Thiru Cumaran
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- Jun 18, 2026
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Why do floating rate bonds have little duration?
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To be accurate: floating-rate bonds have very low effective duration.Thiru Cumaran wrote:Why do floating rate bonds have little duration?
Assuming that the coupon is the same as the bond’s YTM.cpk123 wrote:coupon resets every 6 months for a 6 month bond - so the bond now sells at its par value.
Ok then but floating-rate bonds can also have long maturity right?S2000magician wrote:
To be accurate: floating-rate bonds have very low effective duration.Thiru Cumaran wrote:Why do floating rate bonds have little duration?
Their price doesn’t change much because the coupon resets periodically to a rate based on market interest rates.
Won’t they both be equal on the reset date? Since coupons are set to market interest rates.S2000magician wrote:
Assuming that the coupon is the same as the bond’s YTM.cpk123 wrote:coupon resets every 6 months for a 6 month bond - so the bond now sells at its par value.
It depends on the bond. Assuming that LIBOR is the reference rate, some floating-rate bonds reset to LIBOR, some to LIBOR + 50bp, some to LIBOR + 100bp, and so on.MrSmart wrote:
Won’t they both be equal on the reset date? Since coupons are set to market interest rates.S2000magician wrote:
Assuming that the coupon is the same as the bond’s YTM.cpk123 wrote:coupon resets every 6 months for a 6 month bond - so the bond now sells at its par value.