Understanding the Key Components
Before diving into the example, it is helpful to understand the basic layout of a bond table:
- Issuer: The corporation or government entity borrowing the money.
- Coupon Rate: The fixed annual interest rate the bond pays.
- Maturity Date: The date the issuer must repay the principal (face value) to the investor.
- Bid / Ask Price: Quoted as a percentage of par. The Bid is what buyers are willing to pay; the Ask is what sellers are willing to accept.
- Yield to Maturity (YTM): The total annual return an investor expects if they buy the bond at the current price and hold it until maturity.
A Step-by-Step Practical Example
Let’s look at a realistic corporate bond quote that you might see on a financial platform:
$$\text{\textbf{ABC Corp 5.50\% 06/15/2035 | Bid: 98.25 | Ask: 98.75 | YTM: 5.65\%}}$$
Step 1: Identify the Issuer and Terms
- What it means: ABC Corp is the company issuing the bond.
- Coupon Rate: 5.50%. This means the bond pays 5.50% of its $1,000 face value in interest each year ($55.00), usually split into two semi-annual payments of $27.50.
- Maturity Date: 06/15/2035. The company will return the full $1,000 principal to the bondholder on June 15, 2035.
Step 2: Calculate the Actual Purchase Price (The “Ask”)
If you want to buy this bond, you look at the Ask price, which is quoted as 98.75. Remember, this is a percentage, not a dollar amount.
- The Math: $98.75\% \text{ of } \$1,000 = 0.9875 \times \$1,000 = \mathbf{\$987.50}$.
- Takeaway: You are buying this bond at a discount because the price ($987.50) is less than the par value ($1,000).
Step 3: Calculate the Selling Price (The “Bid”)
If you already owned this bond and wanted to sell it immediately, you would look at the Bid price, which is 98.25.
- The Math: $98.25\% \text{ of } \$1,000 = 0.9825 \times \$1,000 = \mathbf{\$982.50}$.
- The Spread: The difference between the Ask and Bid ($987.50 – $982.50 = $5.00) is the broker’s spread.
Step 4: Evaluate the Yield to Maturity (YTM)
The quote lists a YTM of 5.65%.
- Why is it higher than the 5.50% coupon? Because you bought the bond at a discount ($987.50), your overall return includes both the annual $55 interest payments plus the extra $12.50 gain you make when the company pays you back the full $1,000 at maturity.
(Note: If a bond’s quote is above 100, it is trading at a premium, meaning you pay more than $1,000 up front, and your YTM will be lower than the coupon rate).
Sources & Further Reading
To explore deeper corporate and government bond quotation styles (including fractional pricing like 1/32nds used in Treasury bonds), you can refer to these detailed guides:
