January 25th, 2007, 12:35 pm
QuoteOriginally posted by: renikusu418936, this is a great help,Does this mean that (Fwd Yld - Spot Yld) encapsulates the 'cost of carry' and the pull to par whereas just looking at the fwd price- spot price) only takes into account the 'cost of carry'? I.e if dv01 =.10;Spot-Fwd Prc = +31c = +.31/.10 bps = +3.1bps (positive carry) and Fwd Yld - Spot yld = -1.1bps (negative carry?) , this means net net I get negative carry, with pull to par of 4.2bps working against me?H.Yes and yes. A high-cpn bond will have a high dollar carry (which is good if you're long), but it'll have a high dollar price, so it'll pull to par (which is bad if you're long).In my opinion, (fwd yield - spot yield) is the best way to look at "carry", even though it includes pull to par. If I'm thinking about putting a trade on where I term the repo to a fwd date, I'll want to know how much money I'll make or lose if yields don't change, which is always a decent baseline scenario. I don't think a lot of traders think in terms of unchanged prices.