Non-U.S. Market Debt Securities
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 Why foreign bonds stack new risks
- 1:12 Sovereign debt: political, currency, credit
- 1:55 The currency denomination on/off switch
- 3:17 Foreign corporate bonds and accounting gaps
- 4:00 Eurodollar bonds bypass the SEC
- 4:34 Yankee bonds and mandatory SEC registration
- 6:05 Bearer form and the "Euro means outside" rule
- 6:36 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- The three risks stacked on sovereign debt (political, currency, credit) and why political risk never drops to zero, even for highly rated countries
- How currency denomination acts as an on/off switch for currency risk, and why U.S. dollar denomination fixes only that one risk
- What foreign corporate bonds add on top of standard credit risk: different accounting standards, lighter regulatory oversight, and capital controls
- Yankee bonds: foreign issuers selling in the U.S., denominated in U.S. dollars, and required to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
- Eurodollar bonds: U.S. dollar-denominated bonds issued outside the U.S., not SEC-registered, often sold to institutions in bearer form
- Why "Euro" means outside the currency's home country, so a Euroyen bond is a yen bond issued outside Japan
- The Yankee vs. Eurodollar showdown: both kill currency risk for U.S. investors, but only Yankee bonds require SEC registration
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