Revision as of 21:00, 19 November 2023 by Admin (Created page with "Kate buys a five-year 1000 face amount bond today with a 100 discount. The annual nominal coupon rate is 5% convertible semiannually. One year later, Wallace buys a four-year bond. It has the same face amount and coupon values as Kate’s and is priced to yield an annual nominal interest rate of 10% convertible semiannually. The discount on Wallace’s bond is D. The book value of Kate’s bond at the time Wallace buys his bond is B. Calculate B – D. <ul class="mw-ex...")
ABy Admin
Nov 19'23
Exercise
Kate buys a five-year 1000 face amount bond today with a 100 discount. The annual nominal coupon rate is 5% convertible semiannually. One year later, Wallace buys a four-year bond. It has the same face amount and coupon values as Kate’s and is priced to yield an annual nominal interest rate of 10% convertible semiannually. The discount on Wallace’s bond is D. The book value of Kate’s bond at the time Wallace buys his bond is B.
Calculate B – D.
- 724
- 738
- 756
- 838
- 917
ABy Admin
Nov 19'23
Solution: C
The yield rate on Kate's bond is
[[math]]
\begin{aligned}
& (1000-100)=25 a_{\overline{10}| \frac{i^{(2)}}{2}}+1000 v^{10} \\
& \frac{i^{(2)}}{2}=0.0371551
\end{aligned}
[[/math]]
The discount on Wallace's bond is
[[math]]
\begin{aligned}
& (1000-D)=25 a_{\overline{8} \mid 0.05}+1000 v^8 \\
& 1000-D=838.42, \quad D=161.58
\end{aligned}
[[/math]]
The book value of Kate's bond at time 1 is
[[math]]
\begin{aligned}
& B=25 a_{\overline{8}|0.0371551}+1000 v^8 \\
& B=917.19
\end{aligned}
[[/math]]
The difference is [math]B-D=917.19-161.58=755.61[/math]