Chapter Two
Determinants of
Interest Rates
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Interest Rate Fundamentals
Nominal interest rates are the interest rates
actually observed in financial markets
Directly affect the value (price) of most securities
traded in the money and capital markets
Changes in interest rates influence the
performance and decision making for individual
investors, businesses, and governmental units
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Key U.S. Interest Rates, 1972-2019
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Loanable Funds Theory
Changes in interest rates impact security values
FIs spend much time and effort trying to identify factors
that determine the level of interest rates at any moment
in time, as well as what causes interest rate movements
over time
Loanable funds theory views equilibrium interest
rates in financial markets as a result of the supply
of and demand for loanable funds
Categorizes financial market participants – consumers,
businesses, governments, and foreign participants – as
net suppliers or demanders of funds
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Supply of Loanable Funds
“Supply of loanable funds” describes funds provided
to the financial markets by net suppliers of funds
Generally, the quantity of loanable funds supplied
increases as interest rates rise
Household sector (consumer sector) is one of the largest
suppliers of loanable funds in the U.S. ($84.66t in 2019)
Business sector often has excess cash that it can invest for
short periods of time ($28.06t for nonfinancial and $98.47t for
financial business in 2019)
Governments may supply loanable funds ($5.66t in 2019)
Foreign investors view U.S. markets as alternatives to their
domestic financial markets ($27.20t in 2019)
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Supply of and Demand for
Loanable Funds
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Demand for Loanable Funds
“Demand for loanable funds” describes the total net
demand for funds by fund users
In general, the quantity of loanable funds demanded is
higher as interest rates fall
Household demand reflects financing purchases of homes,
durable goods, and nondurable goods ($16.05t in 2019)
Businesses demand funds to finance investments in long-term
assets and for short-term working capital needs ($66.46t for
nonfinancial and $111.87t for financial in 2019)
Governments also borrow heavily ($28.86t in 2019)
Foreign participants, mostly from the business sector, borrow in
U.S. financial markets ($20.81t in 2019)
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Factors That Cause the Supply
and Demand Curves for Loanable
Funds to Shift
Factors that cause the supply curve of loanable funds to
shift, at any given interest rate:
1. As wealth of fund suppliers increases (decreases), the
supply of loanable funds increases (decreases)
2. As risk of the financial security increases (decreases), the
supply of loanable funds decreases (increases)
3. As near-term spending needs increase (decrease), the
supply of loanable funds increases (decreases)
4. When monetary policy objectives allow the economy to
expand (restrict expansion), the supply of loanable funds
increases (decreases)
5. As economic conditions improve in a domestic (foreign)
country, the supply of funds increases (decreases)
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Factors That Cause the Supply
and Demand Curves for Loanable
Funds to Shift (Continued)
Factors that cause the demand curve for loanable funds to
shift include the following:
1. As the utility derived from an asset purchased with
borrowed funds increases (decreases), the demand for
loanable funds increases (decreases)
2. As the restrictiveness of nonprice conditions on borrowed
funds decreases (increases), the demand for loanable funds
increases (decreases)
Nonprice conditions may include fees, collateral, or requirements or
restrictions on the use of funds (i.e., restrictive covenants)
3. When domestic economic conditions result in a period of
growth (stagnation), the demand for funds increases
(decreases)
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Factors That Affect the Supply of and
Demand for Loanable Funds for a
Financial Security
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Determinants of Interest Rates
for Individual Securities
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reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Determinants of Interest Rates
for Individual Securities
ij* = f(IP, RFR, DRPj, LRPj, SCPj, MPj)
ij* = equilibrium nominal interest rate for a given
security
IP = Inflation premium
RFR = Real risk-free rate
DRPj = Default risk premium on the jth security
LRPj = Liquidity risk premium on the jth security
SCPj = Special feature premium on the jth security
MPj = Maturity premium on the jth security
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reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Determinants of Interest Rates for
Individual Securities: Inflation
Inflation is the continual increase in the price level of a
basket of goods and services
The higher the level of actual or expected inflation, the higher
will be the level of interest rates
In the U.S., inflation is measured using indexes
Consumer price index (CPI)
Producer price index (PPI)
Annual inflation rate using the CPI index between years t
and t+1 would be equal to:
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Determinants of Interest Rates for
Individual Securities: Real Risk-
Free Rate
A real risk-free rate is the interest rate that would exist
on a risk-free security if no inflation were expected over
the holding period of a security
The higher society’s preference to consume today, the higher
the real risk-free rate (RFR)
Relationship among the real risk-free rate (RFR), the
expected rate of inflation [E(IP)], and the nominal interest
rate (i) is referred to as the Fisher effect
The Fisher effect is often written as the following:
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Determinants of Interest Rates for
Individual Securities: Default Risk
Default risk is the risk that a security issuer will fail to
make its promised interest and principal payments to the
buyer of a security
The higher the default risk, the higher the interest rate that will
be demanded by the buyer of the security to compensate him
or her for this default (or credit) risk exposure
Difference between a quoted interest rate on a security
(security j) and a Treasury security with similar maturity,
liquidity, tax, and other features (such as callability or
convertibility) is called a default or credit risk premium
(DRPj)
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Determinants of Interest Rates for
Individual Securities: Liquidity
Risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that a security can be sold at a
predictable price with low transaction costs on short
notice
A highly liquid asset is one that can be sold at a predictable
price with low transaction costs, and thus can be converted
into its full market value at short notice
If a security is illiquid, investors add a liquidity risk premium
(LRP) to the interest rate on the security that reflects its
relative liquidity
LRP might also be thought of as an “illiquidity” premium
LRP may also exist if investors dislike long-term securities
because their prices (present values) are more sensitive to
interest rate changes than short-term securities
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Determinants of Interest Rates for
Individual Securities: Special
Provisions or Covenants
Special provisions or covenants that may be written into
the contract underlying a security also affect the interest
rates on different securities
Some of these provisions include the security’s taxability,
convertibility, and callability
For investors, interest payments on municipal securities are
free of federal, state, and local taxes
A convertible (special) feature of a security offers the holder the
opportunity to exchange one security for another type of the
issuer’s securities at a preset price
In general, special provisions that provide benefits to the
security holder (e.g., tax-free status and convertibility) are
associated with lower interest rates
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Determinants of Interest Rates for
Individual Securities: Term to
Maturity
The term structure of interest rates is a comparison of
market yields on securities, assuming all characteristics
except maturity are the same
Change in required interest rates as the maturity of a security
changes is called the maturity premium (MP)
The MP can be positive, negative, or zero
The following general equation can be used to determine
the factors that functionally impact the fair interest rate
(ij*) on an individual (jth) financial security:
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Common Shapes for Yield
Curves on Treasury Securities
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Term Structure of Interest Rates
Relationship between a security’s interest rate and its
remaining term to maturity (i.e., the term structure of
interest rates) can take a number of different shapes
Explanations for the shape of the yield curve fall
predominately into three theories:
1. Unbiased expectations theory
2. Liquidity premium theory
3. Market segmentation theory
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Explanations for the Shape of the
Term Structure of Interest Rates
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Unbiased Expectations Theory
At a given point in time, the yield curve reflects the
market’s current expectations of future short-term
rates
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Liquidity Premium Theory
A weakness of the unbiased expectations theory is
that it assumes that investors are risk neutral
Liquidity premium theory is an extension of the
unbiased expectations theory
Based on the idea that investors will hold long-term maturities
only if they are offered at a premium to compensate for future
uncertainty in a security’s value, which increases with an
asset’s maturity
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Market Segmentation Theory
Market segmentation theory argues that individual
investors and FIs have specific maturity preferences,
and to get them to hold securities with maturities other
than their most preferred requires a higher interest
rate (maturity premium)
Does not consider securities with different maturities as
perfect substitutes
Individual investors and FIs have preferred investment
horizons (habitats) dictated by the nature of the liabilities
they hold (i.e., investors have complete risk aversion for
securities outside their maturity preferences)
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Market Segmentation and
Determination of the Slope of the
Yield Curve
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Time Value of Money
Time value of money is the basic notion that a dollar
received today is worth more than a dollar received at
some future date
Two forms of time value of money calculations are
commonly used in finance for security valuation
purposes:
1. Value of a lump sum
A lump sum payment is a single cash payment received at the
beginning or end of some investment horizon
2. Value of annuity payments
Annuity payments are a series of equal cash flows received at
fixed intervals over the entire investment horizon
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Lump Sum Valuation
Present Value of a Lump Sum
Future Value of a Lump Sump
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Annuity Valuation
Present Value of an Annuity
Future Value of an Annuity
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