Duration | 5-Minute Finance (2024)

Duration

Duration is a measure of interest-rate risk. Or, stated differently, duration is a measure of how sensitive the price of a fixed-income instrument is to interest-rate changes.

When we say, “The duration of the bond is 4 years,” we mean:

  • “If the interest rate on the bond goes up by 1%, the bond’s price will decline by 4%.”

Duration is quoted in “years.”

  • If a bond has a semi-annual period, we convert duration to years before quoting it (a duration of 8 semi-annual periods is 4 years).

Duration is Approximate

Duration is a linear approximation of a nonlinear relationship.

  • Duration is more accurate as the change in the interest rate becomes smaller.
  • The error when using duration to estimate a bond’s sensitivity to interest rates is often calledconvexity.

Determinants of Duration

Duration is affected by the bond’s coupon rate, yield to maturity, and the amount of time to maturity.

  • Duration is inversely related to the bond’s coupon rate.
  • Duration is inversely related to the bond’s yield to maturity (YTM).
  • Duration can increase or decrease given an increase in the time to maturity (but it usually increases). You can look at this relationship in the upcoming interactive 3D app.

For a review of bond coupon rates and yields see these presentations:An Introduction to Bond Valuation;For What is the Yield-to-Maturity Used?.

Average of Time Payments are Received

Duration can be thought of as the weighted average of when the bondholder receives payment. The weights are the proportion of the bond’s total value received in each period.

  • In the following app, change the bond’s coupon, YTM, and maturity and see how it affects the weights. Check that the way the weights react is consistent with the relationships on the previous slide.

  • This will give you an intuitive understanding of how these variables affect duration.

Interactive App

With the following app, you can set the maximum yield-to-maturity, and time to maturity, and see the resulting 3D duration surface. You can also change the coupon rate and see the effect on the duration surface.

  • You can move the 3D surface around, and zoom in and out, with your mouse.

  • How does increasing the yield-to-maturity, or time to maturity, affect the bond’s duration?

  • How does increasing the bond’s coupon rate affect duration?

  • Can you see the case where duration is decreasing with an increased time to maturity?

Calculating Duration

Duration is the slope of the line tangent to the bond’s price at the bond’s present YTM.

  • Remembering our calculus, we immediately see we need to calculate the derivative of the bond’s price with respect to the YTM. Seethis videofor a complete derivation.

However, it is customary to first calculate what is called Maucaulay Duration, and then use this to calculate Modified Duration.

  • Modified Duration is equivalent to the derivative of the bond’s price with respect to the YTM.

  • Once we have Modified Duration, we can use it to calculate the bond’s price (or % change) given a change in YTM.

Using Duration

Specifically, the steps in using duration are:

  1. Calculate ‘Macaulay Duration’ which is the weighted average of when the bondholder receives their payments.

  2. Divide this by `(1 + YTM)` to get Modified Duration (which is the derivative).

  3. Calculate the % change in the bond’s price as a linear function of modified duration.

Macaulay Duration

Let `BP` be the bond price, `CF_i` the cash flow from the bond in period `i`, and `n` the number of periods until maturity. Say the par value is $1000. The Macaulay Duration is:

`\text{Macaulay Duration} = \sum_{i = 1}^n {(i)\frac{(\frac{CF_i}{(1+YTM)^i})}{BP}}`

Note that since `BP = \sum_{i = 1}^n {\frac{CF_i}{(1+YTM)^i}}` the second term in the summation is the proportion of the bond received at time `i`. These are weights (and sum to 1). Denoting them `w_i` we have:

Macaulay Duration = `\sum_{i = 1}^n {(i)w_i}`

Macaulay Duration

From our definition above, we can make the following observations:

  • Duration cannot exceed the number of periods to maturity of the bond.
  • The Duration of a zero-coupon bond is the number of years until maturity.

Also note, we can calculate the duration of a bond portfolio as the weighted average of the duration of all of the individual the bonds in the portfolio.

Modified Duration

Macaulay Duration is a bit off however, so we adjust it by dividing it by `(1+YTM)`.

The result (Modified Duration) then matches the derivative of the bond’s price with respect to YTM.

Modified Duration = `\frac{\text{Maucaulay Duration}}{(1+YTM)}`

Simple Example

Say we have a 5% coupon bond with annual payments and 8 years until maturity. Let the bond’s YTM be 3%.

The bond’s price is: `P = \$50\frac{1-1/(1.03)^8}{0.03} + \frac{\$1000}{(1.03)^8} = \$1140.39`

`\text{Macaulay Duration} = \sum_{i = 1}^7 (i)\frac{(\frac{50}{(1.03)^i})}{\$1140.39} + 8\frac{(\frac{1050}{1.03^8})}{\$1140.39} = 6.87\ yrs`

`\text{Modified Duration} = \frac{6.87}{1.03} = 6.67\ yrs`

Now You Try

Calculate the Macaulay and Modified Durations for the following bonds. You can check your answers with the interactive app on the following slide. All bonds have annual payments in the interactive app.

  • A 15% coupon bond with 20 years to maturity and a 3% YTM.

  • A 4% coupon bond with 10 years to maturity and a 7% YTM.

  • A 0% coupon bond with 10 years to maturity and a 2% YTM.

You can also use the following app to see duration decrease when maturity increases.

  • Set the coupon to 3%, the YTM to 18%, and increase years to maturity from 17.

Modified Duration Calculation

Using Modified Duration

We use Modified Duration to approximate the change in the bond’s price for a give change in yield. In terms of percent, we can say:

`\%\Delta P = -(\text{Modified Duration}) \Delta YTM`

  • For example, if a bond has a Modified Duration of 8, then given a 0.5% increase in yield, the bond is expected to decline by 4%.

`\%\Delta P = -8(0.5\%) = 4\%`

Improving on Duration

If we want to improve our estimate of the % change in the bond’s price, we can add a convexity adjustment.- This is covered in the 5MinuteFinance interactive presentation onBond Convexity.

Credits and Collaboration

Click the following links to see thecode,line-by-line contributions to this presentation, andall the collaborators who have contributed to 5-Minute Finance via GitHub.

Learn more about how to contributehere.

Duration | 5-Minute Finance (2024)

FAQs

What is the fee called to borrow money? ›

Interest Rate

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It should be specific, measurable, action-oriented, realistic and have a timeline.

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Finance covers the study and management of money, as well as almost any activity relating to money. Finance is a large industry, encompassing lending, banking, forecasting, investing, and a large breadth of other matters related to the distribution and trading of financial assets.

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The interest rate is the cost of debt for the borrower and the rate of return for the lender. The money to be repaid is usually more than the borrowed amount since lenders require compensation for the loss of use of the money during the loan period.

How much would a $5000 loan cost per month? ›

What is the monthly payment on a $5,000 personal loan?
Payoff periodAPRMonthly payment
1 year15%$451
2 years15%$242
3 years15%$173
4 years15%$139
3 more rows

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At some point, the payday lender might send your debt to collections. In the end, you may owe the amount you borrowed, plus the fee, overdraft charges, bounced check fee, possible collections fees, and possible court costs if the payday lender or collection agency sues you.

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Apr 18, 2024

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May 8, 2024

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What is a principle amount? ›

The principal amount is the money borrowed from the bank (or, in some cases, the money in a savings or checking account). The interest amount is the amount of money added to the loan when the bank charges that client for the privilege of borrowing its money.

What are loan fees called? ›

Key Takeaways

An origination fee is typically 0.5% to 1% of the loan amount and is charged by a lender as compensation for processing a loan application. Origination fees are sometimes negotiable, but reducing them or avoiding them usually means paying a higher interest rate over the life of the loan.

What is the cost or fee for borrowing money called? ›

Interest- The price that people pay to borrow money. When people make loan payments, interest is a part of the payment. Interest Rate- The cost of borrowing money expressed as a percentage of the amount borrowed (principal).

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Interest. A fee charged by a lender, and paid by a borrower, for the use of money.

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Interest is what you pay for using someone else's money. You repay money to whoever gave you the credit card or loan. Credit cards and loans have different interest rates. Look for the “APR.” APR means annual percentage rate. It is how much interest you pay during a whole year.

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