Dollar Duration

Dollar Duration

The dollar duration measures the dollar change in a bond's value to a change in the market interest rate. >              Dollar Duration = DUR x (∆i/1+ i) x P DUR = the bond's straight duration ∆i = change in interest rates i = current interest rate; and P = bond price While dollar duration refers to an individual bond price, the sum of the weighted bond dollar durations in a portfolio is the portfolio dollar duration. Dollar duration differs from Macaulay duration and modified duration in that modified duration is a price sensitivity measure of the yield change, meaning it is a good measure of volatility, and Macaulay duration uses the coupon rate and size plus the yield to maturity to assess the sensitivity of a bond. To calculate the dollar duration of a bond you need to know its duration, the current interest rate, and the change in interest rates. As duration measures quantify the sensitivity of a bond's price to interest rate changes, dollar duration seeks to report these changes as an actual dollar amount.

Dollar duration is used by bond fund managers to measure a portfolio's interest rate risk in nominal, or dollar-amount terms.

What is the Dollar Duration

The dollar duration measures the dollar change in a bond's value to a change in the market interest rate. The dollar duration is used by professional bond fund managers as a way of approximating the portfolio's interest rate risk.

Dollar duration is one of several different measurements of bond's duration, As duration measures quantify the sensitivity of a bond's price to interest rate changes, dollar duration seeks to report these changes as an actual dollar amount. 

Dollar duration is used by bond fund managers to measure a portfolio's interest rate risk in nominal, or dollar-amount terms.
Dollar duration calculations can be used to calculate risk for many fixed income products such as forwards, par rates, zero-coupon bonds, etc.
There are two main limitations to dollar durations: it may result in an approximation; and it assumes that bonds have fixed rates with fixed interval payments.

Basics of Dollar Duration

Dollar duration, sometimes called money duration or DV01, is based on a linear approximation of how a bond's value will change in response to changes in interest rates. The actual relationship between a bond's value and interest rates is not linear. Therefore, dollar duration is an imperfect measure of interest rate sensitivity, and it will only provide an accurate calculation for small changes in interest rates.

Mathematically, the dollar duration measures the change in the value of a bond portfolio for every 100 basis point change in interest rates. Dollar duration is often referred to formally as DV01 (i.e. dollar value per 01). Remember, 0.01 is equivalent to 1 percent, which is often denoted as 100 basis points (bps). To calculate the dollar duration of a bond you need to know its duration, the current interest rate, and the change in interest rates.

             Dollar Duration = DUR x (∆i/1+ i) x P

While dollar duration refers to an individual bond price, the sum of the weighted bond dollar durations in a portfolio is the portfolio dollar duration. Dollar duration can be applied to other fixed income products as well that have prices that vary with interest rate moves.

Dollar Duration vs. Other Duration Methods

Dollar duration differs from Macaulay duration and modified duration in that modified duration is a price sensitivity measure of the yield change, meaning it is a good measure of volatility, and Macaulay duration uses the coupon rate and size plus the yield to maturity to assess the sensitivity of a bond. Dollar duration, on the other hand, provides a straightforward dollar-amount computation given a 1% change in rates.

Limitations of Dollar Duration

Dollar duration has its limitations. Firstly, because it is a negative sloping linear line and it assumes the yield curve moves in parallels the result is only an approximation. However, if you have a large bond portfolio, the approximation becomes less of a limitation.

Another limitation is that the dollar duration calculation assumes the bond has fixed rates with fixed interval payments. However, interest rates for bonds differ based on market conditions as well as the introduction of synthetic instruments.

Related terms:

Basis Points (BPS)

Basis points (BPS) refers to a common unit of measure for interest rates and other percentages in finance. read more

Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is

A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more

Bond Fund

A bond fund invests primarily in bonds (government, corporate, municipal, convertible) and other debt instruments to generate monthly income. read more

Convexity Adjustment

A convexity adjustment is a change required to be made to a forward interest rate or yield to get the expected future interest rate or yield. read more

Convexity

Convexity is a measure of the relationship between bond prices and bond yields that shows how a bond's duration changes with interest rates. read more

Duration

Duration indicates the years it takes to receive a bond's true cost, weighing in the present value of all future coupon and principal payments. read more

Fixed Income & Examples

Fixed income refers to assets and securities that bear fixed cash flows for investors, such as fixed rate interest or dividends. read more

Interest Rate Sensitivity

Interest rate sensitivity is a measure of how much the price of a fixed-income asset will fluctuate as a result of changes in interest rates. read more

Interest Rate Risk

Interest rate risk is the danger that the value of a bond or other fixed-income investment will suffer as the result of a change in interest rates. read more

Macaulay Duration

The Macaulay duration is the weighted average term to maturity of the cash flows from a bond.  read more