Key Concepts

The primary yield curve risk factors are level, slope, and shape. Yield curve changes can be decomposed into these factors by principal components analysis.

\[ \begin{split} \text{butterfly spread} = &\ 2\cdot \text{medium-term yield} \\ &-\text{short term yield} \\ &- \text{long term yield} \end{split} \]

Taylor approximation of present value for change in yield: \[ \%\Delta PV ^{\text{Full}} \approx -(\text{ModDur}\cdot \Delta \text{Yield})+(\frac{1}{2} \cdot \text{Convexity} \cdot \left(\Delta \text{yield})^2 \right) \]

A bond with higher convexity will gain more from a rate decrease and lose less from a rate increase.

Yield Curve Strategies

An investor who believes the yield curve is static can increase returns by increasing duration or leverage of the portfolio.

Buying a bond with a maturity longer than the investment horizon will yield more than one that matches the investment horizon by rolling down the yield curve.

Financing a long term purchase at repo rates generates a repo carry return if the rolldown yield exceeds the financing cost.

A receive-fixed swap is like a repo carry but pays a market reference rate instead of the repo rate.

Bull Steepening
Short term rates fall more than long term rates
Bear Steepening
Long term rates rise more than short term rates

Bear steepening scenario should short duration, bull should long duration.

A butterfly position combines an intermediate bullet position with a long and short term barbell position.

Active Fixed-Income Management Across Currencies

Covered interest rate parity
\[ F(\frac{DC}{FC}, \ T) = S_0(\frac{DC}{FC})\frac{(1+r_{DC})^{T}}{(1+r_{FC})^{T}} \]
Butterfly spread
Twice the intermediate term rate minus the short term and long term rates