Ch004-1 Bond Price Yield (Eng) PDF
Ch004-1 Bond Price Yield (Eng) PDF
Ch004-1 Bond Price Yield (Eng) PDF
Lesson 4: Bond
analysis
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− Bond Characteristics
− Bond Pricing
− Bond Yields
− Bond Prices over time
− Default risk & Bond pricing
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Bond Characteristics
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Bond Characteristics
Intrinsic features
– Coupon rate
– Maturity
– Principal value: face value or par value
Issuing features
– Secured (senior) bonds
– Unsecured bonds (debentures)
– Subordinated (junior) debentures
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Bond Characteristics
Securing Indenture:
- Sinking funds
- Subordination of future debt
- Dividend restrictions
- Collateral
Features affecting maturity
– Callable (call premium)
– Puttable
– Non-refunding provision
– Sinking Fund
– Convertible
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Call Provisions
Call Provisions :
- Allowing the issuer to repurchase the bond at
a specified call price before the maturity date
- Callable bonds typically come with a period
of call protection, an initial time during which
the bonds are not callable
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Puttable bonds
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Convertible bonds
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Sinking Fund
To help ensure the commitment does not create a cash
flow crisis, the firm agrees to establish a sinking fund
to spread the payment burden over several years. The
fund may operate in one of two ways:
Issuers
Government
– Treasury Bill: less than 1 year
– Notes: from 1 to 10 years
– Bonds: from 10 to 30 years
Corporates
Local Government
Foreign corporates and governments
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Principal and Interest Payments for Treasury
Inflation Protected Security
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Bond Pricing
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Ct = 40 (semiannually
P = 1000
T = 20 periods
r = 3% (semiannually)
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Figure 14.3 The Inverse Relationship Between
Bond Prices and Yields
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Table 14.2 Bond Prices at Different Interest Rates (8%
Coupon Bond, Coupons Paid Semiannually
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Accrued Interest and Quoted Bond Prices 21
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Bond Yields
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Current Yield
Bond yields
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Yield to Call
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Figure 14.4 Bond Prices: Callable and Straight
Debt
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Reinvestment Assumptions
Holding Period Return
– Changes in rates affects returns
– Reinvestment of coupon payments
– Change in price of the bond
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Example:
suppose you buy a 30-year, 7.5% (annual payment)
coupon bond for 980$ (YTM 7.67%) and plan to
hold it for 20 years. Your forecast is that
- Bond’s YTM is 8% when it is sold in 20 years.
- Reinvestment rate of the coupons will be at 6
- The forecast sales price in 20 years will be 966,45$
The 20 coupon payments will grow with compound
interest to 2,758.92$ at the end of year 20.
Your $980 investment will grow in 20 years to
$966.45 + $2,758.92 = $3,725.37.
This corresponds to an annualized compound return
of 6.90%:
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HPR = [ I + ( P0 - P1 )] / P0
where
I = interest payment
P1 = price in one period
P0 = purchase price
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Holding-Period Example
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Example: Holding-Period
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Figure 14.6 Prices over Time of 30-Year
Maturity, 6.5% Coupon Bonds
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Figure 14.7 The Price of a 30-Year Zero-Coupon Bond
over Time at a Yield to Maturity of 10%
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Rating companies
– Moody’s Investor Service
– Standard & Poor’s
– Fitch
Rating Categories
– Investment grade
– Speculative grade
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Figure 14.8 Definitions of Each Bond Rating
Class
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Coverage ratios
Leverage ratios
Liquidity ratios
Profitability ratios
Cash flow to debt
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Table 14.3 Financial Ratios and Default Risk by
Rating Class, Long-Term Debt
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Table 14.3 Financial Ratios and Default Risk by
Rating Class, Long-Term Debt
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Sinking funds
Subordination of future debt
Dividend restrictions
Collateral
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Default premium
– Depends on the possibility of default, high
rating bond has a low default premium.
– The default premium varies with the
economic cycle. When the economy is
contracted, the spreads between yields on
different rating bonds increase.
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Figure 14.11 Yields on Long-Term Bonds,
1954 – 2006
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