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Principles of Finance: Unit 5, Rocky Road: High Yield or "Junk" Bonds 5 Views
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Description:
High yield (or "junk") bonds are just like they sound... junky. They're bonds that pay a high interest rate, because they're so gosh-darn risky.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop... rocky road high-yield or junk bonds
- 00:08
high-yield bonds aren't really a type category unto themselves that is a bond [High yield bond description]
- 00:13
that has a high-yield today could have started out as a really safe low
- 00:18
yield bond a while ago and then the company backing it stumbled they put out
- 00:23
bad product they didn't pay attention to competition they just stunk one way or
Full Transcript
- 00:27
another and I think Sears or Toys R Us well let's say you had a bond that was [Toys R Us store]
- 00:31
issued with a 5% coupon at par or a hundred cents on the dollar or a
- 00:35
thousand dollars as being the price paid to get 50 bucks a year paid each year
- 00:39
for 15 years until that bond was paid off but then all the sudden the specter
- 00:44
of the b-word you know bankruptcy came along and the credit worthiness of the [Ghost appears in a corridor]
- 00:49
bond suddenly came into question as the company was just barely able to make its
- 00:53
interest payments last quarter....well, nervous nellie bond investors desperate
- 00:58
to get out from a messy illiquid bad returned bond situation actively dumped
- 01:04
units of the bonds which started out in a thousand bucks and declined [Bond declining face value]
- 01:07
precipitously to finish the first weeks trading selling for only 500 bucks while
- 01:12
the coupons remained 5% only now investors paying $500 for that stream of
- 01:18
50 dollars a year for the remaining years on the bonds duration were
- 01:21
getting a 10% yield instead of a 5% yield...In the scheme of things these days
- 01:27
that's very high yield also known as yes junk bonds while high-yield bonds gained
- 01:33
fame and infamy as junk in the 1980s when they were used as openly highly [Woman answers telephone]
- 01:38
risky vehicles to make acquisitions in real estate, Midwestern factory produced
- 01:43
stuff and a bunch of other edgy targets for example, yeah Michael
- 01:47
Millikin... prominent financier ended up going to [Michael Millikin behind bars]
- 01:51
prison for having "falsely marketed the quote junk bonds" and
- 01:55
well, that era is long gone but bonds that have high-yield are here to stay so
- 02:00
what are the specifics that make a bond high-yield well usually risk if a
- 02:05
company has a hundred million dollars in operating profits pre-tax and has a
- 02:09
billion dollars of debt which cost the company 80 million dollars a year just
- 02:13
to pay the interest meanings 8% bonds well it's likely that the billion bucks
- 02:18
of debt carries a very high yield wait how does that work? well, the company
- 02:23
probably had at one point two hundred million dollars in operating profits and
- 02:27
they raised a billion dollars with an 8% coupon thinking that they'd quickly pay [Company example of operating profit]
- 02:32
down the principal such that after year one the two hundred million dollars less
- 02:36
eighty million dollars of interest would make their billion bucks of debt stand
- 02:40
at eight hundred eighty million and if they did the same for two to three more
- 02:44
years well they'd be at a very easily digestible leverage ratio and all would [Person gives a thumbs up]
- 02:49
be just fine but then something bad happened the market changed the new
- 02:53
Barbie product was laced in arsenic instead of silk trade treaties killed
- 02:57
the foreign marketplace whatever so instead of having projected operating [The Queen and Trump talking]
- 03:02
profits of two hundred million, two hundred fifty million and three hundred
- 03:06
million the company had two hundred million one hundred million and oof yeah
- 03:10
that is if the management had projected plan a to Wall Street and been oh, so
- 03:15
wrong well why would the street trust them now guess what they wouldn't and so
- 03:20
it's likely that the common equity of a company with this kind of stumble is [Person removes stock]
- 03:23
trading it pennies a share the "smart money" is betting that the company
- 03:27
goes bankrupt but here's where real investors can make real money if you
- 03:31
look at the new release of product from the company and it actually clicks and [Man checking companies on computer]
- 03:35
you see evidence from the Amazon trending data that people are actually
- 03:39
starting to buy it well then all of a sudden you wonder if the company wasn't
- 03:42
fully wrong in their leveraging maybe they were just early if the company was
- 03:47
teetering on the edge of bankruptcy with bonds with a coupon of eight percent now
- 03:50
trading at 50 cents on the dollar to give a very high yield of 16 percent
- 03:54
would you want to buy the bonds here if you believe the new products are really
- 03:58
gonna work well if you only could buy bonds then probably odds are good that
- 04:02
16 percent is money good in 16% that's great return for a bond so maybe you're [Person giving thumbs up]
- 04:08
really smart and good and lucky and you have really good returns more than
- 04:10
doubling your money and then some as the bonds go back to par and have a yield of
- 04:14
8% you know trading from 50 cents on the dollar to a hundred cents on the dollar
- 04:18
and maybe the company pays off the debt and you do slightly better than doubling
- 04:22
your money or at least doubling your yield that is so you do way better than
- 04:25
doubling your money it's nice-ish...but if you had a
- 04:29
thrill for the edge and you were smart and you were good and you had enormous [Man holding a bowling ball]
- 04:32
cojones that say Brunswick on em, well you'd probably buy the stock here the
- 04:36
common equity trading at seventy three cents a share what was likely trading in
- 04:40
the 20 or $30 a share range just a year or two ago and if the company returns to
- 04:45
anything close to parity with its old self instead of doubling your money and
- 04:49
change in the bond land you'd make like 30 times your money and more in the
- 04:53
equity land why are we focusing on equity and a discussion of high-yield
- 04:57
bonds here well because often high-yield bonds trade like or are highly
- 05:03
correlated with how the equity is performing and a lot of money is left on [Money appears on the table]
- 05:07
the table by being "too safe" and buying bonds when investors should have
- 05:11
just bought the stock...High-yield bonds are risky in a lot of ways in which
- 05:15
equities are risky but their upside is capped at most you just get your
- 05:19
principal back with all the back interest equities are uncapped they can
- 05:23
go really high anyway high-yield bonds generally live in the [High-yield bond with professional investor]
- 05:26
domain of professional investor to have access to company management and all
- 05:30
kinds of data not available to a joke consumer investor, at least not easily
- 05:34
so if you're buying junk be sure you're okay you know with the smell [Man with a junk bond walking through landfill]
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