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In the first row, the security is paying its bondholders 7 3/4% interest and is due to mature Feb, 2001. Prices in the bid and ask columns are percentages of the bond's face value of $1,000. So, a bid of 105:12 means that a buyer was willing to pay $1053.75, compared to the seller's lowest asking price, 105:14, or $1054.38, a difference of 63 cents per thousand. (The numbers after the colons represent 32nds, so 12/32nds, for example, would equal $3.75, which is appended to the 105 before the colon.) By looking at the bid and ask prices, you can see that an investor who bought the bond at par when it was first issued can make a profit of more than 5% if it were sold now. The reason for the profit can be explained by the rate column. The security pays higher interest than a newly-issued three-year Treasury would, so is more attractive to an investor. But because the investor would pay a premium to purchase the existing note, the yield to maturity falls to 5.50%. In the next row, the bond pays a lower rate, 5 3/8%. Its price was unchanged the day before, closing at 99:27, or $998.44, indicating an investor buying that security would be able to acquire it at a discount from its par value of $1,000. Because the investor is buying the bond below its par value, the yield to maturity, 5.44%, exceeds the coupon rate. Tax Exempt Bonds:
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| Issuer | Coupon | Maturity | Price | Yield to Maturity |
| Nevada GO Bds | 5.00 | 5-15-28 | 97 1/8 | 5.19 |
| Nebraska Public Power District | 5.00 | 1-1-28 | 97 | 5.20 |
Looking at those two examples, a buyer would know that a 20-year municipal bond paying 5% interest would cost about $970. In this case, the slight price variances may be attributable to different credit ratings and other factors.
In the first row, the State of Nevada general obligation bonds are offering a coupon rate of 5% with a maturity in May of 2028. The most recent price of this bond, shown as a percent of its face value, was $971.25, $28.75 less than its initial offering value per $1,000. In other words, if the buyer's bid was accepted, he would pay less than the current bond holder did when the bond was first issued, because prevailing interest rates are now higher than 5% on similar tax-exempt bonds. Because of the discount, the buyer would be earning a yield to maturity of 5.19%, more than the stated interest rate, because he bought the bond at less than its face value.
The second issue, offered by the Nebraska Public Power District, has the same coupon, or interest rate, 5% and matures in January of the same year, 2028. Just as in the Nevada example, the seller would be receiving less than what he paid for the bond when it was originally issued, $970 per $1,000, a 3% loss. The lower price, consequently raises the yield to maturity for the buyer to 5.20%.
The Association and Bloomberg News LLP. also provide a yield table for AAA-rated insured revenue bonds, a useful benchmark for prices of other municipal issues. In addition, the Association and Standard & Poor's also sponsor a phone service which provides subscribers with current prices of up to 25 securities for $9.95. Call 1-800-Bond Info for details.
| Bonds | Cur. Yld. | Vol | Close | Net Chg. |
| BosCelts 6s38 | 9.2 | 22 | 65 3/8 | + 1/4 |
| PacBell 6 5/8 34 | 6.7 | 5 | 99 1/8 | - 1/8 |
The companies issuing the bonds are listed in the first column, in this case, the professional basketball team, The Boston Celtics, and the telecommunications company, Pacific Bell. Immediately after the names, comes the interest rate paid by the bond as a percentage of its par value. The Celtic's bond pays 6%; Pac Bell's pay somewhat more, 6 5/8%. (The small "s" in the Celtic's listing simply separates the interest rate from the year the bond matures, 2038). The PacBell bond matures in 2034.
The basketball team's bond has a current yield of 9.2% based on its closing price of $653.75 per $1,000. The volume traded on the exchange the day before amounted to $22,000 and the price rose $2.50. Similarly, the phone company had a volume of $5,000 and closed nearer its par value, $991.25, down $1.25 for the day. Below is a sample corporate bond table in the newspaper.
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Corporate Bond Table in the newspaper
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Column 1:
Issuer.
This is the company, state (or province), or country that is issuing the
bond.
Column 2: Coupon. The
coupon
refers to the fixed interest rate that the issuer pays to the lender.
The coupon rate varies by bond.
Column 3:
Maturity
Date. This is the date when the borrower will pay the lenders
(investors) their principal back. Typically only the last two digits of
the year are quoted, 25 means 2025, 04 is 2004, etc.
Column 4: Bid Price. This is the price in which someone is
willing to pay for the bond. It is quoted in relation to 100, no matter
what the par value is. Think of the bond price as a percentage, a bond
with a bid of $93 means it is trading at 93% of its par value.
Column 5: Yield. The yield indicates annual return until the bond
matures. Yield is calculated by the amount of interest paid on a bond
divided by the price, it is a measure of the income generated by a bond.
If the bond is
callable it will have a "c--" where the "--" is the year the
bond can be called. For example c10 means the bond can be called as
early as 2010.
Treasuries in the secondary Market:
If you want to purchase treasury issues in the
secondary market instead of buying direct from treasury, news papers
carry the Treasury price quotation each day.
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The Maturity column shows the maturity date of the issue ("n" depicts Treasury notes).
Colons in bid-and-asked quotes represent thirty-seconds. For example 100.03 means 100 3/32. Treasury bill quotes are in hundredths, quoted on terms of a rate of discount.
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The "bid" price is the highest price (stated as a percentage of face value) that a buyer is willing to pay.
The "asked" price is the lowest price that a seller is willing to accept.
The Change column shows the amount the price change from the previous day's closing price to the current day's closing price.
The Yield column shows the yield to maturity that you would earn if the Treasury were purchased at the current market price and held to the maturity date.
Next==>>
Major types of Bonds
Table of
contents
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