This question deals with bootstrapping and spot rates, you are given Exhibit 1 and 2 then asked which of three bond prices is correct.
Exhibit 1
Three-Year, €100 par, 3.00% Coupon, Annual Pay Option-Free Bond
Exhibit 2
Yield to Maturity Par Rates for One-, Two-, and Three-Year Annual Pay Option-Free Bonds
One-year Two-year Three-year 1.25% 1.50% 1.70% The answer is C 103.7815 Euros What I don’t understand is why Year 2 spot rate (z2): 100 = 1.5/1.0125 + 101.5/(1+z2)^2 = 0.015019 why is the coupon 1.5? Is that the BEY is that the Two-year YTM, it says in exhibit one a 3.0% coupon so I want to use 3 as the coupon. I’ve looked elsewhere online and I haven’t come up with a solid explination.
Remember what a par curve is: the coupon rate for bonds priced at par. Thus, the par rate for a given bond is its YTM (a bond will be priced at par if its coupon equals its YTM).
So, a 2-year bond priced at par will have a 1.50% coupon. A 3-year bond priced at par will have a 1.70% coupon.