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picture1_Bill Format In Word 30336 | Invoice Prices And T Bill Quotes


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File: Bill Format In Word 30336 | Invoice Prices And T Bill Quotes
invoice prices and t bill quotes invoice prices for bonds purchased between coupon payments coupon interest accrues linearly by convention based on the number of days in the coupon period ...

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                                          Invoice Prices and T-Bill Quotes
                   Invoice Prices
                   For bonds purchased between coupon payments, coupon interest accrues linearly (by 
                   convention) based on the number of days in the coupon period.
                   Treasury trades settle on the next business day after the trade date. The settlement date is 
                   the date that is used to establish the date of new ownership. When we say that a bond is 
                   bought or sold on a certain date, for simplicity, you can assume that we are referring to 
                   the settlement date.
                   Treasury Bonds – based on actual day counts
                   Corporate Bonds – 30 days/month and 360 days/year
                   Money Market Instruments – actual days in a month but 360 days/year
                   Example: 
                   An 8% 5 yr Treasury note due 5/15/02 has a YTM of 7%. Its price is 101.496.
                   The coupon period between 5/15/00 and 11/15/00 had 184 days.
                   The next coupon period 11/15/00 – 5/15/01 had 181 days.
                   Note: A coupon period will never have fewer than 181 days and never more than 184 
                   days.
                   If the bond is purchased on 10/1/00, 139 days have elapsed since 5/15/00, so the accrued 
                   interest per dollar is:
                   (139/184) (.08/2) = .03022 = 3.022% of face must be paid in addition to the quoted 
                   (clean) price. 
                   Invoice Price of Bond = Clean price plus accrued interest.
                   101.496 (clean price) + 3.022 (accrued interest) = 104.518 (invoice price)
                   The invoice price of the bond can also be computed as the present value of the future 
                   cash flows
                   Since 139/184 is the proportion of the coupon period since the last payment, it follows 
                   that 45/184 is the proportion of the semi-annual period remaining till the next coupon 
                   payment. So, the present value of the note will be calculated as:
                                          45/184        1+(45/184)       2+(45/184)         3+(45/184)
                   Invoice Price = 4/(1+r)     + 4/(1+r)        + 4/(1+r)       + 104/(1+r)
                   where r is the semi-annual yield (BEY/2). 
                   In our example of YTM = 7%, which gives us 104.518.
                                                                                                             1
          The PRICE function in Excel calculates the PV of the cash flows in this way and then 
          subtracts the accrued interest to give the clean price
          Treasury Bill Quotes
          Yield on a Discount Basis:
             Commonly used by bond traders by convention
             Easier to calculate than YTM before calculators
          Yield on a discount basis = 100 – Price     ·             360
                                                           100                 days to maturity
          Yield on a discount basis understates both EAR and BEY
          Example:
          T-bill matures in 90 days
          Current price is 99
          Yld on a discount basis =  100 – 99    ·    360   =   .04  =  4%
                                                        100                90
                               BEY  =  100 – 99     ·     365         =  4.097%
                                                99                    90
          EAR:  EAR = (FV/PV)n – 1           where n = # of compounding periods in a year
                                     = (100/99)365/90 – 1  =  .0416 = 4.16%
          T-bill quotes: 
          Note: Price is not quoted 
                    Discount rate is quoted
          How do we find the price?
          Yld on a discount basis:  d = 100 – P  ·  360
                         100  n
          d = discount rate (yld on a discount basis)
          P = Price
          n = days to maturity
          Solve algebraically for P
           P=100(1− nd )
                360
                                                     2
              Bond Equiv. Yield  =  100 – P  ·  365       When n < 182 days
                                                       P             n
              Note that we put P in the denominator instead of 100 and use 365 instead of 360.
              This gives us the BEY but it’s still not the EAR.
              EAR here assumes compounding every 90 days
              BEY assumes annual compounding with semiannual cash flows
              When n< 182, you can easily convert from Yield on a Discount Basis to BEY using:
              BEY   =    365d
                             360 – dn
              If n > 182 days, it gets a little tricky because the calculation must reflect the fact that a T-
              bill does not pay interest, but a T-Bond would make a semi-annual interest payment 
              before maturity.
              BEY =
                          −2n      n  2  2n       100
                              +2 (   ) −(  −1)(1−    )
                          365   √ 365   365        P
                                     2n −1
                                     365
                                                                              3
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...Invoice prices and t bill quotes for bonds purchased between coupon payments interest accrues linearly by convention based on the number of days in period treasury trades settle next business day after trade date settlement is that used to establish new ownership when we say a bond bought or sold certain simplicity you can assume are referring actual counts corporate month year money market instruments but example an yr note due has ytm its price had will never have fewer than more if elapsed since so accrued per dollar face must be paid addition quoted clean plus also computed as present value future cash flows proportion last payment it follows semi annual remaining till calculated r where yield bey our which gives us function excel calculates pv this way then subtracts give discount basis commonly traders easier calculate before calculators maturity understates both ear matures current yld fv n compounding periods not rate how do find d p solve algebraically nd equiv put denominator...

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