Bond Yield

Bond Yield

Bond Yield Latest News

Yield on India’s benchmark 10-year bonds will stay soft in July, according to Bank of Baroda (BoB) Research.

What is a Bond?

  • A bond is a loan made by an investor to a borrower for a set period of time in return for regular interest payments.
  • The time from when the bond is issued to when the borrower has agreed to pay the loan back is called its ‘term to maturity’. 
  • The bond issuer uses the money raised from bonds to undertake various activities such as funding expansion projects, refinancing existing debt, undertaking welfare activities, etc. 

What is Bond Yield?  

  • It is the return an investor expects to receive each year over its term to maturity.
  • It partially depends on coupon payments, which refer to the periodic interest income obtained as a reward for holding bonds.
  • The bondholders receive the bond’s face value at the end of the bond’s life. However, one may buy bonds at par value, discount (at a price lower than par value), or premium (at a price higher than par value) as they trade in the secondary market. 
  • Therefore, the prevailing market price of bonds also affects the bond yield.
  • It is calculated by using the following formula:
  • Bond Yield = Coupon Amount/Price

Bond Yield vs. Bond Price

  • The prices at which investors buy and sell bonds in the secondary market move in the opposite direction to the yields they expect to receive . 
  • Once a bond is issued, it offers fixed interest payments to its owner over its term to maturity, which does not change. 
  • However, interest rates in financial markets change all the time, and, as a result, new bonds that are issued will offer different interest payments to investors than existing bonds.
  • For example, suppose interest rates fall. New bonds that are issued will now offer lower interest payments. 
  • This makes existing bonds that were issued before the fall in interest rates more valuable to investors, because they offer higher interest payments compared to new bonds. 
  • As a result, the price of existing bonds will increase. 
  • Bond yield is the earning of an investor from a bond over a specific tenure, expressed in a percentage. It is dependent on the interest rate and bond price. 
  • As a result, when the interest rate falls, and the bond price is higher than the face value of the bond, your bond yield will be lower than the coupon rate. 
  • Similarly, when interest rates rise and bond prices are lower than the face value, your bond yield will be higher than the coupon rate.

Source: TH

Bond Yield FAQs

Q1: What is a bond?

Ans: A loan made by an investor to a borrower for a fixed period with regular interest payments.

Q2: What is the formula for calculating Bond Yield?

Ans: Bond Yield = Coupon Amount / Price

Q3: When interest rates rise in the market, what happens to bond yields and prices respectively?

Ans: Yields rise, prices fall.

Q4: What makes existing bonds more attractive when market interest rates fall?

Ans: They offer higher interest payments than new bonds.

Q5: If the market price of a bond is higher than face value, how does this affect bond yield compared to the coupon rate?

Ans: Bond yield is lower than the coupon rate.

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