30 year maturities

patso

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What does this really mean in baby language “The 30-year maturities provide investors with extra positive convexity for a modest increase in effective (or modified-adjusted) duration.”
 
It means that the duration of a 30-year bond is only slightly higher than that of, say, a 20-year bond, but its convexity is higher.
For example, consider two bonds with 6% coupons and 6% YTM: one a 20-year bond, the other a 30-year bond.
  • 20-year: modified duration = 11.6 years, modified convexity = 186.8 years²
  • 30-year: modified duration = 13.8 years, modified convexity = 296.5 years²
So, for a 19.7% increase in duration, you get a 58.7% increase in convexity.
 
Thanks Magician. I understand the longer the maturity the higher the convexity and the duration but why should this be positive convexity (why not negative??).
 
You’re welcome.
Fixed-coupon, option-free bonds always have positive convexity. Take a look at any price/yield curve.
(Note: higher convexity is always better, whether it’s -100 vs. -150, or 0 vs. -100, or 50 vs. -50, or 150 vs 50.)
 
Wouldn’t negative convexity mean it’s concave?
 
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