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Principles of Finance: Unit 2, Yield Curves: The Pricing of Debt 5 Views
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Description:
What are yield curves, and why are they so yield-y? We'll explain the four flavors of yield curve: normal, flat, inverse, and mocha chip.
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of Finance a la shmoop.. yield curves the pricing of debt so [Briefcase with yield curves on the front appears]
- 00:10
we've given you the broad framework for interest rates ie the you know kissing
- 00:15
cousin of inflation alright but how are they priced how are these yield curves
- 00:20
formed like specifically what drives the price of renting money well there are [Man on horse whipping money]
- 00:26
really two elements involved here one the odds that you'll get paid back the
Full Transcript
- 00:31
money you just loaned if you're the bank loaning out the money and two the time
- 00:37
it'll take you to get paid back the money you just loaned out well these two
- 00:41
things are linked but well let's just focus on risk for now if a buddy asks
- 00:46
you for 10 bucks for lunch and tells you she'll pay you back tomorrow and you're [Girl asks friend for $10]
- 00:51
at work on a Tuesday and you know it's highly likely you'll see her Wednesday
- 00:56
well her 10 dollar loan is probably money good meaning that the risk of not
- 01:01
being paid back that 10 bucks is low but what if she wanted to borrow $1,000 [Girl asking friend for $1000]
- 01:07
while she goes off with Bjorn for a lovely summer in the Swedish
- 01:11
Highlands well she'll be coming back to work afterwards but man that Bjorn guy
- 01:16
is good-looking and in the back of your mind you're wondering if well she'll [Girl and Bjorn eating a picnic]
- 01:20
just stay in Sweden forever and you might not see her again well maybe you'd
- 01:24
still loan her the money but now you're gonna miss that grand for a whole summer
- 01:30
and there was all this stuff you wanted to go buy with it and now your earring
- 01:35
rep will go hungry so maybe you charge her some real interest like well 5% on
- 01:41
that money so when she comes back she has to pay you a thousand 50....50
- 01:46
bucks for renting the money for a quarter of a year that's a 20 percent
- 01:50
annualized rate got it no it's not okay to just give you back your grand and a [Woman with money and a FedEx box]
- 01:54
lousy t-shirt at the end that says my friend went to Sweden with a guy named
- 01:59
Bjorn and all I got was this lousy t-shirt although that'd be kind of a
- 02:04
cool t-shirt I think Anyway same as above only now
- 02:08
she wants to borrow 10 grand wow that's a lot of money could she ever pay that
- 02:12
back well one more time same as above only now she wants to borrow 20 grand [Girl watching a Deer and Elvis]
- 02:17
for the reindeer Platinum Elvis wedding in neighboring Helsinki and she'll give
- 02:23
you your 5% but she wants 20 years to pay you back lots of risk there if she
- 02:29
ever doesn't pay you back well how on earth do you call collections in Sweden [Men with bats appear beside woman]
- 02:34
ie the burly guys with baseball bats who visit your home to collect from bad
- 02:39
poker hands on your once besties are you really gonna do that and make that call
- 02:44
but if you had to like if you were a commercial bank or something well you'd
- 02:49
want to charge a lot of interest like say maybe you'd charge
- 02:53
I don't know 15% interest a year at least that way if she made payments for [Girl opens mailbox]
- 02:57
six or seven years while you'd at least have collected most of your initial
- 03:02
principal before she disappeared on a Viking ship [Girl with Bjorn on a viking ship]
- 03:05
so that's risk premium you'll charge a premium beyond the very safe next day
- 03:12
hamburger ten dollar rate to make up for the odds that your buddy just goes away
- 03:18
and never pays you back what's the hamburger rate in real life well it's [Woman working at hamburger store]
- 03:22
called LIBOR and it stands for the London interbank offering rate LIBOR
- 03:28
there you go it's generally how the Western world sets interest rates today [Woman spins a wheel of interest]
- 03:31
with a lot of input from the US federal government ...The Fed well that
- 03:36
hamburger rate is basically just the best rate or the best price of renting
- 03:41
money to the banks best credit risk customers like if you're loaning not a [Woman gives money to man called Google]
- 03:47
lot of money to Google for a year it's highly likely they'll pay you back so
- 03:51
they don't have to pay a lot of rent on that money you just loaned them
- 03:55
that's the hamburger rate and everything higher than that is risk premium all [Hamburgers stacked on top of each other]
- 04:00
right well these rates can be understood through yield curves...
- 04:04
well here are three of them look at them and
- 04:07
see if you can figure out on your own what they're telling us here's a normal [three example yield curves]
- 04:11
yield curve... you can see the yield is low when the
- 04:15
time is short presumably a little bit less risk right if you're gonna collect
- 04:19
quickly from someone then there's an inverse yield curve like where rates are
- 04:23
super high today but they get cheaper in the future and then there's kind of a
- 04:27
flattish looking yield curve there where nobody really cares about the duration....
- 04:36
well the GPS navigation device in figuring out how the bond market is [GPS screen in car appears]
- 04:40
reflecting economic conditions in corporate America is called the spread
- 04:45
to Treasuries because it is US Treasury bills that are the hamburger rate in
- 04:51
most US based debt transactions so let's start with normal alright in non special
- 04:59
debt times short interest rates are lower than long term rates like that's [Normal yield curve graph appears]
- 05:04
normal that's not some crazy economic event has happened that changes the
- 05:08
price of renting money that means that a person X wants to borrow money for
- 05:12
three months well the annualized rate of that
- 05:16
borrowing is lower than if the same person X under the same terms wants
- 05:21
to borrow money for 30 years right.. three months that per month rent is cheaper
- 05:26
than the per month rent for thirty years why well because person X could die her [Person X drops off the chart]
- 05:31
company could go bankrupt she could disappear lots of bad things could
- 05:35
happen in that 30 year time frame so most lenders are much happier with
- 05:40
shorter term borrowings so they priced that debt cheaper and that's what you
- 05:45
see in this yield curve got it? cheaper here more expensive there so then how
- 05:49
does the opposite happen ie what's the deal with the inverted
- 05:53
yield curve thing... well let's go back in history well when Jimmy [Man enters door]
- 05:57
Carter wanted to stamp out inflation and cool down the economy quickly he made [Jimmy Carter pours water on inflation]
- 06:02
the cost of short-term money borrowing extremely expensive like 12% annualized
- 06:09
rate kind of expensive and thats for the best customers just for scale here in
- 06:14
most of the modern era short-term money has cost closer to 1% not 12... [Giant Jimmy Carter terrorizing the city]
- 06:20
well you wanted to borrow money for ten years cost maybe 10% in 30 years it was
- 06:26
maybe 8% got it so that's an inverted yield curve it looks like that and to
- 06:31
think about it the markets were betting that Carter would be successful in
- 06:36
cooling down the economy near-term and that some years later rates would fall [Raegan sitting in office]
- 06:41
and the curve would return to its normal shape or at least yields would return to
- 06:47
their normal prices and that's exactly what happened but for a while we had
- 06:51
this weird looking inverted yield curve from the late 1970s until reaganomics
- 06:55
really took hold in the early 80s all right last but not least is the flat
- 07:01
yield curve well that's what it looks like right there and when a yield curve
- 07:05
is flat it's telling you that the market just doesn't care whether dead is short [Flat yield curve appears]
- 07:09
medium or long term means that the market thinks that rates will be pretty
- 07:13
steady for a long time flat yield curves don't happen all that often but when
- 07:18
they do well it's kind of a harvest movement of finance... [Man talking about flat yield curves and a wolf man appears]
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