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Phenomenology of the Interest Curve: A Statistical Analysis of Term Structure Deformations

Jean-Philippe Bouchaud
Centre d'Etudes de Saclay (CEA) - Service de Physique de l'Etat Condense (SPEC); Capital Fund Management - Department of Science and Finance

Nicholas Sagna
Credit Suisse First Boston Fixed Income Research

Rama Cont
Columbia University - Center for Financial Engineering; Columbia University - Department of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research (IEOR)

Nicole El Karoui
Ecole Polytechnique, Paris - Centre de Mathematiques Appliquees

Marc Potters
Capital Fund Management - Department of Science and Finance


December 1997


Abstract:     
This paper contains a statistical description of the whole U.S. forward rate curve (FRC), based on data from the period 1990-1996. We find that the average deviation of the FRC from the spot rate grows as the square-root of the maturity, with a proportionality constant which is comparable to the spot rate volatility. This suggests that forward rate market prices include a risk premium, comparable to the probable changes of the spot rate between now and maturity, which can be understood as a `Value-at-Risk' type of pricing. The instantaneous FRC however departs from a simple square-root law. The distortion is maximum around one year, and reflects the market anticipation of a local trend on the spot rate. This anticipated trend is shown to be calibrated on the past behavior of the spot itself. We show that this is consistent with the volatility `hump' around one year found by several authors (and which we confirm). Finally, the number of independent components needed to interpret most of the FRC fluctuations is found to be small. We rationalize this by showing that the dynamical evolution of the FRC contains a stabilizing second derivative (line tension) term, which tends to suppress short scale distortions of the FRC, suggesting an analogy with the motion of a vibrating string subject to random perturbations. This shape dependent term could lead, in principle, to arbitrage. However, this arbitrage cannot be implemented in practice because of transaction costs. We suggest that the presence of transaction costs (or other market `imperfections') is crucial for model building, for a much wider class of models becomes eligible to represent reality.

JEL Classifications: E43, C51

Working Paper Series

Date posted: February 10, 1998 ; Last revised: May 15, 1998

Suggested Citation

Bouchaud , Jean-Philippe , Sagna, Nicholas, Cont, Rama, El Karoui, Nicole and Potters, Marc, Phenomenology of the Interest Curve: A Statistical Analysis of Term Structure Deformations (December 1997). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=58470 or doi:10.2139/ssrn.58470


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Contact Information

Jean-Philippe Bouchaud (Contact Author)
Centre d'Etudes de Saclay (CEA) - Service de Physique de l'Etat Condense (SPEC) ( email )
Orme des Meurisiers
91191 Gif-sur-Yvette cedex France
+33 1 69 08 73 45 (Phone)
+33 1 69 08 87 86 (Fax)
Capital Fund Management - Department of Science and Finance ( email )
109-111 rue Victor Hugo
Levallois 92532 France
+33 1 69 08 73 45 (Phone)
+33 1 69 08 87 86 (Fax)
Rama Cont
Columbia University - Center for Financial Engineering ( email )
500 W120th St
New York, NY 10027
United States
HOME PAGE: http://www.cfe.columbia.edu/
Columbia University - Department of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research (IEOR) ( email )
331 S.W. Mudd Building
500 West 120th Street
New York, NY 10027
United States
HOME PAGE: http://www.cfe.columbia.edu
Nicole El Karoui
Ecole Polytechnique, Paris - Centre de Mathematiques Appliquees ( email )
Palaiseau 91128 Cedex France
(33) 1 69 33 41 48 (Phone)
(33) 1 69 33 70 31 (Fax)
Marc Potters
Capital Fund Management - Department of Science and Finance ( email )
6 boul Haussmann
Paris 75009
France
+33 1 49 49 59 10 (Phone)
+33 1 47 70 17 40 (Fax)
HOME PAGE: http://www.cfm.fr
Nicolas Sagna
Credit Suisse First Boston Fixed Income Research ( email )
11 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10010
United States
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