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22.01.2024
Credit risk, interest rate risk, and exchange rate risk are the primary concerns when investing in bonds. Other considerations include reinvestment risk, call risk, liquidity risk and inflation risk.
Risks of Bond Investment
17.01.2024
Not all bonds are equally affected by interest rate fluctuations. Short-duration fixed-income securities reduce interest rate risk by leveraging lower sensitivity, mitigating potential losses in declining bond markets. Floating-rate corporate bonds minimize exposure to rising Treasury rates and credit spread changes through increased interest payments and short durations...
How to make money in a high interest rate environment
27.12.2023
Sustainability bonds include Green, Social, Sustainability, and Sustainability-linked bonds. The ESG bond market has steadily grown, surpassing $4 trillion by June 2023. Sustainability bonds share is anticipated to exceed 14% of total global bond issuance this year. Challenges in the sustainable bond market include "greenwashing," early development phase risks, and inherent credit risks.
Investing Sustainably: Green, Social and ESG bonds
15.11.2023
You should invest in single-name bonds if you: want to know in advance what you will earn on your investment; If you intend to hold a bond to maturity, it works much like a typical time deposit; do not want to pay ongoing fees each year; are confident in the creditworthiness of a bond issuer; prefer to invest on your own and pick the better returns from the wide variety of options available. You should choose Bond ETFs if you: do not want to worry about the credit risk of bond issuers...
Bond vs. ETF: Which to choose?
28.08.2023
The bond spread is the difference in yield between the bond in question and its benchmark. The benchmark bond is usually a government bond of the same country and similar maturity. You need to see the spread to understand how your willingness to take the credit risk of the bond is being rewarded.
Bond maths: Spread
28.08.2023
Duration is a measure of a bond's interest rate risk. It shows how much the price of a bond will fall or rise if the level of market interest rates changes. For a typical fixed-rate bond, duration can be roughly estimated as the time from today to maturity in years.
Bond maths: Duration
28.08.2023
Yield shows how much your capital invested in a bond will grow per year. Yield is not equal to coupon rate. They are equal only if a bond is traded at price of 100%.
Bond maths: Yield
28.08.2023
Bond prices are quoted as a percentage of par value. Par value is the amount to be repaid at maturity. You need to multiply the bond price by its par value and add the accrued coupon income to understand how much you should pay for a bond. Coupons are accrued on the par value.
Bond maths: Price
17.08.2023
The things that cause bond prices to change can be boiled down to three big things: how much the interest rates in a country change; expectations of change in interest rates; the creditworthiness of the bond issuer.
Why do bond prices change?
16.08.2023
Euro interest rates are the highest in over a decade. Bonds now and usually offer higher returns than deposits. Bonds and deposits can be withdrawn before maturity, but there may be some loss. Deposits are usually government guaranteed. Bonds are not. Both deposits and bonds are usually taxed similarly in European countries.
What to choose in a high interest rate environment: deposit or bond?
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