Title: Valuation and Characteristics of Bonds
1Valuation and Characteristics of Bonds
2Terminology and types of bonds
3Definitions
- Bond
- Par value (face value)
- Coupons and Coupon rate
- Maturity and Time to maturity
- Yield or Yield to maturity
- Which of these will vary across bonds depending
on riskiness?
4The bond indenture
- Contract between the company and its bondholders
(represented by a trustee) - The indenture includes
- Basic terms of the bonds
- Total amount of bonds issued
- Description of property used as security
- Sinking fund provisions
- Call provisions (call premium)
- Convertibility options
- Protective covenants
- Negative - i.e. firm can not merge, sell assets,
pay dividend - Positive - i.e. firm must maintain certain
financial ratios, provide maintenance of assets
5Bond classifications
- Security
- Seniority
- Rate and/or payment
- Quality (ratings)
- Issuer
6Bond classifications - security
- Collateral secured by financial securities
- Mortgage secured by real property, normally
land or buildings - Debentures unsecured
- Notes unsecured debt with original maturity
less than 10 years
7Bond classifications - seniority
- Senior
- Junior
- Subordinated
8Bond classifications rate zeros
- Make no periodic interest payments (coupon rate
0) - The entire yield-to-maturity comes from the
difference between the purchase price and the par
value - Cannot sell for more than par value
- Sometimes called zeroes, or deep discount bonds
- Treasury Bills and principal only Treasury strips
are good examples of zeroes
9Bond classifications rate floating rate
- Coupon rate floats depending on some index value
- Examples adjustable rate mortgages and
inflation-linked Treasuries - There is less price risk with floating rate bonds
- The coupon floats, so it is less likely to differ
substantially from the yield-to-maturity - Coupons may have a collar the rate cannot go
above a specified ceiling or below a specified
floor
10Bond classifications quality investment grade
- High Grade
- Moodys Aaa and SP AAA capacity to pay is
extremely strong - Moodys Aa and SP AA capacity to pay is very
strong - Medium Grade
- Moodys A and SP A capacity to pay is strong,
but more susceptible to changes in circumstances - Moodys Baa and SP BBB capacity to pay is
adequate, adverse conditions will have more
impact on the firms ability to pay
11Bond classifications quality junk
- Low Grade
- Moodys Ba, B, Caa and Ca
- SP BB, B, CCC, CC
- Considered speculative with respect to capacity
to pay. The B ratings are the lowest degree of
speculation. - Very Low Grade
- Moodys C and SP C income bonds with no
interest being paid - Moodys D and SP D in default with principal
and interest in arrears
12Bond classifications - issuer
- Treasury Securities
- Federal government debt
- Maturities
- T-bills pure discount bonds with original
maturity of one year or less - T-notes coupon debt with original maturity
between one and ten years - T-bonds coupon debt with original maturity
greater than ten years - Municipal Securities
- Debt of state and local governments
- Varying degrees of default risk, rated similar to
corporate debt - Interest received is tax-exempt at the federal
level
13Bond markets
- Primarily over-the-counter transactions with
dealers connected electronically - Extremely large number of bond issues, but
generally low daily volume in single issues - Makes getting up-to-date prices difficult,
particularly on small company or municipal issues - Treasury securities are an exception
14Bond valuation
15Definitions of value
- Book value value of an asset as shown on a
firms balance sheet - Liquidation value amount received if an asset
were sold individually - Market value observed value of an asset in the
marketplace - Intrinsic value economic or fair value of an
asset - Can the intrinsic value of an asset differ from
its market value?
16Security Valuation
- In general, the intrinsic value of an asset the
PV of an assets expected future cash flows - So the value of an asset is a function of
- Amount timing of expected cash flows
- Riskiness of the cash flows
- Investors required rate of return
17The Bond-Pricing Equation
- It dollar interest to be received w/each pmt
- M par value of bond at maturity
- kb required rate of return for the bondholder
- N number of periods to maturity
18Bond prices interest rates
- Interest rates and bond prices are inversely
related - As interest rates increase, bond prices ______
- As interest rates decrease, bond prices ______
- Interest rate risk
- A change in _______ caused by a change in ______
_______.
19Bondholders required returns
- If bondholder required return coupon rate, then
the bond will sell at ______. - The coupon rate depends on the risk
characteristics of the bond when issued - Discount bonds
- Premium bonds
20Bondholders required returns
- The coupon rate depends on the risk
characteristics of the bond when issued - Which bonds will have the higher required rate of
return, all else equal? - Secured debt vs. a debenture
- Subordinated debenture vs. senior debt
- A bond with a sinking fund vs. one without
- A callable bond vs. a non-callable bond
21Yield to maturity
- The expected rate of return on a bond.
- The rate of return investors earn on a bond if
they hold it to maturity. - Yield-to-maturity is the rate implied by the
current bond price. - If you have a financial calculator, enter N, PV,
PMT and FV, remembering the sign convention (PMT
and FV need to have the same sign, PV the
opposite sign)
22Current Yield
- The ratio of the interest payment to the bonds
current market price. - Current Yield
- Annual interest payment/current market price of
the bond - A 1,000 bond with 8 coupon rate and market
price of 700 - Current yield 80 / 700 11.4
23Bond prices relation between coupon and yield
- If YTM coupon rate, then
par value bond price - Why?
- If YTM par value
- Why?
24Relation between price andyield-to-maturity
25Price reinvestment risk
- Price Risk
- Change in price due to changes in interest rates
(this is also known by itself as interest rate
risk) - Long-term bonds have more price risk than
short-term bonds - Reinvestment Rate Risk
- Uncertainty concerning rates at which cash flows
can be reinvested - Short-term bonds have more reinvestment rate risk
than long-term bonds
26Default risk
- The risk that the bondholder will not receive all
of the bonds promised cash flows - Ceteris paribus, higher default risk implies a
higher YTM - Only U.S. Govt bonds have no default risk.
- Bondholders are better protected if
- they have senior claims
- there is collateral (security)
- the firm has established a sinking fund
- there are restrictive covenants
27Interest rate risk
- Interest rate risk has two components
- Time to maturity--All other things equal, the
longer the time to maturity, the greater the
interest rate risk. - Coupon rate--All other things equal, the lower
the coupon rate, the greater the interest rate
risk
28(No Transcript)
29Bond pricing theorems
- Bonds of similar risk (and maturity) will be
priced to yield about the same return, regardless
of the coupon rate - If you know the price of one bond, you can
estimate its YTM and use that to find the price
of the second bond - This concept can be transferred to valuing assets
other than bonds
30Valuing a discount bond with annual coupons 1
- Consider a bond with a coupon rate of 10 and
coupons paid annually. The par value is 1000 and
the bond has 5 years to maturity. The yield to
maturity is 11. What is the value of the bond? - Using the formula
- B PV of annuity PV of lump sum
- B 100(1 1/(1.11)5 / .11) 1000 / (1.11)5
- B 369.59 593.45 963.04
- Using the calculator
- N 5 I/Y 11 PMT 100 FV 1000
- CPT PV -963.04
31Valuing a discount bond with annual coupons 2
- Suppose our firm decides to issue 20-year bonds
with a par value of 1,000 and annual coupon
payments. The return on other corporate bonds of
similar risk is currently 12, so we decide to
offer a 12 coupon interest rate. - What would be a fair price for these bonds?
32Valuing a discount bond with annual coupons 2
(cont.)
- Suppose interest rates fall immediately after we
issue the bonds. The required return on bonds of
similar risk drops to 10. - What would happen to the bonds intrinsic value?
33Valuing a discount bond with annual coupons 2
(cont.)
- Suppose interest rates rise immediately after we
issue the bonds. The required return on bonds of
similar risk rises to 14. - What would happen to the bonds intrinsic value?
- Suppose coupons are semi-annual.
34Bond valuation with semiannual coupons
- To value a bond with semiannual coupons
- halve the annual coupon amount,
- halve the quoted YTM (market interest rate)
- double the number of periods (years).
35YTM example
- Suppose we paid 898.90 for a 1,000 par 10
coupon bond with 8 years to maturity and
semi-annual coupon payments. What is the yield to
maturity?
36YTM with annual coupons
- Consider a bond with a 10 annual coupon rate, 15
years to maturity and a par value of 1000. The
current price is 928.09. What is the yield to
maturity?
37YTM with semiannual coupons
- Suppose a bond with a 10 coupon rate and
semiannual coupons, has a face value of 1000, 20
years to maturity and is selling for 1197.93.
What is the required return of investors?
38Valuing a premium bond with annual coupons
- Suppose you are looking at a bond that has a 10
annual coupon and a face value of 1000. There
are 20 years to maturity and the yield to
maturity is 8. What is the price of this bond?
39Zero coupon bonds
- Value of a zero coupon PV of bond's par or face
value - What is the value of a 5 year zero coupon bond
(1000 face value) if its YTM is 15?
40Quiz
- Eagle Co.s bonds mature in 8 years. The bonds
have a 12 coupon rate and pay coupons on a
semiannual basis. If the current price of
Eagles bonds is 875, what is the YTM?