LONG TERM DEBT - BONDS Flashcards
Non-current liabilities (long-term debt)
consist of an expected outflow of resources arising from present obligations that are not payable within a year or the operating cycle of the company, whichever is longer
more than 1 year (otherwise current)
examples of non current liabilities
Bonds payable
Long-term notes payable
Mortgages payable
Pension liabilities
Lease liabilities
what are restrictions/covenants?
- conditions that can protect bondholders instead of lenders
- every time that a firm issues a bond → needs money –> bondholders → 1st risk: the company has to pay the interest back (much safer)
Types of Bonds
Secured and Unsecured (debenture) bonds
Term, Serial, and Callable bonds
Convertible, Commodity-Backed, Deep-Discount bonds
Registered and Bearer (Coupon) bonds
Income and Revenue bonds
Bond contract/indenture
-represents a promise to pay:
1. sum of money at designated maturity date, plus
2. periodic interest at a specified rate on the maturity amount (face value)
-Paper certificate, typically a €1,000 face value
-Interest payments usually made semiannually
-Used when the amount of capital needed is too large for one lender to supply
if price of bond is higher than face value:
generates a PREMIUM:
- price > face value
- yield < coupon rate
bond issued at par
- yield rate = coupon/ steady rate
Discount when:
- yield rate > coupon rate
- price < face value
which one is the best situation for bondholder?
discount = higher probability of gaining
difference between coupon and yield
coupon = nominal stated rate, written in terms
yield = market rate, rate that provides an acceptable return commensurate with the issuer risk
how to calculate amount of interest that is actually paid to bondholder?
stated rate*face value of the bond
how to calculate amount of interest that is actually recorded as interest expense by the issuer?
yield rate*carrying value fo bond
When bonds sell at less than face value:
- Investors demand a rate of interest higher than stated rate
- Usually occurs because investors can earn a higher rate on alternative investments of equal risk
- Cannot change stated rate so investors refuse to pay face value for the bonds
- Investors receive interest at the stated rate computed on the face value, but they actually earn at an effective rate because they paid less than face value for the bonds
Effective-Interest Method
Bond issued at a discount
amount paid at maturity is more than the issue amount
Effective-Interest Method
Bonds issued at a premium
company pays less at maturity relative to the issue price