perpetuities, and so on.
Chapter 3 What Do Interest Rates Mean and What Is Their Role in Valuation?
45
that makes fixed coupon payments of $C forever. The formula in Equation 3 for the
price of a perpetuity, P
c
, simplifies to the following:
3
(4)
where
P
c
= price of the perpetuity (consol)
C = yearly payment
i
c
= yield to maturity of the perpetuity (consol)
One nice feature of perpetuities is that you can immediately see that as i
c
goes
up, the price of the bond falls. For example, if a perpetuity pays $100 per year for-
ever and the interest rate is 10%, its price will be $1000 = $100/0.10. If the interest
rate rises to 20%, its price will fall to $500 = $100/0.20. We can also rewrite this for-
mula as
(5)
i
c
⫽
C
P
c
P
c
⫽
C
i
c
3
The bond price formula for a perpetuity is
which can be written as
in which
. From your high school algebra you might remember the formula for an infi-
nite sum:
for x < 1
and so
which by suitable algebraic manipulation becomes
P
c
⫽ C ¢
1
⫹ i
c
i
c
⫺
i
c
i
c
≤ ⫽
C
i
c
P
c
⫽ C ¢
1
1
⫺ x
⫺ 1≤ ⫽
C B
1
1
⫺ 1>11 ⫹
i
c
2
⫺ 1R
1
⫹ x ⫹ x
2
⫹ x
3
⫹ p ⫽
1
1
⫺ x
x
⫽ 1/11 ⫹ i2
P
c
⫽ C1x ⫹ x
2
⫹ x
3
⫹ p 2
P
c
⫽
C
1
⫹ i
c
⫹
C
11 ⫹ i
c
2
2
⫹
C
11 ⫹ i
c
2
3
⫹ p
What is the yield to maturity on a bond that has a price of $2,000 and pays $100 annu-
ally forever?
Solution
The yield to maturity would be 5%.
i
c
⫽
C
P
c
E X A M P L E 3 . 5 Perpetuity
46
Part 2 Fundamentals of Financial Markets
The formula in Equation 5, which describes the calculation of the yield to matu-
rity for a perpetuity, also provides a useful approximation for the yield to maturity
on coupon bonds. When a coupon bond has a long term to maturity (say, 20 years
or more), it is very much like a perpetuity, which pays coupon payments forever.
This is because the cash flows more than 20 years in the future have such small
present discounted values that the value of a long-term coupon bond is very close
to the value of a perpetuity with the same coupon rate. Thus, i
c
in Equation 5 will
be very close to the yield to maturity for any long-term bond. For this reason, i
c
,
the yearly coupon payment divided by the price of the security, has been given the
name
current yield and is frequently used as an approximation to describe inter-
est rates on long-term bonds.
Discount Bond
The yield-to-maturity calculation for a discount bond is similar to
that for the simple loan. Let us consider a discount bond such as a one-year U.S.
Treasury bill, which pays a face value of $1,000 in one year’s time. If the current
purchase price of this bill is $900, then equating this price to the present value of
the $1,000 received in one year, using Equation 1, gives
and solving for i,
More generally, for any one-year discount bond, the yield to maturity can be writ-
ten as
(6)
where
F = face value of the discount bond
P = current price of the discount bond
i
⫽
F
⫺ P
P
i
⫽
$1,000
⫺ $900
$900
⫽ 0.111 ⫽ 11.1%
$900i
⫽ $1,000 ⫺ $900
$900
⫹ $900
i ⫽ $1,000
11 ⫹ i2 ⫻ $900 ⫽ $1,000
$900
⫽
$1,000
1
⫹ i
where
C
=
yearly payment
= $100
P
c
=
price of perpetuity (consol)
= $2,000
Thus,
i
c
⫽ 0.05 ⫽ 5%
i
c
⫽
$100
$2,000
Chapter 3 What Do Interest Rates Mean and What Is Their Role in Valuation?
47
In other words, the yield to maturity equals the increase in price over the year
F – P divided by the initial price
P. In normal circumstances, investors earn positive
returns from holding these securities and so they sell at a discount, meaning that the
current price of the bond is below the face value. Therefore, F – P should be posi-
tive, and the yield to maturity should be positive as well. However, this is not always
the case, as extraordinary events in Japan indicated (see the Global box below).
An important feature of this equation is that it indicates that for a discount bond,
the yield to maturity is negatively related to the current bond price. This is the same
conclusion that we reached for a coupon bond. For example, Equation 6 shows that a
rise in the bond price from $900 to $950 means that the bond will have a smaller increase
in its price over its lifetime, and the yield to maturity falls from 11.1% to 5.3%. Similarly,
a fall in the yield to maturity means that the price of the discount bond has risen.
Summary
The concept of present value tells you that a dollar in the future is not
as valuable to you as a dollar today because you can earn interest on this dollar.
Specifically, a dollar received n years from now is worth only
today. The
present value of a set of future cash flows on a debt instrument equals the sum of the
present values of each of the future cash flows. The yield to maturity for an instru-
ment is the interest rate that equates the present value of the future cash flows on
that instrument to its value today. Because the procedure for calculating the yield
to maturity is based on sound economic principles, this is the measure that finan-
cial economists think most accurately describes the interest rate.
Our calculations of the yield to maturity for a variety of bonds reveal the impor-
tant fact that current bond prices and interest rates are negatively related:
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