Bond Positions
3 bondsPortfolio Examples
Load a preset to explore different portfolio strategies:
Assumptions
- Market value weights (current prices, not face value)
- Option-free bonds (no callable/putable features)
- Parallel yield curve shifts assumed
- First-order approximation (convexity not included)
Portfolio Metrics
Duration Contribution Breakdown
| Bond | Market Value | Weight | Duration | Contribution |
|---|
Duration Contribution Visualization
Understanding Portfolio Duration
What is Portfolio Duration?
Portfolio duration measures the overall interest rate sensitivity of a bond portfolio. It is calculated as the weighted average of the modified durations of individual bonds, where weights are based on each bond's market value as a proportion of the total portfolio value.
Portfolio duration answers a critical question: "How much will my portfolio's value change if interest rates move?"
The Portfolio Duration Formula
Where:
- wi = Market value weight of bond i (MVi / Total MV)
- Di = Modified duration of bond i
For example, if Bond A has a market value of $500,000 with duration 3.5 and Bond B has $500,000 with duration 7.0, the portfolio duration is: (0.50 × 3.5) + (0.50 × 7.0) = 5.25 years.
Portfolio DV01 (Dollar Duration)
DV01 (Dollar Value of 01) represents the dollar change in portfolio value for a 1 basis point (0.01%) change in interest rates:
DV01 is essential for hedging and risk management because it expresses interest rate risk in dollar terms rather than percentage terms.
Why Portfolio Duration Matters
- Interest Rate Risk Management: Quantifies how much your portfolio value will change when rates move
- Index Tracking: Match your portfolio duration to a benchmark for passive management
- Asset-Liability Matching: Match portfolio duration to liability duration for pension funds and insurance companies
- Immunization: Set portfolio duration equal to investment horizon to lock in returns
- Hedging: Use DV01 to calculate hedge ratios for interest rate swaps or futures
Portfolio Strategies by Duration
- Short Duration (1-3 years): Lower interest rate risk, suitable when expecting rising rates
- Intermediate Duration (3-7 years): Balanced approach, typical for core bond portfolios
- Long Duration (7+ years): Higher interest rate sensitivity, benefits from falling rates
- Barbell Strategy: Combine short and long maturities, skipping intermediate
- Bullet Strategy: Concentrate maturities around a target date
Limitations of Portfolio Duration
Portfolio duration is a powerful tool but has important limitations:
- Parallel shift assumption: Assumes all rates move by the same amount (rarely true in practice)
- Linear approximation: Duration is only accurate for small yield changes; for large moves, convexity matters
- Option-free bonds only: Callable bonds, MBS, and floaters need effective duration, not modified duration
- No credit risk: Duration measures interest rate risk only, not credit spread risk
Frequently Asked Questions
Important Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only. It calculates portfolio modified duration as a weighted average of individual bond durations, which is a first-order approximation assuming parallel yield curve shifts and option-free bonds. For callable bonds, MBS, or other securities with embedded options, use effective duration instead. This is not financial advice.
Related Calculators
Wharton Online
Applied Value Investing Certificate
Learn fundamental analysis and equity valuation from Wharton Online.
- Wharton Online curriculum
- DCF & comparable analysis
- Equity research methodology
Use code RYANOC for up to $500 off
via