NPV is the price of a zero coupon bond - Answers
EAA (npv) - Answers choose b/w mutually exclusive projects with different lives
payback period (most helpul?) - Answers an effective measure of investment risk. The project with a
shortest payback period has less risk than with the project with longer payback period, often used
when liquidity is an important criteria to choose a project, suitable for projects of small investments.
downfalls of npv - Answers doesn't measure the project size, sensitivity to discount rates, doesn't
include real options, requires that the investor know the exact discount rate, the size of each cash
flow, and when each cash flow will occur, only useful for comparing projects at the same time; it does
not fully build in opportunity cost, does not provide an overall picture of the gain or loss of executing
a certain project
ytm - Answers - the rate that makes the pv of the bonds cash flows equal the price of bond
- the rate of return a bondholder earns is held to maturity, all coupon and principal payments are
made, and cpn payments are reinvested at the same yield
bond price - Answers P = PV(Annuity of N payments of CPN) + PV(Single cash flow from repayment of
face
value)
** pv of cash flows discounted at YTM = to bond price
** discount separately and add them up
realized bond yields - Answers - return earned on a bond given the cash flows actually received
- interest rate at which the pv of actual cash flows = bond price
- allows investors to see what they actually earned on investments (evaluate performance)
holding period return - Answers $100 fv bond
cpn 10%
semi annual
- 6 months later, can sell for 97 and collect 5
-hpr: total value is 102, so 102/100 = 0.2
2% total for 6 months, so a year is (1.02)^2 = 1.0404 -> realized return
useful for comparing returns b/w investments for different periods of time
{[(Income + (End of Period Value - Initial Value)] / Initial Value+ 1}1/t - 1
bond valuation - Answers Par: price = face value ; ytm = coupon rate
Discount: price < face value ; YTM > coupon rate
Premium: price > face value ; YTM < coupon rate
bond price - interest rate - Answers inversely related
- prices of long term bonds and lower coupon bonds change more
- interest rate risk increases as maturity increases, but at a decreasing rate
default risk - Answers risk that borrow may not make payments
- default risk premium : yield on security with default risk - risk free rate
bond option provisions - Answers callability- issuer can pay back loan before it matures
putability- bondholder can demand payment before maturity (can force company to buy it back from
you)
convertability- bondholder can exchange the bond for stocks of the issuer
primary markets - Answers raise capital
sold:
- government securities (auctioned)
- corporate, federal agencies debt, municipal bonds, mortgage-baked securities
(underwritten by investment banks)
- equity (through public offering IPO)