Chapter 12 The Bond Market
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A bond’s interest rate will also depend on its features and characteristics, which are
described in the following sections.
Characteristics of Corporate Bonds
At one time bonds were sold with attached coupons that the owner of the bond
clipped and mailed to the firm to receive interest payments. These were called bearer
bonds because payments were made to whoever had physical possession of the
bonds. The Internal Revenue Service did not care for this method of payment, how-
ever, because it made tracking interest income difficult. Bearer bonds have now been
largely replaced by registered bonds, which do not have coupons. Instead, the
owner must register with the firm to receive interest payments. The firms are
required to report to the IRS the name of the person who receives interest income.
Despite the fact that bearer bonds with attached coupons have been phased out,
the interest paid on bonds is still called the “coupon interest payment,” and the inter-
est rate on bonds is the coupon interest rate.
Restrictive Covenants
A corporation’s financial managers are hired, fired, and com-
pensated at the direction of the board of directors, which represents the corpora-
tion’s stockholders. This arrangement implies that the managers will be more
interested in protecting stockholders than they are in protecting bondholders. You
should recognize this as an example of the moral hazard problem introduced in
Chapter 2 and discussed further in Chapter 7. Managers may not use the funds pro-
vided by the bonds as the bondholders might prefer. Since bondholders cannot look
to managers for protection when the firm gets into trouble, they must include rules
and restrictions on managers designed to protect the bondholders’ interests. These
are known as restrictive covenants. They usually limit the amount of dividends the
firm can pay (so to conserve cash for interest payments to bondholders) and the abil-
ity of the firm to issue additional debt. Other financial policies, such as the firm’s
involvement in mergers, may also be restricted. Restrictive covenants are included
in the bond indenture. Typically, the interest rate will be lower the more restric-
tions are placed on management through restrictive covenants because the bonds
will be considered safer by investors.
Call Provisions
Most corporate indentures include a call provision, which states
that the issuer has the right to force the holder to sell the bond back. The call pro-
vision usually requires a waiting period between the time the bond is initially issued
and the time when it can be called. The price bondholders are paid for the bond is
usually set at the bond’s par price or slightly higher (usually by one year’s interest
cost). For example, a 10% coupon rate $1,000 bond may have a call price of $1,100.
If interest rates fall, the price of the bond will rise. If rates fall enough, the price
will rise above the call price, and the firm will call the bond. Because call provisions
put a limit on the amount that bondholders can earn from the appreciation of a bond’s
price, investors do not like call provisions.
A second reason that issuers of bonds include call provisions is to make it possi-
ble for them to buy back their bonds according to the terms of the sinking fund. A
sinking fund is a requirement in the bond indenture that the firm pay off a portion
of the bond issue each year. This provision is attractive to bondholders because it
reduces the probability of default when the issue matures. Because a sinking fund pro-
vision makes the issue more attractive, the firm can reduce the bond’s interest rate.
A third reason firms usually issue only callable bonds is that firms may have to
retire a bond issue if the covenants of the issue restrict the firm from some activity
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Part 5 Financial Markets
that it feels is in the best interest of stockholders. Suppose that a firm needed to bor-
row additional funds to expand its storage facilities. If the firm’s bonds carried a
restriction against adding debt, the firm would have to retire its existing bonds before
issuing new bonds or taking out a loan to build the new warehouse.
Finally, a firm may choose to call bonds if it wishes to alter its capital structure.
A maturing firm with excess cash flow may wish to reduce its debt load if few attrac-
tive investment opportunities are available.
Because bondholders do not generally like call provisions, callable bonds must
have a higher yield than comparable noncallable bonds. Despite the higher cost,
firms still typically issue callable bonds because of the flexibility this feature pro-
vides the firm.
Conversion
Some bonds can be converted into shares of common stock. This fea-
ture permits bondholders to share in the firm’s good fortunes if the stock price rises.
Most convertible bonds will state that the bond can be converted into a certain num-
ber of common shares at the discretion of the bondholder. The conversion ratio will
be such that the price of the stock must rise substantially before conversion is likely
to occur.
Issuing convertible bonds is one way firms avoid sending a negative signal to
the market. In the presence of asymmetric information between corporate insiders
and investors, when a firm chooses to issue stock, the market usually interprets this
action as indicating that the stock price is relatively high or that it is going to fall in
the future. The market makes this interpretation because it believes that managers
are most concerned with looking out for the interests of existing stockholders and
will not issue stock when it is undervalued. If managers believe that the firm will
perform well in the future, they can, instead, issue convertible bonds. If the managers
are correct and the stock price rises, the bondholders will convert to stock at a rel-
atively high price that managers believe is fair. Alternatively, bondholders have the
option not to convert if managers turn out to be wrong about the company’s future.
Bondholders like a conversion feature. It is very similar to buying just a bond
but receiving both a bond and a stock option (stock options are discussed fully in
Chapter 24). The price of the bond will reflect the value of this option and so will
be higher than the price of comparable nonconvertible bonds. The higher price
received for the bond by the firm implies a lower interest rate.
Types of Corporate Bonds
A variety of corporate bonds are available. They are usually distinguished by the type
of collateral that secures the bond and by the order in which the bond is paid off if
the firm defaults.
Secured Bonds
Secured bonds are ones with collateral attached. Mortgage bonds
are used to finance a specific project. For example, a building may be the collateral
for bonds issued for its construction. In the event that the firm fails to make payments
as promised, mortgage bondholders have the right to liquidate the property in order
to be paid. Because these bonds have specific property pledged as collateral, they
are less risky than comparable unsecured bonds. As a result, they will have a lower
interest rate.
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