Valuation of Callable/Putable Corporate Bonds in a One-Factor Lognormal Interest-Rate Model

Whereas the callable-bond market used to emphasize primarily public debt—government agencies and investment grade and non-investment grade corporate debt—that has changed dramatically over the past 20 years, in part due to the low prevailing rates of interest as well as some systematic changes in th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of fixed income Vol. 31; no. 1; pp. 80 - 95
Main Authors: Goldberg, Robert S., Ronn, Ehud I., Xu, Liying
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: London Pageant Media 01-07-2021
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Summary:Whereas the callable-bond market used to emphasize primarily public debt—government agencies and investment grade and non-investment grade corporate debt—that has changed dramatically over the past 20 years, in part due to the low prevailing rates of interest as well as some systematic changes in the agency sector. While some agency and investment grade corporate bonds are still extant, there are more numerous callable bonds of lower ratings categories. In delivering a theoretically sound practical model, one that does not call for computation or use of an option-adjusted spread, the article seeks to use a one-factor lognormal interest rate model to calibrate the implied vols of callable and putable bonds in the US bond market and to relate those implied volatilities to measures of time to call, time from call to maturity, moneyness, and the credit-yield spread. TOPICS: Fixed income and structured finance, derivatives, options, quantitative methods, statistical methods Key Findings ▪ Valuation of callable and putable bonds in a theoretically sound practical model that does not use “option-adjusted spreads.” ▪ A one-factor lognormal interest-rate model is used to calibrate implied vols of callable and putable bonds in the US corporate and agency bond markets. ▪ Volatility calibration uses observed bonds’ market prices to elicit dependence of priced volatility on time to first call, time from call to maturity, moneyness, and the credit-yield spread.
ISSN:1059-8596
2168-8648
DOI:10.3905/jfi.2021.1.111