Hi David,
There's something about Hull that I can't grasp when working out the conversion factor for the Treasury Bond futures.
I think I get the concept ok, but when I work through the cash flows for the instrument with the extra 3 months after rounding down I can't seem to make total sense of it.
If you look at my attatched spreadsheet, I worked out the cash flows from the Hull example on page 134. (I've scanned in the formula Hull uses and put it in the spreadsheet.)
From my spreadsheet, I can work out the bond price to equal $125.83 just like Hull by following my pricing of the bond. However what I don't understand correctly is:
1. Hull states that this price is for 'Discounting all the payments back to a point in time 3 months from today at 6% per annum.' However, from what I can see the 1st coupon payment is actually discounted to TODAY - i.e. pv'ed at 4/(1.03)^i - and NOT 3 months. i.e. my 1st cash flow actually discounts the bond to today, not in 3 months time.
2. How can we literally just stick on an extra coupon payment of 4 at the beginning of the formula? If this represents the extra three months at 'maturity', doesn't this value need to be discounted back as well?
I'm hoping that this is all some hokey pokey type rule that you must follow since I can't tie the math up correctly.
Hope that makes some sense.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Paul
There's something about Hull that I can't grasp when working out the conversion factor for the Treasury Bond futures.
I think I get the concept ok, but when I work through the cash flows for the instrument with the extra 3 months after rounding down I can't seem to make total sense of it.
If you look at my attatched spreadsheet, I worked out the cash flows from the Hull example on page 134. (I've scanned in the formula Hull uses and put it in the spreadsheet.)
From my spreadsheet, I can work out the bond price to equal $125.83 just like Hull by following my pricing of the bond. However what I don't understand correctly is:
1. Hull states that this price is for 'Discounting all the payments back to a point in time 3 months from today at 6% per annum.' However, from what I can see the 1st coupon payment is actually discounted to TODAY - i.e. pv'ed at 4/(1.03)^i - and NOT 3 months. i.e. my 1st cash flow actually discounts the bond to today, not in 3 months time.
2. How can we literally just stick on an extra coupon payment of 4 at the beginning of the formula? If this represents the extra three months at 'maturity', doesn't this value need to be discounted back as well?
I'm hoping that this is all some hokey pokey type rule that you must follow since I can't tie the math up correctly.
Hope that makes some sense.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Paul