Bond Parameters

years
bps
bps
% of par

Quick Examples

Load a preset to explore different credit risk profiles:

Assumptions

  • Linear price-spread approximation (first-order)
  • Interest rates unchanged (spread-only shock)
  • Ignores convexity, default, and liquidity effects
  • Modified duration used as proxy for spread duration

DTS Results

Duration Times Spread -- year-bps
Risk Category --
Post-Shock Spread -- bps
Approx. % Price Change --
Approx. $ Change (per $100) --
Enter parameters to see DTS analysis.

Spread Sensitivity

Estimated price change if spread moves:

-100 bps --
-50 bps --
-25 bps --
Current --
+25 bps --
+50 bps --
+100 bps --

Visualization

DTS: --. Risk level: --.

Understanding Duration Times Spread (DTS)

What is Duration Times Spread?

Duration Times Spread (DTS) is a credit risk metric developed by Lehman Brothers (now part of Barclays) that measures a bond's sensitivity to relative changes in credit spreads. It combines two key characteristics: the bond's duration (price sensitivity) and its credit spread (compensation for credit risk).

DTS is particularly useful for comparing credit risk across bonds with very different spread levels. A 10 basis point spread widening means something very different for a bond trading at 50 bps versus one at 500 bps.

How to Calculate DTS

The DTS formula is straightforward:

DTS = Modified Duration x Credit Spread (in basis points)

For example, a bond with 5 years of modified duration and a 200 basis point spread has a DTS of 1,000 (5 x 200 = 1,000).

Price Change Approximation

DTS can be used to estimate the price impact of relative spread changes:

Approx. % Price Change = -Duration x Spread Change (bps) / 100

This approximation works well for small spread movements. For larger changes or bonds with significant convexity, actual price changes may differ.

DTS Risk Categories

While there are no universally standardized thresholds, the following categories provide useful guidance:

  • Low (DTS < 300): Short-duration investment grade bonds with tight spreads
  • Moderate (DTS 300-600): Typical investment grade corporate bonds
  • High (DTS 600-1000): Longer-duration IG or shorter-duration high yield
  • Very High (DTS > 1000): Long-duration high yield or distressed credits

Why DTS Matters for Portfolio Management

  • Risk Budgeting: Allocate credit risk across positions using DTS as a common denominator
  • Relative Value: Compare risk-adjusted returns across bonds with different characteristics
  • Scenario Analysis: Estimate portfolio impact from spread widening/tightening
  • Position Sizing: Size positions to achieve consistent risk contribution

DTS vs. Spread Duration

Both metrics measure spread sensitivity, but with different denominators:

  • Spread Duration: Measures absolute price sensitivity (% price change per 1 bp spread change)
  • DTS: Measures relative price sensitivity (% price change per 1% relative spread change)

DTS is more useful when comparing bonds across different rating tiers, as it normalizes for different spread levels.

Market Benchmarks

As reference points for current market conditions:

  • Investment Grade (broad): DTS typically ranges from 400-700, depending on duration profile
  • High Yield: DTS typically ranges from 700-1000 or higher

These values fluctuate with market conditions. During credit stress, spreads widen and DTS increases across the board.

CFA Exam Tip: DTS is useful for comparing credit risk across the quality spectrum. Remember that DTS captures both duration and spread exposure, making it more comprehensive than duration alone for credit portfolios.

Frequently Asked Questions

Duration Times Spread (DTS) is a credit risk metric that combines a bond's modified duration with its credit spread (in basis points). It measures how sensitive a bond's price is to relative changes in credit spreads. A higher DTS indicates greater credit spread risk exposure.

DTS is calculated by multiplying Modified Duration by Credit Spread (in basis points). For example, a bond with 5 years modified duration and a 150 basis point spread has a DTS of 750 (5 x 150 = 750). This measures the bond's exposure to spread movements.

DTS values above 600 are generally considered high risk, and values above 1000 are very high risk. Investment grade bonds typically have DTS around 500, while high yield bonds average around 850. The appropriate DTS level depends on your risk tolerance and portfolio objectives.

DTS helps portfolio managers compare credit risk across bonds with different durations and spreads. It allows for risk budgeting, identifying which bonds contribute most to spread risk, and assessing how portfolios will perform if spreads widen. Unlike duration alone, DTS captures both interest rate and credit spread sensitivity.

Spread duration measures absolute price sensitivity to spread changes (% price change per 1 basis point spread change). DTS measures relative price sensitivity (% price change per 1% relative spread change). DTS is useful for comparing risk across bonds with very different spread levels, since a 10bp move means different things for a 50bp vs 500bp spread bond.
Important Disclaimer

This calculator is for educational purposes only. It provides a first-order linear approximation of price changes. Actual price movements may differ due to convexity, default risk, liquidity, and other factors. The risk categories shown are illustrative guidelines, not standardized industry thresholds. This is not financial advice.