- Published on
What is a bond?
- Authors
- Name
- Benton Li
Is a practice of consensually tying, and binding. Examples include frogtying.
When an issuer(borrower, debtor) borrows money from a holder(lender, creditor), a debt is created. A bond is just a security form of debt.
Common bonds include government bonds, corporate bonds, and municipal bonds.
A bond is like a legal contract. From the holder’s perspective, they pay a price for this contract, and in return, receive scheduled payments later.
Most bond issuance usually requires collaterals. I mean, why should I trust you? What if you don’t pay me?
You can resell the bond. You might sell the bond for many reasons: short of cash flow, the possibility of counter party default, interest rate change, etc.
Is bond a debt? Not really. You owe money to your credit card issuer but it’s not a bond.
Terminology
Principal:
a.k.a nominal, par, or face amount. The amount that the holder gives to the issuer.
This amount will be paid upon maturity (if it’s not a perpetual bond)
Coupons:
Coupons are the periodic interests paid to the holder. This could be a price for opportunity cost, credit risk, inflation risk, etc.
Period:
This specifies the frequency of coupon payments. e.g. annually, semiannually, monthly…
Term to Maturity
Maturity is the date that the debt terminates → you happy me happy.
Intuitively, term to maturity is the amount of time until the debt expires.
Based on the term of maturity, some bonds may have different names
- 0 yr < M < 1 yr: bills
or Williams - 1 yr < M < 10 yrs: notes
- perpetual: no maturity period, you only pay the interest
Example
A chipmunk borrows $100 from Deez Nuts Bank and the repayment schedule is as follows:
Year 1 | $2 |
---|---|
Year 2 | $2 |
Year 3 | $2 |
Year 4 | $102 |
In this case, the principal is $100. The coupon is $2 and paid annually. The term to maturity is 4 years.
Some bonds are simple like the example above — a vanilla bond.
Some bonds can are complicated like zero-coupon securities, callable bonds, CoCo bonds. They will appear in future posts.
We will also cover more analyses like yield calculation and bond price calculation in future posts.
Stay tuned :))