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INTRODUCTION TO BONDS
AND THEIR VALUATION

  Alan Anderson, Ph.D.
  ECI Risk Training
  www.ecirisktraining.com




          (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
             www.ecirisktraining.com   1
WHAT IS A BOND?

A bond is a debt instrument that provides
a periodic stream of interest payments to
investors while repaying the borrowed
principal on a specified maturity date




               (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                  www.ecirisktraining.com   2
BOND TERMINOLOGY

 Face (par) value:

the price of a bond when first issued

(often a multiple of $1,000)


            (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
               www.ecirisktraining.com   3
Coupon rate:

The periodic interest payments promised
to bondholders are a fixed percentage of
a bond’s face value; this percentage is
known as the coupon rate


             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com    4
Coupon:

the dollar value of the periodic
interest promised to bondholders;
this equals the coupon rate times
the face value of the bond


          (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
             www.ecirisktraining.com   5
Maturity

The time until the principal
is scheduled to be repaid




           (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
              www.ecirisktraining.com   6
Call Provisions

Some bonds contain a provision that
enables the issuer to buy the bond
back from the bondholder at a pre-
specified price prior to maturity


            (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
               www.ecirisktraining.com   7
A bond containing such a
provision is said to be callable




             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   8
This call option is known as
an embedded option, since
it can’t be bought or sold
separately from the bond




         (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
            www.ecirisktraining.com   9
Put Provisions

Some bonds contain a provision that
enables the buyer to sell the bond
back to the issuer at a pre-specified
price prior to maturity


             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   10
A bond containing such a
provision is said to be putable




            (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
               www.ecirisktraining.com   11
Sinking Fund Provisions

Some bonds are issued with a
provision that requires the issuer
to buy back a fixed percentage
of the bonds each year


           (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
              www.ecirisktraining.com   12
CONVERTIBLE BONDS
A convertible bond contains an embedded
option; the holder has the right to convert
the bond into a pre-determined number of
shares of stock




               (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                  www.ecirisktraining.com   13
BOND ISSUERS
Bonds can be categorized
according to their issuers:

       Treasury Bonds
       Corporate Bonds
       Municipal Bonds
       Foreign Bonds
             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   14
TREASURY BONDS

Treasury bonds are issued by the U.S.
government to finance its deficits




             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   15
These are free of default risk, which
is the risk that the investor will not
receive all promised payments




             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   16
They are also not taxed by
state and local governments




          (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
             www.ecirisktraining.com   17
CORPORATE BONDS
Corporations can raise funds by issuing
debt in the form of corporate bonds

These bonds offer a higher promised
coupon rate than Treasuries, but expose
investors to default risk

             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   18
Ratings agencies, such as Standard and
Poor’s and Moody’s, rank corporate issuers
according to their likelihood of default




               (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                  www.ecirisktraining.com   19
The riskiest corporations offer the
highest coupon rates to investors
as compensation for default risk




             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   20
MUNICIPAL BONDS

A municipal bond is issued by a state or
local government; as a result, they carry
little or no default risk

They also offer an extremely favorable
tax treatment to investors

             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   21
A municipal bond is not
taxed at the Federal level

It is also not taxed by the
issuing municipality


           (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
              www.ecirisktraining.com   22
As a result, municipal bonds offer
very low coupon rates to investors




            (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
               www.ecirisktraining.com   23
FOREIGN BONDS

Foreign bonds are issued by foreign
governments and corporations

These may be denominated in dollars
or in a foreign currency


              (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                 www.ecirisktraining.com   24
ILLUSTRATING A
BOND’S CASH FLOWS

 A bond’s cash flows may
 be shown with a time line




          (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
             www.ecirisktraining.com   25
EXAMPLE

Suppose that a bond is issued with:

      a face value of $1,000
      a coupon rate of 4%
      a maturity of four years


             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   26
With a face value of $1,000, the
bond will make an annual coupon
payment of:

    4%* $1,000 = $40



            (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
               www.ecirisktraining.com   27
On the bond’s maturity date, the bond pays:

        one final $40 coupon
        the face value of $1,000

Therefore, the final cash flow totals $1,040

                (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                   www.ecirisktraining.com   28
This is shown as follows:




        (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
           www.ecirisktraining.com   29
(c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
   www.ecirisktraining.com   30
where:

VB   = the bond’s price or value
rd   = the interest rate used to compute
     the present value of the bond’s cash
     flows; this is known as the discount
     rate
                (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                   www.ecirisktraining.com   31
NOTE
The appropriate discount rate to use for
pricing a bond depends on several factors,
including the bond’s default risk and maturity




                 (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                    www.ecirisktraining.com   32
PRICING BONDS

A bond’s price equals the present value
of its expected future cash flows




               (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                  www.ecirisktraining.com   33
EXAMPLE
Referring to the previous example,
suppose that the appropriate
discount rate for this bond is 4%.

What is the price of this bond?



             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   34
PRICING BONDS
 WITH FORMULAS
A bond may be priced with the
following formula:

       N
            INT            M
VB =                 +
     t =1 (1 + rd )    (1 + rd )
                   t             N




             (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                www.ecirisktraining.com   35
where:
         INT = the periodic coupon or
                interest payment
         rd = the discount rate
         M = the bond’s par or face value
         N = the number of periods until the
               bond’s maturity date
                (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                   www.ecirisktraining.com   36
In this example, the price is computed as:


  40      40         40     1, 040
      1
        +     2
                +       3
                          +       4
(1.04) (1.04)     (1.04) (1.04)


               (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                  www.ecirisktraining.com    37
This equals:

 38.4615 + 36.9822 + 35.5599
 + 888.9964 = $1,000.00



          (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
             www.ecirisktraining.com   38
At a discount rate of 5%, the price is:


  40      40         40     1, 040
      1
        +     2
                +       3
                          +       4
(1.05) (1.05)     (1.05) (1.05)


              (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                 www.ecirisktraining.com   39
This equals:

 38.0952 + 36.2812 + 34.5535
 + 855.6106 = $964.54




          (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
             www.ecirisktraining.com   40
At a discount rate of 3%, the price is:


  40      40        40      1, 040
      1
        +     2
                +       3
                          +       4
(1.03) (1.03)     (1.03) (1.03)


              (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                 www.ecirisktraining.com   41
This equals:

 38.8350 + 37.7038 + 36.6057
 + 924.0265 = $1,037.17




          (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
             www.ecirisktraining.com   42
These results show the following
important relationship:

If rd > coupon rate, VB < face value
If rd = coupon rate, VB = face value
If rd < coupon rate, VB > face value

            (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
               www.ecirisktraining.com   43
These results also demonstrate that there
is an inverse relationship between interest
rates and bond prices:

   when rates rise, bond prices fall
   when rates fall, bond prices rise

              (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                 www.ecirisktraining.com   44
NOTE

A bond that sells for less than its face
value is known as a discount bond

A bond that sells for more than its face
value is known as a premium bond


              (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                 www.ecirisktraining.com   45
ZERO COUPON BONDS

A zero-coupon bond does not make any
coupon payments; instead, it is sold to
investors at a discount from face value




              (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                 www.ecirisktraining.com   46
The difference between the
price paid for the bond and the
face value represents the return
to the investor

This is known as a capital gain

            (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
               www.ecirisktraining.com   47
The pricing formula for
a zero coupon bond is:


            M
   VB =
        (1 + rd ) N




       (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
          www.ecirisktraining.com   48
EXAMPLE
A one-year zero-coupon bond
is issued with a face value of
$1,000. The discount rate for
this bond is 8%. What is the
market price of this bond?



           (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
              www.ecirisktraining.com   49
M           1, 000
VB =             =            = $925.93
     (1 + rd ) N
                   (1 + .08)1




              (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009
                 www.ecirisktraining.com   50

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Introduction To Bonds

  • 1. INTRODUCTION TO BONDS AND THEIR VALUATION Alan Anderson, Ph.D. ECI Risk Training www.ecirisktraining.com (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 1
  • 2. WHAT IS A BOND? A bond is a debt instrument that provides a periodic stream of interest payments to investors while repaying the borrowed principal on a specified maturity date (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 2
  • 3. BOND TERMINOLOGY Face (par) value: the price of a bond when first issued (often a multiple of $1,000) (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 3
  • 4. Coupon rate: The periodic interest payments promised to bondholders are a fixed percentage of a bond’s face value; this percentage is known as the coupon rate (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 4
  • 5. Coupon: the dollar value of the periodic interest promised to bondholders; this equals the coupon rate times the face value of the bond (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 5
  • 6. Maturity The time until the principal is scheduled to be repaid (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 6
  • 7. Call Provisions Some bonds contain a provision that enables the issuer to buy the bond back from the bondholder at a pre- specified price prior to maturity (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 7
  • 8. A bond containing such a provision is said to be callable (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 8
  • 9. This call option is known as an embedded option, since it can’t be bought or sold separately from the bond (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 9
  • 10. Put Provisions Some bonds contain a provision that enables the buyer to sell the bond back to the issuer at a pre-specified price prior to maturity (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 10
  • 11. A bond containing such a provision is said to be putable (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 11
  • 12. Sinking Fund Provisions Some bonds are issued with a provision that requires the issuer to buy back a fixed percentage of the bonds each year (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 12
  • 13. CONVERTIBLE BONDS A convertible bond contains an embedded option; the holder has the right to convert the bond into a pre-determined number of shares of stock (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 13
  • 14. BOND ISSUERS Bonds can be categorized according to their issuers: Treasury Bonds Corporate Bonds Municipal Bonds Foreign Bonds (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 14
  • 15. TREASURY BONDS Treasury bonds are issued by the U.S. government to finance its deficits (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 15
  • 16. These are free of default risk, which is the risk that the investor will not receive all promised payments (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 16
  • 17. They are also not taxed by state and local governments (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 17
  • 18. CORPORATE BONDS Corporations can raise funds by issuing debt in the form of corporate bonds These bonds offer a higher promised coupon rate than Treasuries, but expose investors to default risk (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 18
  • 19. Ratings agencies, such as Standard and Poor’s and Moody’s, rank corporate issuers according to their likelihood of default (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 19
  • 20. The riskiest corporations offer the highest coupon rates to investors as compensation for default risk (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 20
  • 21. MUNICIPAL BONDS A municipal bond is issued by a state or local government; as a result, they carry little or no default risk They also offer an extremely favorable tax treatment to investors (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 21
  • 22. A municipal bond is not taxed at the Federal level It is also not taxed by the issuing municipality (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 22
  • 23. As a result, municipal bonds offer very low coupon rates to investors (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 23
  • 24. FOREIGN BONDS Foreign bonds are issued by foreign governments and corporations These may be denominated in dollars or in a foreign currency (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 24
  • 25. ILLUSTRATING A BOND’S CASH FLOWS A bond’s cash flows may be shown with a time line (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 25
  • 26. EXAMPLE Suppose that a bond is issued with: a face value of $1,000 a coupon rate of 4% a maturity of four years (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 26
  • 27. With a face value of $1,000, the bond will make an annual coupon payment of: 4%* $1,000 = $40 (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 27
  • 28. On the bond’s maturity date, the bond pays: one final $40 coupon the face value of $1,000 Therefore, the final cash flow totals $1,040 (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 28
  • 29. This is shown as follows: (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 29
  • 30. (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 30
  • 31. where: VB = the bond’s price or value rd = the interest rate used to compute the present value of the bond’s cash flows; this is known as the discount rate (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 31
  • 32. NOTE The appropriate discount rate to use for pricing a bond depends on several factors, including the bond’s default risk and maturity (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 32
  • 33. PRICING BONDS A bond’s price equals the present value of its expected future cash flows (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 33
  • 34. EXAMPLE Referring to the previous example, suppose that the appropriate discount rate for this bond is 4%. What is the price of this bond? (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 34
  • 35. PRICING BONDS WITH FORMULAS A bond may be priced with the following formula: N INT M VB = + t =1 (1 + rd ) (1 + rd ) t N (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 35
  • 36. where: INT = the periodic coupon or interest payment rd = the discount rate M = the bond’s par or face value N = the number of periods until the bond’s maturity date (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 36
  • 37. In this example, the price is computed as: 40 40 40 1, 040 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 (1.04) (1.04) (1.04) (1.04) (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 37
  • 38. This equals: 38.4615 + 36.9822 + 35.5599 + 888.9964 = $1,000.00 (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 38
  • 39. At a discount rate of 5%, the price is: 40 40 40 1, 040 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 (1.05) (1.05) (1.05) (1.05) (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 39
  • 40. This equals: 38.0952 + 36.2812 + 34.5535 + 855.6106 = $964.54 (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 40
  • 41. At a discount rate of 3%, the price is: 40 40 40 1, 040 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 (1.03) (1.03) (1.03) (1.03) (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 41
  • 42. This equals: 38.8350 + 37.7038 + 36.6057 + 924.0265 = $1,037.17 (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 42
  • 43. These results show the following important relationship: If rd > coupon rate, VB < face value If rd = coupon rate, VB = face value If rd < coupon rate, VB > face value (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 43
  • 44. These results also demonstrate that there is an inverse relationship between interest rates and bond prices: when rates rise, bond prices fall when rates fall, bond prices rise (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 44
  • 45. NOTE A bond that sells for less than its face value is known as a discount bond A bond that sells for more than its face value is known as a premium bond (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 45
  • 46. ZERO COUPON BONDS A zero-coupon bond does not make any coupon payments; instead, it is sold to investors at a discount from face value (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 46
  • 47. The difference between the price paid for the bond and the face value represents the return to the investor This is known as a capital gain (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 47
  • 48. The pricing formula for a zero coupon bond is: M VB = (1 + rd ) N (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 48
  • 49. EXAMPLE A one-year zero-coupon bond is issued with a face value of $1,000. The discount rate for this bond is 8%. What is the market price of this bond? (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 49
  • 50. M 1, 000 VB = = = $925.93 (1 + rd ) N (1 + .08)1 (c) ECI RISK TRAINING 2009 www.ecirisktraining.com 50