Corporate Bonds: Rapid Fire
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 Par value, semiannual interest, and percentage-of-par quotes
- 1:58 Bankruptcy priority and secured versus unsecured debentures
- 3:41 Income bonds, convertibles, and zero-coupon phantom income
- 5:28 Ratings cutoff at BBB-/Baa3 and fallen angels
- 6:59 Commercial paper at 270 days and ETN versus ETF
- 8:32 The yield ladder: discount climbs, premium dips
- 9:14 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- Why every corporate bond defaults to $1,000 par and semiannual interest unless the question says otherwise, and how to move the decimal on percentage-of-par quotes
- The bankruptcy liquidation priority from secured bondholders down to common stockholders, and why debenture simply means unsecured
- Why equipment trust certificates rank among the safest corporate bonds, not the riskiest, and the exam trap the test-makers love to set
- How convertible bonds carry a lower coupon in exchange for the holder's option to convert, and when forced conversion becomes the rational choice
- The tax nightmare of phantom income on zero-coupon bonds and OID accretion, and why retirement accounts are their natural home
- Where the investment-grade cliff drops at BBB-/Baa3, what a fallen angel is, and why ratings measure default risk only
- The 270-day ceiling on commercial paper for SEC registration exemption, and how exchange-traded notes (ETNs) differ from exchange-traded funds (ETFs) on issuer credit risk
- How the yield ladder climbs on discount bonds and dips on premium bonds, and why yield to call is yield to worst for premium callable bonds
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