Tutorial 4 Questions
Tutorial 4 Questions
Tutorial 4 Questions
3. Suppose that there are two bonds, A and B. Suppose also the default risk on
bond A increases. As a result of this we would expect to see:
A. the demand for A to decrease and the demand for B to increase.
B. the demand for A to increase and the demand for B to decrease.
C. the demand for A to decrease and the demand for B to decrease.
D. the demand for A to increase and the demand for B to increase.
6. Municipal bonds generally have lower interest rates than U.S. Government
bonds because:
A. they have less risk.
B. they never mature.
C. they are exempt from Federal taxes.
D. they are more liquid.
7. Yield curves show:
A. the relationship between time to maturity and bond interest rates (yields).
B. the relationship between bond interest rates (yields) and bond prices.
C. the relationship between risk and bond interest rates (yields).
D. the relationship between liquidity and bond interest rates (yields).
9. The liquidity premium theory suggests that yield curves should usually be:
A. inverted.
B. up-sloping through year 1, then flat thereafter.
C. up-sloping.
D. flat.
10. The liquidity premium theory is based upon the idea that, other things
remaining equal,
A. investors are indifferent between short-term and long-term bonds.
B. investors prefer long-term bonds.
C. investors prefer short-term bonds.
D. investors prefer intermediate-term bonds.
13. What will the yield curve look like if future short-term interest rates are
expected to rise sharply?
A. It will steeply slope upward.
B. It will slightly slope upward.
C. It will be horizontal.
D. It will slope downward.
14. Reduced liquidity of a bond causes the interest rate on that bond
A. To be higher because it is more widely traded.
B. To be higher because it is less widely traded.
C. To be lower because it is less widely traded
D. To be lower because it is more widely traded
5. Risk premiums on corporate bonds are usually anticyclical; that is, they decrease
during business cycle expansions and increase during recessions. Why is this so?
8. Predict what will happen to interest rates on a corporation’s bonds if the federal
government guarantees today that it will pay creditors if the corporation goes
bankrupt in the future. What will happen to the interest rates on Treasury securities?
17. If a yield curve looks like the one shown in the figure below, what is the market
predicting about the movement of future short-term interest rates? What might the yield
curve indicate about the market’s predictions for the inflation rate in the future?
8, default risk of corp bond fall -> Dcb up -> Pcb up, IR fall
Btb fall, P fall, IR up
23. Assuming the expectations theory is the correct theory of the term structure, calculate
the interest rates in the term structure for maturities of one to four years, and plot the
a, 1y = 4%/1 = 4%
2y = 4%+6%/2=5%
3y = 4+6+11/3=7%
4y= 4+6+11+`5/4=9%
resulting yield curves for the following paths of one-year interest rates over the next four
years:
a. 4%, 6%, 11%, 15%
b. 3%, 5%, 13%, 15%
How would your yield curves change if people preferred shorter-term bonds to longer-
term bonds?
25. The table below shows current and expected future one-year interest rates, as well as
current interest rates on multiyear bonds. Use the table to calculate the liquidity premium
for each multiyear bond.
Int