Convexity
The second-order measure of a bond's price sensitivity to yield changes, capturing the curvature that modified duration misses.
What is Convexity?
Convexity measures the curvature of the price-yield relationship. While modified duration approximates the bond price change as a straight line, the actual relationship is curved — a bond gains more in price when yields fall by 1% than it loses when yields rise by 1%. Positive convexity, which all standard bonds exhibit, is therefore beneficial to bondholders. Convexity is added to the duration approximation for large yield moves: ΔPrice ≈ −ModDur × ΔY × Price + 0.5 × Convexity × (ΔY)² × Price. Callable bonds can exhibit negative convexity near the call price.
Formula
Worked Example
5-year maturity, YTM = 8%
Source: CFA Institute — Fixed Income Analysis, 3rd ed., Ch. 5 (2023-01-01)
Calculate Convexity
Par value repaid at maturity
Total annual coupon in dollars
Annual YTM used as the discount rate
Remaining years until maturity
1 = annual, 2 = semi-annual
Convexity
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