Bonds Debt Restructure Flashcards
Bonds Debt Restructure
What is a serial bond?
Any bond that matures in installments
Bonds Debt Restructure
What is a term bond?
Any bond that matures on a single date
Bonds Debt Restructure
What is a debenture bond?
A bond not secured by any collateral
Bonds Debt Restructure
What is a sinking fund bond?
Cash is held in a sinking fund for repayment of bond at maturity
5 years of requirements and maturity details should be disclosed
Bonds Debt Restructure
What is the formula to calculate proceeds of a bond sale?
Present Value of the principal payment at maturity+ Present Value of Interest Payments made
: Market Value of Bond Proceeds
Bonds Debt Restructure
How is the present value of a bond calculated?
Step 1: PV of $1 @ Yield Rate (not Stated Rate)
x Bond Face Value
PLUS
Step 2: PV of an Ordinary Annuity of $1 for Term @Yield
x (Stated Rate x Face)
Bonds Debt Restructure
Which costs are included in bond issuance costs? How are they recorded?
Include Engraving; Printing; Legal; Underwriter; Registration
Debited to a deferred charge account and amortized over life of Bond using S/L
Bond Proceeds - Bond Issuance Costs : Net Bond Proceeds
Time of amortization begins when issued
Bonds Debt Restructure
How are bonds reported when classified as trading securities?
Reported at FMV with unreleased gains and losses being included in earnings
Bonds Debt Restructure
How are bonds amortized under the interest method?
Both discount and premium amortization amounts increase each year
Bonds Debt Restructure
Describe the book value method when converting from bonds to stocks.
No gain or loss recognized
APIC is the plug for the difference between the Bond’s Book Value and the Par Value of the Common Stock
Bonds Debt Restructure
What is the stated rate for a bond?
Rate on the face of the bond
Bonds Debt Restructure
What is the market rate on a bond?
Rate that bonds are currently selling for
Bonds Debt Restructure
What happens when the bond’s market rate is greater than the stated rate?
Bond will need to sell at a discount in order for buyers to be interested. The difference in market rate vs. the stated is made up by the buyer purchasing the bond for less than par value
Bonds Debt Restructure
What happens when a bond’s market rate is less than the stated rate?
Bond will need to sell at a premium in order for buyers to be interested. The difference in market rate vs. the stated is made up by the buyer purchasing the bond for more than par value
Bonds Debt Restructure
How does accrued interest on a bond affect the purchase price?
The total cash that seller receives will be MORE than they normally would (set aside any considerations for premium or discount; they are irrelevant for this point).
Basically; the purchaser of the bonds must give the bond issuer the amount of accrued interest up front.
Bonds Debt Restructure
When does interest expense start accruing on a bond?
When the bonds are issued
Bonds Debt Restructure
How is an interest payment on a bond calculated?
Cash for payment : Stated rate x Face amount
Bonds Debt Restructure
What amount of interest is expensed on a bond interest payment?
Interest expense : effective yield x carrying value
Any difference between expense and cash payment is applied as amortization against premium/discount
Bonds Debt Restructure
What are convertible bonds? Which recording method is used?
Bonds that can be converted to stock
Book value method used if no gain or loss
Market value method used if there is a gain or loss
Bonds Debt Restructure
How is the retirement of bonds recorded?
Gain or Loss is Ordinary
Extraordinary if both unusual and infrequent
When is a gain recognized in a debt restructuring?
In a settlement (debt off the books), an ordinary gain/loss is recognized
If terms are modified; and future payments are now less than the carrying amount of the debt; then a Gain is recognized
What is the gain recognized under a settlement of debt?
Gain recognized: Difference between cash paid/FMV given up and carrying amount of debt
Under a modification of terms, if the sum of cash flows is greater than the book value of the debt, there will still be interest paid. What is the correct accounting treatment in this scenario?
No gain or loss recognized
A new rate of interest is computed: what rate makes the PV of future cash flows = the BV of the debt?