“International Finance and Payments” Lecture IX “International Bond Market” Lect. Cristian...

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“International Finance and Payments” Lecture IX “International Bond Market” Lect. Cristian PĂUN Lect. Cristian PĂUN Email: Email: cpaun @ase.ro URL: URL: http://www.finint.ase.ro http://www.finint.ase.ro Academy of Economic Studies Faculty of International Business and Economics

Transcript of “International Finance and Payments” Lecture IX “International Bond Market” Lect. Cristian...

“International Finance and Payments”

Lecture IX

“International Bond Market”

Lect. Cristian PĂUNLect. Cristian PĂUN

Email: Email: [email protected]

URL: http://www.finint.ase.roURL: http://www.finint.ase.ro

Academy of Economic Studies

Faculty of International Business and Economics

General Situation

CountriesWeight

Developed Countries 96,1 %

Asia 2,3 %

South America 0,8%

Eastern Europe + Africa 0,7%

International Bond Market

Types of Bonds

BondsWeight

T Bonds Peste 50 %

Corporate Bonds 30 %

Foreign Bonds 10 %

Euro Bonds 20 %

Situation by Issuing Institutions

International Bond Market

Issuing Institution Weight

Government Over 50 %

- Public Companies 30 %

Banks 10 %

Private Companies 20 %

International Institutions 12,4 %

Value Lead Manager Maturity Coupon

225 bil USD Merill Lynch 1999 9,75 %

52 000 bil ¥ Nomura Securities 1999 5,20 %

30.000 bil ¥ Nomura Securities 2001 5,05 %

600 mil DM Credit Suisse 2002 7,75 %

Romanian Experience on International Bond Market

International Bond Market

Bonds 1985 1987 1988 2000 2002

Fixed Rate Notes 53 % 63 % 70 % 71,2% 71,3%

Floating Rate Notes 41 % 11 % 10 % 25,1% 25,1%

Convertible Bonds 4 % 9 % 3 % 3,5% 3,4%

Bonds with warrant 2 % 17 % 17 % 0,1% 0,1%

LowerHigherCost

LowerHigherRisk

LowerHigherMaturity

LowerHigherVolum

Foreign currencyLocal currencyDenomination

AnywhereAnywhereInvestors

AnywhereAnywhereIssuers

Euro-BondsForeign BondsDifferences

LowerHigherCost

LowerHigherRisk

LowerHigherMaturity

LowerHigherVolum

Foreign currencyLocal currencyDenomination

AnywhereAnywhereInvestors

AnywhereAnywhereIssuers

Euro-BondsForeign BondsDifferences

Bond Issuing Mechanism - IPO

Beneficiary

Underwritting Group

Co - managers

Lead Manager BankCoordination

and/or guarantee group

Selling group

Private Investors

Step VI

Step III

Step II

Step I

Private Investors

Step VI

Step IV

Tombstone

IPO description: Step 1: Contacting a lead manager bank and this bank will create the

coordinating group (if the amount is too important) Step 2: Creating the Underwriting group that will sign up for 70% from

the total bond’s quantity with the condition of including the unsold bonds in their own portfolio;

Step 3: Creating the Selling group that will try to sell in advance the remaining 30% from the total bonds;

Step 4: Selling the bonds to private investors Step 5: Listing the bonds on capital markets, starting the secondary

market, closing operation (tombstone)

If the private investors will be not interested for IPO of bonds:- Redesigning the bonds conditions (issuing price, call price)- Road Show (promoting the IPO at the level of private investors)- Guarantee for IPO granted by lead bank (the unsubscribed bonds will

be included in its own portfolio)

Bond Definition

- Bond = a security that is issued in connection with a specific borrowing arrangement

-Bond indenture = the contract between the issuer and the borrower

- Main elements of the contract:

- Face value

- Coupon rate

- Issuing price

- Bond premium

- Bond classification:

- T-Bonds

- Municipal Bonds

- Corporate Bonds

Types of Corporate Bonds

1. Call Provisions on Corporate Bonds:

- allows the issuer to repurchase the bond at a specific call price before the maturity

- The call price is above par value according with maturity (it falls as time passes);

- Usually offers a higher coupons rates then noncallable bonds.

2. Convertible Bonds:

- Give to the bondholders an option to exchange each bond for a specified number of shares of common stock of the firm;

- The Conversion Rate = Number of Bonds / Number of Stock

- The Conversion Premium = Bond Par Value x Number of Bonds – Current Stock Price x Number of Stock

Types of Corporate Bonds

3. Puttable Bonds:

- Allows the bond holder to extend or to sell bond at a specific date (call date)

- The holder is interest to extend the bond life when the bond current yield exceeds current market yields;

- When the coupon rate is too low the holder will reduce the holding period

4. Floating Rate Note:

- Make interest payments that are tied to some measure of current market rate (T-Bill rate adjusted with 4%)

- Major risk: changes in the company’s financial strength (if the financial situation will be worse the price of the bond would fall because the investor’s will require a greater yield premium than the security can offer).

Innovation in the Bond Market

• Reverse Floater Bonds: the coupon rate falls when the general interest rates

rises (the benefit of the investors is double when the rates falls – higher price

and higher interest rate);

• Asset - Backed Bonds: - issuing a bond with a coupon rate connected to the

financial performance of several firms from the same group (example: Walt

Disney, David Bowie)

• Catastrophe Bonds: - issuing a bond with a final payment that depended on

whether there a catastrophe will be produced (example: Electrolux and a

possible earthquake in Japan).

• Indexed Bonds: - make payments that are tied to a general price index or a

particular commodity price (example: Mexico issued a bond tied to the price of

oil).

Indexed Bonds: Example

Par Value 15 USD

Number 100 Bonds

Coupon 5%  

Time Inflation Par Value Coupon Repayments Annuity

0 0 1500 0 0 0

1 2% 1530 76.50 0 76.50

2 3% 1575.9 78.80 0 78.80

3 1% 1591.659 79.58 1591.659 1671.24

Nominal Return=(Interest+Price Appreciation)/Initial Price

Real Return=(1+Nominal Return)/(1+Inflation)

Time Nominal Real

0 - -

1 7.10% 5.00%

2 8.15% 5.00%

3 6.05% 5.00%

Bond Value and Bond Price

Tt i)(1

ValuePar

i)(1

CouponValue Bond

Par Value 100 USDCoupon 9% paid annualy

Time 6% 7% 9% 11% 12%1 year 102.8302 101.869159 100 98.1982 97.32143

10 years 122.0803 114.047163 100 88.22154 83.0493320 years 134.4098 121.188028 100 84.07334 77.5916730 years 141.2945 124.818082 100 82.61241 75.83445

Interest Rate

00 i1

ΔiDUR

p

Δp

Bond Yields – Yield to Maturity

30

1t

130t )k1(

$100

)k1(

$9$08.22

Selling price 122.08 USDCoupon 10%Par value 100 USDMaturity 10 years

Bond Yields – Current Yield

YTM = 6 %

122.08$

9$

Price Selling

InterestYieldCurrent

Bond Yields – Yield to Call

Selling price 122.08 USDCoupon 10%Par value 100 USDMaturity 10 yearsCall Price 110 USD

30

1t

130t )k1(

$110

)k1(

$9$08.22 YTM = 6.23 %

Determinants of Bond Safety

1. Coverage Ratios: ratios of company to fixed costs

• Times – interest – earned ratio (EBIT/Interest Obligations)

• Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio (EBIT/(Interest+Lease)

2. Leverage Ratio (Debt-to-Equity Ratio)

3. Liquidity Ratios:

• Current Ratios = Current Assets / Current Liabilities

• Quick Ratios = (Current Assets – Inventories) / Current Liabilities

4. Profitability Ratios

• ROA = EBIT / Total Asset

5. Cash Flow to Debt Ratio (Cash Flow to Outstanding Debt)

Financial Ratios by Rating Classes

US Industrial Long Term Debt AAA AA A BBB BB B

EBIT interest coverage ratio 17.5 10.8 6.8 3.9 2.3 1.0

EBITDA interest coverage ratio 21.8 14.6 9.6 6.1 3.8 2.0

Funds Flow / Total Debt 105.8 55.8 46.1 30.5 19.2 9.4

Free operating cash flow / Total Debt 55.4 24.6 15.6 6.6 1.9 -4.6

Return on capital 28.2 22.9 19.9 14.0 11.7 7.2

Operating Income / Sales 29.2 21.3 18.3 15.3 15.4 11.2

Long Term Debt / Capital 15.2 26.4 32.5 41.0 55.8 70.7

Total Debt / Capital 26.9 35.6 40.1 47.4 61.3 74.6

Source: Bodie, Kane, Marcus “Investment”, page 437, McGraw-Hill Irwin, 2003