haiderraza
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- Jun 18, 2026
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the return for 5 years on a bond is 53.87%. How will we calculate the annulaized return?
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Ah! yes, you have to add 1. I always get that wrong.dwheats wrote:
^incorrect?
I would go…..[1.5387^(1/5)] - 1 = 0.09 = 9%
It is exactly the effect of compounding returns.haiderraza wrote:
formula for annualized return is correct dwheats. my confusion is on the rationale behind this. if say, i multiply 9% by 5 years it comes out to be 45% which is way too less than original 53.87%. Is this the affect of compounding which I am missing here?
I dont quite follow what you are asking here, sorry.haiderraza wrote:
r(1) = 9%
r(2) = 10%
r(3) = 11%
f(1,1) = 11.01%
f(1,2) = 12.01%
based on the above data, the return of the two year zero-coupon bond over one year holding period is?
That’s the power of compounding my friend. In compunding there’s a exponential growth and if you graph it you’ll see a non linear relationship with the time.haiderraza wrote:
formula for annualized return is correct dwheats. my confusion is on the rationale behind this. if say, i multiply 9% by 5 years it comes out to be 45% which is way too less than original 53.87%. Is this the affect of compounding which I am missing here?
PV = -1haiderraza wrote:the return for 5 years on a bond is 53.87%. How will we calculate the annulaized return?
wow, that’s easy!S2000magician wrote:
PV = -1haiderraza wrote:the return for 5 years on a bond is 53.87%. How will we calculate the annulaized return?
FV = 1.5387
n = 5
PMT = 0
Solve for i = 9.0011%
All this stuff’s easy.Pompey wrote:
wow, that’s easy!S2000magician wrote:
PV = -1haiderraza wrote:the return for 5 years on a bond is 53.87%. How will we calculate the annulaized return?
FV = 1.5387
n = 5
PMT = 0
Solve for i = 9.0011%
It basically means that you could earn a higher return than the bond’s YTM by selling it before it matures. Because as you go down the yield curve, the yields are lower, and you’ve essentially gained most of the YTM at some point, and holding on to the bond for longer would be less profitable than selling it for a little capital gain, and investing the proceeds in another long term bond.haiderraza wrote:
In summary, when the yield curve slopes upward, as a bond approaches maturity or “rolls down the yield curve,” it is valued at successively lower yields and higher prices. Using this strategy, a bond can be held for a period of time as it appreciates in price and then sold before maturity to realize a higher return.
Can somebody explain this concept to me please?
A spot rate (or spot curve) draws a curve of the respective spot rates for maturity dates, of theoratical zero-coupon securities (when prices are not available). Meaning that it shows the interest rate (or yield) for saving up money today, to that period (t). It’s different from the yield (or par) curve which plots the YTM as a function of time, although they are closely related since they depend on each other’s shape.haiderraza wrote:
What is the difference between a spot rate, coupon rate and the yield curve?