💵 What is a Bond?

A bond is a type of loan — you lend money to a government or company, and they promise:

  1. To pay you interest every year (called coupon payments)
  2. To return your principal at the end (called face value or par value)

📘 Bond Details (Example)

  • Coupon rate: 3%
    → You receive $30 per year (3% of $1000 face value)
  • Maturity: 10 years
  • Face value: $1000
  • Market risk-free interest rate: 2%

📉 Why Do We Discount?

Because $1 in the future is worth less than $1 today, we discount all future payments to their present value using the risk-free rate (2%).


🧮 Step-by-Step Valuation

🟩 Step 1: Present Value of Coupons (Annuity)

You receive $30 every year for 10 years.

Annuity formula:

Plug in values:


🟦 Step 2: Present Value of Face Value (Lump Sum)

You get $1000 at the end of 10 years.


📊 Final Bond Price

Add both components:


🔺 Why is it Trading Above Par?

Because the coupon rate (3%) is higher than the market interest rate (2%), investors are willing to pay more than $1000 to earn that higher income.

This is called a premium bond.


🔑 Key Takeaways

  • Discount coupons as an annuity
  • Discount face value as a lump sum
  • Use the market rate (not the coupon rate) for discounting
  • If coupon rate > market rate, bond price > par
  • If coupon rate < market rate, bond price < par

📉 Default Risk and the Default Spread

🛑 What is Default (Credit) Risk?

When a bond is issued by a company or government with risk, there’s a chance you won’t get your full coupon or principal payments.

This is called:

Default Risk or Credit Risk


⚠️ Why It Matters

To compensate for this risk, investors (you) demand a higher interest rate than the risk-free rate.

The extra interest is called the:

Default Spread


💰 Adjusted Discount Rate

When valuing a risky bond:

This increases the discount rate, which reduces the bond price, reflecting its higher risk.


📘 Example:

  • Risk-Free Rate: 3%
  • Default Spread: 2%

Now use 5% to discount the bond’s cash flows, not 3%.

This gives a lower valuation for the same promised payments.

🧠 Key Idea

The more likely the issuer might default, the higher the return you should demand — and the lower the bond’s fair value today.


Investment Grade vs. High Yield

  • Investment Grade Bonds = BBB (S&P/Fitch) or Baa3 (Moody’s) and above

    • These are considered low default risk
  • Below Investment Grade Bonds = BB and below

    • Also called “junk bonds” or “high-yield bonds”

    • Higher yields because they’re riskier


What is a Floating Rate Bond?

  • A floating rate bond pays interest that adjusts regularly (e.g., every 3 or 6 months).

  • The interest payment is tied to a reference rate like LIBOR, SOFR, or a government bond yield, plus a fixed spread.

Why Should It Trade at Par?

  • Because the coupon resets to match the market, you’re always getting a fair current return.

  • There’s no gain or loss from changes in market interest rates — unlike fixed-rate bonds.

When a bond’s market price = face value (par), then: YTM = coupon rate

Takeaway:

  • All else equal, it’s safer to buy low default risk bonds and consider floating rate bonds to reduce interest rate risk and preserve capital stability. ?
  • The longer the maturity of the bond and the lower the coupon rate, the more sensitive the value will be to changes in interest rates.