burberryjam
New member
- Jun 18, 2026
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Hi
I am struggling with Fixed Income, in particular when to annualise by compouding or when to annualise by simple multiplication. An example asks for the annual yield to maturity:
5 years to maturity
price = 101
par value = 100
coupon = 6% paid semiannually
I would find the semiannual yield to maturity of 2.8835%, then compound this over two semiannual periods to get the annualised yield to maturity (5.85%). The answer is apparently to multiply this by 2 to get 5.767%. I would consider 5.85% to be the YTM, and 5.767% to be the BEY.
Am I missing something here? If I am asked to find the annual YTM is this different to the annualised YTM?
Thanks for any help..
I am struggling with Fixed Income, in particular when to annualise by compouding or when to annualise by simple multiplication. An example asks for the annual yield to maturity:
5 years to maturity
price = 101
par value = 100
coupon = 6% paid semiannually
I would find the semiannual yield to maturity of 2.8835%, then compound this over two semiannual periods to get the annualised yield to maturity (5.85%). The answer is apparently to multiply this by 2 to get 5.767%. I would consider 5.85% to be the YTM, and 5.767% to be the BEY.
Am I missing something here? If I am asked to find the annual YTM is this different to the annualised YTM?
Thanks for any help..