date2time
Time and frequency from dates
Syntax
Description
[
computes
time factors appropriate to compounded rate quotes between the TFactors
,F
]
= date2time(___,Compounding
,Basis
,EndMonthRule
)Settle
and Maturity
dates
using optional input arguments for Compounding
, Basis
,
and EndMonthRule
. date2time
is
the inverse of time2date
.
Examples
Compute date2time
Using an actual/actual Basis
To get the date2time
period between '31-Jul-2015' and '30-Sep-2015' using an actual/actual basis:
date2time(datetime(2015,7,31),datetime(2015,9,30), 2, 0, 1)
ans = 0.3333
When using date2time
quasi coupon, two quasi coupon dates are computed for a bond with a maturity corresponding to the Dates
input. In this case, that would be "30-Sep-2015". Assuming that the compounding frequency is 2
, the other quasi coupon date is six months prior to this date. Assuming the end of month rule is in place, then the other quasi coupon date is "31-Mar-2015". You can use these two dates to compute the total number of actual days in a period (which is 183). Given this, the fraction of time between the start and end date for the actual/actual basis is computed as follows.
(Actual Days between Start Date and End Date)/(Actual Number of Days between Quasi Coupon Dates)
There are 61 days between 31-Jul-2015 and 30-Sep-2015 and 183 days between the quasi coupon dates ("31-Mar-2015" and "30-Sep-2015") which leads to a final result of 61/183 or exactly 1/3.
Input Arguments
Settle
— Settlement date
datetime scalar | string scalar | date character vector
Settlement date, specified as a scalar datetime, string, or date character vector.
To support existing code, date2time
also
accepts serial date numbers as inputs, but they are not recommended.
Data Types: char
| string
| datetime
Maturity
— Maturity date
datetime array | string array | date character vector
Maturity date, specified as a scalar or N
-by-1
vector
using a datetime array, string array, or date character vectors.
To support existing code, date2time
also
accepts serial date numbers as inputs, but they are not recommended.
Data Types: char
| string
| datetime
Compounding
— Rate at which input zero rates are compounded when annualized
2
(Semiannual compounding) (default) | scalar with numeric values of 0
, 1
, 2
, 3
, 4
, 5
, 6
, 12
, 365
, –1
Rate at which input zero rates are compounded when annualized,
specified as a scalar with numeric values of: 0
, 1
, 2
, 3
, 4
, 5
, 6
, 12
, 365
,
or –1
. Allowed values are defined as:
0
— Simple interest (no compounding)1
— Annual compounding2
— Semiannual compounding (default)3
— Compounding three times per year4
— Quarterly compounding6
— Bimonthly compounding12
— Monthly compounding365
— Daily compounding-1
— Continuous compounding
The optional Compounding
argument determines
the formula for the discount factors (Disc
):
Compounding
=0
for simple interestDisc = 1/(1 + Z * T)
, whereT
is time in years and simple interest assumes annual timesF = 1
.
Compounding
=1
,2
,3
,4
,6
,12
Disc = (1 + Z/F)^(-T)
, whereF
is the compounding frequency,Z
is the zero rate, andT
is the time in periodic units, for example,T = F
is one year.
Compounding
=365
Disc = (1 + Z/F)^(-T)
, whereF
is the number of days in the basis year andT
is a number of days elapsed computed by basis.
Compounding
=-1
Disc = exp(-T*Z)
, whereT
is time in years.
Basis
— Day-count basis
0
(actual/actual) (default) | numeric with value 0
through 13
| vector of numerics with values 0
through 13
Day-count basis, specified as an integer with a value 0
through 13
or
a N
-by-1
vector of integers
with values 0
through 13
.
0 = actual/actual (default)
1 = 30/360 (SIA)
2 = actual/360
3 = actual/365
4 = 30/360 (BMA)
5 = 30/360 (ISDA)
6 = 30/360 (European)
7 = actual/365 (Japanese)
8 = actual/actual (ICMA)
9 = actual/360 (ICMA)
10 = actual/365 (ICMA)
11 = 30/360E (ICMA)
12 = actual/365 (ISDA)
13 = BUS/252
For more information, see Basis.
Data Types: single
| double
EndMonthRule
— End-of-month rule flag for month having 30 or fewer days
1
(in effect) (default) | nonnegative integer [0,1]
End-of-month rule flag for month having 30 or fewer days, specified
as scalar nonnegative integer [0
, 1
]
or a using a N
-by-1
vector of
values. This rule applies only when Maturity
is
an end-of-month date for a month having 30 or fewer days.
0
= Ignore rule, meaning that a payment date is always the same numerical day of the month.1
= Set rule on, meaning that a payment date is always the last actual day of the month.
Data Types: logical
Output Arguments
More About
Difference Between yearfrac
and date2time
The difference between yearfrac
and date2time
is
that date2time
counts full periods as a whole
integer, even if the number of actual days in the periods are different. yearfrac
does
not count full periods.
For example,
yearfrac('1/1/2000', '1/1/2001', 9)
ans = 1.0167
yearfrac
for Basis
9
(ACT/360
ICMA) calculates 366/360 = 1.0167. So, even if the dates have the
same month and date, with a difference of 1 in the year, the returned
value may not be exactly 1. On the other hand, date2time
calculates
one full year period:
date2time('1/1/2000', '1/1/2001', 1, 9)
ans = 1
Version History
Introduced before R2006aR2022b: Serial date numbers not recommended
Although date2time
supports serial date numbers,
datetime
values are recommended instead. The
datetime
data type provides flexible date and time
formats, storage out to nanosecond precision, and properties to account for time
zones and daylight saving time.
To convert serial date numbers or text to datetime
values, use the datetime
function. For example:
t = datetime(738427.656845093,"ConvertFrom","datenum"); y = year(t)
y = 2021
There are no plans to remove support for serial date number inputs.
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