Abstract:
The primary objective of the study was to construct the most applicable model that can be used for tting
yield curves for Sri Lanka Government Bonds. It is important to adhere to a scienti c method of deciding the yields for
respective securities in line with the yield curve than ad-hock and personal judgments for bond Investors, traders, and
monetary authorities. Nelson-Siegel model used Ordinary Least Squares after xing the Lambda parameters to make the
model linear and
exible enough to handle. Primary examination of the Nelson-Siegel parsimonious approach on Sri Lanka
Government Securities yields t the yields having an average R2 of 91.4%. But R2 was not consistent throughout the entire
study period i.e., 2010 to 2018 as R2 fell below 80% in some of the periods. Hence, the di erent discounting function was
used to enhance the accuracy and predictability of the model applying Ordinary Least Squares technique. Two models were
derived for the nal test and evaluation and found one model with two exponential decay functions and tenor as another
predictor. This model exhibits over 97% R2 even after xed for two Lambdas. Further, the out-of-sample predictability
of the model surpassed the other models with an average of higher R2 values and less Mean Residual Sum of Squared
values. Clustering algorithms (listed under Weka) were used to examine the di erent patterns of the yield curve during the
study period. The same model was re-constructed for identi ed clusters xing separate Lambda but the comparison of
separate lambda for each cluster and overall lambda did not indicate signi cant di erences. The nal model comprises the
traditional Nelson-Siegel model, but more towards the Dobbie-Wilkie Model, which accounted for two exponential dece
functions and a time variable. In Sri Lanka, very few attempts have been made to understand the behavior of the yield
curve. That resulted to have controversial and unorthodox practices to judge the optimal yields for respective government
bonds, especially for the longer tenor bonds beyond 5 years. Monetary authorities are geared to develop and extend the Sri
Lankan Government securities Bond yield curve beyond the 10 years (tenor) which will encourage foreign investors to
invest in Sri Lanka bonds. Countries with active longer tenor yield curves have been bene ted from FDI.