Yield basis

From ACT Wiki
Revision as of 20:27, 27 June 2022 by imported>Doug Williamson (Classify page.)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search

A basis of quoting the return on an instrument by reference to its current value (rather than by reference to its terminal value).


Example: Yield basis calculation

When an instrument is quoted - on a yield basis, one period before its maturity - at a yield of 10% per period, this means that it is currently trading at a price of 100% DIVIDED BY (1 + 10% = 1.10) = 90.91% of its terminal value, to the nearest 0.01%.


(The periodic discount rate on this instrument is 100% LESS 90.91% = 9.09%. So if the same instrument had been quoted on a discount basis, then the quoted discount rate per period = 9.09%.)


The relationship between the periodic yield (r) and the periodic discount rate (d) is:

d = r/(1+r)


So in this case:

d = 0.10/(1 + 0.10)

= 0.10/1.10

= 9.09% (to the nearest 0.01%)


See also