Title: The Valuation and Characteristics of Bonds
1The Valuation and Characteristics of Bonds
2The Basis of Value
- Securities are worth the present value of the
future cash income associated with owning them - The security should sell in financial markets for
a price very close to that value - However, I might think Security A has a different
intrinsic value then someone else thinks, because
we have different estimates for the - Discount rate
- Expected future cash flows
3The Basis for Value
- Investing
- Using a resource to benefit the future rather
than for current satisfaction - Putting money to work to earn more money
- Common types of investments
- Debtlending money
- Equitybuying an ownership in a business
- A return is what the investor receives divided by
what s/he invests - Debt investors receive interest
4The Basis for Value
- Rate of return is the interest rate that equates
the present value of its expected future cash
flows with its current price - PV FV ? (1 k)
- Return is also known as
- Yield
- Interest
5Bond Valuation
- A bond issue represents borrowing from many
lenders at one time under a single agreement - While one person may not be willing to lend a
single company 10 million, 10,000 investors may
be willing to lend the firm 1,000 each
6Bond Terminology and Practice
- A bonds term (or maturity) is the time from the
present until the principal is to be returned - Bonds mature on the last day of their term
- A bonds face value (or par) represents the
amount the firm intends to borrow (the principal)
at the coupon rate of interest - Bonds typically pay interest (coupon rate) every
six months - Bonds are non-amortized (meaning the principal is
repaid at once when the bond matures rather than
being repaid in increments throughout the bonds
life)
7Interest Rates for Various Treasury Securities of
Differing Maturities
Note that bonds with a longer maturity generally
have a higher interest rate and that interest
rates on Treasury securities move in tandem.
8Bond ValuationBasic Ideas
- Adjusting to interest rate changes
- Bonds are sold in both primary (original sale)
and secondary markets (subsequent trading among
investors) - Interest rates change all the time
- Most bonds pay a fixed interest rate
- What happens to the price of a bond paying a
fixed interest rate in the secondary market when
interest rates change?
9Bond ValuationBasic Ideas
- You buy a 20 year, 1000 par bond today for par
(meaning you pay 1,000 for it) when the coupon
rate is 10 - This implies that your required rate of return
was 10 - For that purchase price, you are promised 20
years of coupon payments of 100 each, and a
principal repayment of 1,000 in 20 years - After youve held the bond investment for a week,
you decide that you need the money (cash) more
than you need the investment - You decide to sell the bond
- Unfortunately, interest rates have risen
- Other investors now have a required rate of
return of 11 - They can buy new bonds with an 11 coupon rate in
the market for 1,000 - Will they buy your bond from you for 1,000?
- NO! Theyll buy it for less than 1,000
10Determining the Price of a Bond
- Remember, Intrinsic Value is the present value of
all future expected cash flows - With a bond, predicting the future cash flows is
somewhat easy, because the promised cash flows
are specified. - Interest (usually)
- Principal (usually)
- Maturity (in years)
In practice most bonds pay interest semi-annually.
11Determining the Price of a Bond
12Determining the Price of a Bond
- The Bond Valuation Formula
- The price of a bond is the present value of a
stream of interest payments plus the present
value of the principal repayment
13Figure 6.1 Cash Flow Time Line for a Bond
14Determining the Price of a Bond
- Two Interest Rates and One More
- Coupon rate
- Determines the size of the interest payments
- Kthe current market yield on comparable bonds
- The appropriate discount rate that makes the
present value of the payments equal to the price
of the bond in the market - AKA yield to maturity (YTM)
- Current yieldannual interest payment divided by
bonds current price
15Solving Bond Problems with a Financial Calculator
- Financial calculators have five time value of
money keys - With a bond problem, all five keys are used
- Nnumber of periods until maturity
- Imarket interest rate
- PVprice of bond
- FVface value (par) of bond
- PMTcoupon interest payment per period
- With calculators that have a sign convention the
PMT and FV must be of one sign while the PV will
be the other sign - The unknown will be either the interest rate or
the present value - When solving for the interest rate, the price of
the bond must be inputted as a negative value
while the PMT and FV must be inputted as a
positive value - Sophisticated calculators have a bond mode
allowing easy calculations dealing with accrued
interest
16Determining the Price of a BondExample
17Bond Example
18Maturity Risk Revisited
- Relates to term of the debt
- Longer term bonds fluctuate more in response to
changes in interest rates than shorter term bonds - AKA price risk and interest rate risk
- As time passes, if interest rates dont change
the price of a bond will approach its par
19Table 6.1
20Maturity Risk Revisited
21Finding the Yield at a Given Price
- Weve been calculating the intrinsic value of a
bond, but we could calculate the bond yield
(based on its current value in the market) and
compare that yield to our required rate of return
Involves solving for k, which is more complicated
because it involves both an annuity and a FV
Use trial and error to solve for k, or use a
financial calculator.
22Finding the Yield at a Given PriceExample
23Call Provisions
- If interest rates have dropped substantially
since a bond was originally issued, a firm may
wish to refinance, or retire their old high
interest bond issue - However, the issuing corporation would have to
get all the bondholders to agree to this - From the bondholders viewpoint, this could be a
bad ideathey would be giving up high coupon
bonds and would have to reinvest their cash in a
market with lower interest rates - To ensure that the corporation can refinance
their bonds should they wish to do so, the
corporation makes the bonds callable
24Call Provisions
- Call provisions allow bond issuers to retire
bonds before maturity by paying a premium
(penalty) to bondholders - Many corporations offer a deferred call period
(meaning the bond wont be called for at least x
years after the initial issuing date) - Known as the call-protected period
25Call Provisions
- The Effect of A Call Provision on Price
- When valuing a bond that is probably going to be
called when the call-protected period is over - Cannot use the traditional bond valuation
procedure - Cash flows will not be received through maturity
because bond will probably be called
26Figure 6.5 Valuation of a Bond Subject to Call
27Call Provisions
- Valuing the Sure-To-Be-Called Bond
- Requires that two changes be made to bond
valuation formula
The future value becomes the call price (face
value plus call premium).
N now represents the number of periods until the
bond is likely to be called.
28The Refunding Decision
- When current interest rates fall below the coupon
rate on a bond, company has to decide whether or
not to call in the issue - Compare interest savings of issuing a new bond to
the cost of making the call - Calling in the bond requires the payment of a
call premium - Issuing a new bond to raise cash to pay off the
old bond requires payment of administrative
expenses and flotation costs
29Dangerous Bonds with Surprising Calls
- Some bonds have contingency call features buried
in the fine print - For instance, some issuers would like to retire a
portion of their bond issue periodically - Versus paying a huge principal repayment on the
entire issue at maturity - This feature does not require a call provision
- Rather, those bondholders who must retire their
bond are determined by lottery
30Risky Issues
- Sometimes bonds sell for a price far below what
valuation techniques suggest - Investors are worried that company may not be
able to pay promised cash flows - Valuation model should determine a price similar
to the market price if the correct discount rate
is used - Riskier loans should be discounted at a higher
interest rate leading to a lower calculated price
31Convertible Bonds
- Unsecured bonds that are exchangeable for a fixed
number of shares of the companys stock at the
bondholder's discretion - Allows bondholders to participate in a stocks
price appreciation should the firm be successful - Conversion ratio represents the number of shares
of stock that will be received for each bond - Conversion price is the implied stock price if
bond is converted into a certain number of shares - Usually set 15-30 higher than the stocks market
value at the time the bond is issued - Can usually be issued at lower coupon rates
32Convertible Bonds
- The effect of conversion on financial statements
and cash flow - Upon conversion an accounting entry removes the
convertible bonds from long-term debt and places
it into the equity accounts - There is no immediate cash flow impact, but
ongoing cash flow implications exist - Interest payments will stop
- If the firms stock pays a dividend the newly
created shares are entitled to those dividends - Improves debt management ratios
33Advantages of Convertible Bonds
- To issuing companies
- Convertible features are sweeteners that let the
firm pay a lower interest rate (coupon) - Can be viewed as a way to sell equity at a price
above market - Convertible bonds usually have few or no
restrictions - To buyers
- Offer the chance to participate in stock price
appreciation - Offer a way to limit risk associated with a stock
investment
34Forced Conversion
- A firm may want its bonds to be converted because
- Eliminates interest payments on bond
- Strengthens balance sheet
- Convertible bonds are always issued with call
features which can be used to force conversion - Issuers generally call convertibles when stock
prices rise to 10-15 above conversion prices - Rational investors will convert if the conversion
value is greater than the call value
35Valuation (Pricing) Convertibles
- A convertibles price can depend on
- Its value as a traditional bond or
- The market value of the stock into which it can
be converted - At any stock price the convertible is worth at
least the larger of its value as a bond or as
stock - The market value will be greater due to the
possibility that the stocks price will rise
36Figure 6.7 Value of a Convertible Bond
37Effect on Earnings Per ShareDiluted EPS
- Upon conversion convertible bonds cause dilution
in EPS - EPS drops due to the increase in the number of
shares of stock - Thus convertible bonds have the potential to
dilute EPS - Therefore convertible bonds will impact the
calculation of Diluted EPS according to FASB 128
38Effect on Earnings Per ShareDiluted EPSExample
39Effect on Earnings Per ShareDiluted EPSExample
40Effect on Earnings Per ShareDiluted EPSExample
41Institutional Characteristics of Bonds
- Registration, Transfer Agents, and Owners of
Record - A record of registered securities is kept by a
transfer agent - Payments are sent to owners of record as the
dates as of the dates the payments are made - Bearer bonds vs. registered bonds
- Bearer bondsinterest payment is made to the
bearer of the bond - Registered bondsinterest payment is made to the
holder of record
42Kinds of Bonds
- Secured bonds and mortgage bonds
- Backed by collateral
- Debentures
- Unsecured bonds
- Subordinated debentures
- Lower in priority than senior debt
- Junk bonds
- Issued by risky companies and pay high interest
rates
43Bond RatingsAssessing Default Risk
- Bond rating agencies (such as Moodys, SP)
evaluate bonds (and issuing firms) and assign a
rating to each bond issued by a corporation - These ratings gauge the probability that issuers
will fail to meet their obligations
44Bond RatingsAssessing Default Risk
- Why Ratings Are Important
- Ratings are the primary measure of the default
risk associated with bonds - Thus, ratings play a big part in the interest
rate that investors demand - The rating a firms bonds receive basically
determines the rate at which the firm can borrow - A lower quality rating implies a higher borrowing
rate
45Bond RatingsAssessing Default Risk
- The differential between the yields on high and
low quality bonds is an indicators of the health
of the economy - The Differential Over Time
- The quality differential tends to be larger when
interest rates are generally high - May indicate a recession and marginal firms are
more likely to fail, making them riskier - The Significance of the Investment Grade Rating
- Many institutional investors are prohibited from
trading below-investment-grade bonds
46Table 6.2
47Bond IndenturesControlling Default Risk
- As a bondholder, you would like to ensure that
you will receive your promised interest and
principal payments - Bond indentures attempt to prevent firms from
becoming riskier after the bonds are purchased,
and includes such protective covenants as - Limits to managements salary
- Limits to dividends
- Maintenance of certain financial ratios
- Restrictions on additional debt issues
- Sinking funds provide money for the repayment of
bond principal
48Appendix 6-A Lease Financing
- A lease is a contract giving one party (lessee)
the right to use an asset owned by another
(lessor) for a periodic payment - Individuals may lease houses, apartments and
automobiles - Corporations may lease equipment and real estate
- Approximately 30 of all equipment today is leased
49Appendix 6-A Leasing and Financial Statements
- Originally leasing allowed the lessee to use the
asset without ownership - Lease payments were recognized as expenses on the
income statement - Had no impact on balance sheet
- Led to large use of lease financing
- Became the leading form of off balance sheet
financing
50Appendix 6-A Misleading Results
- Off balance sheet financing makes financial
statements misleading - Missed lease payments can cause the firm to fail
just like a missed interest payment on debt - Thus long-term leases are effectively the same as
debt - Not having leases appear on the balance sheet can
mislead investors to think a firm is stronger
than it is
51Appendix 6-A Misleading Results
- By the early 1970s concerns led to FASB 13
- Prior to FASB 13 an asset was owned by whoever
held its title regardless of who used the asset - FASB 13 stated that the real owner of an asset is
whoever enjoys its benefits and deals with the
risks and responsibilities
52Appendix 6-A Operating and Capital (Financing)
Leases
- Under FASB 13 lessees must capitalize financing
leases - Puts the value of leased assets and liabilities
on the balance sheet - Makes the balance sheet similar to what it would
have been had the asset been purchased with
borrowed money - Operating leases can still be listed off the
balance sheet
53Appendix 6-A Operating and Capital (Financing)
Leases
- Rules that must be met for a lease to be
classified as an operating lease - Lease must not transfer legal ownership to the
lessee at its end - Must not be a bargain purchase option at the end
of the lease - Lease term must be lt 75 of the assets estimated
economic life - Present value of the lease payments must be lt 90
of the assets fair market value at the beginning
of the lease
54Appendix 6-A Financial Statement Presentation
of Leases by Lessees
- Operating leases
- No balance sheet entries
- Lease payments are treated as an expense
- Details must be listed in footnotes
- Financing leases
- Lessee must record an asset on balance sheet
- Lessee must record an offsetting liability
- Both of the above amounts are usually the present
value of the stream of committed lease payments - The interest rate is generally the rate the
lessee would pay if it were borrowing money at
the time the lease begins - The asset is depreciated while the Lease
Obligation is treated like a loan
55Appendix 6-A Leasing from the Perspective of
the Lessor
- Lessors are usually banks, finance companies and
insurance companies - Companies buy the equipment and lease it to
customer - Lease payments are calculated to offer the lessor
a given return - The interest rate is called the lessors return
or the rate implicit in the lease - Lessor holds legal titlecan repossess assets if
lessee defaults - Lessors get better treatment in bankruptcy
proceedings than lenders
56Appendix 6-A Residual Values
- Residual valuethe value of an asset at the end
of the lease term - Lessee may buy the equipment
- Lessor may sell it to someone else
- Asset may be re-leased (usually only with
operating leases) - Makes lease pricing and return calculations more
complex - Often are important negotiating points between
lessee and lessor
57Appendix 6-A Lease Vs. BuyThe Lessees
Perspective
- Broad financing possibilities
- Equity
- Debtavailable through bonds or banks
- Leasingavailable through leasing companies
- Should conduct a lease vs. buy comparison
- Choose the lowest cost in a present value sense
58Appendix 6-A The Advantages of Leasing
- No money down
- Lenders typically require some downpayment
whereas lessors usually do not - Restrictions
- Lenders usually require covenants/indentures,
whereas lessors have few, if any, restrictions - Easier credit with manufacturers/lessors
- Equipment manufacturers sometimes lease their own
products and will lease to marginally
creditworthy customers
59Appendix 6-A The Advantages of Leasing
- Avoiding the risk obsolescence
- Short leases transfer this risk to lessors
- Tax deducting the cost of land
- If real estate is leased the lease payment can be
deducted as an expense, whereas if the land is
owned it is not depreciable - Increasing liquiditythe sale and leaseback
- A firm may sale an asset (to generate cash) and
lease the same asset backused to free up cash
invested in real estate - Tax advantages for marginally profitable companies
60Appendix 6-A Leveraged Leases
- The ability to depreciate an asset reduces taxes
- If a company is not making a profit (and not
paying taxes) then depreciation is not saving the
firm any money - A lessor buys equipment but finances a portion of
the price of the equipment (hence, the term
leveraged) and is allowed to depreciate the
leased assets and gain the tax benefits - The lessor passes along some of the benefits to
the lessee in the form of lower lease payments