jyothi1965
New Member
David
I picked this one up from the PRM set of questions:
A firm has two outstanding bond issues: a 6 percent coupon bond with one year to maturity
trading at a spread of 88 bps over Treasuries and a 9 percent coupon bond with ten years to
maturity trading at a spread of 340 bps over Treasuries. The one-year and ten-year Treasuries
are trading at 4% and 5% respectively. Both the bonds rank pari passu and have an estimated
recovery rate of 30%. What is the minimum upfront premium that a dealer will charge to sell a
one year credit swap to an owner of the 10-year bond?
A. 85 basis points.
B. 88 basis points.
C. 327 basis points.
D. 340 basis points.
The answer is simplistic: (considering that reading the question takes a couple of minutes!!!)
18. Correct answer: A
Since all the bonds rank equally, they would default at the same time. Therefore, the dealer
could hedge a one-year credit swap on the firm (for whichever bond) by selling the one-year
bond and purchasing one-year Treasuries. This results in a cost of 88 bps at the end of the
year, or 85 bps upfront {= 88 / (1 + 4%)}.
This seems an intelligent question, and and I am curious to know how to interpret the answer.
(How can equal ranking mean that they would default at the same time?)- unless it is a credit event.
Thanks as always
J
I picked this one up from the PRM set of questions:
A firm has two outstanding bond issues: a 6 percent coupon bond with one year to maturity
trading at a spread of 88 bps over Treasuries and a 9 percent coupon bond with ten years to
maturity trading at a spread of 340 bps over Treasuries. The one-year and ten-year Treasuries
are trading at 4% and 5% respectively. Both the bonds rank pari passu and have an estimated
recovery rate of 30%. What is the minimum upfront premium that a dealer will charge to sell a
one year credit swap to an owner of the 10-year bond?
A. 85 basis points.
B. 88 basis points.
C. 327 basis points.
D. 340 basis points.
The answer is simplistic: (considering that reading the question takes a couple of minutes!!!)
18. Correct answer: A
Since all the bonds rank equally, they would default at the same time. Therefore, the dealer
could hedge a one-year credit swap on the firm (for whichever bond) by selling the one-year
bond and purchasing one-year Treasuries. This results in a cost of 88 bps at the end of the
year, or 85 bps upfront {= 88 / (1 + 4%)}.
This seems an intelligent question, and and I am curious to know how to interpret the answer.
(How can equal ranking mean that they would default at the same time?)- unless it is a credit event.
Thanks as always
J