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Published byRoderick Mosley Modified over 9 years ago
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An Introduction to Bonds Tina Horvath
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What is a Bond? w Debt instrument: When one purchases a bond, one essentially lends an organization such as the government or a corporation a specified amount of money which the borrower agrees to repay at a designated time. w Why buy a bond? In exchange for permission to borrow money from the lender, the organization agrees to pay annual interest payments on the amount borrowed. w Components: principal - face value of the bond (typically $1000) coupon - rate of interest maturity - time till issuer will repay borrower
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Different Types of Bonds w Corporate w Government (Treasury) w Municipal
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Corporate Bonds w Corporate bonds are issued so that companies can finance expansion or raise funds for other expenses. w Senior debt - bonds that are backed by specific assets of the company. w Debenture - a bond whose issue is secured simply by the promise of the company to repay the amount borrowed. w Default Risk (Ratings) Standard & Poor: AAA = good credit, CCC = poor standing Moody: Aaa = good credit, Caa = poor standing w Special cases: “junk bonds” - bonds with high default rating (CCC, Caa or worse) convertible bonds - bonds that can be exchanged for other securities
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Government Bonds w Government, or Treasury bonds, are especially noted for their lack of risk since they are backed by the US government. bill - maturity of a year or less note - maturity of 1-10 years bond - maturity of 10+ years w STRIPS - Separate Trading Registered Interest and Principal Securities, or STRIPS, can be split up into separate interest and principal payments, with each payment trading as a separate security. Example: zero coupon bonds w The Federal Reserve retains some control over the bond market by open-market operations: buying or selling US Treasuries in order to control the money supply changing the discount rate: raising or lowering the rate which in turn raises or lowers general interest rates setting reserve requirements: increasing reserves and thereby raising interest rates or decreasing reserves and thereby decreasing rates
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Municipal Bonds w Municipal bonds are state and local government bonds. w Tax free, not subject to federal taxes w Two types of municipal bonds: general obligation bonds - funded by property taxes, sales taxes, and income tax revenue bonds - funded by revenue from a particular project; e.g., a government issues a revenue bond in order to build a turnpike and repays these bonds with the tolls collected.
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Yields w Coupon yield: the interest paid on the principal based on the coupon rate. w Current yield: yield based on interest payments with respect to the purchase price of the bond (discount, premium). w Yield to maturity (YTM): estimates the total amount that one can earn over the total life of the bond. YTM = coupon + prorated discount or premium (face value + purchase price) / 2
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What Determines Bond Prices? w Current market interest rates: Bond prices tend to increase when interest rates fall and decrease when rates rise. w Inflation: High inflation will devalue a bond. w Liquidity: The ease and cost of trading a particular bond will affect the price. w Political risk: People tend not to invest when the government seems unstable.
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Bonds in the Real World
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