Relationship of Bond Prices to Changes in Maturity and Coupon
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 Carla's bonds and the $1,000 magnet
- 1:31 Pull to par for discount and premium bonds
- 2:28 Extending maturities when rates are falling
- 3:42 Laddered portfolios versus bullet strategies
- 4:54 Zero coupon bonds and the desert trek
- 6:14 The volatility spectrum, most to least risky
- 7:30 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- Why pull to par is automatic: discount bonds rise toward $1,000 and premium bonds fall toward $1,000 regardless of what prevailing rates do
- How long-term bonds swing harder than short-term bonds when interest rates move, and why that drives every portfolio strategy question on the exam
- When to extend maturities (expecting rates to fall) versus shorten maturities (expecting rates to rise) to manage interest rate risk
- Why a laddered portfolio requires no rate forecast, and how it differs from a bullet strategy built around a single known cash need
- Why low-coupon and zero-coupon bonds are more sensitive to rate changes than high-coupon bonds for the same maturity
- Why a zero-coupon bond has the maximum duration for its maturity, since 100% of cash flow lands at the end
- The golden rule of bond volatility: longest maturity plus lowest coupon equals the greatest interest rate risk
Read the full lesson, free
This video's complete written lesson is free to read in the CertFuel app, no signup wall. When you're ready to drill the topic, the full Series 7 course adds adaptive practice questions and spaced-repetition flashcards.