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I did that also, but I haven’t cracked this part of the curriculum yet. That just seemed to be the intuitive answer. I was under the impression that the spot rate equates the PV (spot price) to the value at a future date.TripleMinor wrote:
I got 7.8%. Just calculated the YTM on the 1.5 year bond.
Not sure if thats correct though?
YTM does not equal the 18 month spot rate, but they are darned close with the given data. I’m guessing your I/Y is 7.762%; I get a spot rate of roughly 7.81% using bootstrapping.TripleMinor wrote:
I got 7.8%. Just calculated the YTM on the 1.5 year bond.
Not sure if thats correct though? Seems to simple
Using the data provided, I got 7.79% entering 1.5 for N, -97.55 for PV, 6 for PMT, and 100 for FV. This made me think it was that straight forward. For the spot rate, should it only be calculated using zero coupons?breadmaker wrote:
YTM does not equal the 18 month spot rate, but they are darned close with the given data. I’m guessing your I/Y is 7.762%; I get a spot rate of roughly 7.81% using bootstrapping.TripleMinor wrote:
I got 7.8%. Just calculated the YTM on the 1.5 year bond.
Not sure if thats correct though? Seems to simple
Look at the prices for the 0.5 and 1 year bonds: since both have zero coupons, the price is in effect the discount factor for the given maturity. Using these two values, project out the cash flows for times 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5, discount each one by the appropriate factor, and solve for the spot rate for the cash flow at time 1.5.
I did something similar but the more I look at it I think the bootstrapping method is correct.tickersu wrote:
Using the data provided, I got 7.79% entering 1.5 for N, -97.55 for PV, 6 for PMT, and 100 for FV. This made me think it was that straight forward. For the spot rate, should it only be calculated using zero coupons?breadmaker wrote:
YTM does not equal the 18 month spot rate, but they are darned close with the given data. I’m guessing your I/Y is 7.762%; I get a spot rate of roughly 7.81% using bootstrapping.TripleMinor wrote:
I got 7.8%. Just calculated the YTM on the 1.5 year bond.
Not sure if thats correct though? Seems to simple
Look at the prices for the 0.5 and 1 year bonds: since both have zero coupons, the price is in effect the discount factor for the given maturity. Using these two values, project out the cash flows for times 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5, discount each one by the appropriate factor, and solve for the spot rate for the cash flow at time 1.5.