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1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? Steady income Generally safe Reduce risk through diversification
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1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

1

Chapter 14 - Bonds

• A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan

• Why buy bonds?– Steady income– Generally safe– Reduce risk through diversification

Page 2: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

2

Types of Bonds

• Corporate bonds– Unsecured = debentures

• Treasuries and Agencies• Inflation-indexed• Municipals

– State and local government agencies– Usually tax-exempt

• Zero coupons

Page 3: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

3

Bonds – Issuer Types

• Mortgage-related $7.9T40.6%

• Corporations 4.4 22.6

• US Treasuries 3.6 18.5

• State & Local Gov’t 1.9 9.8

• Other asset-backed 1.7 8.5– Total $19.5 100.0%

Page 4: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

4

Bond Features

• Par value – face value or principal amount repaid at maturity– Usually $1,000 per bond– Market price may be more or less than par

• Coupon rate – percentage of par value paid annually in interest– With 6% coupon, $1,000 bond pays $60/yr– Most bonds pay interest semi-annually, $3.

Page 5: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

5

Capital Food Chain

• Secured creditors (OK if < assets)

• General Creditors– Debenture holders and unsecured creditors– Subordinated debenture holders

• Preferred stockholders

• Common stockholders

Page 6: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

6

Ratings

• Moody’s, Standard and Poors, Fitch– Assess quality of borrower’s credit– AAA to D– Junk bonds are BB and below– Lower rating, greater risk, higher rates

Page 7: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Page 8: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Junk Bonds

• AKA “high risk”, “non-investment grade”, “high yield” or “speculative”

• Low credit rating - BB and below– Higher risk, higher rates

• Fallen angels (companies in trouble) or new, unproven firms

Page 9: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

9

Quality SpreadsTen Year Maturities – April 2004

Yield Spread Example

USTN 4.40%

AAA 4.71 +31 GE & UPS

AA 4.91 51 Abbott Labs

A 5.25 85 McDonalds

BBB 5.85 145 GM

BB 7.90 350 Goodyear

Page 10: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

10

Convertible Securities

Convertible into common stock at a fixed rate at bondholder’s option

$1,000 bond convertible into 20 shares– Equal to $50/share (1,000/20)

– Stock rises to $60. Bond worth $1,200 (60 * 20)

Offers upside potential but have lower rates than on comparable nonconvertibles

Look at coupon and conversion ratio

Page 11: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Callable Bonds

• Redeemable at issuer’s option– Rates drop, bond called, new bonds issued– Investor forced to reinvest at lower rate

• Deferred calls and call premiums– Some not callable for first five years– Premium: say 105% of par year 6, 104%

year 7 ….. par year 11

• Effect: callables pay a higher rate.

Page 12: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

12

Municipal Bonds

• Muni's are issued by states, counties, cities and school districts

• Interest not subject to federal taxes (usually)• General obligations

– backed issuer’s taxing power

• Revenue bonds repaid by project's revenue• Muni's subject to credit risk – Orange

County's and Cleveland's bankruptcy

Page 13: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Page 14: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

14

Bond Valuation

• Bond pays fixed amount of interest over a number of years and at maturity the bond is redeemed and you receive the par value.

• Value of a bond is the present value of each interest payment and the present value of the payment at maturity.

Page 15: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

15

Evaluating Bonds

• Yield – return on the investment– Not the same as coupon rate (% of par value)– Current yield – ratio of annual interest to price– 8% bond selling for $700 has 11.4% current

yield

• Yield to Maturity (YTM) – return earned if held to maturity; interest plus/minus difference between par and purchase price

Page 16: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Bond Calculations

• US bonds pay interest semiannually– Review non-annual compounding– This means we must change the annual rate to a

per period rate

• $1,000 two year bond with 6% coupon rate has four $30 semiannual interest payments plus $1,000 paid at maturity.

Page 17: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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6% bond, Due two years; Market rate = 10%; Interest semi-ann

Time CF 5% PVIF PV

6 mo $30 .9524 $28.57

12 mo 30 .9070 27.21

18 30 .8638 25.91

24 30 .8227 24.68

1,000 .8227 822.70

$927.07

Page 18: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Valuation

Remember: the coupon is fixed for the life of the bond

The only way a bond's return can be increased is by reducing its price

One year bond 8% coupon ($80); Market rate 10% ($100). Price falls to $980

$80 interest + $20 capital gain = $100

Page 19: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Relationships

Inverse relation between changes in interest rates and changes in bond prices– Rates increase, bond prices fall– Rates decrease, prices rise– Bonds may sell for par value, more than

par, or less than par.• Market rate above coupon, sells at a discount

• Market below coupon, bond sells at a premium

Page 20: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Bond Values at Different Rates

Page 21: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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More Relationships

• Longer-term bonds fluctuate more in price than shorter-tem bonds (next slide)

• As maturity approaches, market value approaches par value

• Upward movement in callable bonds limited because they may be called away from you

Page 22: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Longer-term = More Sensitive

Price of 12% 5 and 10 Year Bonds

Rate 5 Year 10 Year

9% $1,117 $1,192

12 1,000 1,000

15 899 848

Page 23: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Price Sensitivity – 5 vs. 10 Year

Page 24: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Page 25: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Page 26: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Preferred Stock

Hybrid security – similar to bonds and stock– Like bonds: usually fixed return, paid before

common dividends, usually don't vote– Like stock: no maturity and failure to pay

dividend does not trigger bankruptcy

Page 27: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Features of Preferred

• May have multiple issues with different terms

• Sometimes convertible into common

• Some have cumulative dividends

• May be callable

• Some have floating rates

Page 28: 1 Chapter 14 - Bonds A promise to repay a sum of money on a fixed date, together with interest, usually over the life of the loan Why buy bonds? –Steady.

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Risks With Preferred Stock

Interest rates rise, price declines

Rates fall – what happens if callable?

Gains limited

Dividends not as secure as bond interest