Default Risk

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

The risk that a bond issuer will fail to make required interest payments or repay principal at maturity. Default risk is measured by credit ratings from agencies like Standard & Poor's, Moody's, and Fitch, with higher-rated bonds (AAA) having lower default risk than lower-rated bonds (BB). Investors demand higher yields (default risk premium) to compensate for accepting greater default risk.

Example

An investor compares three $10,000 bonds with 10-year maturities: U.S. Treasury yielding 3.5% (zero default risk), AAA-rated corporate bond yielding 4.2%, and BB-rated corporate bond yielding 7.8%. The higher yields on corporate bonds compensate for default risk. If the BB-rated company faces financial distress and defaults, the investor may lose principal and interest, while the Treasury bond is backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse default risk with interest rate risk (bond price changes due to market rate movements), believe all government bonds have zero default risk (only U.S. Treasuries; municipal bonds carry some default risk), or forget that higher yields indicate higher default risk, not better investments.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying which securities have zero default risk (U.S. Treasury securities only)
  • Ranking bonds by default risk based on credit ratings and issuer type
  • Understanding the relationship between default risk and yield (risk-return tradeoff)
  • Calculating yield spreads between corporate bonds and Treasury securities (credit spread)
  • Determining appropriate bond investments for clients based on default risk tolerance

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
U.S. Treasury securities default risk Zero Backed by full faith and credit of U.S. government; considered risk-free
Investment-grade threshold (lower default risk) BBB-/Baa3 or higher S&P/Fitch use BBB-, Moody's uses Baa3 as lowest investment-grade rating
High-yield threshold (higher default risk) BB+/Ba1 or lower Below investment-grade; also called junk bonds or speculative-grade

Example Exam Questions

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

Question 1

Elena, a 62-year-old retiree, holds a bond portfolio consisting of 40% U.S. Treasury bonds, 30% AAA-rated corporate bonds, and 30% BB-rated corporate bonds. She is concerned about preserving capital and asks which portion of her portfolio carries the highest default risk. What is the most accurate response?

Question 2

Which of the following statements best describes how default risk is measured in the bond market?

🔥

Master Investment Vehicles Concepts

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

Access Free Beta
Question 3

An investment adviser is building a bond ladder for a client and is considering the following securities. Which list correctly ranks them from LOWEST to HIGHEST default risk?

Question 4

All of the following statements about default risk are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investment-grade corporate bond is downgraded from A to BBB-, remaining at the investment-grade threshold. Which of the following statements accurately describe potential effects of this downgrade?

1. The bond's default risk has increased
2. The bond's market price will likely increase
3. Investors will demand a higher yield to compensate for increased risk
4. The bond's coupon payment amount will change

💡 Memory Aid

Think of default risk like lending money to friends: Lending to your financially stable friend (AAA = low risk) means accepting lower interest, but lending to your unreliable friend (BB = high risk) means demanding much higher interest to compensate for the risk they won't pay you back. Uncle Sam (U.S. Treasuries) always pays back (zero default risk), but everyone else carries some risk. Higher yield = Higher default risk.

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:

Related Study Guides