April 12th, 2003, 2:07 am
Bootstrapping basically uses short term rates to find longer term rates. Using the zero-coupon factor Taking an example to illustrate this:take Z(0,0.5) as the zero coupon factor for a payment to be recieved in half a year from, Cash Flow (0.5) as the cash flow from a treasury instrument 6 months from now and P(0) to be the price of instrument at t=0.You can consider the corresponding instrument to be the Price of a 6 month bond .P(0) = Cash flow(0.5) / Z(0,0.5)Assume that the coupon is 3%. This would imply a Cash Flow of 101.5 (as 3% is annual) for an instrument with price at t=0 of 100. Filling in our equation above, we can calculate the zero coupon factor Z(0,0.5) of 101.5/100 = 1.5bootstrapping effectively breaks up the longer periods into shorter periods so if we extend the relationship forward to 1 year:We have a similar relationship, accommodating the half year factor into the the 1 year factorP(0) = [Cash Flow(0.5) / Z(0,0.5)] + [Cash Flow(1.0) / Z(0,1.0)]As we know [Cash Flow(0.5) / Z(0,0.5)] and P(0), we can determine the Zero coupon factor for 1 year assuming we have the annual coupon rate for the 1 year instrument.And so forth.....