ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

Finance: What is the inverse relationship between interest rates and bond values? 75 Views


Share It!


Description:

The inverse relationship refers to the fact that as interest rates go up, bond prices go down, and vice-versa. Bottom line reason is supply and demand. If more people want to buy a bond, the bond itself can pay less interest and still get sold at a higher price, hence the price goes up as interest goes down. If not enough people are interested, the rate needs to rise and price needs to go lower to entice buyers.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

finance a la shmoop what is the inverse relationship between interest rates and

00:07

bond values okay people think of Batman hanging [Batman hanging upside down]

00:12

upside down not with a date on a Saturday night but you know just as his

00:16

normal course of the business so yeah bonds have this same strange inverted

00:22

relationship with financial gravity when prevailing interest rates go up like [Bond is sucked up by hoover]

00:27

when the Fed makes the cost of renting money more expensive so it can fight

00:32

inflation and other bad guys then the principal values of bonds goes down [Bond values decreases]

00:37

think about it this way imagine you just paid a thousand dollars for a piece of

00:41

paper from the reputable corporation whoop-dee-doo the world's leading

00:45

manufacturer of whoopee cushions anyway whoopty-doo promises to pay you sixty [Whoopee cushions on a conveyor belt]

00:50

dollars a year for ten years and then pay you back a thousand bucks all right

00:54

a year later however the world's economies take off and a new president

00:57

commands that we fight inflation hard so that old people living on fixed incomes [President demanding to fight inflation]

01:03

don't get evicted from their homes and have to live in SUV's parked by the side

01:07

of the road yeah we don't like that and yeah that happens to old people they

01:10

can't afford to take the risk of owning stocks in the stock market so they

01:14

generally just own safe bonds and end up being subjected to inflation risk that

01:19

is when a government paper that they own is safe and pays bond interest of three

01:23

percent pre-tax and two percent after taxed with the world inflating at 3% a

01:28

year meaning old people then gradually see the buying power of their savings [Stack of cash disappears]

01:32

wither away to nothing and well that's why we fight inflation so the Fed the

01:36

thing that controls the price of renting money to banks who then rent the money

01:40

to borrowers the Fed then raises the price of renting that money hoping to

01:44

bring down inflation well that price hike then makes the cost of renting [example of renting money]

01:48

money for a corporation way higher that higher price of renting money is

01:52

collateral damage from the bonds the government is setting off to fight the [Explosion occurs in the distance]

01:56

war on inflation all right so back to whoopty-doo paper now with the federal

01:59

fund rate hikes the cost of renting money is more expensive, the company

02:04

thought they could get away with paying 6% rent on the money they wanted to

02:07

spend on their whoopee stamping Factory but now the cost of renting that money [Whoope cushion with 6% old cost of rent]

02:11

is 8% and those 2% difference points are a big deal on a

02:15

hundred million bucks two million a year is meaningful to a company with a

02:19

volatile product so now think about it from the perspective of all the

02:23

people who bought six percent corporate bonds of similar risk and duration as

02:27

the ones whoop-dee-doo was gonna sell ie apples to apples in all respects except [Girl holding two whoopee cushions]

02:31

the interest rate well almost overnight the rate of return on those bonds looks

02:35

anemic at best those old crappy six percent bonds now

02:40

need to yield a sexy eight percent to be competitive with the new or current

02:45

market environment well who would want to own those old six percent low

02:49

yielding bonds which should now yield eight percent answer nobody.. The six

02:54

percent paper sells off or sells down as people sell their bonds until that six

02:59

percent of yield equals eight percent a year yield more specifically previous [Old and New environment annual yield]

03:04

investors had paid a thousand bucks for 60 bucks a year in yield well now that

03:08

yield has to be $80 to match the new environment as set by the Fed and the

03:13

marketplace so the mathy question here is what price

03:16

must the bond be selling at the one which originally sold for $1000 par that

03:21

gave 6% yield so that that bond now gives 8 percent yield....

03:26

well the price has to go down so that the $60 of yield or something let's call

03:32

it cleverly...X equals $80 over a thousand or 8% so that's 60 over x equals .08[Maths formula for new bond price]

03:40

or 60 equals 0.08X or by dividing both sides by 0.08 you get 750

03:47

yeah which is the new price of the bond after the feds rate hike cost corporate

03:52

bond rates to go from 6% to 8% got it we following here people the yield on that [Man discussing bond rates]

03:57

old thousand-dollar par bond which was 6% when it was issued is now 8% because

04:02

the market price of a thousand bucks a unit that investors were paying for that

04:06

bond has fallen such that the bond at 750 a unit paying 60 bucks a year now

04:11

yields 8% so it should make sense that bond values would fall something

04:16

equivalent to that number it's like a teeter-totter so that when rates are [See-saw of rates and par value]

04:20

high par value of old bonds are low and vice versa that teeter-totter thing, everyone

04:26

uses that as an example we waited until this part in the the video to regale you with it..

04:30

and key self-awareness issue for you nervous Nellie investors you don't [Man is nervous and masked man points gun at him]

04:34

have to sell the bond at this price by the way you could just hold that six

04:39

percent formally yielding bond for the remaining nine years get your grand and [Man holding stack of dollars]

04:43

move on you still will have made six percent a year on your thousand dollar

04:47

investment which is good just not as good is that juicy eight percent you

04:51

could have gotten okay if all that hasn't confused you enough let's add one

04:54

more degree of difficulty here just keep the Bulgarian judge evaluating us happy [Bulgarian judge smiling]

04:59

because you know he lives in Bulgaria, so yeah well hidden in those numbers is the

05:04

fact that a buyer who would pay 750 bucks for your bond would also get the

05:09

250 bucks of appreciation on the bond over nine years to then get paid back

05:13

their principal so in real life the bond wouldn't fall fully to 750 there would

05:18

be some recognition of the roughly 250 divided by 9 which equals $28 ish a year

05:25

in extra financial return on top of the interest and oh by the way that

05:30

appreciation would be taxed each year as it appreciated in value so what happens [Man discussing bond value + recognition]

05:35

if things go the other way well yeah the bond yields continue to fall and that 60

05:40

bucks a year you paid a grand for has prevailing similar risk bond selling at

05:44

4% like what happens if inflation goes the other way while the value of your

05:49

fat yielding bond would go up right the markets only paying 40 bucks a year to

05:54

rent that brand and you have this awesome piece of paper that pays 60

05:57

bucks a year so the value of your paper would be bid up in that setting right [Man points to the ceiling]

06:01

60 over a thousand gave you 6% of your return when you

06:05

bought the bond but now the prevailing rates are 4% not six so the value of

06:09

your once $1000 value bond must change it becomes X unknown, mysterious yes like [Bond becomes X and Batman appears]

06:15

Batman so 60 over X must now equal 4% we multiply both sides by X to get it out

06:21

of the denominator and you have 60 equals 0.04X then you divide

06:26

both sides by 0.04 and 60 over 0.04 is 1500 so yes in that short window of

06:31

one year when interest rates fell from 6%to 4% your bonds value skyrocketed like [Bond value rocket launching into the air]

06:36

Manhattan Batman building from a grand to being

06:40

up 50% to 1500 bucks you know sorta remember that now this big premium

06:46

slowly fades away over time you're only gonna get back that original par value

06:51

thousand dollars when the bond matures it's over the next nine years that five

06:55

hundred bucks in premium will slowly decline at about fifty five bucks a year [Premium declining in value]

06:59

there abouts so in real life the bonds value wouldn't actually hit 1500

07:02

it would do well just not that well and yes what a roller coaster [Man sitting on a rollercoaster]

07:05

it's been riding that bond investment brought to the highest of heights when

07:08

interest rates go down only for the bond value to plummet back down and once [Bond value increasing and decreasing par value]

07:12

interest rates jump again so the lesson ...I'm not sure that's your job all we

07:17

know is in this poor shmucks case it'll be best to pick a ride with a you must

07:21

be too tall to enter sign [Man approaches rollercoaster and reads must be too tall to enter sign]

Up Next

Finance: What is Bankruptcy?
260 Views

What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...

Related Videos

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
39794 Views

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government

Fake News
11938 Views

How do you tell fake news from real news?

Finance: What is a Dividend?
1777 Views

What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...

Finance: How Are Risks and Rewards Related?
589 Views

How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...