Duration
Duration
Duration
What Is Duration?
Duration is a measure of the sensitivity of the price of a bond or other debt
instrument to a change in interest rates. A bond's duration is easily confused
with its term or time to maturity because certain types of duration measurements
are also calculated in years.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
In general, the higher the duration, the more a bond's price will drop as interest
rates rise (and the greater the interest rate risk). For example, if rates were to
rise 1%, a bond or bond fund with a five-year average duration would likely lose
approximately 5% of its value.
Time to maturity: The longer the maturity, the higher the duration, and
the greater the interest rate risk. Consider two bonds that each yield 5%
and cost $1,000, but have different maturities. A bond that matures faster
—say, in one year—would repay its true cost faster than a bond that
matures in 10 years. Consequently, the shorter-maturity bond would have
a lower duration and less risk.
Coupon rate: A bond’s coupon rate is a key factor in calculation duration.
If we have two bonds that are identical with the exception of their coupon
rates, the bond with the higher coupon rate will pay back its original costs
faster than the bond with a lower yield. The higher the coupon rate, the
lower the duration, and the lower the interest rate risk.
Types of Duration
The duration of a bond in practice can refer to two different things.
The Macaulay duration is the weighted average time until all the bond's cash
flows are paid. By accounting for the present value of future bond payments, the
Macaulay duration helps an investor evaluate and compare bonds independent
of their term or time to maturity.
In order to understand modified duration, keep in mind that bond prices are said
to have an inverse relationship with interest rates. Therefore, rising interest rates
indicate that bond prices are likely to fall, while declining interest rates indicate
that bond prices are likely to rise.
Macaulay Duration
Macaulay duration finds the present value of a bond's future coupon payments
and maturity value. Fortunately for investors, this measure is a standard data
point in most bond searching and analysis software tools. Because Macaulay
duration is a partial function of the time to maturity, the greater the duration, the
greater the interest-rate risk or reward for bond prices.
The previous formula is divided into two sections. The first part is used to find
the present value of all future bond cash flows. The second part finds the
weighted average time until those cash flows are paid. When these sections are
put together, they tell an investor the weighted average amount of time to
receive the bond's cash flows.
To complete the calculation, an investor needs to take the present value of each
cash flow, divide it by the total present value of all the bond's cash flows and
then multiply the result by the time to maturity in years. This calculation is easier
to understand in the following table.
The "Total" row of the table tells an investor that this three-year bond has a
Macaulay duration of 2.684 years. Traders know that, the longer the duration is,
the more sensitive the bond will be to changes in interest rates. If the YTM rises,
the value of a bond with 20 years to maturity will fall further than the value of a
bond with five years to maturity. How much the bond's price will change for each
1% the YTM rises or falls is called modified duration.
Modified Duration
The modified duration of a bond helps investors understand how much a bond's
price will rise or fall if the YTM rises or falls by 1%. This is an important number
if an investor is worried that interest rates will be changing in the short term. The
modified duration of a bond with semi-annual coupon payments.
Using the numbers from the previous example, you can use the modified
duration formula to find how much the bond's value will change for a 1% shift in
interest rates.
In this case, if the YTM increases from 6% to 7% because interest rates are
rising, the bond's value should fall by $2.61. Similarly, the bond's price should
rise by $2.61 if the YTM falls from 6% to 5%. Unfortunately, as the YTM
changes, the rate of change in the price will also increase or decrease. The
acceleration of a bond's price change as interest rates rise and fall is called
"convexity."
Usefulness of Duration
Investors need to be aware of two main risks that can affect a bond's investment
value: credit risk (default) and interest rate risk (interest rate
fluctuations). Duration is used to quantify the potential impact these factors will
have on a bond's price because both factors will affect a bond's expected YTM.
Dollar duration measures the dollar change in a bond's value to a change in the
market interest rate, providing a straightforward dollar-amount computation
given a 1% change in rates. Effective duration is a duration calculation for bonds
that have embedded options.
Bond traders also use key rate duration to see how the value of their portfolio
would change at a specific maturity point along the entirety of the yield curve.
When keeping other maturities constant, the key rate duration is used to
measure the sensitivity of price to a 1% change in yield for a specific maturity.