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NISM Series XIII module
Chapter reading
S4_CH1
Workbook pages 12-79
Concept lesson
This is the learning layer for Introduction to Interest Rate, Interest Rate Instruments and Markets: bond math, yield logic, formulas, delivery rules, traps and quick revision. The practice buttons sit on the side only after the concept has landed.
The largest chapter in the entire Series IV workbook at 68 pages. This is not a derivatives chapter — it is a fixed income fundamentals chapter. Before you can understand interest rate futures, you need to understand bonds: how they are priced, what yield means, how duration measures risk, what repo is, and how the yield curve works. Roughly 25% of all exam questions come from here. Master the bond math and the yield curve concepts, and you've secured the foundation of the exam.
**Money market** (maturity < 1 year): Treasury Bills, Call Money, Certificates of Deposit, Commercial Paper, Repo/Reverse Repo
**Bond market** (maturity ≥ 1 year): Government bonds (G-Secs), State Development Loans, Corporate bonds
Together = Debt market = Fixed Income Securities market
**Standard money market tenors:** Overnight (ON), 1W, 2W, 1M to 1Y Most liquid: ON, 1M, 3M
**Standard bond market tenors:** 2Y, 5Y, 7Y, 10Y, 15Y, 20Y, 25Y, 30Y Most liquid: 2Y and 10Y
**Coupon bond:** Pays periodic coupons (interest) + principal at maturity. Most common. Has reinvestment risk.
**Zero coupon bond:** No periodic payments. Issued at discount, redeemed at face value. No reinvestment risk. True return can be calculated in advance. Duration = Maturity.
**Annuity:** Equal periodic payments of coupon + part of principal. Example: EMI loans. Most consumer/housing loans are structured as annuities.
**Consol (Perpetual bond):** Pays coupon forever, principal never repaid. Example: UK government consols at 3%.
**Depository:** Public Debt Office (PDO) of RBI
**Account types:** - **SGL Account (Subsidiary General Ledger):** Held by Scheduled Commercial Banks (SCBs), Primary Dealers (PDs), and select financial institutions directly with PDO - **CSGL Account (Constituent SGL):** Held by others (investors) through SCBs or PDs — investors hold G-Secs here in their SCB/PD - **Gilt Account:** Investor account with SCB or PD (not with PDO). Maximum one Gilt Account per investor. Every debit requires Gilt Account Holder's authorization. Right of set-off cannot be applied.
**RBI-regulated entities** must hold G-Secs compulsorily in electronic form (SGL or Gilt Account).
**Auction types:** Yield-based (new securities) and Price-based (re-issuance)
**Eligible to open CSGL:** SCBs, PDs, NSDL, CDSL, SHIL (Stock Holding Corp), NABARD, CCIL
**Coupon rate:** Annual coupon / Face value. NOT a true return measure — ignores price premium/discount and capital gain/loss at redemption.
**Current Yield = Annual Coupon / Current Market Price × 100** - Better than coupon but still ignores capital gain/loss at redemption - Example: Bond at Rs 105, coupon 9%: Current yield = 9/105 × 100 = **8.57%** - Example: Bond at Rs 97, coupon 8.5%: Current yield = 8.5/97 × 100 = **8.76%**
**Yield to Maturity (YTM):** - The internal rate of return (IRR) if bond held to maturity and all coupons reinvested at YTM - Also an alternative way of quoting bond price - Assumes flat term structure (same rate for all cash flows) — this is a limitation - Assumes reinvestment at YTM itself — also a limitation - True return measure? Not completely — but better than coupon and current yield
**True return:** Only zero coupon bond gives a truly calculable return in advance (no reinvestment).
**Price risk (Market risk):** Bond price changes IMMEDIATELY when interest rates change. - Interest rates rise → Bond prices fall (inverse relationship — always) - Interest rates fall → Bond prices rise
**Reinvestment risk:** Effect is SLOW over time — it affects how coupons get reinvested. - Interest rates fall → Coupons reinvested at lower rates → Total return less than YTM - Zero coupon bonds have NO reinvestment risk (no coupons to reinvest)
**Credit risk:** Risk of default by issuer. Sovereign bonds = risk-free. Corporate bonds have credit risk.
**Credit spread:** Yield difference between corporate bond and equivalent sovereign bond. Measures credit risk premium. - AAA → lowest credit spread (safest) - BBB → higher credit spread (more risky) - Interest rate will be highest for lowest credit rating (BB < BBB < A < AA < AAA)
**Macaulay Duration:** - Weighted average time to receive all cash flows - For zero coupon bond: Macaulay Duration = Maturity (exactly) - For coupon bond: Macaulay Duration < Maturity - Higher coupon → lower duration | Lower coupon → higher duration - Higher YTM → lower duration | Lower YTM → higher duration - Longer maturity → higher duration (generally) - Measures PRICE RISK in a bond
**Modified Duration (MD) = Macaulay Duration / (1 + YTM)**
**Key formula:** ``` Change in bond price ≈ -MD × Change in YTM × Bond Price ```
**Example:** Bond price = Rs 100, MD = 5.80, YTM falls 0.01% (1 basis point) ``` Change = 100 × 5.80 × 0.0001 = Rs 0.58 → New price = 100.58 ```
**Price Value of Basis Point (PVBP):** Absolute rupee change in bond price for 1 basis point change in YTM. ``` PVBP = MD × Bond Price × 0.0001 ```
Both MD and PVBP measure price risk — same concept in different units (% vs Rs).
**Term structure** = snapshot of interest rates for different maturities at ONE point in time. **Shift** = how the term structure changes over time.
**Four shapes:** 1. **Normal (Positive/Upward sloping):** Long-term rates > Short-term rates. Longer term → higher rate. Most common. Indicates economic growth expected. 2. **Inverted (Negative/Downward sloping):** Long-term rates < Short-term rates. Rate rises first then falls. High demand for short-term money (working capital), low demand for long-term capital expenditure. May indicate recession. 3. **Flat:** Long-term rate = Short-term rate. Same rate for all maturities. 4. **Humped:** Rate rises for medium term, then falls. High for medium term, falls on either side.
**Three types of shifts:** 1. **Parallel shift:** All rates move by the same amount in the same direction. No yield curve spread risk. 2. **Steepening:** Long-term minus short-term difference WIDENS (from positive to more positive, OR from negative to less negative). Anti-clockwise rotation. 3. **Flattening:** Long-term minus short-term difference NARROWS (from positive to less positive, OR from negative to more negative). Clockwise rotation.
**Yield curve spread risk:** Arises when shift is NON-PARALLEL (steepening or flattening). NOT when shift is parallel.
**What drives rates:** - Short-term rates: Driven by liquidity (RBI policy, repo rate) - Long-term rates: Driven by inflation outlook and capital expenditure demand
Applies to coupon bonds (not zero coupon).
When a bond is traded between coupon dates: - Buyer pays seller the accrued interest - Accrued interest = coupon rate × (days from last coupon date to settlement) / (days in coupon period) - Buyer gets the full coupon on next coupon date — reimburses seller for their period
**Dirty price (Full price) = Clean price + Accrued interest**
**Day count conventions:** - Actual/Actual: Use actual calendar days - 30/360: Each month = 30 days, year = 360 days - Example: Feb 28 to Mar 1 under 30/360 = 1 day (Feb 28 is treated as day 30)
**Repo = Repurchase Agreement** - **Repo from seller's perspective:** Borrow money + lend security (pledge security for cash) - **Reverse Repo from buyer's perspective:** Lend money + borrow security
Simple rule: Repo = Borrowing money against collateral (security)
**Callable bond:** Issuer has the right to prepay (redeem) before maturity. Used when rates fall — issuer can refinance at lower rates.
**Puttable bond:** Investor has the right to sell back (redeem) to issuer before maturity. Used when rates rise — investor can exit and reinvest at higher rates.
**Trap 1: "Current yield is same as YTM" — FALSE** Current yield ignores capital gain/loss at redemption. YTM accounts for it (approximately).
**Trap 2: "Zero coupon bond has no price risk" — FALSE** Zero coupon bonds have NO reinvestment risk but DO have price risk (price still changes with interest rates). In fact, duration = maturity, so they have MORE price risk than equivalent coupon bonds.
**Trap 3: "Inverted yield curve means long-term rate > short-term rate" — FALSE** Inverted = long-term LOWER than short-term. Normal = long-term HIGHER.
**Trap 4: "Parallel shift creates yield curve spread risk" — FALSE** Only non-parallel shifts (steepening/flattening) create yield curve spread risk.
**Trap 5: "High credit rating = high interest rate" — FALSE** High credit rating (AAA) = LOW interest rate (low risk premium). BBB = HIGH interest rate.
**Trap 6: "SGL account is for all investors" — FALSE** SGL = only SCBs, PDs, select FIs. Regular investors use CSGL (through SCB/PD) or Gilt Account.
**Trap 7: "An investor can have multiple Gilt Accounts" — FALSE** Maximum ONE Gilt Account per investor.
**~25% of all questions.** Term structure questions (normal/inverted/flat/humped, parallel/steepening/flattening) appear in almost every exam — 3-5 per exam. Modified duration calculations appear 2-3 times. Current yield calculations 1-2 times. SGL/CSGL/Gilt account rules 2-3 times. T-bill auction details 1-2 times. This is the chapter to invest the most study time in.