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Principles of Finance: Unit 5, Bond Maturity and Zero Coupon Bonds 11 Views
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Description:
What are bond maturity and zero coupon bonds, and how are they related? Or are they NOT related, and this is just a very weird video?
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of finance a la shmoop bond maturity and zero coupon bonds well [Briefcase with bond maturity and zero coupon bonds on the front]
- 00:07
unlike the writers at shmoop bonds eventually mature what does that mean
- 00:12
well yes in fact bonds get hair on their private parts and become distinctively [Bond grows hair]
- 00:16
attractive to other bonds and well there's a rebellion against their issuer
- 00:21
that's only natural okay so bond maturity let's frame a
Full Transcript
- 00:24
couple of things here first a bond is issued or sold it has a nominal rate ie
- 00:29
the amount it will pay in interest for renting the principal you know from
- 00:34
investors it has a duration or rather a time period that'll pass before the bond [Duration circled on a bond]
- 00:39
fully matures and the principal owed is returned and the bond might have other
- 00:42
features like put in call provisions which would entitle owners of the bond
- 00:46
to force the company or issue or to buy the bonds back usually at a discount or
- 00:50
call provisions which would allow the issuer of the bonds to buy them back
- 00:54
usually at a modest premium to the par value at which they were issued there's
- 00:57
also a PIK provision where they can pay in kind ie pay the interest of cash in [PIK provision definition on a whiteboard]
- 01:02
stock instead so think about the cash flows on a twenty-five thousand dollar
- 01:06
bond with a coupon of eight percent maturing in ten years well here's what
- 01:10
the cash flows look like mmm, what happened? well financially this is what
- 01:15
happens you get minus twenty five thousand and minus because the amount
- 01:18
was subtracted from your Wells Fargo checking account when it was deposited [Well Fargo logo with stack of cash]
- 01:22
into the coffers of the Comcast corporation when he bought the bond that
- 01:26
was part of their new bond offering to fund something that will save cable from
- 01:30
free Wi-Fi wimax well twice a year you get a plus one
- 01:34
thousand bucks that is an eight percent coupon pays two grand a year on a
- 01:38
twenty-five thousand dollar bond but again just to bludgeon you over the head
- 01:42
with this concept bonds normally pay twice a year so you'd get a grand twice
- 01:46
a year for ten years that's twenty payments of a grand and your last
- 01:50
payment would be for what... yes twenty six thousand dollars because you'd collect
- 01:56
your last coupon payment of that thousand dollars and then you get your [Payments of bonds listed]
- 01:59
principal back easy-peasy vanilla so that's standard maturity of a bond, but
- 02:04
there are other ways bonds mature as well so next type of maturity is a balloon
- 02:08
maturity and yes you can tell we're still working on [Clown making balloons and shmoop workers laugh]
- 02:13
In a balloon maturity the
- 02:14
principle is generally retired in nuggets maybe 5% is repaid after two [Balloon maturity explanation on whiteboard]
- 02:18
years and then another 12 and 1/2 percent of the bond that was issued
- 02:22
retired after three years and then 25% after seven years in Tibet so that the
- 02:27
principal shrinks in stages to nothing that is it's balloons of debt pop over [Debt balloons expand and pop]
- 02:32
time...but with big chunks paid off like a step function rather than the slow
- 02:37
gradual pay down of something like a typical home mortgage where a tiny bit
- 02:42
of principal is paid down each month until on the final month's payment most
- 02:46
of that payment is in fact principal think of it as serial liposuction of
- 02:50
debt all right next up zero coupon bonds, and yep your hunch is right zero coupon
- 02:56
bonds are bonds with no coupon... well they don't pay cash
- 03:00
interest along the way why would anybody want a bond that pays no coupon and no
- 03:05
interest well no in fact the bond does pay interest it just pays all of the
- 03:09
interest at the very end of the duration when the bond finally matures ie it has
- 03:16
outgrown shmoop writing stables here and the principal
- 03:19
plus all of the accrued interest payments are then paid all at once
- 03:22
well these type of bonds are sold at a discount to par with investors simply [Bond maturity breakdown]
- 03:27
collecting the par value so many years later in one lump sum...US government
- 03:32
short term paper trades this way and in the case of US government paper there's
- 03:36
no stated interest rate the bonds just traded a discount to par in an auction
- 03:45
okay so here's the sitch you have a bond being offered at $1,000 par value it's [Man discussing bond at $1,000 par value]
- 03:50
being sold today for 700 bucks which is a discount to par of $300 what's the
- 03:55
yield of this zero coupon bond
- 04:02
...okay trick question this one's impossible to answer why
- 04:07
because we didn't give you the duration without it you have no idea if you get
- 04:12
your thousand dollar principle and interest in one year or 10 years or a [Duration of bond changes from 1 year to 10 years]
- 04:16
hundred years or when the cows come home like when did they ever leave anyway all
- 04:20
right well so if you buy that zero coupon bond for $700 when it comes to
- 04:23
you in say six years you'll agglomerate the interest and the gradual increase in
- 04:27
principal when you calculate the value of the bond going forward while [Calculations of the bond through 6 years]
- 04:31
calculating the yields on zeros is a bit gnarly the basic idea here is just that [Surgeons performing operation]
- 04:36
you get nothing back until the end when you get it all back but by way of
- 04:42
example if you borrowed a thousand dollars for six years at 12% rate of
- 04:46
interest well you would get nothing along the way in roughly two thousand
- 04:50
dollars at the end in one lump sum payment remember that rule of 72 thing [Rule of 72 appears on the board]
- 04:54
here's the handy dandy way of calculating all that got it okay in this
- 04:57
case what are the risk characteristics of a bond like this, riskier or less
- 05:02
risky than a vanilla bond answer: riskier why well because the investors get
- 05:06
nothing along the way so all bets are on that investors get fully paid way at the [Rainbow appears]
- 05:12
end of the rainbow there's also a risk that the company doesn't sock away
- 05:15
enough money to pay off these zeros at the end or that they have a hard time
- 05:19
refinancing them at the very end if they haven't been disciplined enough to save [Woman worried about saving cash]
- 05:22
cash along the way or if their businesses you know gone to the crapper
- 05:26
there with no direct obligation to put away a few nuts each month for this [Squirrel eating nuts in the field]
- 05:29
eventual big fat payout it's easy for companies to get kind of sort of you
- 05:34
know forgetful about them well to stem some fears most corporations create
- 05:38
what's called a sinking fund an amount of money that they sink into a piggy
- 05:42
bank for the day that the debt money comes due not surprisingly zeros usually
- 05:47
pay higher yield or higher interest rates and carry these higher yields
- 05:51
because of this illiquidity feature like you don't get any cash
- 05:55
long time it's a bummer not to get at least a little cash along the way and [$1,000 bond with no interest for each year]
- 05:59
it's also a bummer to have to carry all that risk for an eventual payout way
- 06:02
down the line so that's why they have to pay you more in interest to rent your
- 06:06
money all right to the lesson well no matter how many comics you might own or [Series of comic books]
- 06:09
if you know farty jokes you might laugh at well you always have a shot at
- 06:13
maturity as long as you own a bond [Man discussing maturity in bonds]
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