than at its
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Assume that the risk free rate is equal to 0.04. The corporate bond rate for a risky bond is 0.11. Assume a recovery rate of 0.33. All rates in this problem are stated as decimals. Using the precise calculation formula, calculate λ , the probability of default. Round your answer to three decimal places, and state as a decimal.
Please answer fast i give you upvote.
Consider an economy with three dates (t=0,1,2) and two safe bonds. Bond A has 2% coupon
and Bond B has 3% coupon. The payoffs and prices of the bonds are given as follows
price at t=0
99.50
Bond A
Bond B
t=1
2
3
t=2
102
103
(a) Is there an arbitrage?
(b) If yes, find an arbitrage portfolio.
100.25
Description
Please use the examples provided here to work on the following two
problems (show your work):
Problem 1:
The real rate of interest is currently 2%; the inflation expectation an
premiums for a security are shown below.
Inflation expectation premium
5%
Risk premium
4%
Find the risk-free rate of interest, RF, that is applicable to the
security.
b.
a.
Find the nominal rate of interest for the security.
Droblo m 3:
Chapter 3 Solutions
PRIN.OF CORPORATE FINANCE
Ch. 3 - (PRICE) In February 2009, Treasury 8.5s of 2020...Ch. 3 - (YLD) On the same day, Treasury 3.5s of 2018 were...Ch. 3 - (DURATION) What was the duration of the Treasury...Ch. 3 - (MDURATION) What was the modified duration of the...Ch. 3 - Bond prices and yields A 10-year bond is issued...Ch. 3 - Bond prices and yields The following statements...Ch. 3 - Bond prices and yields Construct some simple...Ch. 3 - Bond prices and yields A 10-year German government...Ch. 3 - Bond prices and yields A 10-year German government...Ch. 3 - Bond prices and yields A 10-year U.S. Treasury...
Ch. 3 - Bond returns If a bonds yield to maturity does not...Ch. 3 - Bond returns a. An 8%, five-year bond yields 6%....Ch. 3 - Prob. 10PSCh. 3 - Duration True or false? Explain. a....Ch. 3 - Duration Here are the prices of three bonds with...Ch. 3 - Duration Calculate the durations and volatilities...Ch. 3 - Prob. 14PSCh. 3 - Duration Find the spreadsheet for Table 3.4 in...Ch. 3 - Prob. 16PSCh. 3 - Spot interest rates and yields Which comes first...Ch. 3 - Prob. 18PSCh. 3 - Spot interest rates and yields Look again at Table...Ch. 3 - Prob. 20PSCh. 3 - Spot interest rates and yields Assume annual...Ch. 3 - Spot interest rates and yields A 6% six-year bond...Ch. 3 - Spot interest rates and yields Is the yield on...Ch. 3 - Prob. 24PSCh. 3 - Measuring term structure The following table shows...Ch. 3 - Term-structure theories The one-year spot interest...Ch. 3 - Term-structure theories Look again at the spot...Ch. 3 - Real interest rates The two-year interest rate is...Ch. 3 - Prob. 30PSCh. 3 - Bond ratings A bonds credit rating provides a...Ch. 3 - Prob. 32PSCh. 3 - Price and spot interest rates Find the arbitrage...Ch. 3 - Prob. 34PSCh. 3 - Prices and spot interest rates What spot interest...Ch. 3 - Prices and spot interest rates Look one more time...
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- Give typing answer with explanation and conclusion Consider a coupon bond with coupon payment=4.25, M=100, and n=2. Suppose ?1 = 4% and ?2 = 4.24%. Consider a forward contract for the delivery of the coupon bond in one period from today. Calculate the forward price using the following two approaches: 1) use the forward rate to price the forward contract; 2) use the cost of carry approach: spot-forward parity adjusted for the coupons.arrow_forwardConsider the following pure discount bonds with face value $1,000: Maturity Price 1 952.38 2 898.47 3 847.62 4 799.64 5 754.38 a). Find the spot rates and draw a yield curve.b). Assume that there is a constant liquidty premium that is equal to 1% across all maturities. Find the forward rates and the expected one period future interest rates.arrow_forwardI (Interest rates) 1. Consider a bank account paying interest rate R2 = 4% with semi-annual compounding frequency. What is the equivalent rate R1 with yearly compounding frequency? What is the equivalent rate Rc with continuous compounding? 2. Explain briefly (in words) what are the potential pitfalls of using the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) for the evaluation of investment projects. 3. Consider the following two bonds: bond (A) is a zero-coupon bond with maturity TA and duration DA = TA; bond (B) is a coupon bond with maturity TB > TA and duration DB = TA. Which of the two bonds has a greater convexity? (Justify your answer.)arrow_forward
- The rate of return that you would earn if you bought a bond and held It to its maturity date is called the bond's yield to maturity (YTM). If Interest rates in the economy rise after a bond has been issued, what will happen to the bond's price and to Its YTM? Does the length of time to maturity affect the extent to which a given change in interest rates will affect the bond's price? Briefly explain with necessary numerical data.arrow_forward8. An easy way to calculate the cost of debt is to: A Observe the rate of a similar issued bond that was recently issued B determine the beta for the firms debt and use the SML to determine the requires return. C Ask your neighbor who works at the JPMorgan bond desk. D Use the Divendend Growth Modelarrow_forwardSuppose that the borrowing rate that your client faces is 5%. Assume that the equity market index has an expected return of 8% and standard deviation of 24%, that r = 28. What is the range of risk aversion for which a client will neither borrow nor lend, that is, for which y=1? Note: Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answers to 2 decimal places. y = 1 for 9.60 SAS 0.48arrow_forward
- What is the shape of the yield curve given the term structure below? What expectations are investors likely to have about future interest rates? 5 yr 7 yr 10 yr 20 yr 1 yr 2 yr 3 yr Term 4.13 4.93 3.32 3.74 2.38 2.73 1.98 Rate (EAR %) ... What is the shape of the yield curve given the term structure below? (Select the best choice below.) A. The yield curve is an inverted yield curve (decreasing). B. It is hard to tell because we are not given an EAR for every year. C. The yield curve is a flat yield curve. D. The yield curve is a normal yield curve (increasing).arrow_forwardQuantitative Problem: Today, interest rates on 1-year T-bonds yield 1.3%, interest rates on 2-year T-bonds yield 2.3%, and interest rates on 3-year T-bonds yield 3.7%. a. If the pure expectations theory is correct, what is the yield on 1-year T-bonds one year from now? Be sure to use a geometric average in your calculations. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to four decimal places. % 1.3 Show All Feedback b. If the pure expectations theory is correct, what is the yield on 2-year T-bonds one year from now? Be sure to use a geometric average in your calculations. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to four decimal places. 2.4 % Show All Feedback c. If the pure expectations theory is correct, what is the yield on 1-year T-bonds two years from now? Be sure to use a geometric average in your calculations. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to four decimal places. 3.8 Show All Feedbackarrow_forwardInvestigating the principle that all bonds are priced to give the same total yield which is the current market rate of interest. REQUIRED: Create your own bond – i.e. the par value may be kept at 1000, but decide your own coupon rate, maturity period and current market rate of interest. Now compute your total yield which should consist of Current Yield plus Capital Gain/Loss Yield and find out if it equates the market rate of interest that you selected.arrow_forward
- Suppose a bond’s price is expected to decrease by 3% if its market discount rate increases by 50 bps. If the bond’s market discount rate decreases by 50 bps, the bond price is most likely to change by: 3% Less than 3% More than 3% What is the best terminology to describe this pattern (use terminology covered in this unit)? Please explain your answer.arrow_forwardUnlike the coupon interest rate, which is fixed, a bond's yield varies from day to day depending on market conditions. To be most useful, it should give us an estimate of the rate of return an investor would earn if that investor purchased the bond today and held it for its remaining life. There are three different yield calculations: Current yield, yield to maturity, and yield to call. A bond's current yield is calculated as the annual interest payment divided by the current price. Unlike the yield to maturity or the yield to call, it does not represent the actual return that investors should expect because it does not account for the capital gain or loss that will be realized if the bond is held until it matures or is called. This yield was popular before calculators and computers came along because it was easy to calculate; however, because it can be misleading, the yield to maturity and yield to call are more relevant. The yield to maturity (YTM) is the rate of return earned on a…arrow_forwardQuantitative Problem: Today, interest rates on 1-year T-bonds yield 1.7%, interest rates on 2-year T-bonds yield 2.5%, and interest rates on 3-year T-bonds yield 3.4%. a. If the pure expectations theory is correct, what is the yield on 1-year T-bonds one year from now? Be sure to use a geometric average in your calculations. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to four decimal places. b. If the pure expectations theory is correct, what is the yield on 2-year T-bonds one year from now? Be sure to use a geometric average in your calculations. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to four decimal places. c. If the pure expectations theory is correct, what is the yield on 1-year T-bonds two years from now? Be sure to use a geometric average in your calculations. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to four decimal places.arrow_forward
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