VanBuren77
New Member
Hi -
New to the forum, so not entirely certain of the format here. I have a question:
Forward interest rates are indicative of the market's expectation. They are weak predictors of the future, but they tell us an idea of how the market feels about interest rates in the future.
If I have a 10 year bond with a yield of 2% as of today, and a 10 year, 1 year forward bond with a yield of 3%, then I should have an upwards slowing forward rate curve. Because price and yield have an inverse relationship, the price of the 1 year forward bond should be lower than the price of the 10 year spot.
How does this make sense in the context of these rates / prices being indicative of the market's expectation of the future?
If the market expected interest rates to rise, wouldn't there be a rally in rates, such that the price of the 3% forward rate bond would rise, and offset the yield?
New to the forum, so not entirely certain of the format here. I have a question:
Forward interest rates are indicative of the market's expectation. They are weak predictors of the future, but they tell us an idea of how the market feels about interest rates in the future.
If I have a 10 year bond with a yield of 2% as of today, and a 10 year, 1 year forward bond with a yield of 3%, then I should have an upwards slowing forward rate curve. Because price and yield have an inverse relationship, the price of the 1 year forward bond should be lower than the price of the 10 year spot.
How does this make sense in the context of these rates / prices being indicative of the market's expectation of the future?
If the market expected interest rates to rise, wouldn't there be a rally in rates, such that the price of the 3% forward rate bond would rise, and offset the yield?