An affine term structure model is a
financial model
Financial modeling is the task of building an abstraction, abstract representation (a mathematical model, model) of a real world finance, financial situation. This is a mathematical model designed to represent (a simplified version of) the perfor ...
that relates
zero-coupon bond
A zero coupon bond (also discount bond or deep discount bond) is a bond in which the face value is repaid at the time of maturity. Unlike regular bonds, it does not make periodic interest payments or have so-called coupons, hence the term zero ...
prices (i.e. the discount curve) to a
spot rate
In finance, a spot contract, spot transaction, or simply spot, is a contract of buying or selling a commodity, security or currency for immediate settlement (payment and delivery) on the spot date, which is normally two business days after the ...
model. It is particularly useful for deriving the
yield curve – the process of determining spot rate model inputs from observable
bond market data. The affine class of term structure models implies the convenient form that log bond prices are linear functions of the spot rate (and potentially additional state variables).
Background
Start with a stochastic
short rate model
with dynamics:
:
and a risk-free zero-coupon bond maturing at time
with price
at time
. The price of a zero-coupon bond is given by:
where
, with
being is the bond's maturity. The expectation is taken with respect to the
risk-neutral probability measure . If the bond's price has the form:
:
where
and
are deterministic functions, then the short rate model is said to have an affine term structure. The yield of a bond with maturity
, denoted by
, is given by:
Feynman-Kac formula
For the moment, we have not yet figured out how to explicitly compute the bond's price; however, the bond price's definition implies a link to the
Feynman-Kac formula, which suggests that the bond's price may be explicitly modeled by a
partial differential equation
In mathematics, a partial differential equation (PDE) is an equation which imposes relations between the various partial derivatives of a Multivariable calculus, multivariable function.
The function is often thought of as an "unknown" to be sol ...
. Assuming that the bond price is a function of
latent factors leads to the PDE:
where
is the
covariance matrix
In probability theory and statistics, a covariance matrix (also known as auto-covariance matrix, dispersion matrix, variance matrix, or variance–covariance matrix) is a square matrix giving the covariance between each pair of elements of ...
of the latent factors where the latent factors are driven by an Ito
stochastic differential equation in the risk-neutral measure:
Assume a solution for the bond price of the form:
The derivatives of the bond price with respect to maturity and each latent factor are:
With these derivatives, the PDE may be reduced to a series of ordinary differential equations:
To compute a closed-form solution requires additional specifications.
Existence
Using
Ito's formula we can determine the constraints on
and
which will result in an affine term structure. Assuming the bond has an affine term structure and
satisfies the
term structure equation, we get:
:
The boundary value
:
implies
:
Next, assume that
and
are affine in
:
:
The differential equation then becomes
:
Because this formula must hold for all
,
,
, the coefficient of
must equal zero.
:
Then the other term must vanish as well.
:
Then, assuming
and
are affine in
, the model has an affine term structure where
and
satisfy the system of equations:
:
Models with ATS
Vasicek
The
Vasicek model
In finance, the Vasicek model is a mathematical model describing the evolution of interest rates. It is a type of one-factor short-rate model as it describes interest rate movements as driven by only one source of market risk. The model can be u ...
has an affine term structure where
:
Arbitrage-Free Nelson-Siegel
One approach to affine term structure modeling is to enforce an
arbitrage-free condition on the proposed model. In a series of papers, a proposed dynamic yield curve model was developed using an arbitrage-free version of the famous Nelson-Siegel model,
which the authors label AFNS. To derive the AFNS model, the authors make several assumptions:
# There are three latent factors corresponding to the ''level'', ''slope'', and ''curvature'' of the
yield curve
# The latent factors evolve according to multivariate
Ornstein-Uhlenbeck processes. The particular specifications differ based on the measure being used:
##
(Real-world measure
)
##
(Risk-neutral measure
)
# The volatility matrix
is diagonal
# The short rate is a function of the level and slope (
)
From the assumed model of the zero-coupon bond price: