Macaulay Duration
The weighted-average time (in years) to receive all of a bond's cash flows, used as a measure of interest rate sensitivity.
What is Macaulay Duration?
Macaulay duration is the present-value-weighted average of the times at which a bond's cash flows are received. Each cash flow is weighted by its present value as a share of the bond's total price. A higher duration means more of the bond's value is concentrated in later cash flows, making it more sensitive to interest rate changes. A zero-coupon bond's Macaulay duration always equals its maturity, because there is only one cash flow at maturity. Coupon bonds have a shorter duration than their maturity. Macaulay duration is the theoretical foundation for modified duration and convexity.
Formula
Worked Example
5-year maturity, at-par (YTM = 8%)
Source: CFA Institute — Fixed Income Analysis, 3rd ed., Ch. 5 (2023-01-01)
Calculate Macaulay Duration
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
Macaulay Duration
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How to Interpret Macaulay Duration
📚 Bond Risk — Complete the path
- Macaulay Duration
- Modified Duration
- Effective Duration
- Convexity
- Duration Price Approximation