Guarantee and Yield curve: Difference between pages

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1.  
Market rates for different maturities of funds are usually different, with longer term rates usually - but not always - being higher.


To assume the liability for debts of another in the event of the other's default.
A yield curve describes today’s market rates per annum on fixed rate funds for a series of otherwise comparable securities, having different maturities.  




2.  
There are three ways of expressing today’s yield curve:
#Zero coupon yield curve.
#Forward yield curve.
#Par yield curve.


The undertaking so given.


In English law, a stronger form of security than a guarantee would be a bond, a bond being a direct primary obligation from the issuer of the bond, such as a bank or insurance company.
If any one of the curves is known then each of the other two can be calculated by using no-arbitrage pricing assumptions.
The shape of today's yield curve is influenced by - but not entirely determined by - the market's expectations about future changes in market rates.


 
The yield curve is sometimes also known as the Term structure of interest rates.
3.
 
A manufacturer's or supplier's formal promise about the quality or performance of goods, usually given for a pre-defined period after purchase.
 
Also known as a 'warranty'.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Accommodation finance]]
* [[Bootstrap]]
* [[Bid bond]]
* [[Expectations theory]]
* [[Bond]]
* [[Falling yield curve]]
* [[Contingent liabilities]]
* [[Fisher-Weil duration]]
* [[Counter-indemnity]]
* [[Forward yield]]
* [[Downstream]]
* [[Inverse yield curve]]
* [[Guarantee line]]
* [[Negative yield curve]]
* [[Guarantor]]
* [[Net interest risk]]
* [[Indemnity]]
* [[Par yield]]
* [[Security]]
* [[Positive yield curve]]
* [[Upstream]]
* [[Riding the yield curve]]
* [[Warranty]]
* [[Spread risk]]
 
* [[Zero coupon yield]]
 
===Other links===
[http://www.treasurers.org/node/9128 Bank guarantees, letters of credit and performance bonds, The Treasurer 2013]

Revision as of 10:59, 13 July 2013

Market rates for different maturities of funds are usually different, with longer term rates usually - but not always - being higher.

A yield curve describes today’s market rates per annum on fixed rate funds for a series of otherwise comparable securities, having different maturities.


There are three ways of expressing today’s yield curve:

  1. Zero coupon yield curve.
  2. Forward yield curve.
  3. Par yield curve.


If any one of the curves is known then each of the other two can be calculated by using no-arbitrage pricing assumptions. The shape of today's yield curve is influenced by - but not entirely determined by - the market's expectations about future changes in market rates.

The yield curve is sometimes also known as the Term structure of interest rates.


See also