Let's say you buy a bond with a face value of $1,000 and a coupon rate of 5%, so the annual interest payments are $50. The bond matures in 10 years, but the issuer can call the bond for $1,050 in two years if they choose. You buy the bond for $960, a discount to face value. What is the yield to call (i.e., YTC)

Respuesta :

Answer:

the yield to call of this bond is: 5.48%

Explanation:

Given:

  • Face value: $1,000 (FP)
  • Coupon rate of 5% => Coupon payment is: 5%*1000 = $50 (C)
  • Call price of bond  $960 (CP)
  • n = 10 years

As we know that, the formula to find out yield to call is:

YTC = [tex]\frac{C + (FP- CP)/n}{(FP+CP)/2}[/tex]

= [tex]\frac{50 + (1000-960)/10}{(1000+960)/2}[/tex]

= 0.0548

= 5.48%

So the yield to call of this bond is: 5.48%

Answer:

 YTC = 9.45%

Explanation:

Given Data;

Face value = $1000

Coupon rate = 5%

Coupon interest = $50

Maturity years = 10 years

Call price = $1050

Discounted face value = $960

Call date = 2 years

YTC = ?

To calculate the yield to call ( YTC), we use the formula;

YTC =  C + (CP -FP)/n  ÷ (CP + FP )/2

Where;

C = coupon interest

CP = call price

FP  = face value (market value)

n= number of years

substituting into the formula, we have

YTC = (50 + (1050 -960)/2)  ÷ (1050 +960)/2

       = (50 + 45) /1005

      = 95/1005

      = 0.0945 * 100

       9.45%