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Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management First Canadian Edition By Reilly, Brown, Hedges, Chang. 11. Chapter 11 Bond Fundamentals. Basic Features of a Bond Global Bond Market Structure Types of Bond Issues Obtaining Information on Bond Prices. The Basic Features of a Bond. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Investment Analysis and Portfolio Investment Analysis and Portfolio ManagementManagement
First Canadian EditionFirst Canadian EditionBy Reilly, Brown, Hedges, ChangBy Reilly, Brown, Hedges, Chang1111
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-2
•Basic Features of a Bond•Global Bond Market Structure•Types of Bond Issues•Obtaining Information on Bond
Prices
Chapter 11 Bond Fundamentals
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-3
The Basic Features of a Bond
• Bonds as fixed income securities• Pay a fixed amount of interest periodically
to the holder of record• Repay a fixed amount of principal at the
date of maturity
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-4
The Basic Features of a Bond
• Bond market is divided by maturity• Money Market: Short-term issues that
mature within one year• Notes: Intermediate-term issues that
mature between one and ten years• Bonds: Long-term obligations with
maturity greater than ten years
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-5
Bond Characteristics
• Intrinsic Features• Coupon:
• Determine the periodic interest income
• Term to maturity: • Term bond or a serial bond
• Principal value: • Different from market value and the common
principal or par value is $1,000
• Type of ownership: • Bearer vs. registered bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-6
Bond Characteristics
• Types of Issues• Secured (senior) bonds• Unsecured bonds (debentures)• Subordinated (junior) debentures
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-7
Bond Characteristics
• Indenture provisions• The indenture is the contract between the issuer
and the bondholder specifying the issuer’s legal requirements
• Features affecting a bond’s maturity• Callable (call premium)• Noncallable• Deferred call• Nonrefunding provision• Sinking fund
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-8
Rates of Return on Bonds
where:HPRi,t = the holding period return for bond i during period t
Pi,t+1 = the market price of bond i at the end of period t
Pi,t = the market price of bond i at the beginning of period t
Inti,t = the interest payments on bond i during period t
Holding Period Return
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-10
The Global Bond Market Structure
• The market for fixed-income securities is substantially larger than the listed equity exchanges (NYSE, TSE, LSE) because corporations tend to issue bonds rather than common stock
• In 2007, 30% of new security issues in Canada were equity (common and preferred)
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-11
The Global Bond Market Structure
• Bond Ratings• Most corporate and municipal bonds are rated by
one or more of the rating agencies• The exceptions are very small issues and bonds
from certain industries, such as bank issues. These are known as non-rated bonds
• Two major rating agencies• Dominion Bond Rating Service (DBRS)• Standard and Poor’s Rating Direct Canada
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-13
Types of Bond Issues
• Domestic Government Bonds• Canada
• T-bills, notes, bonds
• Real Return Bonds (RRBs)• CPI indexed bonds
• Canada Savings Bonds (CSBs)• Japan
• Medium term, long term, super long term
• United Kingdom• Short gilts, medium gilts, long gilts
• Eurozone• Government bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-14
Types of Bond Issues
• Government Agency Issues• United States
• Not direct issues, but backed by “full faith and credit” of the U.S. government
• GNMA pass-through certificates
• Japan• Account for about 7% of the total Japanese yen
bond market
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-15
Types of Bond Issues
• Municipal Bonds
• General obligation (GO) bonds• Revenue bonds• Interest payments are exempt from federal income
tax• Convert the tax-free yield of a municipal bond
selling close to par to an equivalent taxable yield (ETY)
where: i = coupon rate of the municipal obligations T = marginal tax rate of the investor
)-(1ETY
T
i
)-(1ETY
T
i
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-16
Types of Bond Issues
• Municipal Bond Insurance• Significant feature of U.S. municipal bond
market is municipal bond insurance• Bond insured against default risk
• Insurance is irrevocable for the life of the issue
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-17
Types of Bond Issues
• Corporate Bonds• Mortgage bonds• Equipment trust certificates• Collateral Trust Bonds• Collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs)• Asset-backed securities (ABSs)• Certificates for automobile receivables (CARs)• Credit card receivables• Variable rate notes• Zero coupon and deep discount bonds• High-yield bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-18
• High-Yield Bonds• Also known as speculative
bonds and junk bonds• Based on specification that
bonds rated below BBB make up high-yield market, that is, non-investment grade bonds
• High-yield bond market exploded in size and activity beginning in the early 1980s
• Major owners of high-yield bonds have been mutual funds, insurance companies, and pension funds
Corporate Bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-19
• Japanese Corporate Bond Market• Bonds issued by industrial firms or utilities• Minimum issuing requirements are specified by
the Ministry of Finance• Bonds issued by banks to finance loans to
corporation• Commercial banks• Long-term credit banks• Mutual loan and savings banks• Specialized financial institutions
Corporate Bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-20
• Pound Sterling Corporate Bond Market• Three Forms
• Debentures• Unsecured loans• Convertible bonds
• Maturity structure is fairly wide • Coupon structure is also broad with high-
coupon bonds in the 10 to 14% range• Almost all U.K. corporate bonds are callable
term bonds
Corporate Bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-21
• Eurozone Corporate Bonds• Pure corporate bonds that include industrial and
utility firms (about 15%)
• Securitized/collaterlized bonds that include indirect corporate borrowing (about 12%)
Corporate Bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-22
• Foreign bonds are sold in one country and currency by a borrower of a different nationality• For example, Canadian dollar-denominated bonds sold
in Canada by a Japanese firm (Maple bonds)
• Eurobonds are securities denominated in U.S. dollars and underwritten by international bond syndicates and sold to investors outside the U.S.
International Bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-23
• United States• Yankee bonds register with SEC• Eurodollar bond market affected by changes in value
of U.S. dollar
• Japan• Samurai bonds: Yen denominated issued by non-
Japanese firms in Japan• Euroyen bonds: Yen denominated, sold outside Japan
International Bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-24
• United Kingdom• Bulldog bonds are sterling-denominated bonds issued
by non-English firms and sold in London• Eurosterling bonds are sold in markets outside London
by international syndicates
• Eurozone• Market popular among foreign issuers including issuers
domiciled in the U.S.• Impressive growth in Eurobonds issued by non-residents
International Bonds
Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 11-25
Obtaining Information on Bonds
• Less emphasis on fundamental analysis• Most bond investors rely on rating agencies
for credit analysis• Market and economic conditions• Intrinsic bond features• National Association of Securities Dealers
(NASD) through Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine (TRACE)• Release more timely information