Examples of high-yield bonds in the following topics:
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Characteristics of Bonds
- The yield is the rate of return received from investing in the bond.
- High-yield bonds are bonds that are rated below investment grade by the credit rating agencies.
- Therefore, because of the inherent riskiness of these bonds, they are also called high-yield or "junk" bonds.
- This is mainly the case for high-yield bonds.
- To be free from these covenants, the issuer can repay the bonds early, but only at a high cost.
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Redeeming Before Maturity
- For bond issuers, they can repurchase a bond at or before maturity.
- These bonds are referred to as callable bonds.
- Most callable bonds allow the issuer to repay the bond at par.
- This is mainly the case for high-yield bonds.
- To be free from these covenants, the issuer can repay the bonds early, but only at a high cost.
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Ratings
- Bond ratings below BBB/Baa are not considered to be investment-grade; these bonds are called junk bonds.
- Junk bonds are also called high-yield bonds.
- As these bonds are more risky than investment grade bonds, investors expect them to earn a higher yield.
- The risks associated with investment-grade bonds (or investment-grade corporate debt) are considered significantly higher than those associated with first-class government bonds.
- Use the ratings system to assess the risk associated with different bonds
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Call Provisions
- A callable bond (also called redeemable bond) is a type of bond that allows the issuer of the bond to retain the privilege of redeeming the bond at some point before the bond reaches its date of maturity.
- Most callable bonds allow the issuer to repay the bond at par.
- This is mainly the case for high-yield bonds.
- To be free from these covenants, the issuer can repay the bonds early, but only at a high cost.
- Similarly, yield on a callable bond is higher than the yield on a straight bond.
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Types of Bonds
- The most common secured bonds.
- This bears the owner's name on the bond certificate and in the register of bond owners kept by the bond issuer or its agent, the registrar.
- A term bond matures on the same date as all other bonds in a given bond issue.
- Serial bonds in a given bond issue have maturities spread over several dates.
- These are high-interest rate, high-risk bonds.
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Other Features
- Other important features of bonds include the yield, market price and putability of a bond.
- The yield is the rate of return received from investing in the bond.
- The market price of the bond will vary over its life: it may trade at a premium (above par, usually because market interest rates have fallen since issue), or at a discount (below par, if market rates have risen or there is a high probability of default on the bond).
- Yield on a puttable bond is lower than the yield on a straight bond.
- Describe the effect a bond's market price has on its yield
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Chapter Questions
- If one bond market has a high risk while the other is low risk, then how does risk impact the bond markets?
- If one market has high information costs while the other does not, then how would information cost affect the bond markets?
- Explain both the term structure of interest rates and the yield curve.
- Which three theories explain the characteristics of the yield curve?
- If you saw a yield curve with a negative slope, which economic phenomenon would you predict to occur in a year?
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Answers to Chapter 9 Questions
- Thus, investors increase their demand for the low-risk bonds and decrease their demand for the high-risk ones.
- Furthermore, the interest rates are lower for the low-risk bonds and higher for the high-risk bonds.
- Thus, investors increase their demand for the low information cost bonds and decrease their demand for the high information cost ones.
- Consequently, bond prices increase for the bonds with low information costs but increase for the high information cost bonds.
- Preferred habitat theory does the best in explaining the yield curve.
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Yield to Maturity
- Yield to maturity is the discount rate at which the sum of all future cash flows from the bond are equal to the price of the bond.
- If the yield to maturity for a bond is less than the bond's coupon rate, then the (clean) market value of the bond is greater than the par value (and vice versa).
- Yield to put: same as yield to call, but when the bond holder has the option to sell the bond back to the issuer at a fixed price on specified date.
- Yield to worst: when a bond is callable, puttable, exchangeable, or has other features, the yield to worst is the lowest yield of yield to maturity, yield to call, yield to put, and others.
- Classify a bond based on its market value and Yield to Maturity
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Term Structure of Interest Rates
- Consequently, the yield curve usually slopes upward because people prefer to hold short-term bonds rather than long-term bonds.
- Consequently, the yield curve slopes upward because the investors add the term premium to long maturity bonds.
- Interest rate on a long-term bond equals the average of the short-term interest rates expected to occur over the life of the long-term bond.
- However, investors add a term premium, so the yield curve has a positive slope because the term premium is high enough to cancel the effect of changing interest rates.
- When a yield curve is downward sloping, such as a three-month T-bill interest rate exceeds the 10-year T-bond, a recession usually occurs one year later.