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  2. Duration (finance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duration_(finance)

    This will give modified duration a numerical value close to the Macaulay duration (and equal when rates are continuously compounded). Formally, modified duration is a semi- elasticity , the percent change in price for a unit change in yield, rather than an elasticity , which is a percentage change in output for a percentage change in input.

  3. Bond convexity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bond_convexity

    Therefore, increases in r must decrease the duration (or, in the case of zero-coupon bonds, leave the unmodified duration constant). [13] [14] Note that the modified duration D differs from the regular duration by the factor one over 1 + r (shown above), which also decreases as r is increased.

  4. Stock duration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stock_duration

    The duration of an equity is a noisy analogue of the Macaulay duration of a bond, due to the variability and unpredictability of dividend payments. The duration of a stock or the stock market is implied rather than deterministic. Duration of the U.S. stock market as a whole, and most individual stocks within it, is many years to a few decades.

  5. Fixed-income attribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed-income_attribution

    The modified duration of a bond assumes that cash flows do not change in response to movements in the term structure, which is not the case for an MBS. For instance, when rates fall, the rate of prepayments will probably rise and the duration of the MBS will also fall, which is entirely the opposite behavior to a vanilla bond.

  6. TLT vs. Shorter-Duration Bond ETFs: Which Should You ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/tlt-vs-shorter-duration-bond...

    With a nice 4.13% yield and an average bond duration of 1.9 years, the VGSH ETF stands out as a "safer" option for retirees to park cash in. It's an incredibly liquid ETF with millions of shares ...

  7. Duration gap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duration_gap

    Formally, the duration gap is the difference between the duration - i.e. the average maturity - of assets and liabilities held by a financial entity. [3] A related approach is to see the "duration gap" as the difference in the price sensitivity of interest-yielding assets and the price sensitivity of liabilities (of the organization) to a change in market interest rates (yields).

  8. What Is the Marginal vs. Effective Tax Rate? - AOL

    www.aol.com/marginal-vs-effective-tax-rate...

    Your effective tax rate is the combined percentage of your total income that you pay as income tax. In other words, it’s the average among the several different marginal rates many people pay on ...

  9. Floating rate note - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_rate_note

    The effective spread is the average margin over the benchmark rate that is expected to be earned over the life of the security. For a floating rate note selling at par value, the effective margin is merely the contractual spread over the benchmark rate specified in the note's prospectus.