lecture 24 (1) Flashcards
The call option in the callable bond is exercised when the firm can
Buy the debt back at a price lower than the market price
If the trading price of the firm bonds is very low already, then the call provision of the bond is useless (it ends up out of the money)
This happens when the yield has increased from the issuance date
If the trading price of the firm bond is very high (yields are low) then the call option is very useful (the firm can rebuy its own debt at a lower) price
Who pays for the benefits of the call provision
The creditors, who have to accept a low-price offer for an asset that is trading at a high price
what is sovereign debt
government debt
Debt not issued by corporations: government treasury securities
TIPS (treasury-inflation-protected securities)
When prices rise (there is inflation), the future principal is adjusted upward
Coupons are also adjusted for inflation
An inflation-index bond issued by the US treasury with maturities of 5, 10, 20 years
There are standard fixed rate coupon bonds with one difference: the outstanding principal is adjusted for inflation)
Term loan
a bank loan that lasts for a specific term
Revolving line of credit
a credit commitment for a specific time period, typically two to three years, which a company can use as needed
Private placement
a bond issue that is sold to a small group of investors rather than the general public
Tradable among institutional investors
Securities made up of other financial securities
securities cash flows come from the cash flows of the underlying financial securities that “back” it
Asset securitization
the process of creating an asset-backed security
mortgage-backed security
largest sector of the asset-backed security market
Backed by home mortgages
Larges issuers are US government agencies and sponsored enterprises, such as the government national mortgage association (GNMA)
Student loan-backed securities
student loan marketing association
covenants
restrictive clauses in a bond contract that limit the issuers from undercutting their ability to repay the bonds
convertible bond
a corporate bond with a provision that gives the bondholder an option to convert each bond owned into a fixed number of shares of common stock
Conversion ration
the number of shares received upon conversion of a convertible bond, usually stated per 1000$ of face value
conversion price
the face value of a convertible bond divided by the number of shares received if the bond is converted