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laura Mathews recently hired Robert Smith, an investment adviser at Shire Gate Advisers, to assist her in investing. Mathews states that her investment time horizon is short, approximately two years or less. Smith gathers information on spot rates for on-the-run annual-coupon gov-ernment securities and swap spreads, as presented in Exhibit 1. Shire Gate Advisers recently
published a report for its clients stating its belief that, based on the weakness in the financial markets, interest rates will remain stable, the yield curve will not change its level or shape for the next two years, and swap spreads will also remain unchanged.
ExHIbIT 1 Government Spot Rates and Swap Spreads
Smith decides to examine the following three investment options for Mathews:
Investment 1: Buy a government security that would have an annualized return that is nearly risk free. Smith is considering two possible implementations: a two-year investment or a combination of two one-year investments.
Investment 2: Buy a four-year, zero-coupon corporate bond and then sell it after two years. Smith illustrates the returns from this strategy using the swap rate as a proxy for corporate yields.
Investment 3: Buy a lower-quality, two-year corporate bond with a coupon rate of and a Z-spread of 65 bps.
When Smith meets with Mathews to present these choices, Mathews tells him that she is somewhat confused by the various spread measures. She is curious to know whether there is one spread measure that could be used as a good indicator of the risk and liquidity of money market securities during the recent past.
-In presenting Investment 1, using Shire Gate Advisers' interest rate outlook, Smith could show that riding the yield curve provides a total return that is most likely:
Carrying Value
The book value of an asset or liability on a company's balance sheet, representing its value according to accounting standards.
Unrealized Gain
A profit that results from an investment that has increased in value but has not yet been sold for cash.
Acquisition Differential
The gap between what a company is bought for and the true worth of its recognizable assets and debts.
Goodwill Impairment
Goodwill impairment occurs when the market value of a company's goodwill asset falls below its book value, indicating that the asset is overvalued on the balance sheet.
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