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Question: A newly issued 10-year maturity, 4% coupon bond making annual coupon payments is sold to the public at a price of $800. What will be an investor’s taxable income from the bond over the coming year? The bond will not be sold at the end of the year. The bond is treated as an original-issue discount bond.

Short Answer

Expert verified

Answer

$56.60

Step by step solution

01

Given information

Issued price of a bond = 800

n =10,

PV = -800,

FV =1000,

PMT = 40.

02

Calculation of taxable income

Since the bond’s price is 800, its yield to maturity = 6.8245%

Using the constant yield method, its price in one year = $814.60

Increase = $814.60 - $ 800 = $14.60

Therefore total taxable income = $40 + $14.60 = $56.60

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Most popular questions from this chapter

The following bond swaps could have been made in recent years as investors attempted to increase the total return on their portfolio.

From the information presented below, identify possible reason(s) that investors may have made each swap.

A 12.75-year maturity zero-coupon bond selling at a yield to maturity of 8% (effective annual yield) has a convexity of 150.3 and a modified duration of 11.81 years. A 30-year maturity 6% coupon bond making annual coupon payments also selling at a yield to maturity of 8% has a nearly identical modified duration—11.79 years—but considerably higher convexity of 231.2.

a. Suppose the yield to maturity on both bonds increases to 9%. What will be the actual percentage of capital loss on each bond? What percentage of capital loss would be predicted by the duration-with-convexity rule?

b. Repeat part ( a ), but this time assume the yield to maturity decreases to 7%.

c. Compare the performance of the two bonds in the two scenarios, one involving an increase in rates, the other a decrease. Based on their comparative investment performance, explain the attraction of convexity.

d. In view of your answer to ( c ), do you think it would be possible for two bonds with equal duration, but different convexity, to be priced initially at the same yield to maturity if the yields on both bonds always increased or decreased by equal amounts, as in this example? Would anyone be willing to buy the bond with lower convexity under these circumstances?

Why do bond prices go down when interest rates go up? Don’t investors like high interest rates?

Question: Under the expectations hypothesis, if the yield curve is upward-sloping, the market must expect an increase in short-term interest rates. True/false/uncertain? Why?

Macaulay’s duration is less than the modified duration except for:

a . Zero-coupon bonds.

b. Premium bonds.

c. Bonds selling at par value.

d. None of the above.

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