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A convertible bond is a corporate bond that gives investors regular interest payments and the right to convert the bond into a predetermined number of shares of the issuer’s common stock. It combines fixed income features with potential equity upside if the company’s share price rises.
Convexity refers to the curved relationship between a bond’s price and its yield. It shows how a bond’s duration changes when interest rates move, making it a more refined measure of interest rate sensitivity than duration alone. Bonds with higher positive convexity usually benefit more when yields fall and may lose less when yields rise, while bonds with negative convexity, such as callable bonds, can have more limited upside when interest rates decline.
A corporate bond is a debt security issued by a company to raise capital. Investors who buy corporate bonds lend money to the company and usually receive regular interest payments, with the principal repaid at maturity if the issuer remains able to meet its obligations.
A covered bond is a regulated debt security issued by a bank or another financial institution and backed by a dedicated pool of high-quality assets, usually mortgage loans or public sector loans. Investors benefit from dual recourse, meaning they have a claim against both the issuer and the cover pool if the issuer defaults.
Credit risk is the risk that a bond issuer, borrower, or counterparty may fail to meet its debt obligations, such as paying coupons or repaying principal on time. In bond investing, credit risk is one of the key factors affecting a bond’s yield, price, credit rating, and overall attractiveness to investors. Higher credit risk usually requires higher yield compensation, while lower credit risk is typically associated with more stable issuers and lower borrowing costs.
Credit spread is the difference in yield between a bond with credit risk and a safer benchmark bond with a similar maturity, such as a government bond. It shows the additional compensation investors require for taking issuer credit risk. Wider credit spreads usually indicate higher perceived default risk or weaker market sentiment, while narrower spreads suggest stronger confidence in the issuer or broader economy.
Current yield is the annual coupon payment of a bond divided by its current market price, expressed as a percentage. It measures the income generated relative to the price paid for the bond, without accounting for capital gains or losses at maturity.
Default is a situation where a borrower or issuer fails to meet a required obligation under a debt agreement, most commonly by missing scheduled interest or principal payments. In bond markets, default indicates that the issuer has failed to repay debt as agreed, which may lead to restructuring, legal action, lower recovery for investors, and reduced access to future borrowing.
A derivative is a financial contract whose value is linked to an underlying asset, rate, index, or other benchmark. It allows investors and institutions to hedge risk, gain exposure to price movements, or transfer market risk without directly buying or selling the underlying instrument. Common types of derivatives include futures, options, forwards, and swaps.
Dirty price is the total price a buyer pays for a bond, including both the clean price and the accrued interest accumulated since the last coupon payment. It represents the actual settlement amount in a bond transaction.