The document discusses bond valuation and features. It provides an example of a company, Xanth Co., issuing a bond with a $80 annual coupon over 10 years and $1,000 face value. It explains how the bond's price changes from $1,000 to $884.82 as interest rates rise from 8% to 10%, making it a discount bond. The document also discusses semiannual coupon payments and how interest rate risk depends on time to maturity and coupon rate.
The document discusses bond valuation and features. It provides an example of a company, Xanth Co., issuing a bond with a $80 annual coupon over 10 years and $1,000 face value. It explains how the bond's price changes from $1,000 to $884.82 as interest rates rise from 8% to 10%, making it a discount bond. The document also discusses semiannual coupon payments and how interest rate risk depends on time to maturity and coupon rate.
The document discusses bond valuation and features. It provides an example of a company, Xanth Co., issuing a bond with a $80 annual coupon over 10 years and $1,000 face value. It explains how the bond's price changes from $1,000 to $884.82 as interest rates rise from 8% to 10%, making it a discount bond. The document also discusses semiannual coupon payments and how interest rate risk depends on time to maturity and coupon rate.
The document discusses bond valuation and features. It provides an example of a company, Xanth Co., issuing a bond with a $80 annual coupon over 10 years and $1,000 face value. It explains how the bond's price changes from $1,000 to $884.82 as interest rates rise from 8% to 10%, making it a discount bond. The document also discusses semiannual coupon payments and how interest rate risk depends on time to maturity and coupon rate.
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The key takeaways are that bonds are debt instruments used by corporations and governments to borrow money. A bond pays regular interest payments (coupons) and returns the principal at maturity. The value of a bond fluctuates based on market interest rates.
The main features of a bond include its coupon payments, face/par value, coupon rate, time to maturity, and whether it is a discount, par, or premium bond.
The value of a bond is affected by changes in market interest rates over time. If rates rise, the value declines. If rates fall, the value increases. The number of periods until maturity and the coupon rate also impact the bond's value.
BOND VALUATION
BONDS AND BOND VALUATION
• Corporations (and governments) frequently borrow money by issuing or selling debt securities called bonds. • A bond is normally an interest-only loan, meaning that the borrower will pay the interest every period, but none of the principal will be repaid until the end of the loan. BOND FEATURES AND PRICES • For example, suppose the Beck Corporation wants to borrow $1,000 for 30 years. The interest rate on similar debt issued by similar corporations is 12 percent. Beck will thus pay .12 × $1,000 = $120 in interest every year for 30 years. At the end of 30 years, Beck will repay the $1,000. As this example suggests, a bond is a fairly simple financing arrangement. BOND FEATURES AND PRICES • In our example, the $120 regular interest payments are called the bond’s coupons. • Because the coupon is constant and paid every year, this type of bond is sometimes called a level coupon bond . The amount repaid at the end of the loan is called the bond’s face value, or par value. As in our example, this par value is usually $1,000 for corporate bonds, and a bond that sells for its par value is called a par value bond . Government bonds frequently have much larger face, or par, values. • Finally, the annual coupon divided by the face value is called the coupon rate on the bond. Since $120/$1,000 = 12 percent, the Beck bond has a 12 percent coupon rate. • The number of years until the face value is paid is called the bond’s time to maturity. A corporate bond will frequently have a maturity of 30 years when it is originally issued, but this varies. Once the bond has been issued, the number of years to maturity declines as time goes by. BOND VALUES AND YIELDS • As time passes, interest rates change in the marketplace. Because the cash flows from a bond stay the same, the value of the bond fluctuates. When interest rates rise, the present value of the bond’s remaining cash flows declines, and the bond is worth less. • When interest rates fall, the bond is worth more. • To determine the value of a bond at a particular point in time, we need to know the number of periods remaining until maturity, the face value, the coupon, and the market interest rate for bonds with similar features. This interest rate required in the market on a bond is called the bond’s yield to maturity (YTM). This rate is sometimes called the bond’s yield for short. Given all this information, we can calculate the present value of the cash flows as an estimate of the bond’s current market value. XANTH COMPANY For example, suppose the Xanth Co. were to issue a bond with 10 years to maturity. The Xanth bond has an annual coupon of $80, implying the bond will pay $80 per year for the next 10 years in coupon interest. In addition, Xanth will pay $1,000 to the bondholder in 10 years. PV OF FACE $ 463.19 PV OF INTEREST _ 536.81 TOTAL VALUE OF THE BONDS $1,000.00 XANTH COMPANY For example, suppose the Xanth Co. were to issue a bond with 10 years to maturity. The Xanth bond has an annual coupon of $80, implying the bond will pay $80 per year for the next 10 years in coupon interest. In addition, Xanth will pay $1,000 to the bondholder in 10 years. PV OF FACE $ 463.19 PV OF INTEREST _ 536.81 TOTAL VALUE OF THE BONDS $1,000.00 XANTH COMPANY • To illustrate what happens as interest rates change, suppose that a year has gone by. The Xanth bond now has nine years to maturity. If the interest rate in the market has risen to 10 percent, what will the bond be worth? PV OF FACE $ 424.10 PV OF INTEREST _ 460.72 TOTAL VALUE OF THE BONDS $ 884.82 XANTH COMPANY • To illustrate what happens as interest rates change, suppose that a year has gone by. The Xanth bond now has nine years to maturity. If the interest rate in the market has risen to 10 percent, what will the bond be worth? PV OF FACE $ 424.10 PV OF INTEREST _ 460.72 TOTAL VALUE OF THE BONDS $ 884.82 XANTH COMPANY • The Xanth Co. bond now sells for less than its $1,000 face value. Why? The market interest rate is 10 percent. Considered as an interest-only loan of $1,000, this bond only pays 8 percent, its coupon rate. Since the bond pays less than the going rate, investors are willing to lend only something less than the $1,000 promised repayment. • Because the bond sells for less than face value, it is said to be a discount bond . XANTH COMPANY • The only way to get the interest rate up to 10 percent is to lower the price to less than $1,000 so that the purchaser, in effect, has a built-in gain. For the Xanth bond, the price of $885 is $115 less than the face value, so an investor who purchased and kept the bond would get $80 per year and would have a $115 gain at maturity as well. • This gain compensates the lender for the below-market coupon rate. • Another way to see why the bond is discounted by $115 is to note that the $80 coupon is $20 below the coupon on a newly issued par value bond, based on current market conditions. The bond would be worth $1,000 only if it had a coupon of $100 per year. In a sense, an investor who buys and keeps the bond gives up $20 per year for nine years. At 10 percent, this annuity stream is worth $115.18. SEMIANNUAL COUPONS • If an ordinary $1,000 bond has a coupon rate of 14 percent, the owner will receive a total of $140 per year, but this $140 will come in two payments of $70 each. • Suppose the yield to maturity on our bond is quoted at 16 percent. Bond yields are quoted like annual percentage rates (APRs); the quoted rate is equal to the actual rate per period multiplied by the number of periods. With a 16 percent quoted yield and semiannual payments, the true yield is 8 percent per six months. • If our bond matures in seven years, what is the bond’s price? • What is the effective annual yield on this bond? SEMIANNUAL COUPONS • If an ordinary $1,000 bond has a coupon rate of 14 percent, the owner will receive a total of $140 per year, but this $140 will come in two payments of $70 each. • Suppose the yield to maturity on our bond is quoted at 16 percent. Bond yields are quoted like annual percentage rates (APRs); the quoted rate is equal to the actual rate per period multiplied by the number of periods. With a 16 percent quoted yield and semiannual payments, the true yield is 8 percent per six months. • If our bond matures in seven years, what is the bond’s price? $917.56 • What is the effective annual yield on this bond? 16.64 percent INTEREST RATE RISK • The risk that arises for bond owners from fluctuating interest rates is called interest rate risk . How much interest rate risk a bond has depends on how sensitive its price is to interest rate changes. This sensitivity directly depends on two things: the time to maturity and the coupon rate. As we will see momentarily, you should keep the following in mind when looking at a bond: 1. All other things being equal, the longer the time to maturity, the greater the interest rate risk. 2. All other things being equal, the lower the coupon rate, the greater the interest rate risk.