This is “Bond Valuation”, section 9.4 from the book Finance for Managers (v. 0.1). For details on it (including licensing), click here.
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The financial value of any asset is the present value of its future cash flows, so we already have the tools necessary to start valuing bonds. If we know the periodic coupon payments, the par value, and the maturity of the bond, then we can use our time value of money skills from Chapter 7 "Time Value of Money: Multiple Flows" to solve for either price or YTM, given the other.
For example, if I know that a bond with a 5% annual coupon has 7 years to maturity, a $1,000 par value, and has a YTM of 6.5%, I can figure out its price. Since payments are yearly: n = 7 years, r = 6.5% per year, PMT = ($1,000 × 5%) = $50 per year, and FV = $1,000.
Figure 9.1 Bond Timeline—Annual Coupon
Using a financial calculator or excel, or solving by hand, we should get a PV = $917.73.
Bond prices, by convention, are quoted as a percentage of the par value. In our above example, the result of $917.73 would be quoted as 917.73 / 1,000 = .91773 = 91.77%. And because we know they are percentages by convention, we don’t include the percent sign. So our bond quote is 91.77.
If a bond is quoted at exactly 100, we say it is trading at par (since it costs the par value). Above 100, we say the bond is trading at a premium, and below 100, it is at a discount.
If our bond paid its coupon semiannually, we need to calculate the value in terms of semiannual (six month) periods. By convention, bond yields are quoted like an APR, in that they are always equal to the rate over the period times the periods in a year. Thus, our inputs should be: n = 7 × 2 = 14 semi-years, r = 6.5% / 2 = 3.25 % per semi-year, PMT = ($1,000 × 5% / 2) = $25 every semi-year, and FV = $1,000.
Figure 9.2 Bond Timeline—Semiannual Coupon
Our result is a PV of $916.71, which is only slightly different than our annual coupon bond.
For ease, we have only used example bonds with whole years left until maturity. A bond that was traded part of the way through the year would have accrued interest due to the bond seller (since the entire coupon payment will now go to the new owner).
By convention, bond prices in US markets are quoted as “clean prices”, meaning they ignore this accrued interest. This makes it easier to compare bonds day-to-day, since the accrued interest changes every day (and resets to zero when the coupon payment is made). When a trade actually occurs, the clean price plus the accrued interest will be combined to make the actual payment (the “dirty” price).
Solving for YTM is similar. If the price of our above semiannual coupon bond rose to a quoted 94.35, what is the YTM?
Figure 9.3 Bond Timeline—Semiannual Coupon Solving for YTM
n = 14 semi-years, PMT = $25, FV = $1,000, and PV = − ($1,000 × .9435) = −$943.50. We represent the price as a negative number since it is a cash outflow. Solving for r gives a result of 3.00% for the semiannual period, or 3.00% × 2 = 6.00% for the quoted YTM.
Excel has two functions that can be used to directly solve for bond prices and yields. Both require actual calendar dates for settlement and maturity of the bond; since all we know of our bond is that it has 7 years to maturity, we’ll pick dates that are 7 years apart. Both also require an input of how much of the par value is received at redemption, quoted as a % of par. Since we are receiving all of the par value at redemption, this number will be 100.
=PRICE(settlement date, maturity date, coupon rate, yield, redemption, pmts per year)
=PRICE(“1/1/2010”, “1/1/2017”, 5%, 6.5%, 100, 2)
91.67
=YIELD(settlement date, maturity date, coupon rate, price, redemption, pmts per year)
=YIELD(“1/1/2010”, “1/1/2017”, 5%, 94.35, 100, 2)
.0600 or 6.00%