Interest rate and arbitrage free valuation-middle forward rate

h21

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I cant seem to comprehend the idea-the middle forward rate in a period is approximately equal to the implied one period forward rate of that period
what does middle forward rate even mean? where is this whole middle idea coming from
 
Recall that the rates you have in period 1 are related by rup = rdown(e^2σ).
The (hypothetical) middle rate is rdown(e^σ); it’s the geometric average of rup and rdown. It should be close to the 1-period forward rate.
So all they’re saying is that the forward curve runs roughly through the middle of the tree.
I wrote an article on creating binomial interest rate trees that may be of some help here: http://financialexamhelp123.com/creating-a-binomial-interest-rate-tree/
 
thanks
maybe i am just brain jammed but page 170 binominal tree example question b, why is there a forward rate tree and how does this connect to the bigger picture
 
S2000magician wrote:
Recall that the rates you have in period 1 are related by rup = rdown(e^2σ).
The (hypothetical) middle rate is rdown(e^σ); it’s the geometric average of rup and rdown. It should be close to the 1-period forward rate.
So all they’re saying is that the forward curve runs roughly through the middle of the tree.
I wrote an article on creating binomial interest rate trees that may be of some help here: http://financialexamhelp123.com/creating-a-binomial-interest-rate-tree/
so all its saying is, if you get the implied forward rate, treata it as middle spot you can get the up and down spot rate with sigma?
 
h21 wrote:thanks
maybe i am just brain jammed but page 170 binominal tree example question b, why is there a forward rate tree and how does this connect to the bigger picture
Page 170 where?
 
It is always good to quote Reading Number and question number because some of us use the VitalSource application and have no idea what a page is.
 
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