Yield Curve – Vasicek Model

File Name: Yield Curve – Vasicek Model

Location: Modeling Toolkit | Yield Curve | Vasicek Model

Brief Description: Creates the term structure of interest rates and reconstructs the yield curve assuming the underlying interest rates are mean-reverting and stochastic

Requirements: Modeling Toolkit, Risk Simulator

Modeling Toolkit Function Used: MTVasicekBondYield

A Vasicek model is used to compute the term structure of interest rates and yield curve; it assumes a mean-reverting stochastic interest rate. The rate of reversion and long-run mean rates can be determined using Risk Simulator’s Statistical Analysis tool. If the long-run rate is higher than the current short rate, the yield curve is upward sloping, and vice versa.

The yield curve is the time-series relationship between interest rates and the time to maturity of some underlying debt. The more formal mathematical description of this relationship is called the term structure of interest rates. The yield curve can take on various shapes. In the normal yield curve, yields rise as maturity lengthens and the yield curve is positively sloped, reflecting investor expectations for the economy to grow in the future (and hence an expectation that inflation rates will rise in the future). An inverted yield curve occurs when the long-term yields fall below short-term yields, and long-term investors settle for lower yields now if they think the economy will slow or even decline in the future, indicative of a worsening economic situation in the future (and hence an expectation that inflation will remain low in the future). Another potential situation is a flat yield curve, signaling uncertainty in the economy. The yield curve also can be humped or show a smile or a frown. The yield curve over time can change in shape through a twist or bend, a parallel shift, or a movement on one end versus another.

As the yield curve is related to inflation rates, and as central banks in most countries have the ability to control monetary policy to target inflation rates, inflation rates are mean-reverting in nature. This also implies that interest rates are mean-reverting as well as stochastically changing over time.

In a 1977 paper, a Czech mathematician, Oldrich Vasicek, proved that bond prices on a yield curve over time and various maturities are driven by the short end of the yield curve, or the short-term interest rates, using a risk-neutral martingale measure. In his work the mean-reverting Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process was assumed, hence the resulting Vasicek model requires that a mean-reverting interest rate process be modeled (rate of mean reversion and long-run mean rates are both inputs in the Vasicek model). See Figure 169.1.

 

Figure 169.1: Using the Vasicek model to generate a yield curve 




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