Chapter 14 - Bonds and Long-Term Notes
mortgage bond
backed by a lien on specified real estate owned by the issuer; less risky than debentures, lower interest rate
coupon bonds
name of the owner was not registered; the holder actually clipped an attached coupon and redeemed it in accordance with instructions on the indenture
disclosure notes should include
nature of the company liabilities, interest rates, maturity dates, call provisions, conversion options, restrictions by creditors, assets pledged as collateral
times interest earned ratio
net income + interest expense + tax expense / interest expense
rate of return on shareholders equity
net income / shareholder's equity
rate of return on assets
net income / total assets
subordinated debenture
not entitled to receive any liquidation payment until the claims of other specified debt issues are satisfied
bond
obligation of an issuing corporation to repay a stated amount at a specified maturity date and to pay interest to bondholders between the issue date and maturity
zero-coupon bond
pays no interest, instead offers a return in the form of a "deep discount"
the higher the debt to equity ratio
the higher the risk
default risk
the likelihood a company will default on its obligations
discount
when bonds are sold for less than the face amount
premium
when bonds are sold for more than the face amount
bond indenture
a document that describes specific promises made to bondholders
callable bonds
bonds that allow the issuing company to buy back, or call, outstanding bonds from the bondholders before their scheduled maturity dateq
sinking fund debentures
bonds that must be redeemed on a prespecified year-by-year basis; administered by a trustee who repurchases bonds in the open market
debt to equity ratio
measures the degree of default risk; total lrateiabilities/shareholder's equity
serial bonds
more structured (and less popular) way to retire bonds on a piecemeal basis; retired in installments during all or part of the life of the issue
call price
price at which callable bonds are retired early
debt issue costs
recorded separately and amortized over the term of the related debt; GAAP requires a debit to an asset account - debt issue costs; amount is deducted from cash received
redemption of bond
repayment of principal
convertible bonds
retired as a consequence of bondholders choosing to convert them into shares of stock
debenture bond
secured only by the "full faith and credit" of the issuing corporationg