Title: Module 4 Bonds
1Module 4Bonds
2Module 4 - Learning Objectives
- Define bond issuer, par or face value, coupon
rate, maturity date and call date. - Explain why entities issue bonds.
- Explain how an investor makes money from bonds.
- Define and calculate nominal yield, current
yield, yield to maturity and yield to call. - Define and differentiate Treasuries, municipal
bonds, mortgage securities, and corporate bonds. - Differentiate short, medium, long and zero coupon
bonds. - Explain what credit rating measures.
- Define bond fund.
- Explain how an investor purchases a bond.
- Evaluate a bond using yield, maturity, issuer,
credit rating, and interest rate environment. - Explain how to monitor bond investments with
regards to interest rate, call and credit risk. - Select a bond based on financial goals.
3Income is not rising but debt is
4People are raiding the piggy bank
5Spending power?
6The big picture
http//www.nytimes.com/interactive/2008/07/20/busi
ness/20debt-trap.html?scp1sqdebt20trap202008-
07-20interactivestcse
7Which of the following factors can a lender use
to evaluate your credit?
- Gender
- Age
- Childbearing plans
- Marital status
- Change in marital status
- Loans
- Public assistance
- Dependents
- How long youve lived at your house
- Alimony
- Race
- Color
- National origin
- People in the neighborhood where you want to buy
- How long youve had your job
- Salary
8What does your credit report affect?
- Interest rates
- Job opportunities - Can your prospective employer
check your credit report? - Insurance
- Ability to assume debt
9Analyze a credit report
10Your credit score
Source www.myfico.com
11Credit Scores
12Credit ratings and cost of credit
Source www.myfico.com 3/21/07
13Credit Check-up
- Get a free credit report every year
www.annualcreditreport.com or call 877-322-8228 - Correct any errors by contacting the company in
writing they must resolve the error in 30 days
14Debt as an Investment
- Investors can get on the other side of the fence
by lending money to people or entities who want
to borrow - Bonds are usually the investments
15True or False?
- You could go through your entire investing life
without investing in bonds. - You should only invest in bonds when youre
older. - Stocks always return better than bonds.
- Bonds are boring investments.
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17It is January, 2001. You are analyzing a T-bond
1000 face value that matures in January 2011 and
has a 6.125 coupon.
- Who is the issuer of the bond?
- How much will you get in interest per year?
- How many years will you get the interest?
- What will you get back when the bond matures?
18Why do companies, governments, etc. issue bonds?
19How have bonds done as investments?
20How do you make money from bonds?
21You can also have a gain or loss on a bond
22It boils down to two factor coupon and maturity.
23Pop quiz
- When interest rates go up, bond prices go where?
- When interest rates go down, bond prices go
where? - Shorter maturity bonds are more or less sensitive
to interest rate changes than longer maturity
bonds? - Smaller coupon bonds are more or less sensitive
to interest rate changes than larger coupon bonds?
24Figure this out
- On 2-22-01 you buy a Motorola 1000 face value
bond with a maturity date of 10-01-2097 and a
coupon of 5.22. The bond has a credit rating of
A. Equivalent bonds are giving 7.895. Calculate
the price of this bond.
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26Nominal Yield
- What the issuer pays on the par value of the bond
- It is the return you get if you buy the bond when
its issued and hold it until it matures - In a bond quote, annual interest is not given, so
you have to figure out annual interest by using
nominal yield and multiplying by par value
27The following are 1000 par value bonds and their
coupon rates. What is the annual interest on each?
- Ford Motor (car company) 6.7
- Hewlett Packard (computers) 7.15
- Kroger (supermarkets) 6.8
28Current Yield
- Annual interest divided by price you paid
- Lets you know what you get every year
- Might want to compare to other investments
- Doesnt consider what you sell for
29Calculate current yield
- Alcoa (aluminum manufacturer) 1000 par value
bonds with a coupon rate of 6.5 and maturity of
10 years traded at 104.075. Calculate the current
yield.
30Yield to Maturity
- May have bought a bond at a premium or discount
- When the bond is redeemed, you will have a
capital loss or gain - Yield to maturity takes this into consideration
- More complete measure of return from the bond
(includes interest and gain or loss)
31Calculate the yield to maturity
- It's 2-22-01 and you're evaluating a University
of North Carolina at Greenville 1000 par value
bond with a coupon of 6.0 and a maturity date of
04-01-2021. The bond is quoted at 111.225. - What is the nominal yield?
- What is the current yield?
- What is the yield to maturity?
32Yield to Call
- Certain bonds may be called (redeemed before the
maturity date) by the issuer - This can change your return on the bond
- Callable bonds are riskier and need to be
assessed using yield to call - Similar to yield to maturity except earliest call
date is used rather than maturity date - Yield to call is higher than yield to maturity
when the bond is bought at a discount - Yield to call is lower than yield to maturity
when the bond is bought at a premium
33Calculate nominal yield, current yield, yield to
maturity and yield to call. You are buying 3-1-00.
34Answer sheet
35US Bond Choices
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37Choices - Treasuries
Deficit 9 T (12/06)
38Who do we owe?
39Choices - Municipal Bonds
- Issued by state and local government
- May have tax advantages (be careful--not all muni
interest is tax free) - Not as safe as treasuries but still relatively
safe - May be backed by tax revenues or revenues of
facility
40Evaluating Munis
- It is 02-22-2001. You're looking at two bonds
given the same credit rating by Standard and
Poors. Calcualte their yields and explain why
the yields are different. - .Coca Cola with a maturity date of 09/15/2022 and
a coupon of 8 is quoted at 117.325. - .Pennsylvania State Health Services with a
maturity date of 01/01/2022 and a coupon of 5.75
is quoted at 101.812.
41Choices - Mortgage-backed Securities
- Mortgage-backed securities are created when
individual homeowner mortgages are bundled and
sold to investors - May be guaranteed by Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae, or
Freddie Mac - Irregular payments because homeowners may prepay
mortgage--based on average life rather than
maturity - Highest risk of prepayment when interest rates
fall--bad for bondholder
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43Evaluate these
44Choices - Corporate Bonds
- Issued by large corporations to finance their
business. - Listed on the NYSE or sold over the counter.
- Some corporations offer convertible bonds.
45Evaluate this
- Amazon issued 681 million in convertible 10-year
notes in 1999. The coupon rate was 6 7/8. Each
1000 bond is convertible to 9.529 shares of
Amazon stock. In early 2001, Amazon is selling at
about 15 a share. If you are holding these
bonds, would it be more profitable to convert to
stock or hold the bond? Give your reasons why.
46Choices - Maturity
- During normal economic expansion, the longer the
term the higher the interest rate - This is because the longer the term, the higher
the risk
47The date is 2-22-2001. You are evaluating three
municipal bonds. Calculate the yield to maturity
for each and discuss why they might be different.
- New York Metropolitan Transit Authority bond
quoted at 109.603 with a coupon of 5.4. Maturity
date is 04-01-2011. Credit rating is AAA. - Philadelphia General Purpose bond quoted at
98.234 with a coupon of 4.9. Maturity date is
09-15-2021. Credit rating is AAA. - King County General Purpose bond quoted at 101.25
with a coupon of 5.25. Maturity date is
01-01-2034. Credit rating is AAA.
48Choices - Zero Coupon Bonds
- Pros
- Can buy bond with little money upfront
- Bigger gains if interest rates fall
- Cons
- Bigger losses if interest rate rise
- Dont hear from borrower for a long time
- Taxed even though you dont have the cash
49The effect of interest rate changes on zeros
- Last year. You bought a 30-year par value 1000
zero coupon bond that yielded 6. Calculate the
price you paid. - This year. Interest rates have fallen to 5.
Calculate the value of your zero coupon bond.
50Choices - Credit Ratings
Investment Grade
Junk
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52Calculate the yield and explain any differences.
53Even countries have credit ratings. Consider the
current economic status of the following
countries. What would you guess the rating of
their debt would be?
- Here's a guideline the U.S. is Aaa, China is A3,
Brazil is B2, and Russia is B3. Once you have
made your guesses, go out to the web and check
out www.moodys.com. You'll find country ratings
under Ratings/Sovereign Ratings. - United Kingdom
- Mexico
- Argentina
- Bahamas
- Canada
- Israel
- Colombia
54Bond Funds
- About 8000 bond funds with 15 of mutual fund
assets. - For investors who dont want to buy individual
bonds. - Some pros believe that small investors should
only buy bond funds.
55Go to www.bloomberg.com http//www.morningstar.co
m/Check out the bond fund returns.
56Buying Bonds
- Treasuries - direct from government, broker, unit
trust, or fund - Municipal bonds - broker, unit trust, or fund
- Mortgage-backed bonds - broker, unit trust, or
fund - Corporate bonds - broker, unit trust, or fund
57Interest Rate Food Chain
Risk and return holds for bonds as well. Less
risk means less return. Muni bonds typically give
the lowest interest because of tax
status. Treasuries are next. Theyre
safe. Mortgage-backed are safe but they have call
risk. Corporate bonds are the riskier with junk
being extremely risky. But yields are also better.
58Assess Interest Rate Risk Are we at a high
point or low point for bond interest rates?
59Monitor
- Monitor your bonds. They can change.
- Interest rate risk What is the interest rate
environment when you buy? How is it changing? - Call risk Call risk is highest when interest
rates drop. - Credit risk Issuers can undergo drastic changes
in financial viability. Keep tabs on this.