In January 2006, the yield on AAA-rated corporate bonds averaged approximately 5 percent; one year later, the
Question:
In January 2006, the yield on AAA-rated corporate bonds averaged approximately 5 percent; one year later, the yield on these same bonds had climbed to about 6 percent because the Federal Reserve increased interest rates during the year. Assume that IBM issued a 10-year, 5 percent coupon bond on January 1, 2006. On the same date, Microsoft issued a 20-year, 5 percent coupon bond. Both bonds pay interest annually. Also assume that the market rate on similar-risk bonds was 5 percent at the time that the bonds were issued.
a. Compute the market value of each bond at the time of issue.
b. Compute the market value of each bond one year after issue if the market
yield for similar-risk bonds was 6 percent on January 1, 2007.
c. Compute the 2006 capital gains yield for each bond.
d. Compute the current yield for each bond in 2006.
e. Compute the total return that each bond would have generated for investors in 2006.
f. If you invested in bonds at the beginning of 2006, would you have been better off if you held long-term or short-term bonds? Explain.
g. Assume that interest rates stabilize at the January 2007 rate of 6 percent, then they stay at this level indefinitely. What would be the price of each bond on January 1, 2012, after six years from the date of issue have passed? Describe what should happen to the prices of these bonds as they approach their maturities.
A coupon or coupon payment is the annual interest rate paid on a bond, expressed as a percentage of the face value and paid from issue date until maturity. Coupons are usually referred to in terms of the coupon rate (the sum of coupons paid in a...
Step by Step Answer:
Essentials of Managerial Finance
ISBN: 978-0324422702
14th edition
Authors: Scott Besley, Eugene F. Brigham