Bond


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In finance and economics, a bond or debenture is a debt instrument that obligates the issuer to pay to the bondholder the principal (the original amount of the loan) plus interest. Thus, a bond is essentially an I.O.U. (I owe you contract) issued by a private or governmental corporation. The corporation "borrows" the face amount of the bond from its buyer, pays interest on that debt while it is outstanding, and then "redeems" the bond by paying back the debt. A mortgage is a bond with a lien on a real estate.

Bonds are securities but differ from shares of stock in that stock is an ownership interest (termed "equity"), but bonds are "debt": Therefore a shareholder is an owner, but a bond-holder is a creditor.

Each country sets its own rules for issuing and redeeming short and long-term debt and stock. In the U.S. (for example):

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Issuing bonds

Bonds are issued by governments or other public authorities, credit institutions, and companies, and are sold through banks and stock brokers. They enable the issuer to finance long-term investments with external funds. The term total volume refers to the number of individual bonds in a bond issue.

Features of bonds

The most important features of a bond are:

The rights of a particular bond issue are specified in a written document, called an "indenture". In the U.S. federal and state securities and commercial laws apply to the enforcement of those documents, which are construed by courts as contracts. Those terms may be changed while the bonds are outstanding, but amendments to the governing document often require approval by a majority vote of the bondholders.

Interest is paid on the first "coupon date" (named so because in the past interest was paid by redeeming coupons attached to the bond indenture at a financial institution) and subsequently on coupon dates at regular intervals, assuming the issuer has the money to make the payments on those dates. If all interest ("coupon") payments have not been made when due, and so are in arrears, the issuer must also pay those back-due amounts when it redeems the bond, in addition to the principal ("face") amount.

Callable

The bond may have a "call" provision that allows the issuer to pay back the debt (redeem the bond) before its nominal maturity date. Bonds with this feature are referred to as callable bonds. When there is no such provision requiring a holder to let the issuer redeem a bond before its maturity date, the issuer may offer to redeem a bond early, and its holder may accept or reject that offer.

There are three broad categories of callable bonds.

The European option can also be considered to be a type of Bermudan option, with only one call date.

When a bond is called the issuer often pays a call premium.

Bonds can also carry "put options", which allow the investor to sell the bonds back to the issuer at par value on specified dates.

Types of bond

By type

See also GDP-indexed bonds

By issuer

Trading and valuing bonds

The interest rate that the issuer of a bond must pay is influenced by a variety of factors, such as current market interest rates, the length of the term and the credit worthiness of the issuer. Since these factors are likely to change over time, the market value of a bond can vary after it is issued.

The market price of a bond is the present value of all future interest and principal payments of the bond discounted at the bond's yield, or rate of return. The yield represents the current market interest rate for bonds with similar characteristics. The yield and price of a bond are inversely related so that when market interest rates rise, bond prices generally fall and vice versa.

The market price of a bond may include the accrued interest since the last coupon date (some bond markets include accrued interest in the trading price and others add it on explicitly after trading). The price including accrued interest is known as the "flat" or "tel quel price". (See also Accrual bond.)

The interest rate adjusted for the current price of the bond is called the "current yield" or "earnings yield" (this is the nominal yield multiplied by the par value and divided by the price).

Taking into account the expected capital gain or loss (the difference between the current price and the redemption value) gives the "redemption yield": roughly the current yield plus the capital gain (negative for loss) per year until redemption.

The relationship between yield and maturity for otherwise identical bonds is called a yield curve.

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Investing in bonds

Bonds are bought and traded mostly by institutions like pension funds, insurance companies and banks. Most individuals who want to own bonds do so through mutual funds. Still, in the U.S., nearly 10 percent of all bonds outstanding are held directly by households.

Bonds are generally viewed as safer investments than stocks, but this perception is only partially correct. Bonds do suffer from less day-to-day volatility than stocks, and bonds' interest payments are higher than dividend payments that the same company would generally choose to pay to its stockholders. Bonds are liquid -- it is fairly easy to sell one's bond investments, though not nearly as easy as it is to sell stocks -- and the certainty of a fixed interest payment twice per year is attractive. Bondholders also enjoy a measure of legal protection: under the law of most countries, if a company goes bankrupt, its bondholders will often receive some money back, whereas the company's stock often ends up valueless. However, bonds can be risky:

However, price changes in a bond immediately affect mutual funds that hold these bonds. Many institutional investors have to "mark to market" their trading books at the end of every day. If the value of the bonds held in a trading portfolio has fallen over the day, the "mark to market" value of the portfolio may also have fallen. This can be damaging for professional investors such as banks, insurance companies, pension funds and asset managers. If there is any chance a holder of individual bonds may need to sell his bonds and "cash out" for some reason, interest rate risk could become a real problem. (Conversely, bonds' market prices would increase if the prevailing interest rate were to drop, as it did from 2001 through 2003.) One way to quantify bond risk is in terms of its duration.

There is no guarantee of how much money will remain to repay bondholders. As an example, after an accounting scandal and a Chapter 11 bankruptcy at the giant telecommunications company Worldcom, in 2004 its bondholders ended up being paid 35.7 cents on the dollar.

Arguments against bonds

Some theories of economics, notably Islamic economics and green economics, argue that the overall impact of any debt on ecosystems and society is so negative that no bond should have any legal status. These theories are part of a broader category called creditary economics. In these, there is no creditor, only a joint venture partner or investor. Remnants of this same belief still exist even today in Western finance and legal precedents, as seen in usury laws, mortgage laws, and also as seen in perpetual bonds. At the time of issue during the late Middle Ages, many perpetual bonds were sold not as debt instruments but rather as an income stream or annuity instrument. One was buying a future income, not lending money. By this thinking, no interest was paid on perpetual bonds, despite the existence of a yield for such financial instruments.

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External links

Math

See also: Bond, 1623, 2004, Accrual bond, Accrued interest, Annuities, Annuity, Bank, Bankrupt