March 31st, 2016, 9:05 pm
People fully project both accrual and projection end dates (so the two may differ for particular swap resets) but they will reprice without reference to convexity adjustments.Yes, the OP is quite correct that you end up with particular resets not being paid on the "natural date" for the underlying libor, but practically speaking there are plenty of other disturbances to projection levels that are more important to capture (year-end turns for all, more frequent turns for many). So the convexity adjustment is dropped in favour of concentrating on the other, more important problems.Nowadays, more than ever, you want your curve bootstrap to be as simple as possible, because you've got OIS discounting chucked into the mix. People tend to set up their pricing at the frontier of the overall complexity they can handle and so everything has to pay its way. Convexity corrections for yield curve libor projections tend to show comparatively poorly in terms of added complexity vs benefit.