14.8
Bond Indentures
A bond is issued with an indenture, which is the contract between the issuer and the bond-
holder. Part of the indenture is a set of restrictions that protect the rights of the bondholders.
Such restrictions include provisions relating to collateral, sinking funds, dividend policy,
and further borrowing. The issuing firm agrees to these protective covenants in order to
market its bonds to investors concerned about the safety of the bond issue.
Sinking Funds
Bonds call for the payment of par value at the end of the bond’s life.
This payment constitutes a large cash commitment for the issuer. To help ensure the com-
mitment does not create a cash flow crisis, the firm agrees to establish a sinking fund to
spread the payment burden over several years. The fund may operate in one of two ways:
1. The firm may repurchase a fraction of the outstanding bonds in the open market
each year.
2. The firm may purchase a fraction of the outstanding bonds at a special call price
associated with the sinking fund provision. The firm has an option to purchase the
bonds at either the market price or the sinking fund price, whichever is lower. To
allocate the burden of the sinking fund call fairly among bondholders, the bonds
chosen for the call are selected at random based on serial number.
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The sinking fund call differs from a conventional bond call in two important ways.
First, the firm can repurchase only a limited fraction of the bond issue at the sinking fund
call price. At best, some indentures allow firms to use a doubling option, which allows
repurchase of double the required number of bonds at the sinking fund call price. Second,
while callable bonds generally have call prices above par value, the sinking fund call price
usually is set at the bond’s par value.
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C H A P T E R
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Bond Prices and Yields
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Although sinking funds ostensibly protect bondholders by making principal repayment
more likely, they can hurt the investor. The firm will choose to buy back discount bonds
(selling below par) at market price, while exercising its option to buy back premium bonds
(selling above par) at par. Therefore, if interest rates fall and bond prices rise, firms will
benefit from the sinking fund provision that enables them to repurchase their bonds at
below-market prices. In these circumstances, the firm’s gain is the bondholder’s loss.
One bond issue that does not require a sinking fund is a serial bond issue, in which the
firm sells bonds with staggered maturity dates. As bonds mature sequentially, the principal
repayment burden for the firm is spread over time, just as it is with a sinking fund. One
advantage of serial bonds over sinking fund issues is that there is no uncertainty introduced
by the possibility that a particular bond will be called for the sinking fund. The disadvan-
tage of serial bonds, however, is that bonds of different maturity dates are not interchange-
able, which reduces the liquidity of the issue.
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