Posts tagged 'Bonds'

More Corporate Bonds

Why do companies issue bonds?  If they need money, why don’t they just go to a bank and borrow it?  There are a few reasons, but the main reasons are that borrowing from a bank can be very restrictive and very expensive—more expensive than selling a bond to the general public. In other words, banks are usually more conservative when it comes to investing than people are. (Unfortunately, this is not always true—I wish they had been more conservative before making all those home loans that could never be repaid.)

So it costs a company more to borrow from a bank than it costs them to borrow from you. Plus, when a company borrows money from a bank, the bank often tells them what they can and can’t do with their money. The banks give the company lots of rules, which are called covenants. For example, a bank might tell a company that the money can only be spent on one thing, like operations and not on expansion. Or the bank might say that if the present head of the company leaves the company, all of the money is due back to the bank immediately. Or the bank might tell a company how much cash it must keep on hand at all times. Sometimes the bank requires the company pay back the loan too quickly for the purposes the company is raising money for, like building a new plant.

Companies can find these rules stifling. So, instead of going to a bank for a loan, a company will issue a bond through the bond market. (Think of a bond market as a huge shoe store—where you can buy all different kinds of shoes. In the bond market, you can buy all different kinds of bonds.)

Company bonds are typically issued in 1,000 or 5,000 dollar increments. These increments are called the face value. Face Value really refers to your principal—the amount of money you paid for the bond. The face value has to be paid back to you within a set time frame, called a maturity. The time period in which the face value must be paid can vary from as little as 30 days to as long as 30 years and anywhere in between—there are bonds with even longer maturity dates than 30 years, but they are rare. But typically a bond’s maturity is seven to ten to fifteen years in the future.

Generally in exchange for borrowing your money and issuing you a bond (which is the piece of paper or contract that describes the terms of the loan), a company will periodically pay you interest. Interest is the fee the company pays you for borrowing your money and is no different from the interest the bank pays you. When interest is paid from a bond rather than from a bank, it is called a coupon. To reiterate, a coupon payment is conceptually no different from the interest the bank pays you for leaving your money in a savings account. And, just like with a treasury, the longer the company borrows your money, the higher the interest rate because the longer you are agreeing to tie up your money.

So, when a bond is issued, the bond issuer (the company borrowing the money) determines how much money they need to borrow, the total value of each individual bond (principal), how long they need to borrow the money for (maturity), and the fee they are willing to pay to borrow the money (interest rate or coupon).

Add comment August 7th, 2009

Corporate Bonds

Just as flats are a sensible and versatile shoe for women, corporate bonds can a sensible and versatile investment for the beginning investor. A corporate bond is a loan to a company for a set period of time. If you have been reading this blog then you already know all about them – they are pretty much the same as US Treasuries. The exact same explanations and logic apply except that corporate bonds (or “Corporates”) aren’t guaranteed by the US Government. Rather, they’re guaranteed by the particular corporation from whom the bond is purchased. Therefore, they are a bit riskier than treasuries but, as a result, pay a bit more in interest (a “higher return”). (Remember, the lower the risk, the lower the return; the higher the risk, the higher the return.)

When you buy a corporate bond, you agree to loan your money to a particular company, rather than the US government, in exchange for interest payments that the company will make to you. You can buy corporate bonds from a lot of different companies (lots of different types of companies sell bonds), for example Microsoft or AT&T. Buying a corporate bond is considered riskier (less safe) than buying a treasury or savings bond. Why? Because treasuries and savings bonds are backed by the US government while a corporate bond is backed only by the particular company from whom the bond is purchased. And, unlike to government, a company can’t print more money or raise taxes to pay its debts.

Just like with treasuries, the company that issues the bonds you buy will return your money (your initial investment) plus the interest you’ve earned (the company selling the bond sets the interest rate at the time they issue their bond) once the bond has run its course at a later set date (maturity).

Usually you receive your interest rate payments in the form of checks, sent out within a set time frame, often semi-annually. Then, when the loan matures, you receive the full amount of your original loan back. The original amount you loan the company is called the “Principal”.

Company bonds usually refer to loans that are longer than one year, but like the US government, corporations can also issue shorter term loans. These shorter term company loans are called “Commercial Paper”.

More corporate bonds tomorrow.

Add comment August 5th, 2009

Bonds

You thought you knew all about bonds – friendships, relationships, marriage, the hot one who actually did call the next day. So all this economic talk about rates and payments has you flummoxed.

In financial terms a bond is a loan to a company or to a government. When you buy a bond, you agree to loan your money to the company or government in exchange for interest payments they make to you and the return of your money at a later set date. You receive your interest rate payments in the form of checks, sent out within a set time frame. You receive the full amount of your original loan back when the loan matures. The interest rate you receive depends on how strong the company is. The stronger the company, the less risky the loan and therefore the less interest you receive. (Conversely, the weaker the company, the riskier the loan and the more interest you receive.)

Just as you have a credit score, so do companies and governments. Like you, the better their score, the lower interest rate they have to pay. Where are bonds traded? Just as there is a stock market, so is there a bond market. (See January 12 Stocks posting). However, unlike stocks, some bonds don’t have to be traded in the market. When bonds are not sold on the bond market the transaction is called Over the Counter (OTC).

Turns out, financial bonds are so much easier to comprehend than the real ones.

Add comment January 26th, 2009


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