Bonds are financial instruments representing loans from investors to borrowers, typically corporations or governments. They offer regular interest payments and return of principal at maturity. Bonds are considered less risky than stocks but generally offer lower potential returns.
This unit covers bond types, characteristics, pricing, valuation, and risks. It explores yield calculations, interest rate relationships, and trading strategies. Understanding bonds is crucial for investors seeking income, portfolio diversification, and capital preservation.
Financial instruments that represent a loan made by an investor to a borrower, typically a corporation or government entity
Bonds are debt securities where the issuer owes the holder a debt and is obligated to pay interest (coupon) and/or repay the principal at a later date (maturity)
Investors buy bonds to receive regular interest payments and the return of their principal investment upon maturity
Bonds are considered less risky than stocks but generally offer lower potential returns
Issuers use bonds to finance projects, operations, or other expenses without diluting ownership by issuing stock
Bonds are traded on the secondary market, allowing investors to buy and sell them before maturity
Credit rating agencies (Moody's, Standard & Poor's, Fitch) assign ratings to bonds based on the issuer's creditworthiness and ability to repay the debt
Types of Bonds
Government bonds
Issued by national governments (U.S. Treasury bonds) and considered low-risk investments
Municipal bonds are issued by state and local governments to fund public projects (infrastructure)
Corporate bonds
Issued by companies to raise capital for various purposes (expansion, acquisitions)
Higher risk than government bonds but offer higher yields to compensate investors
High-yield (junk) bonds
Issued by companies with lower credit ratings and higher risk of default
Offer significantly higher yields to attract investors willing to take on more risk
Zero-coupon bonds
Bonds that do not pay regular interest but are issued at a discount and redeemed at face value upon maturity
Convertible bonds
Bonds that give the holder the option to convert the bond into a predetermined number of shares of the issuer's common stock
Callable bonds
Bonds that give the issuer the right to redeem the bond before maturity at a predetermined price
Puttable bonds
Bonds that give the holder the right to sell the bond back to the issuer at a predetermined price before maturity
Bond Characteristics
Face value (par value)
The amount the bondholder will receive when the bond matures
Typically $1,000 per bond
Coupon rate
The annual interest rate paid by the bond issuer on the bond's face value
Expressed as a percentage (5% coupon rate means 50annualinterestona1,000 bond)
Coupon frequency
How often interest payments are made (annually, semi-annually, quarterly)
Maturity date
The date on which the bond issuer must repay the bondholder's principal investment
Bonds with longer maturities generally offer higher interest rates to compensate for the increased risk
Credit rating
An assessment of the bond issuer's creditworthiness and ability to repay the debt
Where r is the yield to maturity, n is the number of periods until maturity, and t is the period number
Duration measures a bond's sensitivity to interest rate changes
Longer duration bonds are more sensitive to interest rate changes than shorter duration bonds
Convexity measures the curvature of the relationship between bond prices and interest rates
Bonds with higher convexity experience larger price increases when interest rates fall and smaller price decreases when interest rates rise
Yield and Interest Rates
Coupon yield
The annual interest payment divided by the bond's face value
CouponYield=FaceValueAnnualCouponPayment
Current yield
The annual interest payment divided by the bond's current market price
CurrentYield=CurrentBondPriceAnnualCouponPayment
Yield to maturity (YTM)
The total return an investor can expect to receive by holding the bond until maturity
Accounts for coupon payments, principal repayment, and the time value of money
Calculated using an iterative process or approximated using the bond's price, coupon rate, and time to maturity
Nominal yield
The stated interest rate on a bond, not adjusted for inflation
Real yield
The nominal yield adjusted for inflation
RealYield=NominalYield−InflationRate
Term structure of interest rates (yield curve)
The relationship between bond yields and their maturities
Normal yield curve: longer maturities have higher yields than shorter maturities
Inverted yield curve: shorter maturities have higher yields than longer maturities, often signaling an impending recession
Bond Risks
Interest rate risk
The risk that changes in interest rates will cause bond prices to fluctuate
When interest rates rise, bond prices fall, and vice versa
Credit (default) risk
The risk that the bond issuer will fail to make coupon payments or repay the principal
Higher for lower-rated bonds (junk bonds) and lower for higher-rated bonds (investment-grade)
Inflation risk
The risk that the purchasing power of the bond's coupon payments and principal repayment will be eroded by inflation over time
More significant for long-term bonds and during periods of high inflation
Liquidity risk
The risk that an investor may not be able to sell a bond quickly or at a fair price due to low trading volume or market conditions
Call risk
The risk that a callable bond will be redeemed by the issuer before maturity, potentially forcing the investor to reinvest at lower interest rates
Reinvestment risk
The risk that an investor will have to reinvest coupon payments at lower interest rates than the bond's original yield
More significant when interest rates are falling
Foreign exchange risk
The risk that changes in currency exchange rates will affect the value of a bond denominated in a foreign currency
Trading and Investing in Bonds
Bonds can be bought and sold on the secondary market through brokers or electronic trading platforms
Bond prices are quoted as a percentage of the bond's face value (par value)
A bond quoted at 98 is trading at 98% of its face value (980fora1,000 bond)
Accrued interest
The interest earned on a bond since the last coupon payment, paid by the buyer to the seller when a bond is traded between coupon payment dates
Bond mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
Pooled investment vehicles that hold a diversified portfolio of bonds, providing investors with exposure to the bond market without having to purchase individual bonds
Laddering
A bond investment strategy where an investor purchases bonds with different maturities to minimize interest rate risk and reinvestment risk
Immunization
A bond investment strategy where an investor matches the duration of their bond portfolio to their investment time horizon to minimize interest rate risk
Bond arbitrage
A trading strategy that seeks to profit from price discrepancies between related bonds or between a bond and a derivative security (bond futures)
Real-World Applications
Governments issue bonds to finance public projects, infrastructure, and budget deficits
U.S. Treasury bonds are considered a risk-free benchmark for other investments
Corporations issue bonds to raise capital for expansion, acquisitions, or other expenses without diluting ownership
Bond issuance allows companies to access funding at lower costs than equity financing or bank loans
Investors use bonds to generate steady income, diversify portfolios, and preserve capital
Bonds are often used to balance the risk of equity investments, particularly for risk-averse investors or those nearing retirement
Central banks (Federal Reserve) use monetary policy tools to influence interest rates and bond yields
Quantitative easing involves central banks purchasing government bonds to lower interest rates and stimulate economic growth
Bond market indicators (yield curves, credit spreads) provide insights into economic conditions and market sentiment
An inverted yield curve (short-term rates higher than long-term rates) often precedes a recession
Pension funds and insurance companies heavily invest in bonds to match their long-term liabilities and ensure stable returns
Liability-driven investing strategies aim to align bond portfolios with the duration and cash flow characteristics of an organization's liabilities