Requirement 1
To Select:
If a 10-year Treasury bond with a 5% coupon rate or a 10 year T-bond with a 6% coupon rate should sell at a greater price.
Introduction:
Treasury bonds and Treasury notes are the forms of borrowing of the U.S. Government. These are coupon paying bonds that pay the interests semiannually called coupon payments. These are generally issued at or near par value. The design of these is similar to that of the coupon paying corporate bonds. The maturity of treasury notes can range up to 10 years. The Treasury bonds have a maturity anywhere between 10 to 30 years.
Requirement 2
To Select:
If a three month expiration call option with exercise price of $40 or a three month call with exercise price of $35 will sell at greater price.
Introduction:
Derivative assets are securities whose payoff depends on the other securities' prices. A call option allows buying the asset at a certain price before or on the expiration date which is specified. The specific price is referred to as the exercise price or the strike price.
Requirement 3
To Select:
If a put option of a stock selling at $50 or another stock having other features same but with put option at $60 should be sold at a greater price.
Introduction:
Derivative assets are securities whose payoff depends on the other securities' prices. A call option allows buying the asset at a certain price before or on the expiration date which is specified. The specific price is referred to as the exercise price or the strike price. Put option is the right for selling a given asset on or before a specified expiration time for a specified price called the exercise price.
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- Assume the zero-coupon yields on default-free securities are as summarized in the following table: (Click on the following icon in order to copy its contents into a spreadsheet.) Maturity (years) 1 2 3 4 5 Zero-coupon YTM 4.30% 4.70% 5.10% 5.30% 5.50% What is the price of a five-year, zero-coupon, default-free security with a face value of $1,000 Question content area bottom Part 1 The price is ___$enter your response here.(Round to the nearest cent.)arrow_forwardUse the following information to answer the question(s) below. Suppose that a default-risk-free zero-coupon bond with a face value of $100 and 5 years to maturity is currently trading at $60. Another bond with the same face value and time to maturity but at risk of defaulting sells for $30. (If this risky bond defaults, there is a 70% chance that 30% of the face value will be recovered and a 30% chance that 50% of the face value will be recovered.) Also, suppose the spread between the expected zero rates of the two bonds is 5% pa. What must be the default probability of the second bond (risky bond)? Choose the closest answer. O 47.66% 58.82% 37.32% None of the other answers are correct. O 67.23%arrow_forwardConsider a $1,000-par-value Bond with the following characteristics: a current market price of $761, 12 years until maturity, and an 8% coupon rate. We want to determine the discount rate that sets the present value of the bond’s expected future cash-flow stream to the bond’s current market price. You are required to determine the discount rate that equates the present value of the bond?arrow_forward
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- Assume the zero-coupon yields on default-free securities are as summarized in the following table: in order to copy its contents into a spreadsheet.) Maturity (years) 1 2 3 4 5 Zero-coupon YTM 6.00% 6.40% 6.70% 7.10% 7.40% What is the price of a five-year, zero-coupon, default-free security with a face value of $1,000? (Click on the following iconarrow_forwardConsider a coupon bond, period t = 0 price $900, with payments: t=0 1 2 3 50 50 1050 Discount (zero coupon) bonds of 1, 2 and 3 years maturity (all with maturity value of $1000) sell for respectively, 960, 900, 820 dollars. Is this coupon bond properly priced? If not, design an arbitrage argument to profit by the mispricing.arrow_forwardNetflux is selling for $105 a share. A Netflux call option with one month until expiration and an exercise price of $121 sells for $2.30 while a put with the same strike and expiration sells for $17.40. a. What is the market price of a zero-coupon bond with face value $121 and 1-month maturity? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places.) Market price b. What is the risk-free interest rate expressed as an effective annual yield? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places.) Risk-free interest ratearrow_forward
- Which of the following statements correctly describes the sensitivity of a bond’s price to a change in market yields? Group of answer choices A. The price of a zero-coupon bond with four years until expiry is going to be more sensitive to changes in market yields than the price of a coupon paying bond issued by the same company with the same term to expiry. B. Holding all other factors constant, the longer the term to expiry, the less sensitive a bond’s price is to changing market yields. C. Holding all other factors constant, the higher the coupon rate, the more sensitive is a bond’s price to changing market yields. D. More than one of the other statements are correct.arrow_forwardBonds. What is the relationship between the price of a bond and its YTM? All else being the same, which has more interest rate risk, a long-term bond or a short-term bond? What about a low coupon bond compared to a high coupon bond? What about a long-term, high coupon compared to a short-term, low coupon bond? Why?arrow_forwardGive typing answer with explanation and conclusionarrow_forward
- Intermediate Financial Management (MindTap Course...FinanceISBN:9781337395083Author:Eugene F. Brigham, Phillip R. DavesPublisher:Cengage Learning