Modified Duration
What it is
Modified duration measures a bond’s price sensitivity to changes in interest rates. It estimates the approximate percentage change in a bond’s price for a 100-basis-point (1 percentage point) change in yield, assuming small changes and a parallel shift in the yield curve. It is derived from Macaulay duration and is widely used for risk management, portfolio construction, and interest-rate exposure analysis.
Key formulae
- Modified duration:
Modified Duration = Macaulay Duration / (1 + YTM / n)
where:
* Macaulay Duration = weighted average time (in years) to receive the bond’s cash flows
* YTM = yield to maturity (expressed as a decimal)
* n = number of coupon periods per year
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- Macaulay duration (practical form):
Macaulay Duration = (Σ (PV of CF at t × t)) / Market Price
where PV of CF at t is the present value of the cash flow at time t, and t is time in years.
How to calculate (step by step)
- Compute the market price by discounting each coupon and the principal at the bond’s YTM.
- Compute the present value of each cash flow and multiply each by its time t (in years).
- Sum those PV×t products and divide by the market price to get Macaulay duration (years).
- Convert to modified duration by dividing Macaulay duration by (1 + YTM / n).
Modified duration is expressed in years but interpreted as a percentage price change: a modified duration of 3 implies roughly a 3% price change for a 1% change in yields (inverse direction).
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Example
A $1,000 face-value bond, 3-year maturity, 10% annual coupon, YTM = 5% (annual):
- Market price:
- Year 1 coupon PV = 100 / 1.05 = 95.24
- Year 2 coupon PV = 100 / 1.05^2 = 90.70
- Year 3 coupon + principal PV = 1,100 / 1.05^3 = 950.22
-
Market price = 95.24 + 90.70 + 950.22 = $1,136.16
-
Macaulay duration:
-
(95.24 × 1 + 90.70 × 2 + 950.22 × 3) / 1,136.16 = 2.753 years
-
Modified duration (n = 1):
- 2.753 / (1 + 0.05) = 2.622
Interpretation: For a 1% increase in yields, the bond’s price would fall by about 2.62% (and rise by about 2.62% for a 1% decrease), ignoring convexity.
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What modified duration tells you
- It quantifies interest-rate risk: higher modified duration → greater price volatility for a given change in yields.
- Useful for:
- Estimating price impact from interest-rate moves
- Constructing/immunizing portfolios to a target interest-rate exposure
- Comparing sensitivity across bonds
Key principles
- Longer maturity → higher duration (more sensitivity).
- Higher coupon → lower duration (less sensitivity), because more cash flows arrive earlier.
- Higher yield → lower duration (reduced sensitivity), since future cash flows are discounted more heavily.
Limitations
- Linear approximation: accurate for small yield changes; for larger moves use convexity-adjusted estimates.
- Assumes parallel yield-curve shifts; does not capture non-parallel or shape changes.
- Bonds with embedded options (callable/putable) require option-adjusted duration measures.
Quick FAQs
- Difference between Macaulay and modified duration?
- Macaulay duration is the weighted average time to cash flows (in years). Modified duration converts that into a price-sensitivity measure (approximate % price change per 1% change in yield).
- Do zero-coupon bonds pay interest?
- No. Zero-coupon bonds pay no periodic coupons and trade at a discount; their duration equals their time to maturity (and modified duration = maturity / (1 + YTM/n)).
Bottom line
Modified duration is a practical, widely used metric for estimating how bond prices respond to interest-rate changes. It helps investors quantify and manage interest-rate risk, but it is a first-order (linear) approximation and should be used with awareness of its assumptions and limitations.