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Acctng Ed 09 - Financial Management

BSA II
Bond Valuation – Handout
I. Terminology and characteristics of bonds
A. A bond is a long-term promissory note that promises to pay the bondholder a predetermined, fixed amount of
interest each year until maturity. At maturity, the principal will be paid to the bondholder.
B. In the case of a firm's insolvency, a bondholder has a priority of claim to the firm's assets before the preferred
and common stockholders. Also, bondholders must be paid interest due them before dividends can be
distributed to the stockholders.
C. A bond's par value is the amount that will be repaid by the firm when the bond matures, usually P1,000.
D. The contractual agreement of the bond specifies a coupon interest rate that is expressed either as a percent of the
par value or as a flat amount of interest which the borrowing firm promises to pay the bondholder each year. For
example: A P1,000 par value bond specifying a coupon interest rate of 9 percent is equivalent to an annual
interest payment of P90.
E. The bond has a maturity date, at which time the borrowing firm is committed to repay the loan principal.
F. An indenture (or trust deed) is the legal agreement between the firm issuing the bonds and the bond trustee who
represents the bondholders. It provides the specific terms of the bond agreement such as the rights and
responsibilities of both parties.
G. The current yield on a bond refers to the ratio of annual interest payment to the bond’s market price.
H. Bond ratings
1. Three primary rating agencies exist—Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, and Fitch Investor Services.
2. Bond ratings are simply judgments about the future risk potential of the bond in question. Bond ratings
are extremely important in that a firm’s bond rating tells much about the cost of funds and the firm’s
access to the debt market.
3. The different ratings and their implications are described.
II. Types of bonds
A. Debentures: unsecured long-term debt.
B. Subordinated debentures: bonds that have a lower claim on assets in the event of liquidation than do other
senior debt holders.
C. Mortgage bonds: bonds secured by a lien on specific assets of the firm, such as real estate.
D. Eurobonds: bonds issued in a country different from the one in whose currency the bond is denominated; for
instance, a bond issued in Europe or Asia that pays interest and principal in U.S. dollars.
E. Zero and low coupon bonds allow the issuing firm to issue bonds at a substantial discount from their P1,000 face
value with a zero or very low coupon.
1. The disadvantages are, when the bond matures, the issuing firm will face an extremely large
nondeductible cash outflow much greater than the cash inflow they experienced when the bonds were
first issued.
2. Zero and low coupon bonds are not callable and can be retired only at maturity.
3. On the other hand, annual cash outflows associated with interest payments do not occur with zero
coupon bonds.
F. Junk bonds: bonds rated BB or below.
III. Valuation: An Overview
A. Definitions of value
1. Book value is the value of an asset shown on a firm's balance sheet which is determined by its historical
cost rather than its current worth.
2. Liquidation value is the amount that could be realized if an asset is sold individually and not as part of a
going concern.
3. Market value is the observed value of an asset in the marketplace where buyers and sellers negotiate an
acceptable price for the asset.
4. Intrinsic value is the value based upon the expected cash flows from the investment, the riskiness of the
asset, and the investor's required rate of return. It is the value in the eyes of the investor and is the same
as the present value of expected future cash flows to be received from the investment.
B. The present value of an asset is a function of three elements:
1. The amount and timing of the asset's expected cash flows
2. The riskiness of these cash flows
3. The investors' required rate of return for undertaking the investment
C. Expected cash flows are used in measuring the returns from an investment.

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IV. Valuation: The Basic Process
The value of an asset is found by computing the present value of all the future cash flows expected to be received from
the asset. Expressed as a general present value equation, the value of an asset is found as follows:
N
$Ct
V =  (1  k) t
t 1
where Ct = the cash flow to be received at time t
V = the intrinsic value or present value of an asset producing expected future
cash flows, Ct, in years 1 through N
k = the investor's required rate of return
N = the number of periods
V. Bond Valuation
A. The value of a bond is simply the present value of the future interest payments and maturity value discounted at
the bondholder's required rate of return. This may be expressed as:
N
$It $M
V
b
=  (1  k b ) t

(1  k b ) N
t 1
where It = the peso interest to be received in each payment
M = the par value of the bond at maturity
kb = the required rate of return for the bondholder
N = the number of periods to maturity
In other words, we are discounting the expected future cash flows to the present at the appropriate discount rate
(required rate of return).
B. If interest payments are received semiannually (as with most bonds), the valuation equation becomes:
$It
2N
$M
V
b
=  2
t
 2N
t 1  kb   kb 
1   1  
 2  2
VI. Bondholder's Expected Rate of Return (Yield to Maturity)
A. We compute the bondholder's expected rate of return by finding the discount rate that gets the present value of
the future interest payments and principal payment just equal to the bond's current market price.
Using the Henderson formula:

(B0 x 60%) + (M x 40%)

B. The bondholder's expected rate of return is also the rate the investor will earn if the bond is held to maturity,
provided, of course, that the company issuing the bond does not default on the payments.
VII. Bond Value: Five Important Relationships
A. First relationship
A decrease in interest rates (required rates of return) will cause the value of a bond to increase; an interest rate
increase will cause a decrease in value. The change in value caused by changing interest rates is called interest
rate risk.
B. Second relationship
1. If the bondholder's required rate of return (current interest rate) equals the coupon interest rate, the
bond will sell at par, or maturity value.
2. If the bondholder's required rate of return exceeds the bond's coupon rate, the bond will sell below par
value or at a "discount."
3. If the bondholder's required rate of return is less than the bond's coupon rate, the bond will sell above
par value or at a "premium."

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C. Third relationship
As the maturity date approaches, the market value of a bond approaches its par value.
1. The premium bond sells for less as maturity approaches.
2. The discount bond sells for more as maturity approaches.
D. Fourth relationship
A bondholder owning a long-term bond is exposed to greater interest rate risk than when owning a short-term
bond.
E. Fifth relationship
The sensitivity of a bond's value to changing interest rates depends not only on the length of time to maturity,
but also on the pattern of cash flows provided by the bond.
1. The duration of a bond is simply a measure of the responsiveness of its price to a change in interest
rates. The greater the relative percentage change in a bond price in response to a given percentage
change in the interest rate, the longer the duration.
2. Calculating duration
n
tC t
t 1 (1  k b ) t
duration =
P0
where t = the year the cash flow is to be received
N = the number of years to maturity
Ct = the cash flow to be received in year t
kb = the bondholder's required rate of return
P0 = the bond's present value

-End-

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