Amortization of Premium and Accretion of Discount
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 Why the IRS cares about tax-free bond prices
- 1:33 Premium amortization: walking the basis down
- 3:25 OID accretion and the tax-free phantom growth
- 4:52 Selling an OID bond early: accreted basis wins
- 5:45 OID vs market discount: new car vs used car
- 6:41 Bond price sensitivity and the zero-coupon king
- 8:06 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- Why premium amortization on a tax-exempt municipal bond is mandatory, not optional, and why the amortized amount is NOT tax-deductible
- How straight-line amortization walks the cost basis down to par (premium divided by years to maturity) so there is no capital loss at maturity
- How original issue discount (OID) accretion walks the basis up to par, and why that phantom growth on a muni is treated as tax-free interest
- The critical distinction between OID (tax-free) and secondary market discount (taxable as ordinary income) on municipal bonds
- Why you must use the adjusted (amortized or accreted) basis, not the original purchase price, to calculate gain or loss on an early sale
- How maturity length and coupon size drive bond price sensitivity, and why zero-coupon bonds have the highest volatility for a given maturity
- The "pull to par" effect as a bond approaches its redemption date
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