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In 1986, General Motors issued $1.25 billion in bonds with an 8.5% coupon—generous at the time. But by the early 1990s, interest rates had plummeted. GM was stuck paying top dollar while new issuers borrowed at half the rate. That costly lesson is why today virtually every corporate bond includes call provisions.

Beyond basic bond structure, bonds can include special features that significantly affect their value and behavior. Understanding these features—and the full spectrum of bond risks—is essential for advising clients.

Section 1: Call and Put Features

Why This Section Matters

Call features benefit issuers; put features benefit investors. Understanding which party benefits—and when they'd exercise these features—is essential for advising clients and passing your exam.

Bond Call Features

Why Issuers Want Call Features

Think about it from the issuer's perspective: if you borrowed money at 8% and rates dropped to 5%, wouldn't you want to refinance? That's exactly what callable bonds allow. The issuer retires old high-rate debt and issues new bonds at lower rates. It's the corporate equivalent of refinancing your mortgage—except bondholders are on the losing end.

When a bond is callable, the issuer has the right to call (redeem) the bond before it matures. This forces bondholders to sell the bond back. Selling a bond back before maturity is known as redeeming the bond.

The callable bond's issuer doesn't owe any interest after redemption. This is a risk for the bondholder, known as call risk. Issuers typically compensate bondholders for call risk in three ways:

How Issuers Compensate for Call Risk
  • Higher coupon rate — Callable bonds usually offer higher rates than comparable non-callable bonds
  • Call protection period — A period during which the bond cannot be called
  • Call premium — An additional amount above par paid when the bond is called

Call Protection

Call protection is a period during which the bond cannot be called.

Call Protection Example

A 20-year bond issued in 2022 is first callable in 2032.

The investor has 10 years of call protection—guaranteed interest payments for a decade.

After 2032, the issuer can call the bond at any time.

Call Premium

A call premium is an additional amount paid above par when a bond is called. Typically, the call premium declines over time:

Declining Call Premium Schedule
Redemption Date Redemption Price
2032 105 ($1,050)
2033 104 ($1,040)
2034 103 ($1,030)
2035 102 ($1,020)
2036 101 ($1,010)
2037+ 100 ($1,000)
The Call Process
  1. The issuer calls the bond
  2. The issuer pays the final interest payment
  3. The issuer returns principal plus any call premium
  4. The issuer can now sell new bonds at lower rates

(A low call premium also makes a call more likely. If the issuer only has to pay 101 to retire a bond paying 8%, that's a bargain compared to years of above-market interest payments.)

Yield to Call (YTC)

Yield to call (YTC) measures how the call feature affects an investor's return if the issuer decides to call.

Test Tip: When recommending callable bonds, the lesser of YTM or YTC must be disclosed so clients understand the lowest potential yield. This is called yield to worst (YTW).

YTC for Discount Bonds

When a bond trades at a discount, YTC is typically higher than YTM because the investor receives the gain between purchase price and par sooner.

Discount Bond Yield Relationship

Nominal Yield → Current Yield → YTM → YTC
(lowest to highest)

YTC is highest because the discount is recovered sooner.

YTC for Premium Bonds

When a bond trades at a premium, YTC is typically lower than YTM—bad news for investors. They lose the attractive higher-coupon payments sooner and lose the premium paid.

Premium Bond Yield Relationship

YTC → YTM → Current Yield → Nominal Yield
(lowest to highest)

YTC is lowest because the premium is lost sooner.

Test Tip: You won't calculate YTC, but you must understand:

  • YTC > YTM for discount bonds
  • YTC < YTM for premium bonds
  • YTW for discount bond = YTM
  • YTW for premium bond = YTC

Bond Put Features

A put feature gives the investor the right to sell the bond back to the issuer at a specified price (typically par). Also called a tender option.

Put vs. Call: Who Benefits?
Feature Who Has the Right? Who Benefits?
Call Issuer Issuer (refinance at lower rates)
Put Investor Investor (exit at par if rates rise)

When Do Investors Exercise Put Options?

When interest rates rise, bond prices fall. If the price drops below par, the bondholder can tender the bond and receive full par value, then reinvest at higher rates.

Important Facts About Calls and Puts
  • Once issued, coupon rate and par value don't change
  • Bond prices fluctuate based on interest rate changes
  • Interest rates and bond prices have an inverse relationship (but this doesn't hold for junk bonds)
  • When rates fall, callable bonds are likely to be called
  • When rates rise, puttable bonds are likely to be redeemed
  • Risk and coupon rates move in the same direction—greater risk means higher coupon
Section 1 Key Points
Concept Key Details
Bond call features Allow issuer to retire bond prior to maturity
Yield to call Measures actual yield if bond is called
Bond put features Allow owner to redeem bond prior to maturity
When calls happen Rates fall → callable bonds likely called
When puts happen Rates rise → puttable bonds likely redeemed

Section 2: Risks Associated with Bonds

In 2008, Lehman Brothers bondholders learned a brutal lesson: even investment-grade debt can become worthless overnight. The firm's bonds, rated A just months before, recovered only pennies on the dollar in bankruptcy.

Bond Ratings—A Measure of Default Risk

Credit risk (also default risk) is the risk that the issuer cannot make interest and principal payments. The two main rating agencies are Moody's and Standard & Poor's (S&P).

Treasury Bonds: No Credit Risk

Treasury bonds are backed by the U.S. Treasury and carry a AAA rating with no credit risk.

Investment Grade vs. Speculative Grade

Grade S&P Moody's
Investment Grade AAA Aaa
AA Aa
A A
BBB Baa
Speculative Grade BB Ba
B B
CCC Caa
CC, C, D Ca, C

Test Tip: S&P uses + or - modifiers (AA+, AA-). Moody's uses 1, 2, 3 (Aa1, Aa2, Aa3). Investment grade = BBB-/Baa3 or better.

Investment Grade = BBB/Baa or Better

Most institutions restrict investments to investment-grade bonds. Bonds below investment grade are called junk bonds or high-yield bonds.

Interest Rate Risk and Price Volatility

Interest rate risk is the risk that rising rates will cause bond prices to fall. Bonds with long maturities or low coupons are most susceptible.

Variable-Rate Bonds

Variable-rate bonds have coupons that adjust to match market rates. Because the yield adjusts, the price stays close to par.

Variable-Rate Bond Behavior

When market rates rise, the variable-rate bond's coupon adjusts up, keeping the bond trading near par. Result: Variable-rate bonds do not have significant interest rate risk.

Price Volatility

Factor More Volatile Less Volatile
Time to maturity Longer maturity Shorter maturity
Coupon rate Lower coupon Higher coupon

Duration

Duration expresses a bond's overall sensitivity to interest rate swings.

Duration Rules
  • High duration = long maturity + low coupon = very volatile
  • Low duration = short maturity + high coupon = very stable
Most to Least Volatile (When Rates Rise)
  1. Large discount bond (lowest coupon)
  2. Small discount bond
  3. Par bond
  4. Small premium bond
  5. Large premium bond (highest coupon)

Most volatile of all: Long-term zero-coupon bonds—they have no interest payments, so their entire value depends on principal repayment at maturity.

Test Tip: Adjustable-rate bonds are suitable for investors looking for protection from interest rate risk.

Other Bond Risks

Systematic risk affects all investments (cannot be diversified away). Nonsystematic risk is unique to specific securities (can be diversified away).

Risk Affected Most By Protection Strategy
Market risk Stocks, high-yield bonds Buy puts, short stock, ETFs
Purchasing power Fixed-income securities Stocks, REITs, TIPS
Interest rate High-duration bonds Stocks, convertible bonds
Credit/default High-yield bonds Safer bonds, U.S. Treasuries
Business Stocks and bonds Diversification
Liquidity Private placements, DPPs, munis Money market, large-caps, Treasuries
Currency Foreign investments Currency futures/options
Call Callable bonds Non-callable bonds
Reinvestment Callable bonds, interest-paying bonds Zero-coupon bonds (STRIPS)
Purchasing Power Risk (Inflation Risk)

The risk that inflation reduces what your returns can buy. The only bonds offering protection are Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS).

Reinvestment Risk

The risk that you can't reinvest returns at comparable rates. Call risk and prepayment risk both increase reinvestment risk—calls and prepayments are more likely when rates fall.

Section 2 Key Points
Concept Key Details
Bond ratings S&P/Moody's; BBB/Baa or better = investment grade
Interest rate risk Based on maturity and coupon rate
Duration Long maturity + low coupon = high volatility
Systematic Cannot be diversified away
Nonsystematic Can be diversified away

Chapter 3 Key Terms Glossary

Term Definition
Callable bond Bond that issuer can redeem before maturity
Call protection Period during which bond cannot be called
Call premium Amount above par paid when bond is called
Call risk Risk that bond will be called, ending interest early
Yield to call (YTC) Yield calculation assuming bond is called
Yield to worst (YTW) Lower of YTM or YTC; must be disclosed
Put feature Gives investor right to sell bond back at specified price
Credit/default risk Risk issuer cannot make payments
Investment grade BBB/Baa or better rating
Speculative/junk Below BBB/Baa (high-yield)
Interest rate risk Risk that rising rates cause price decline
Variable-rate bond Coupon adjusts to market rates
Duration Measure of bond's sensitivity to rate changes
Systematic risk Affects all investments; cannot diversify away
Nonsystematic risk Unique to specific securities; can diversify
Purchasing power risk Inflation reduces real returns
Reinvestment risk Cannot reinvest at same rates
Liquidity risk Cannot sell quickly at fair price
Currency risk Exchange rate fluctuations

Chapter 3 builds on Chapter 2's fundamentals by adding call/put features and the full spectrum of bond risks. Master these before moving to Chapter 4: Corporate, U.S. Government, and Agency Debt.