Title: BOND PRICES AND YIELDS
1BOND PRICES AND YIELDS
2Outline of the Chapter
- Bond Characteristics
- What is a bond?
- Types of bonds
- Bond Pricing
- Bond Yields
- Yield to Maturity
- Yield to Call
- How bond prices change over time.
- Default Risk
- How default risk affects bond prices.
3Bond Characteristics
- Debt securities (fixed-income securities) A
claim on a specified periodic income. - They promise either a fixed-stream of income or a
stream of income that is determined according to
a specified formula. - A bond is a security that is issued in connection
with a borrowing arrangement. - The borrower issues (sells) a bond to the lender
for some amount of cash. - The arrangement obligates the issuer to make
semiannual payments (coupon payments) of interest
to the bondholder for the life of the bond.
4Bond Characteristics (Continued)
- The coupon rate of the bond serves to determine
the interest payments to the bond holder - the coupon ratethe bonds par value
- When the bond matures the issuer repays the debt
by paying the par value (face value) of the bond
to the bondholder. - The coupon rate, maturity date, and par value of
the bond are arranged in advance on the bond
indenture - The contract between the issuer and the
bondholder. - Types of Bonds
- Treasury bonds and notes
- Corporate bonds
- Preferred Stock
- International Bonds
5Bond Characteristics (Continued)
- Treasury bonds and notes
- Debt securities issued by the Treasury.
- Treasury notes matures in 10 years while bonds
mature in 10 to 30 years. - Issued in denominations of 1,000 or more (the
minimum denomination was reduced to 100 in
2008). - Look at the figure 14.1
- Matures in January 2011
- n stands for notes
- Coupon rate is 4.25
- Note pays interest of 42.50 (1,0004.25) per
year in two semiannual payments (21.25)
6Bond Characteristics (Continued)
- Bid and asked prices are quoted in points and a
fraction of 1/32 of a point. - Bid price 9807 of par value.
- 980798 7/32 98.219
- 1,0000.98219982.19
- Ask yield the yield to maturity on the bond
based on the asked price.
7Bond Characteristics (Continued)
- Corporate Bonds
- Debt securities issued by corporations to borrow
money from the investors. - Call provisions
- Call provisions allow the issuer to repurchase
the bond at a specified call price before the
maturity date. - Deferred callable bonds Callable bonds with a
period of call protection, an initial time during
which the bonds are not callable. - The option to call a bond is valuable to the
firm. The investor has to give up the high coupon
rate when the bond is called. Thus in order to
compensate for this risk, callable bonds are
issued with higher coupons and promised yields to
maturity than noncallable bonds.
8Bond Characteristics (Continued)
- Convertible bonds give bondholders an option to
exchange each bond for a specified number of
shares. - Convertible bond holders benefit from price
appreciation of the companys stock. Thus, the
convertibel bonds offer lower coupon rates and
yields ot maturity than do nonconvertible bonds. - Puttable bonds gives the bondholder the option
to extend or retire the bond. - Floating-rate bonds tie interest payments to a
measure of current market rates.
9Bond Characteristics (Continued)
- Preferred Stock Promises to pay specified stream
of dividends like bonds although it is a stock. - If dividends are not paid they cumulate.
- They have priority over common stock holders.
They have to be paid first before the common
stock holders receive any dividends. - In case of bankruptcy their claims have higher
priority over common stock holders but lower
priority over bondholders. - The dividend payments on preferred stocks are not
tax deductable.
10Bond Characteristics (Continued)
- International Bonds
- Foreign bonds issued by a borrower from a
country other than the one in which the bond is
sold. The bond is denominated in the currency of
the country in which it is marketed. - e.g A German firm sells a dollar-denominated
bond in the United States. - Eurobonds issued in the currency of one country
but sold in other national markets - e.g Dollar denominated bonds sold outside the
United States.
11Bond Characteristics (Continued)
- Indexed Bonds make payments that are tied to a
general price index or the price of a particular
commodity. - e.g inflation-indexed bonds coupon payments
and par value on the bonds increases in direct
proportion to CPI. - Time to maturity 3 years
- Par value 1,000
- Coupon rate 4 (annual payments)
- Inflation expectations for the three years are
2, 3, and 1. -
12Bond Characteristics (Continued)
- At the end of first year the par value becomes
1,020 becuase of inflation. - Coupon payment becomes 40.80 (4 of the new
par) - When the bond matures the investor will recieve
the new par at the end of year three and the
coupon payment computed by using the new par for
third year.
13Bond Pricing
- Bond value Present value of coupons Present
value of par value - Market interest ratef(real risk-free rate of
return, inflation premium, default risk premium,
liquidity premium, call risk premium...) - Price couponannuity factor (r, T) par value
PV factor (r,T)
14Bond Pricing (Continued)
- This negative slope of the curve shows the
inverse relationship between bond prices and
yields (required rates of return on the bond). - As the required rates increase the present value
of the bonds payments (prices) decreases. - An increase in the interest rate results in a
price decline that is smaller than the price gain
resulting from a decrease of equal magnitude in
the interest rates. - Convexity
15Bond Pricing (Continued)
- Main source of risk in fixed-income securities
is the interest rate fluctuations. - The sensitivity of the bond prices to market
yields change with the maturity of the bond. - Keeping all other factors the same, the longer
the maturity of the bond, the greater the
sensitivity of price to fluctuations in the
interest rates. - The force of discounting is greatest for the
longest-term bonds.
16Bond Pricing (Continued)
- Bond pricing between coupon dates
- The formula we have employed to price the bonds
assumes that the transaction happens at the
coupon payment date. - If the purchase date is between coupon dates then
you should also compute the accrued interest. - Accrued interest is the amount that the buyer
must pay to the seller as a prorated share of the
upcoming semiannual coupon. - Thus the price of the bond becomes
- Invoice price flat priceaccrued interest
- Accrued interestannual coupon payment/2days
since last coupon payment/days separating coupon
payments
17Bond Yields
- Yield to Maturity
- Standard measure of total rate of return.
- Interest rate that makes the present value of a
bonds payment equal to its price. - Measure of the average rate of return that will
be earned on a bond if it is bought now and held
until maturity. - The compound rate of return over the life of the
bond under the assumption that all bond coupons
can be reinvested at that yield. - Current Yield
- Bonds annual coupon payment divided by the bond
price
18Bond Yields (Continued)
- For premium bonds coupon rate is greater than
current yield, which in turn greater than yield
to maturity. - For discount bonds coupon rate is smaller than
current yield which in turn smaller than yield to
maturity. - Yield to Call
- Average rate of return for bonds subject to call
provision. - Interest rate that makes the present value of a
bonds call price equal to its market price. The
time frame is until the bond is called.
19Bond Yields (Continued)
- Realized compound return
- Yield to maturity will equal the rate of return
realized over the life of the bond if all coupons
are reinvested at an interest rate equal to the
bonds yield to maturity. - If reinvestment rate is equal to the yield to
maturity then the realized compound return equals
yield to maturity as well. - Unfortunately the future interest rates are not
certain so we can not know the rates at which the
interim coupons will be reinvested. - Reinvestment rate risk
- So we need forecasts. Forecasting the realized
compound yield over various holding periods or
investment horizons is called horizon analysis.
20Bond Prices Over Time
- If coupon ratemarket interest rate then a bond
will sell at par. - Investor receives fair compensation for the time
value of money in the form of coupon payments. - No further capital gain is necessary to provide
fair compensation. - If coupon rateltmarket rate then a bond will sell
at discount. - The coupon payments will not provide investors as
high a return as they could earn in the market. - Investors need to earn price appreciation. They
provide built-in capital gain for fair
compensation.
21Bond Prices Over Time (Continued)
- If coupon rategtmarket rate then a bond will sell
at premium. - The coupon payments will provide investors more
return than they could earn in the market. - Investors will bid up the price of these bonds
above their par values. As the bond approach the
maturity, the price will decrease since fewer of
these above-market coupon payments remain. - The capital losses due to decrease in prices will
offset the large coupon payments and again the
bondholders will receive fair rate of return.
22Bond Prices Over Time (Continued)
- Each bond offers investors the same total rate
of return. - The capital gain versus income components may
differ but the price of each bond is set to offer
competitive rates.
23Bond Prices Over Time (Continued)
- Yield to maturity versus holding-period return
- Yield to maturity depends on the bonds coupon,
current price and par value at maturity. - It is the average rate of return if the
investment in the bond is held until the bond
matures. - Holding-period return is the rate of return over
a particular investment period and depends on the
market price of the bond at the end of that
holding period - The price at the end of period is not known from
today and it will respond to unanticipated
changes in interest rates. - Holding-period return can at most be forecast.
24Bond Prices Over Time (Continued)
- Zero-Coupon Bonds
- Carries no coupons and provides all its return in
the form of price appreciation. - Provides only one cash flow on the maturity date
of the bond. - Zeros sell at discount before par and reaches
their par value at the maturity. - Their prices rise exponentially, not linearly.
25Default Risk and Bond Pricing
- There is always a risk that bond defaults, the
company may bankrupt and may not pay the promised
fixed flow of income. - This bond default risk is called credit risk.
- Credit risk is usually measured by agencies such
as Moodys Investor Services, StandardPoors
Corporation, and Fitch Investor Services. - They rate the firms.
- Investment Grade Bonds vs Speculative Grade Bonds
(Junk Bonds) - Those rates BBB or above (SP, Fitch) or Baa
(Moodys are considered investment-grade while
lower rated bonds are classified as
speculative-grade ones.
26Default Risk and Bond Pricing (Continued)
- Determinants of Bond Safety
- Coverage ratio
- Times interest earned earnings before interest
payments and taxes/interest expenses
(obligations) - Fixed-charge coverage ratio EBIT fixed charges
(before taxes)/Fixed charges (before
tax)Interest expense - Low or decreasing coverage ratios signals
possible cash flow difficulties. - Leverage ratio
- Debt/equity ratio
- High ratio indicates excessive indebtedness.
- Signal the possibility that the firm will be
unable to earn enough to satisfy the obligations
on its bond.
27Default Risk and Bond Pricing (Continued)
- Liquidity ratios
- Current ratio current assets/current liabilities
- Quick ratio current assets-inventory/current
liabilities - Measures if firms can pay their bills with their
liquid assets. - Profitability ratios
- ROA, ROE
- Indicates overall health of the firm.
- Cash flow-to-debt ratio
- Indicates how firm can meet its debt obligations
by using the cash flow.
28Default Risk and Bond Pricing (Continued)
- Bond Indentures
- It is the contract between the issuer and the
bondholder. - It sets some restrictions on the issuer to
protect the rights of the bondholders. - These protective covenants include sinking funds,
dividend policy, further borrowing and
collateral. - Sinking Funds
- It is a fund used to spread the payment burden
over several years. - The fund may operate in two ways
- The firm may repurchase a fraction of the
outstanding bonds in the open market each year. - The firm may purchase a fraction of the
outstanding bonds at a special call price.
29Default Risk and Bond Pricing (Continued)
- Subordination of Further Debt
- The amount of additional borrowing is restricted.
- Additional debt might be required to be
subordinated in priority to existing debt. - Dividend Restrictions
- Restricting the dividend payouts protect the
bondholders since by this way the firm retain
assets instead of paying them out to
stockholders. - Collateral
- Represents a particular asset of the firm that
the bondholders receive if the firm defaults on
the bond. - Mortgage bond, Collateral trust bond, Equipment
obligation bond
30Default Risk and Bond Pricing (Continued)
- Expected versus Promised yield to maturity
- Promised (stated) YTM is the maximum possible YTM
of the bond. - Expected YTM takes into account the possibility
of default. - Default Premium
- In order to compensate for the possiblity of
default, corporate bonds must offer a default
premium. - Default premiumpromised yield-risk-free rate
- If the firm remains solvent then YTM on bond will
be higher than YTM on government bond - If the firm bankrupt then YTM on bond will be
less than YTM on government bond.
31Default Risk and Bond Pricing (Continued)
- The corporate bond has the potential for both
better and worse performance than the government
bond. - It is riskier.
- Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDO)
- Emplyed to reallocate risk in the fixed-income
markets. - e.g. mortgage-backed CDOs
32Default Risk and Bond Pricing (Continued)