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Chapter 6 Fixed-Income Securities: Characteristics and Valuation © 2001 South-Western College Publishing
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Classification of Long-Term Debt Mortgage bonds secured Debentures unsecured çSubordinated and Unsubordinated çClaims of subordinated debenture holders are considered only after the claims of unsubordinated debt holders
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Types of L-T Debt Equipment trust certificates Income bonds Collateral trust bonds Pollution control bonds Industrial revenue bonds
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Characteristics of L-T Debt Indenture äcovenants Trustee äTIA 1939 Call feature Call premium Sinking fund Equity-linked debt äconvertible äwarrant Coupon rates Size $25-$200 million
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Debt Information Corporate bonds Majority traded in the over-the-counter market Some larger issues traded on the NY Exchange Quotations % of par value $1000 DukeEn 6 3 / 8 08 6.8 40 93¾ - 1 / 4 Meaning a Duke Energy bond with an interest rate ( coupon rate ) of 6.375%, maturing in 2008, yielding 6.8 %, $40,000 dollars traded, closing price of $9307.5, down $2.50 from the previous day.
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U.S. Government Debt Securities U.S. Treasury bills S-T Maturities of 3, 6 and 12 months Minimum denominations of $10,000 Sold at a discount from maturity value Treasury notes and bonds L-T Notes 1-10 year maturity Bonds 10-30 year maturity
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Bond Ratings QualityS & P’sMoody’s HighestAAAAaa HighAAAa Upper Medium AA MediumBBBBaa JunkBB,B,CCC,CC, C Ba,B,Caa,Ca, C DefaultDD
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Ratings Higher rated bonds generally carry lower market yields Interest rate spread between ratings is less during prosperity than during recessions Junk bonds typically yield 3-6 % or more
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L-T Debt Advantages and Disadvantages Advantages Tax deductibility of interest Financial leverage can increase EPS Ownership is not diluted Disadvantages Increased financial risk Indenture provisions restrict firm’s flexibility
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Value of an Asset Based on the expected future benefits over the life of the asset Future benefits = cash flows ( CF’s ) u Capitalization of cash flow method u PV of the stream of future benefits discounted at an appropriate required rate of return
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Market Value of an Asset Market price Demand & Supply (D&S) Approximated value Equilibrium D&S Intersection Consensus Judgment
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The Value of a Bond is the Present value of its Cash Flows
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Bond Prices and Interest Rates Relationship between P 0 & k d There is an inverse relationship between a bond’s value P 0 and its required rate of return k d L-T Vs S-T Bonds A change in k d changes the value of a long-term bond more than the value of a short-term bond
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Perpetual Bond
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Zero Coupon Bonds formula u table
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Preferred Stock ( P/S ) Is in an intermediate position between C/S and L-T debt Part of equity while increasing financial leverage Dividends on P/S are not tax deductible Has preference over C/S with regard to earnings and assets Dividends can not be paid on C/S unless the preferred dividend for the period has been paid
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Characteristics of P/S Selling price Par value Participation Cumulative Maturity Voting rights
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P/S Advantages and Disadvantages Advantages äFlexible äCan increase financial leverage äCorporate tax advantage Disadvantages äHigh after tax cost äDividends is not tax deductible
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Value of P/S
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