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TIPS – When a Discount is Really a Premium
By Robert Huebscher
May 26, 2009

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Our article last week, Opportunities and Risks in TIPS, elicited questions from several readers regarding whether TIPS priced at a discount to par are more valuable than those priced at a premium.  The question arises for TIPS because they are protected at par at maturity – the Treasury guarantees that the final principal payment will be at least 100, offering an advantage in a deflationary environment.

For nominal Treasury bonds this question is moot.  It is relevant for TIPS in a deflationary environment but not an inflationary one.

It turns out that discount bonds are more valuable, but the market may already be pricing them appropriately.

Consider the following two 19-year TIPS, using pricing data obtained from Bloomberg at the close of business on May 22:

Coupon

Maturity

Bid Price
(32nds)

Yield

Accrued
Principal

1.750

1/15/28

90.30

2.352

101.4

3.625

4/15/28

117.27

2.439

131.4

These bonds differ in maturity by only three months and their yields differ by nine basis points.  The first is priced at a discount and the second is a seasoned issue, with substantial accrued principal, priced at a premium.

The bonds’ performance differs markedly under different deflationary assumptions, but is consistent if inflation ensues:

Assumed Annual CPI Change (%)

Discount Bond IRR (%)

Premium Bond IRR (%)

Performance Advantage of Discount Bond
(Basis Points)

-3

1.94

1.72

22

-2

2.06

1.93

13

-1

2.20

2.18

2

0

2.35

2.44

-9

1

3.37

3.46

-9

2

4.39

4.49

-10


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