ECON 161A Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Future Movement, Business Cycle, Interest Rate Risk

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Review: expectations theory it = current one year bond rate ie t+1 = one year bond rate expected in one year. The yield curve became downward sloping in 1975"s because the 3 year t-bill rose above the longer 10 and 30 year t-bonds (short term bond rates rose above average) and becomes upward sloping again as the t-bill falls. Goods that can stand in for each other but they"re not identical. Longer term bonds are subject to greater uncertainty and interest rate risk. If you have a one month t-bill, the interest rate doesn"t fluctuate much in one month. Market for long-term bonds is less liquid; if you own a 20 year treasury bond, it"s harder to sell that bond than it is a one month or three month treasury bill. They require a liquidity premium for bonds that are less liquid: this yield that is tacked onto longer term bonds.

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