Home
Different Bond Types Information
War Bonds Links
Sitemap

Sponsored Links

 

Navigation

Corporate bond rates
Corporate bond issues
Bond markets
Corporate bond performance
Bail bonds make money
Corporate bonds
Corporate bond offerings
I bond rates
Ford motor corporate bonds
Operational risk for investing in bond
What is municipal bond
Bond investing strategies
Explain bonds
Corporate bond yield curve
Uk corporate bonds

Books
Bond Investing For Dummies
Bond Investing For Dummies
by Russell Wild
Our Price: $16.49
Used from: $12.74

Bonds Now!: Making Money in the New Fixed Income Landscape
Bonds Now!: Making Money in the New Fixed Income Landscape
by Marilyn Cohen Christopher R. Malburg Steve Forbes
Our Price: $19.77
Used from: $17.64

The Complete Guide to Investing in Bonds and Bond Funds: How to Earn High Rates of Returns - Safely
The Complete Guide to Investing in Bonds and Bond Funds: How to Earn High Rates of Returns - Safely
by Martha Maeda
Our Price: $16.47
Used from: $14.64

David Scott's Guide to Investing in Bonds
David Scott's Guide to Investing in Bonds
by David L. Scott Accounting Professor
Our Price: $9.95
Used from: $0.30

Keys to Investing in Municipal Bonds (Barron's Business Keys)
Keys to Investing in Municipal Bonds (Barron's Business Keys)
by Gary Strumeyer
Used from: $21.68



About Corporate Bonds, Risks and Benefits

In a life filled with risk, it pays to play it safe sometimes as the smart ones have learned with corporate bonds. What are corporate bonds? They are the money raised by corporations over and above the sales, services, loans from banks and stocks. Unfortunately, not too many investors have taken the time and the effort to understand this instrument.

 

A bond is a loan to a company and like loans, there is a date when the loan has to be paid back and a rate of interest that has to be paid on that loan in the meantime. Bonds are usually with companies for 10 years after which they reach their maturity date.

While they are relatively safe, bonds too have certain risk factors which we are going to look at. These can be classified under the terms Credit Risk, Interest Risk and Maturity Risk.

There are defaulters where bonds are concerned too and even after not paying their debts, companies just can go on, carrying on with their business. So you have to make up your mind whether you want to sue or to settle. There are, happily, credit rating agencies which rate the credit risk of a company. Poor's and Moody's and Standard are two such agencies.

There is a coupon rate or an interest rate attached to each bond – however, these may change depending on market factors. Interest rates can change as well and you might get lucky and find that the interest on your bond has gone up. When you want to sell a bond, you will find that it fetches a better price on maturity than before maturity or if it has just been bought.

There are some bonds that are allowed redemption before they mature. These are called being ‘callable'. So they can pay for the bond you hold with cash or issue new bonds against it or maybe even a bank loan. This means that if you have been used to getting a high rate of interest, this might suddenly stop if the company tends to call up the bond.

Let's now look at the advantages. If you are cautious and invest in high yield bonds that are healthy and not junk bonds, you can stand to gain a lot. You also have convertible bonds where you can buy bonds that convert into stock directly from the company rather than from the market. This means you can take advantage of the company's price appreciation while enjoying the safety factor of a bond. The price of the bond usually does not fall below a decent price return.

Like any other financial investment, you need to make informed choices and for this, you need to be well up on what is happening in the market. The great thing about bonds is that the benefits as well as the risks are transparent and easily gauged.



 

Bond Investing Recommended Products


Videos

Loading...
How To Purchase Bonds News

Bond Market Feels Pressure From Europe And Washington - Wall Street Journal


CNBC

Bond Market Feels Pressure From Europe And Washington
Wall Street Journal
Risk premiums, also called spreads, on investment-grade bonds closed Friday at 161 basis points, or 1.61 percentage points; that was 15 basis points wider ...
Treasury yields edge up from recent lowsMarketWatch
Obama Debt Market Catches Break as US Signals Peak in AuctionsBusinessWeek

all 101 news articles »

Read more...


Bank of England Calls Halt to Bond Purchase Program - New York Times (blog)


Globe and Mail

Bank of England Calls Halt to Bond Purchase Program
New York Times (blog)
It has purchased around ÂŁ200 billion, or $318 billion, of assets, mostly government bonds, in a program that is designed to inject more cash into the ...
U.K. may end $319 billion bond buy planMarketWatch
Bank's Boost For Company Bond SalesSky News
The BoE on how doing nothing will boost the economyTelegraph.co.uk (blog)
DailyForex -AFP -Channel 4 News (blog)
all 654 news articles »

Read more...


Buy Japanese Bonds 'Early' on Sluggish Recovery, Nomura Says - BusinessWeek


Buy Japanese Bonds 'Early' on Sluggish Recovery, Nomura Says
BusinessWeek
“Investors should focus on Japanese government bonds until autumn,” Matsuzawa said in a speech at a seminar in Tokyo yesterday. Buyers should purchase bonds ...
Company Bond Sales Fall 7% on Greece, Spreads: Credit MarketsBloomberg

all 16 news articles »

Read more...


Korean Won Weakens on European Debt Concern; Bonds Decline - BusinessWeek


JoongAng Daily

Korean Won Weakens on European Debt Concern; Bonds Decline
BusinessWeek
The unit of Italy's biggest bank said clients should purchase contracts giving the option to sell US currency against the won at 1140 per dollar with a ...
Bond investors optimisticJoongAng Daily

all 10 news articles »

Read more...


Fed's Bullard: Fed Could Keep Interest Rates Low Until 2012 - FOXBusiness


FOXBusiness

Fed's Bullard: Fed Could Keep Interest Rates Low Until 2012
FOXBusiness
Such purchase create higher demand for securities, which raise their prices, and interest rates move inversely to bond prices—the higher the price, ...

and more »

Read more...