EC233 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Liquidity Premium, Substitute Good

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Three classes of theories to explain the three facts: expectations theory (1 & 2, segmented-markets theory (3, preferred habitat, and liquidity premium theories (1, 2 & 3) Theory implies that bond holders consider bonds with different maturities to be perfect substitutes. According to this theory, bonds of all different maturities are not substitutes at all. The interest rate for each bond with a different maturity is determined by the equilibrium of demand for and supply of that bond, without any connections to markets for bonds of other maturities. If investors generally prefer bonds with shorter maturities that have less interest-rate risk, then this explains why yield curves usually slope upward. In these two theories, bond rates are determined in part by the expectations theory, but the interest rate on a long-term bond plus a liquidity premium. Bonds on different maturities are partial as opposed to perfect substitutes. There is a non-zero and variable term premium lnt.

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