Bond year to maturity calculator
[DOC File]Quantitative Problem Chapter 3
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For a given yield to maturity, a bond’s value rises as its maturity increases. When yield to maturity equals the coupon rate, a bond’s current price equals its face value regardless of years to maturity. 4. Consider a coupon bond that has a $1,000 per value and a coupon rate of 10%.
[DOC File]Exam-type questions
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a. 20-year, zero coupon bond. * b. 10-year, zero coupon bond. c. 20-year, 10 percent coupon bond. d. 20-year, 5 percent coupon bond. The longer the maturity of a bond, the more of an effect a change in interest rates will have on it. The reason for this is that the price change is compounded into the bond price for more periods.
[DOC File]1) Calculate the after-tax cost of a $25 million debt ...
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Sep 13, 2008 · This expansion will be financed, in part, with debt issued with as coupon interest rate of 6.8 percent. The bonds have a 10-year maturity and a $1,000 face value, and they will be sold to net Ewing $990 per bond. Ewing's marginal tax rate is 40 percent. Preferred stock …
[DOC File]Chapter 10
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two-year bond: three-year bond: The forward rate (f2) is the rate that makes the return from rolling over one-year bonds the same as the return from investing in the two-year maturity bond and holding to maturity: 1.08 ( (1 + f2) = (1.09)2 ( f2 = 0.1001 = 10.01%
[DOC File]Soln Ch 13 Bond prices
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This implies a bond equivalent yield to maturity equal to: 4.26% 2 = 8.52%. Effective annual yield to maturity = (1.0426)2 – 1 = 0.0870 = 8.70%. b. Since the bond is selling at par, the yield to maturity on a semi-annual basis is the same as the semi-annual coupon rate, i.e., 4%. The bond equivalent yield to maturity …
[DOC File]First, you have to do problem 4-9 using a financial calculator
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A 10 year, 12 percent semiannual coupon bond with a par value of $1000 may be called in 4 years at a call price of $1060. The bond sells for $1,100 (assume the bond has just been issued) What is the bond’s yield to maturity. What is the bond’s current yield. What is the bond’s capital gain or loss yield. What is the bond’s yield to call
[DOC File]Soln Ch 14 Yld Curve
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The price of the coupon bond is: Therefore: yield to maturity for the coupon bond = 8.333% [On a financial calculator, enter: n = 2; PV = –106.51; FV = 100; PMT = 12] b. c. Expected price (Note that next year, the coupon bond will have one payment left.) Expected holding period return =
[DOC File]CHAPTER 14: BOND PRICES AND YIELDS
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There will be six payments of $35 each, reinvested semiannually at 3% per period. On a financial calculator, enter: PV = 0; PMT = 35; n = 6; i = 3%. Compute: FV = 226.39. Three years from now, the bond will be selling at the par value of $1,000 because the yield to maturity …
[DOC File]CHAPTER 7
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Bond A: 8-year maturity with a 7 percent annual coupon. Bond B: 10-year maturity with a 9 percent annual coupon. Bond C: 12-year maturity with a zero coupon. Each bond has a face value of $1,000 and a yield to maturity of 8 percent. Which of the following statements is most correct? a. Bond A sells at a discount, while Bond B sells at a premium. b.
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