Coupon Rate

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

The annual interest rate that a bond issuer promises to pay bondholders, expressed as a percentage of the bond's par (face) value. The coupon rate is fixed at issuance and determines the dollar amount of periodic interest payments, typically paid semi-annually. A bond with a 5% coupon rate and $1,000 par value pays $50 annually ($25 every six months).

Example

A corporation issues 20-year bonds with a 6% coupon rate at $1,000 par value. An investor who buys one bond receives $60 annually (6% of $1,000), paid as $30 every six months. Even if market interest rates rise to 8% and the bond's market price falls to $850, the coupon payment remains $60 per year because the coupon rate is fixed at issuance.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse coupon rate with current yield or yield-to-maturity. The coupon rate NEVER changes after issuance (it's fixed), while current yield and YTM fluctuate with market price. A 5% coupon bond is always a 5% coupon bond, but its current yield changes when the bond trades above or below par.

How This Is Tested

  • Calculating the annual or semi-annual dollar payment amount from the coupon rate and par value
  • Understanding that coupon rates are fixed at issuance and do not change with market conditions
  • Distinguishing between coupon rate (fixed) and current yield or YTM (variable)
  • Recognizing the inverse relationship between bond prices and market interest rates while coupon payments remain constant
  • Determining appropriate coupon rates for different credit qualities and maturities

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Standard bond par value $1,000 Most corporate and municipal bonds use $1,000 face value
Standard payment frequency Semi-annual Interest typically paid twice per year (every 6 months)

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Jennifer purchases a newly issued municipal bond with a 4% coupon rate and $1,000 par value, maturing in 10 years. Six months later, market interest rates rise to 6% for similar bonds, and her bond's market price falls to $850. She calls you concerned about her interest payments. What should you tell her?

Question 2

Which of the following best describes the coupon rate on a bond?

🔥

Master Investment Vehicles Concepts

CertFuel's spaced repetition system helps you retain key terms like Coupon Rate and 500+ other exam concepts. Start practicing for free.

Access Free Beta
Question 3

A corporate bond has a 7.5% coupon rate and a par value of $1,000. If the bond pays interest semi-annually, how much will an investor receive every six months?

Question 4

All of the following statements about coupon rates are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A 30-year Treasury bond was issued 10 years ago with a 3% coupon rate when market rates were low. Today, similar new 20-year Treasury bonds are issued with 6% coupon rates. Which of the following statements about the older bond are accurate?

1. The older bond's coupon rate is now 6% to match current market conditions
2. The older bond still pays 3% of its par value annually
3. The older bond's market price is likely trading below par value
4. An investor buying the older bond today will receive larger dollar payments than from the new 6% bond

💡 Memory Aid

Think of the coupon rate as a frozen promise: Once the bond is baked (issued), the coupon rate is frozen solid and never thaws (never changes). It always pays the same percentage of par value, not market price. Remember: "Coupon = Cast in stone" while market prices and yields bounce around. A 5% coupon bond pays $50 per year on $1,000 par forever, even if the bond trades at $800 or $1,200.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: