Chapter 1 Overview of Debt Securities
Chapter 1 Overview of Debt Securities
Chapter 1 Overview of Debt Securities
• Identify the various coupon rate structures, such as fixed rate coupon
bonds, zero-coupon bonds, step-up notes, deferred coupon bonds,
floating-rate securities.
Importance of Maturity:
• Example:
The interest payments made after the deferred period will be higher
than those that would have been made had there been no deferred
period. This is to compensate the bondholder for the lack of interest
payments during the deferred period.
3.2. Bond Coupon Structure:
Floating Rate Notes
• A floating-rate security is an issue whose coupon rate resets
periodically (the coupon reset date) based on a coupon
formula of
• Coupon Rate = Reference Rate + Quoted Margin
• Ex: a floating rate bond with a coupon formula of 50 bps
over the 3-m LIBOR rate (face value = $100):
Coupon rate = LIBOR+0.5%
• If LIBOR rate = 5% today, Coupon rate = 5.5%, and coupon
payment for the period is $5.5
• If LIBOR rate = 6% in one year, coupon rate = 6.5%, and
coupon payment for the period in one year is $6.5
3.2 Bond Coupon Structure:
Floating Rate Notes
• The reference rate could be the prime rate, 6-month Treasury
bill rate, or the 1-month London interbank offered rate
(LIBOR).
• For example, if the quoted margin is 225 basis points over
the 1-month LIBOR, then the coupon formula would be:
Coupon rate = 1-month LIBOR + 225 basis points
• The quoted margin could be a negative number as well as a
positive one:
Coupon rate = 5-year Treasury yield - 90 basis points
3.2 Bond Coupon Structure:
Floating Rate Notes
• A floating-rate security may have a cap, which sets the
maximum coupon rate that will be paid, and/or a floor,
which sets the minimum coupon rate that will be paid.
• Include a provision in the indenture that gives either the bondholder and/or
the issuer an option
Provision Feature
G rants the issuer the rightto retire the debt,fully or
C allprovision
partially,before the scheduled m aturity date
• Call prices may provide a premium above the market price or par
value (a call penalty might be included) to bondholders.
• EX: $250m debentures issued in July 1997 with a coupon rate of 7 1/8% due July 1,
2017. “The debentures will be redeemable at the option of the Company at any time on
or after July 1, 2007, in whole or in part, upon not fewer than 30 days’ nor more than 60
days’ notice, at Redemption Price equal to the percentage set forth below of the
principal amount to be redeemed for the respective 12-month periods beginning July 1
of the years indicated together in each case with accrued interest to the Redemption
Date”:
12 months beginning July 1 Redemption Price 12 months beginning July 1 Redemption Price
• EX: $150m debentures issued on November 20, 1986 with a coupon rate of 8 5/8%
due December 1, 2016. The issue had a 10-year deferred call and the following call
schedule:
If redeemed during the 12 Redemption Price 12 months beginning July 1 Redemption Price
months beginning
December 1
1996 104.313 2002 101.725
1997 103.881 2002 101.294
1998 103.450 2004 100.863
1999 103.019 2005 100.431
2000 102.588 206 and thereafter 100.000
2001 102.156
4.1 Bonds with Call Provisions
• 3. Call prices based on a make-whole
premium provision or a yield-maintenance
premium provision which provides a formula for
determining the call premium to be offered to
assure the bondholder of a minimum yield.
• Even if the share price and thus the value of the equity call option
decline, the price of a convertible bond cannot fall below the price of the
straight bond. Consequently, the value of the straight bond acts as a
floor for the price of the convertible bond.
4.3 Bonds with Convertible Bonds
• Because the conversion provision has value to the
bondholders, the price of a convertible bond is higher than
the price of an otherwise similar bond issued without the
conversion provision.
• 1. Which of the following is not an example of an embedded option? Warrant provision, Call
provision, or Conversion provision?
• Solution to 1: A warrant is a separate, tradable security that entitles the holder to buy the
underlying common share of the issuing company, which is not an embedded option of a bond.
• 2. The type of bond with an embedded option that would most likely sell at a lower price than an
otherwise similar bond without the embedded option is a: Puttable bond? Callable bond? Or
Convertible bond?
• Solution to 2: The call provision is an option that benefits the issuer, as a result, callable bonds
sell at lower prices and higher yields relative to otherwise similar non-callable bonds.
4.3 Bonds with Convertible Bonds
• 3. The additional risk inherent to a callable bond is best described as: Credit risk? Interest rate risk?
Or Reinvest Risk?
• Solution to 3: Reinvestment risk refers to the effect that lower interest rates have on available rates
of return when reinvesting the cash flows received from an earlier investment. Because bonds are
typically called following a decline in market interest rates, reinvestment risk is particularly relevant
for the holder of a callable bond.
• Solution to 4: A puttable bond limits the risk to the bondholder by guaranteeing a pre-specified
selling price at the redemption dates.
• 5. Assume that a convertible bond issued in South Korea has a par value of W1,000,000 and is
currently priced at w1,100,000. The underlying share price is W40,000 and the conversion ratio is
25:1. What is the conversion value?
• Solution to 5: The conversion value of the bond is w40,000x25=w1,000,000. The price of the
convertible bond is w1,100,000, the bond is priced below parity.
The Importance of Options
Embedded in a Bond Issue
• Bond indentures can contain provisions that allow
both the issuer and the bondholder to take some
action against the other party.
• Bonds with embedded options affect the return (or cost) of the
issue.