<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>				<article id="713169861"><artname>Properties of Bond Duration</artname><image file="603184_ec.jpg" align="left" alt="Photo of a White Mailbox" /><p>By definition, <glossary def="A measurement of the life of a bond on a present value basis." primary="Duration">duration</glossary> measures the number of years required to recover the true cost of a <glossary def="A legal document that is a promise to repay borrowed principal along with interest on a specified schedule or certain date (the bond's maturity). Federal, state, and local governments, corporations, and other types of institutions raise capital by selling bonds to investors." primary="Bond">bond</glossary>, considering the <glossary def="The amount of money invested today at a certain rate of return needed to purchase goods at a specific point in the future." primary="Present Value">present value</glossary> of all <glossary def="The interest rate on a bond. It is called a coupon rate because of the traditional, attached coupon that must be surrendered in order to receive the interest. Today, many bonds come without the attached coupon." primary="Coupon Rate">coupon</glossary> and <glossary def="1. The amount borrowed, or the part of the amount borrowed that remains unpaid (not including future interest). 2. The part of a monthly payment that reduces the outstanding balance of a mortgage or other loan. 3. The original investment amount of a security. 4. In banking terms, principal is the original deposit or loan on which interest is earned or paid." primary="Principal">principal</glossary> payments received in the <nodef>future</nodef>. Thus, the higher the coupon rate of a particular bond, the shorter its duration <nodef>will</nodef> be. In other words, the more <glossary def="The medium of exchange used in trade or commerce." primary="Money">money</glossary> coming in now (because of a higher rate), the faster the cost of the bond <nodef>will</nodef> be recovered. The same is true of higher <glossary def="The rate of return on an investment, described as a percentage of the amount of the investment. For example, a $1,000 bond with a 7 percent yield would pay out 7 percent of $1,000, or $70 per year." primary="Yield">yields</glossary>. Again, the more a bond yields in today's dollars, the faster the bondholder <nodef>will</nodef> recover its cost.</p><p>Conversely, longer <glossary def="The date on which a debt or other negotiable instrument comes due and must be paid." primary="Maturity">bond maturities</glossary> mean longer durations, since the fixed <glossary def="A charge for using another's money. Interest is usually stated as a percentage of the amount borrowed and can be charged in a variety of ways, such as accrual, compounding, or simple interest." primary="Interest">interest</glossary> payments <nodef>will</nodef> be <nodef>spread</nodef> over longer periods and <nodef>will</nodef> be more greatly affected by <glossary def="A rise in the general price level of goods and services; inflation is the opposite of deflation. The Consumer Price Index and the Producer Price Index are the most common measures of inflation. As a probable result of inflation, labor asks for higher wages to buy more, prices rise to meet those wages, and inflation becomes a cycle." primary="Inflation">inflation</glossary>. This is best illustrated by imagining a fixed amount of money, for example $1,000, being mailed to you in small payments over time. If these payments are <nodef>spread</nodef> over a one-year period, you <nodef>will</nodef> "recover" your money faster than if the same dollar amount were <nodef>spread</nodef> over a five-year period.</p></article>	