P1.T3 Reading 12, notes p.50

AnZu

New Member
Hi, I was wondering if anyone could explain the formula/calculation at the bottom of p. 50. It says "As another example, what is the 6month semi-annual forward rate starting in 1.5 years?

I think it is an example of forward with discrete compounding, but I can't find the formula in GARP or in the BT notes.

I didn't understand the formula, so I also tried the formula to convert a continuous to a discrete rate (m(e^Rc/m-1)), but I came up with 3.277%.
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
Hi AnZu,

We need to improve that AIM: the concept is more important than the examples. The forward rate is implied by an equality, in the abstract (i.e., before compound frequency):
  • At time zero(ex ante), neglecting liquidity and risk differences: Investing at the 2-year spot rate should have the same expected return as:
  • Investing at 1.5 year spot and "rolling over" into the 0.5 year forward rate
With semi-annual compound frequency:
[1+s(2)/2]^(2*2) = [1+s(1.5)/2]^(1.5*2) * [1+f(1.5,2.0)/2]^(0.5*2); <-- this is the equality that determines the implied forward rate; it is the forward rate the equalizes the expected 2-year return for both approaches. The formula on page 50 then solves for the forward rate

The formula above it uses the exact same idea, just with continuous:
exp[s(2)*2] = exp[s(1.5)*1.5]*exp[f(1.5,2)*0.5] = exp[s(2)*2] = exp[s(1.5)*1.5 + f(1.5,2)*0.5] -->
s(2)*2 = s(1.5)*1.5 + f(1.5,2)*0.5; solve for forward.

I have tagged this AIM for revision: need to explain the no-arbitrage concept first.

Thanks, David
 

AnZu

New Member
Thank you very much for your reply. I am a bit confused by the notation but that is very helpful. Is the 2 at the end (as well as dividing 2.5% and 2.25%) because it is semi-annual?

Also, you mentioned tagging this for revision--does this mean you will post new materials for revision? (And if so, will this show up on my study planner?)
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
Hi Anzu,

s(2) or r(2) or z(2) typically refers to the 2.0 year spot or zero rate; f(1.5, 2) above refers to the six-month forward rate beginning in 1.5 years, although there are a few variations, but I think this is the most intuitive.

Re the (2): yes the "2" is due to 2 periods per year (i.e., semi-annual). Say you want to compound $1.00 forward over the next three years at a rate of, say, 6.0% per annum
  • You could compound at 6% over three years with annual frequency: $1.00*(1+6%)^3.
  • Or, alternatively, you could compound at 6.0% over three years with semi-annual frequency: $1.00*(1+6%/2)^(3*2).
  • Generally, you could compound at 6.0% over three years with frequency of (k) periods per year: $1.00*(1+6%/k)^(3*k).
  • Until you get to the "infinite" variety, which is continuous compounding: $1.00*exp(6%*3)
The general forms of discrete compounding/discounting are given in Hull 4. They are essential, you should have these not only memorized but you should be proficient in their use (and the continuous equivalent):
\(FV=PV\bullet {{\left( 1+\frac{r}{m} \right)}^{mn}}\to PV=FV/{{\left( 1+\frac{r}{m} \right)}^{mn}}\ \)

Re: revision: yes, but given it's not an error in the notes (which would would do ASAP) but rather an internal note to add/elaborate, it is not an internally urgent revision, so the revised PDF appears when it gets done in our workflow. Thanks,
 
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