EP ECONOMICS,AP EDITION-CONNECT ACCESS
20th Edition
ISBN: 9780021403455
Author: McConnell
Publisher: MCGRAW-HILL HIGHER EDUCATION
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Question
Chapter 16, Problem 3P
To determine
Interest rate for an infinity time period.
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Chapter 16 Solutions
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- The demand D (in billions of £) for a bond with coupon rate 5% and face value FV = 1000, and two years to maturity as a function of its price P is D = 4000 − 2P. The supply in (billions of £)as a function of the price of the bond is S = 2P + 400. b) Suppose that the yield to maturity of the bond is i = 0.05. What is the quantity demanded/supplied at this interest rate? What happens to the demand/supply of the bond as the interest rate increases? Explain why. c) What is the equilibrium interest rate? d) Suppose that the bond trades at premium. Is there excess demand or supply? Explain. e) There is a business cycle contraction, so both supply and demand shifts. After the shift, the new demand curve is given by: D = 4000 + X − 2P , whereas the new supply curve is S = 2P + 200. For which values of X will the interest increase/decrease? Which values of X are in line with empirical data?arrow_forwardThe demand D (in billions of £) for a bond with coupon rate 5% and face value FV = 1000, and two years to maturity as a function of its price P is D = 4000 − 2P. The supply in (billions of £)as a function of the price of the bond is S = 2P + 400. b) Suppose that the yield to maturity of the bond is i = 0.05. What is the quantity demanded/supplied at this interest rate? What happens to the demand/supply of the bond as the interest rate increases? Explain why. c) What is the equilibrium interest rate? d) Suppose that the bond trades at premium. Is there excess demand or supply? Explain. e) There is a business cycle contraction, so both supply and demand shifts. After the shift, the new demand curve is given by: D = 4000 + X − 2P , whereas the new supply curve is S = 2P + 200. For which values of X will the interest increase/decrease? Which values of X are in line with empirical data? Please show all the steps and equations used to get to the answers.arrow_forwardThe price of a bond with no expiration date is originally $1,000 and has a fixed annual interest payment of $150. If the price of the bond then falls by $250, what will be the interest rate yield to a new buyer of the bond?arrow_forward
- If a financial asset that is valued at $18,455 in the Stock Market today would be worth $39,200 in 2 years’ time, what would have been the prevailing interest rate in the financial market?arrow_forwardA zero-coupon bond is a bond that is sold for less than its face value (that is, it is discounted) and has no periodic interest payments. Instead, the bond is redeemed for its face value at maturity. Thus, in this sense, interest is paid at maturity. Suppose that a zero-coupon bond sells for $8,500 and can be redeemed in 20-years for its face value of $38,000. What is the annual compound rate of return? Annual compound rate = % (Round to two decimal places as needed.)arrow_forwardSuppose a(t) = 0.0015 (t-3)4 +0.042 (1-2)³ + 1.2145. Calculate values of a(t) and the effective rate of interest, i, for integer values of t from 0 to 50 (no need for an effective rate at t = 0). Then graph the values of the effective rates of interest Round the a(t) values to 3 decimal points and round the interest rates to 2 decimal in percentage form. pointsarrow_forward
- Jane, who works for the economic research department in a multinational corporation, is preparing a report for the advisory board of the company. The report intends to clarify in which country they should invest given the expected change in demand. The objective is, of course, to identify the country with greater change in demand. Jane analyzes countries A and B that currently have the same demand. She calculates the partial derivatives of demand with respect to income and finds that for country A it is greater than for country B. Demand in country A is measured in pounds and in country B in Kg. Can we conclude that if the only change expected in both countries is a change in income of 3.5%, then the company should invest in country A? no, we should calculate instead the income elasticity for the consumption of the good the company sells in each country. There is no statistic that can illuminate the advisory board on this problem. yes, because the derivative tells us that for each…arrow_forwardFor each of the following pairs, which bond would you expect to pay a higher interest rate? Explain! a). a bond of the U.S. government or a bond of an East European government b). a bond that repays the principal in year 2015 or a bond that repays the principal in year 2040 c). a bond from Coca-Cola or a bond from a software company you run in your garage d). a bond issued by the federal government or a bond issued by New York Statearrow_forwardDell Computer makes its suppliers wait 37 days on average to be paid for their goods; however, Dell is paid by its customers immediately. Thus, Dell earns interest on this float, the money that it is implicitly borrowing. If Dell can earn an annual interest rate of 4%, what is this float worth to Dell per dollar spent on inputs?arrow_forward
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