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Bond Issue Process

Essay by   •  October 27, 2016  •  Course Note  •  1,368 Words (6 Pages)  •  994 Views

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Bond Price = Market value = Exhibit 11 and 12

Bond Price means yield?

What is book-building by banks?

Process of determination of demand of issue of bonds and receive orders for each issue.

Terms Associated:

  1. Bond – Publicly traded.
  2. Legal requirements with Bond issue.
  3. Maturity Period.
  4. Yield
  5. Coupon Rate
  6. Bond trading at par
  7. Short-term interbank interest rate (LIBOR)
  8. Credit spread
  9. Risk-free rate, Government Borrowing rate, Benchmark rate, Sovereign rate, Treasury rate.
  10. Book Building by Banks.
  11. Securities

When you buy a bond, either directly or through a mutual fund, you're lending money to the bond's issuer, who promises to pay you back the principal (or par value) when the loan is due (on the bond's maturity date). In the meantime, the issuer also promises to pay you periodic interest payments to compensate you for the use of your money. The rate at which the issuer pays you—coupon rate—is generally fixed at issuance.

An inverse relationship 
When new bonds are issued, they typically carry
coupon rates at or close to the prevailing market interest rate.

Interest rates and bond prices have an inverse relationship; so when one goes up, the other goes down. 

The question is: How does the prevailing market interest rate affect the value of a bond you already own or a bond you want to buy from or sell to someone else? The answer lies in the concept of opportunity cost.

Investors constantly compare the returns on their current investments to what they could get elsewhere in the market. As market interest rates change, a bond's coupon rate—which, remember, is fixed—becomes more or less attractive to investors, who are therefore willing to pay more or less for the bond itself. Let's look at an example.

Suppose the ABC Company offers a new issue of bonds carrying a 7% coupon. This means it would pay you $70 a year in interest. After evaluating your investment alternatives, you decide this is a good deal, so you purchase a bond at its par value: $1,000.1

Interest rates and bond prices have an inverse relationship

[pic 1]

What if rates go up? 
Now let's suppose that later that year, interest rates in general go up. If new bonds that cost $1,000 are paying an 8% coupon—or $80 a year in interest—buyers will be reluctant to pay the $1,000 face value for your 7% ABC Company bond. In order to sell, you'd have to offer your bond at a lower price—a discount—that would enable it to generate approximately 8% to the new owner. In this case, that would mean a price of about $875.
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What if rates fall? 
Similarly, if rates dropped to below your original coupon rate of 7%, your bond would be worth more than $1,000. It would be priced at a premium, since it would be carrying a higher interest rate than what was currently available on the market.
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Of course, many other factors go into determining the attractiveness of a particular bond: the length of time until the bond matures, whether or not its interest is taxable, the creditworthiness of its issuer, the likelihood that the issuer will pay off debt early, and more. But the important thing to remember is that change occurs in market interest rates virtually every day. The movement of bond prices and bond yields is simply a reaction to that change.

Stock values fluctuate in response to the activities of individual companies and general market and economic conditions. Bond values fluctuate in response to the financial condition of individual issuers, general market and economic conditions, and changes in interest rates. Changes in market conditions and government policies may lead to periods of heightened volatility in the bond market and reduced liquidity for certain bonds held by the fund. In general, when interest rates rise, bond values fall and investors may lose principal value. Interest-rate changes and their impact on the fund and its share price can be sudden and unpredictable. Some funds, including non-diversified funds and funds investing in foreign investments, high-yield bonds, small- and mid-cap stocks, and/or more volatile segments of the economy, entail additional risk and may not be appropriate for all investors. Consult a fund's prospectus for additional information on these and other risks.

[pic 2]

Bond Attributes. Yahoo Finance. What properties do you want in a Bond?

Bond: A long-term contract, principal and interest, a borrower is liable to pay to the bondholder on a particular date.

Types of Bonds-

  1. Treasury Bonds – Government Bonds, Low interest rate, Almost zero default risk, is not free of Interest risk
  2. Corporate Bonds – Relatively high interest rate than treasury bonds, Higher Default risk, is it free of interest risk?
  3. Municipal Bonds – State government bonds, lower than treasury interest rates, state-level tax exempt to the bondholder for earning interest.
  4. Foreign Bonds – High exchange rate risk
  1. Foreign Corporate Bonds – High default risk
  2. Foreign Government Bonds – Low default risk

Par Value:

Face value of a single Bond.

Some bonds have par values of $1000 and some less than that (ex. Treasury Bonds can be purchased as multiples of $100).

Principal Amount that the borrower promises to pay the bondholder at the maturity date.

Coupon Payment:

Bonds require fixed amount of interest paid by the borrower every year or every 6 months.

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