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Fixed-rate bonds purchase

There is no net outflow or inflow at the start of these trades, because the 100 million spent on the purchase of the FRN is netted with the receipt of 100 million from the sale of the Treasury. The subsequent net cash flows over the three-year period are shown in the last column. As at the start of the trade, there is no cash inflow or outflow on maturity. The net position is exactly the same as that of a fixed-rate payer in an interest rate swap. For a floating-rate payer, the cash flow would mirror exactly that of a long position in a fixed-rate bond and a short position in an FRN. Therefore, the fixed-rate payer in a swap is said to be short in the bond market—that is, a borrower of funds—and the floating-rate payer is said to be long the bond market. [Pg.107]

It was suggested earlier that a swap be seen as a bundle of cash flows arising from the sale and purchase of two cash-market instruments a fixed-rate bond with a coupon equal to the swap rate and a floating-rate bond with the same maturity and paying the same rate as the floating leg of the swap. Considering a swap in this way, equation (7.23) can be rewritten as (7.24). [Pg.153]

The cash flows for this transaction are set forth in Exhibit 19.1. The second column of the exhibit shows the cash flows from purchasing the 5-year floating-rate bond. There is a 50 million cash outlay and then 10 cash inflows. The amount of the cash inflows is uncertain because they depend on future levels of 6-month EURIBOR. The next column shows the cash flows from borrowing 50 million on a fixed-rate basis. The last column shows the net cash flows from the entire transaction. As the last column indicates, there is no initial cash flow (no cash inflow or cash outlay). In all 10 6-month periods, the net position results in a cash... [Pg.604]

Because bonds typically have a predictable stream of payments of interest and repayment of principal, many people invest in them to receive interest income or to preserve and to accumulate capital. If you are looking for current income, you will most likely be interested in bonds that pay an interest rate that stays fixed until maturity with interest that is paid semiannually. However, if you are saving for retirement or a child s education or other capital accumulation goal, you may wish to consider investing in zero coupon bonds which do not have periodic interest payments. Instead, they are sold at a substantial discount from their face amount and the investor receives one payment— at maturity—that is equal to the purchase price (principal) plus the total interest earned, compounded semiannually at the original interest rate. [Pg.150]


See other pages where Fixed-rate bonds purchase is mentioned: [Pg.215]    [Pg.605]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.361]    [Pg.836]    [Pg.76]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.605 ]




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Fixed-rate bonds

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