"

3.5 Comparison of Single Discount Rate (YTM) and Spot Curve (Solution)

 

Period CF YTM Discount Rate PVCF Spot Rates Spot Discount Rates PVCF
1 4.50 (1/1.046) 1 4.3 .0400 (1/1.0400) 1 4.33
2 4.50 (1/1.046) 2 4.11 .0415 (1/1.0415) 2 4.15
3 4.50 (1/1.046) 3 3.93 .0447 (1/1.0447) 3 3.94
4 104.50 (1/1.046) 4 87.30 .0462 (1/1.0462) 4 87.22
118.00 3.5 99.64 3.5 99.64

 

The Spot Curve can be used to illustrate future reinvestment rates.

While the discount rates vary for each period, the two solutions yield the same dollar price.

  • The Law of One Price assures that the two alternatives are equivalent.

The observed YTM is the average of the implied spot rates.

  • Add up both the YTM and “Spot Discount Rate” columns and find that they are equal, i.e., approximately 3.5.

A bond may be thought of as a “portfolio” of (interest-only and principal-only) zero coupon bonds (“Zeros”).

US Treasury Strips may be created by breaking down a coupon bond’s coupons and principal payments and re-packaging them as zeros. Imagine paying $3.94 and receiving in three six-month periods $4.50 – with no interim cash payments.

US Treasury Strips provide a direct view of the spot curve. Strips and coupons are priced differently – they have different yields.

You may say that the YTM is derived from the “unobserved” spot-curve, i.e., only after the bond’s dollar value is known.

Although we do not present it herewith, the analyst may choose to add a “risk premium” of a certain percent to, or across, the spot curve to reflect the added risk over the bond yield curve embodied by the subject investment project. (“Risk premia” shall be a topic of discussion in the “Component Capital Costs / The Capital Asset Pricing Model” section following immediately below.)

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Fixed Income Mathematics Copyright © 2025 by Kenneth Bigel is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.