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A basis point (bp) is a unit of measurement equal to 1/100th of 1%, or 0.01%. 100 basis points equals 1%. The term exists to eliminate confusion when discussing small percentage changes in financial rates.
Why Basis Points Exist
Without basis points, people would say things like "the rate increased by 0.5 percent" or "the yield changed by 0.25 of 1 percent." This is confusing. Does "0.5 percent" mean 0.5 percentage points (from 5% to 5.5%) or 0.5% of the current rate (from 5% to 5.025%)?
Basis points eliminate ambiguity. "The Federal Reserve raised rates by 50 basis points" clearly means rates increased by 0.5 percentage points. No confusion.
Converting Basis Points to Percentages
Basis points ÷ 100 = Percentage change
- 1 basis point = 0.01%
- 25 basis points = 0.25%
- 50 basis points = 0.50%
- 75 basis points = 0.75%
- 100 basis points = 1.00%
- 250 basis points = 2.50%
Examples:
"The Fed increased the federal funds rate by 75 basis points." = The rate increased by 0.75 percentage points = If it was 4.00%, it's now 4.75%
"The 10-year Treasury yield rose 150 basis points." = The yield increased by 1.5 percentage points = If it was 3.50%, it's now 5.00%
Why It Matters: The Dollar Impact
On large loan amounts, basis points create huge dollar differences.
Example: $300,000 mortgage over 30 years
At 6.50% interest: Monthly payment $1,896 At 6.75% interest (25 basis point increase): Monthly payment $1,948
The 25 basis point increase costs an extra $52/month, or $18,720 over the loan term.
For a $1,000,000 commercial loan, 25 basis points is worth $2,500/year in additional interest.
Basis Points in Different Contexts
Mortgage rates: "Mortgage rates are up 50 basis points this month." This means rates have increased by 0.5 percentage points.
Federal Reserve announcements: "The Fed raised the federal funds rate by 75 basis points." The central bank increased the benchmark short-term rate by 0.75 percentage points.
Bond yields: "The 10-year Treasury yield is up 200 basis points from last year." The yield increased by 2 percentage points.
Investment fees: "This fund charges 50 basis points in annual fees." This means 0.50% annual management fees.
Why Precision Matters
In finance, precision is critical. The difference between 0.25% and 25 basis points sounds similar but isn't:
0.25% of $1,000,000 = $2,500 25 basis points of $1,000,000 = $2,500
They're the same in this case. But consider:
A rate changing by 0.5 percentage points:
- From 5% to 5.5%
- This is 50 basis points
A rate changing by 0.5% of the current rate:
- From 5% to 5.025%
- This is 2.5 basis points
Without basis points terminology, traders and analysts would constantly clarify what they mean. Basis points eliminate that inefficiency.
Basis Points in Trading
Fond managers and traders discuss "basis point spreads." If a government bond yields 4% and a corporate bond yields 4.25%, the spread is 25 basis points. This tells investors how much extra yield they earn for taking on corporate credit risk.
If the spread widens to 50 basis points (corporate bond yields 4.50%), investors interpret this as corporate credit risk increasing. If the spread tightens to 15 basis points, it suggests confidence in corporate credit.
The Bottom Line
Basis points are finance shorthand for "1/100th of 1%." They make communication precise. When the Federal Reserve announces a 50 basis point rate increase, everyone knows exactly what that means. When you hear that a mortgage rate is "up 25 basis points," you know that's a 0.25 percentage point increase, creating measurable payment differences.
For large financial transactions, basis point precision is critical. A 10 basis point difference on a $100,000,000 bond issuance is worth $100,000 annually. Precision matters.





