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Principles of Finance Videos 166 videos

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Principles of Finance: Unit 5, How Bonds are Called - or Put 14 Views


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Description:

When you call a bond, you (a company) are basically buying a bond back. When you put a bond, you (a bondholder) are selling it back to the company.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

Principles of finance a la shmoop how bonds are called or put...[Person picks up suitcase and replaces with new suitcase]

00:08

Want to win the lottery without dropping the dough on like a zillion

00:12

tickets buy a call provision you know most call provisions have a lottery

00:17

provision... okay so this is not about going

00:21

to 7-eleven and paying 2 bucks to the state's tax collection system because [Man carrying bags full of lottery tickets]

00:25

like nobody ever wins those things do they rather a lottery in this sense

00:29

refers to random numbers being assigned to individual series of bonds which make

00:36

those bonds callable by the issuer at some point between when the bonds were [Money transfers from phone to bonds]

00:41

issued and when the cash is collected by the company and when the bonds are fully

00:45

paid off the big idea here is that calling a bond means that the original

00:50

issuer is buying it back like hello bond 8675 309 I'm calling you I want you [Man calling for bond back]

00:57

back please come back all right that is they return the cash to the

01:01

investor who originally bought the bond plus interest and usually a small

01:05

premium paid above the par value of the bond to reward the investor for of a

01:10

hassle and you know that the bond then is considered paid off and done okay so [Bond stamped paid]

01:15

let's say 20% of the outstanding bonds of whatever.com can be called after

01:19

three years and then another 20% can be called after six years and so on until

01:25

the whole thing's retired well the company had a banner year finding itself [Fireworks in the sky]

01:28

with a ton of cash on its books at the end and having already acquired all of

01:32

the corporate jets it wanted well the company decided to spend its remaining

01:36

cash available by calling its outstanding bonds back home to the [Alien spacecraft picking up people from the city]

01:40

mothership all right so what's that process like calling back your bonds

01:44

well if the company wants to call them they spin the wheel of fortune and

01:47

called lucky winners and losers remember there's lottery tickets or lottery [Person calling on a mobile]

01:51

numbers associated with each bond paying each chosen bondholders something like a

01:56

hundred and three cents on the dollar like a three percent premium here

02:00

whatever it said in the paperwork when the bond was originally issued that the

02:04

call premium would be should the bonds be called early well they do that they

02:09

pay a thousand thirty bucks and retire the debt okay [Person hands over a check]

02:13

if bond rates are high today and you're a bond fund portfolio manager well

02:18

you're gonna want some protection, like if you buy someone's bonds which yield

02:22

say 8% today but then what if the bonds are callable next month at par, or a

02:28

hundred cents on the dollar and you're paying a hundred three cents on the

02:32

dollar to buy those bonds that supposedly will be yielding eight

02:35

percent forever and ever but then they get called in a month or a year or less [Person picks up telephone]

02:39

than that well then you have what's called call risk so imagine a scenario

02:43

where you've just paid a thousand thirty dollars for $1,000 par bond that in

02:47

theory pays you 80 dollars a year in interest for the next ten years and you

02:51

feel good about its risk default meaning that you trust that the bonds will you [Man giving presentation on call risk]

02:56

know fully pay off fully down line but then since the bond has no call [Telephone rings]

03:01

protection and interest rates suddenly plummet and the company can refinance

03:05

the bonds elsewhere cheaper well, just one month later before even having paid

03:09

semiannual interest the bonds you just paid a thousand thirty for each are

03:15

called and well legally and you're kind of screwed you must surrender them for a [Person calling on a mobile]

03:19

thousand dollars each you just lost three percent in a month nice job! To

03:24

avoid such a calamity you'll want call protection like the

03:27

company issuer of the bond agrees that it won't call these bonds for at least

03:31

four years so time can pass and you can collect at least some interest along the

03:35

way and if they do get called well then the company will pay a hundred three [Sticky note lands on 1 dollar bill]

03:39

cents on the dollar or a hundred ten cents on the dollar or hundred twenty cents

03:42

on the dollar to buy them back or something like that

03:44

it's called protection so you don't end up losing money on your bonds and note [Money on fire]

03:48

that if the company issuing ever wants to buy them back even if there's no call

03:52

provision it can it's called tendering yeah the company tenderly gently asks if

03:59

people would kindly like to sell it back their used debt they tenderly do this [Man with company briefcase for a head waving]

04:04

that's why it's called tendering the company just tiptoes into the open

04:07

market and tenderly offers whatever the market price is for those bonds like a

04:13

hundred two dollars and seventy three cents or something like that like at a

04:16

2.7% premium and if there are any suckers out there who want

04:19

to sell the company there are perfectly nice eight percent coupon bonds for

04:23

ninety six cents on the dollar well then fine it'll go ahead and buy them back

04:26

thank you very much wow this sounds apocalyptic but most bond investors are [Apocalyptic city up in smoke]

04:30

a relatively dismal dark crowd to start with so the nomenclature fits; bond

04:35

buyers just want to get paid back their interest and their principle and then go

04:40

home and pray an errant airplane does not hit their house. Fittingly most bonds [Airplane in the sky, plummets and explodes]

04:45

carry a yield to worst tag instead of a yield to call that is at worst like if

04:52

my bond is called in the first tranche of potential lottery calls what will be

04:57

the lowest or worst yield I'll get from this point forward on my investment

05:02

Here's another twister when bonds are called

05:05

early they usually carry that premium we mentioned specifically if a bond is

05:10

callable at 1:02 any time well what does that mean well bonds trade in

05:14

denominations of $1,000 right so what is 102 here right we said it's 2% premium

05:19

so that would be the bond is callable for a thousand 20 let's say we've paid a

05:25

thousand dollars for a bond yielding 8% and we hold it exactly 4 years

05:29

collecting 80 dollars a year in interest each year and after 3.8 years we get a

05:34

nasty little email saying thank you very much for your investment that we paid [E-mail from investment to bond buyer]

05:38

you 8% a year in rent for money now we're gonna buy back that bond after 4

05:42

years not letting it go to its full decade long duration sorry pal and for

05:46

the privilege of buying it back we'll pay you a thousand $20 or a 2% call

05:50

premium to retire those now very expensive-looking 8% bonds when we know

05:54

we could refinance with someone else and rent money today at only 5%

06:01

So, if we went back to the beginning of our investment well the yield to worst was [A stack of 100 dollar bills]

06:05

in fact 80 plus 80 plus 80 plus 80 plus 20 plus a thousand or 1340 returned over

06:12

4 years that's cumulative total the yield ended up being a bit more than 8%

06:17

but you can imagine situations where the nominal rate was a very high relative to [Nominal rates value increase on a graph]

06:22

market conditions number and investors paid 1,200 bucks for a bond callable

06:27

four years later at a thousand twenty well they could have ended up tying up

06:31

their money for four years renting it to other people and actually losing money

06:35

it would be like renting your apartment not cashing the check for four years and [Apartment 4 rent sign on a block of apartments]

06:39

then realizing that all the checks that you would have cashed bounced yeah that

06:43

would not be good all right well we just outlined what a call provision looks

06:46

like the right for the company to buy back the bond or call it home to the

06:51

mother ship so then what on earth is a put well is

06:54

it the right of a company to force you to buy a bond...No, but that would make for [Man with company briefcase for head holding a baseball bat]

06:59

a really great reality TV show the put option is given to the holder of the

07:03

bond the holder has the right to put the bond back to the company usually at a [Bond holder puts bond to the company]

07:09

preset price and usually at a discount to the principle price right so it's

07:14

kind of the inverse of a call so the bonds of whatever dot-com might have had

07:17

to have had this extra feature in order for cautious buyers of their bonds to be [Person slowly picks up a bond]

07:22

enticed to buy them why is a put appealing to cautious buyers, well

07:27

because the buyers then legally have the right to get their money back after what

07:32

is essentially a small bond restocking fee...A put provision might have said

07:37

something like puttable anytime after four years at 96 so that means [bond yields transfer to company]

07:43

that owners of the bond could force the company after four years to buy back

07:47

their bond for ninety six cents on the dollar or nine hundred sixty bucks for

07:51

that thousand dollar par value bond well why would a company offer such a great

07:55

deal to investors in its bonds well it would offer it if it had to and

08:00

pretty much only if it had to to entice them to buy that is in order to get the [Lots of people walking fast]

08:04

deal done to attract enough buyers to actually get the bond offering to you

08:08

know happen well they'd have to offer a put the belief in this case by the

08:12

buyers is that the company will still be solvent or at least solvent enough so

08:16

that in four years if everyone who owns these bonds wants to sell them back to

08:20

the company at ninety six cents on the dollar nine hundred sixty bucks four

08:24

thousand dollar principal bond that the company will have the dough or access to [Stacks of money in a vault]

08:27

it via other debt it would issue in place you know to buy back those bonds

08:32

that the investors in them have put back to the mothership....Here's

08:36

hoping but hey well even if the odds aren't a hundred percent that you make a

08:39

nice return on your bond investment well they're a whole lot better than the

08:43

upcoming mega zillion Powerball ...[Road advert for the powerball]

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