A Basis Point (bps) is a unit of measurement widely used in finance to describe changes in interest rates, yields, and other percentage-based metrics with precision.
Applications of basis points includes interest rates, bond yields, management fees and derivatives & swaps.
A Basis Point (bps) is a unit of measurement widely used in finance to describe changes in interest rates, yields, and other percentage-based metrics with precision. This unit removes ambiguity in financial discussions, ensuring clarity when even minor changes can significantly affect investment performance and borrowing costs.
Clarity in Communication: Saying “a 25 bps increase” is clearer than “a 0.25% increase,” especially in fast-moving markets.
Impact on Investments: In fixed income and wealth management, small shifts in rates measured in basis points can influence bond valuations, loan repayments, and portfolio returns.
Global Standard: Basis points are universally recognized, making them a consistent reference for investors, bankers, and policymakers.
Interest Rates: Central banks often adjust policy rates in basis points (e.g., RBI raising repo rate by 25 bps).
Bond Yields: A decline of 50 bps in yields can lead to significant gains in bond prices.
Management Fees: Mutual funds, ETFs, and wealth managers frequently express expense ratios and fees in basis points (e.g., a 100 bps annual fee = 1%).
Derivatives & Swaps: Pricing and valuation of interest rate derivatives often rely on bps movements.
If a lending rate rises from 7.50% to 7.75%, the increase is 25 basis points.
A fund charging a management fee of 150 bps means investors pay 1.50% per year of the invested amount.
If bond yields fall from 8.00% to 7.20%, the decline is 80 basis points.
For wealth management clients, understanding basis points is essential because:
Even a small change in interest rates can alter loan EMIs or portfolio returns.
Bond portfolios are highly sensitive to bps changes in yields.
Investment costs, expressed in bps, directly affect net returns over the long term.