Bond Terminology - YouTube

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Welcome, welcome.
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Today we're going to talk about bonds and present value techniques because it's important
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to understand the concept of present value.
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A bond is a very important area, very heavily tested and there's a whole bunch of different
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new ones, is a big word for me that relates to bonds.
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What is a bond?
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A bond is a borrowing agreement whereby the issuer of the bond promises to pay you, the
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purchaser of the bond, and a certain amount of money after a certain period of time at
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a certain interest rate.
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That is what the purchaser of the bond or the issuer rather of the bond is promising
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to give to the purchaser.
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I've got all these extra money, what should I buy?
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Debt or equity?
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Debt is bonds, equity is stock.
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I buy debt which would be bond, so I'm buying a company's bonds.
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Now there's a bunch of different terms that go along with the bonds that we have to understand.
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You'll see in your notes it says a bond is a borrowing agreement in which the issuer
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promises to repay a certain amount of money which is called the face or the par value
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to the purchaser.
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After a certain period of time called the term at a certain interest rate and we're
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going to look at a couple of different ones called the effective rate or the yield or
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the market and all of those mean the same.
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The effective rate, the yield, the market.
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You can call me Bob or you can call me, like that.
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That's what we're looking at as far as the rate.
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Let's say for example we have a five year term bond.
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It's five year, it's a term bond which we'll learn later.
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It's $1,000,000 and let's say for example that the interest rate is 8% and that is called
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the stated rate.
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Now the stated rate means that's how much they're going to pay me.
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That means they're going to pay me interest of 8% of a million dollars or $80,000 a year.
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Basically I'm saying hey, I'm going to loan you a $1,000,000.
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You are going to pay me 8% a year for $80,000 a year for the next five years.
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Five year term, million dollars.
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The million dollar is the par value, face value, maturity value, that's how much.
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Now, that's great and in this case the stated rate is 8%.
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Let's say the effective called the market, called the yield is also 8% then everything's
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great.
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That means I'm going to loan you a million, you're going to pay me eight and I want to
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earn eight, so that's cool, everything's great.
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That's when these two are the same which means there's no discount or premium.
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However let's say that I could take my money, put it in the bank hypothetically and I could
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earn 10%.
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I could earn 10% on that money.
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If I could earn 10% on the money, why would I loan you my money at 8%.
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I mean I don't want 8%, I want 10%.
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Well you can't just take the bond, scratch out the eight and make it a 10.
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Instead what we're going to have to do is you're going to have to issue me the bonds.
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They're going to pay me 8% in cash.
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That's the stated rate.
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That's called the stated, the face, the coupon, the nominal.
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Face, stated, coupon, nominal is similar, that's the stated rate.
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The yield is what I effectively want to yield.
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If I want to earn 10% then what will happen is you better sell it to me for less than
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a million dollars.
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What I'm really earning is I'm getting 8% in cash plus I'm earning the difference between
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let's say you issue it to me for 900,000.
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It's going to grow to a million so I'm earning 8% plus that extra 100,000 over the next five
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years.
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That would be called a discount.
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Let's say in today's day and age, would I like 10%? Sure, so instead you issue it to
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yield only 6%.
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That means you're going to pay me eight but you only want me to earn six therefore you're
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going to charge me more than a million upfront called a premium.
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You're going to charge me more that way when I get my 80,000, really that 8% is really
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60 of what I've earned but 20 is the premium that I've already prepaid in a sense.
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What we're doing is we're playing with that by having a discount or premium that adjust
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what I'm really earning.
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Those are a couple of terms and we'll expand on this.
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I know it's tricky for some people.
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A lot of people generally but as we go through it, do some examples, you will love it, you
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will become a bondage expert, I mean a bond expert.
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Did I say that bondage, yeah?
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All right, let's take the kids out of the room now.
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All right, let's look at some terms.
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Let's look at some terms starting with term bond.
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What is a term bond?
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A bond that matures at the end of the term hence the name term so that means I'm going
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to get $1,000,000 in five years at the end of the what?
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The term.
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A serial bond, how often do you get up and have cereal?
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That's with a C, this is an S but serial means it matures in installments.
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Every morning you have cereal, every six months maybe you get some money or every year.
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A serial bond does this, if it's $1,000,000 five year term bond, you don't give me any
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of that million until the end of the term.
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If it's a serial bond, you might be giving me interest on a million the first year and
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in 200,000 a principle.
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Next year I'm earning interest on not a million but 800 then 600 then 400 then 200 then I
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get the rest.
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That's called a serial bond, it matures in installments.
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We have debenture bonds, denture bonds.
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Those are bonds with bad teeth, no.
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Debenture bonds are unsecured bonds.
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Those are not supported by any collateral as oppose to like a mortgage bond is what?
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A bond that's secured by a company's mortgage or they have asset back bonds which are fixed
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assets of a company, things like that.
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We have the stated face coupon nominal that is the rate printed on the bond represents
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the amount of cash.
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Back in my example over here, what do we say?
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The stated face nominal coupon is 8% of a million.
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That's 80,000 of cash interest you're going to get.
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You're going to get 80,000 every year.
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How much do we want you to earn?
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That depends on the effective stated or the effected yield or market.
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The next one says carrying amount.
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The carrying amount would be your amortized cost.
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Now we've been hearing this term amortize cost since section one.
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Amortize cost would be face net of unamortized discount or premium.
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That's your carrying value, carrying amount, your amortized cost.
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What is it net of?
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Premium or discount.
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It says the face value of the bond plus the premium when the bond was issued above face
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value or minus the discount when the bond was issued below face value.
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That's going plus the premium or minus the discount which will make more sense once we
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go through our effective interest table, the effective interest method.
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We have effective rate yield market.
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That is the actual rate of interest the company is paying on the bond.
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When the bond is issued to the premium, effective rate is lower than the stated rate.
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Since the cash interest and principle, repayment are based on the face but the company actually
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receive more money than that.
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When the bond is issued a discount, the effective rate is higher.
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All right, come back over here.
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This is the stated rate.
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This is the effective market or yield.
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If these two are the same, no discount or premium.
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In this case I want to earn more than this, you better issue it to me at a discount.
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If this versus this, you want to pay me only six but I'm getting eight.
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You're going to charge me more upfront, that's going to be a premium.
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We're going to have to learn how to amortize these things out but again discount or premium
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it's where the difference between the stated and the effective rate.
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Convertible bond is a bond that is convertible into for example common stock.
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Callable bond is a bond which the issuer has the right to call or redeem prior to its maturity.
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The bond may be callable which is not really good for the investor because I have this
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bond it's doing great.
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Rates go crazy or rates drop really low so I have a good bond and they go, "Man, let's
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call it back because we can pay less."
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A covenant, this is a covenant which is a restriction.
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We have positive covenants, negative covenants.
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We'll see this a lot in the BEC exam but a covenant is a restriction the borrower must
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agree to.
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For example maybe it's like if you go borrow money and let's say the issuer of the bond,
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we might say "Okay, you can't pay a dividend "until the bonds are paid off."
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We might say you have to have life insurance in all of the officers in case somebody dies,
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the company goes under, and we lose our investment.
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Those are called covenants, positive covenants are things you have to do.
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Negative covenants, things you cannot do.
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Those are called covenants are kind of restrictions.
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Says FASB ASCA 25 provides that a company may elect the fair value option for assets
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and liabilities.
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That means that they can look at a financial liability like bonds and then they could elect
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that.
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It says however, if they're not going to do that then we're going to do the accounting
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that we're learning in this chapter.
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If you did fair value, just get the investment.
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It goes up, income, it goes down, loss, and you锟絩e done.
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We're not going to amortize all this stuff, discounts, and premiums and so on.
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What is uglier?
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Discounts and premiums.
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What's going to get tested?
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Amortizing discounts and premiums.
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Trust me, you need to know that.
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Hope for a fair value question, you're not going to see it.
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Okay, so that's what we're looking at as far as setting up just the background on bonds,
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trying to understand what the heck we're doing.