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On September 15, 2008, Lehman Brothers filed the largest bankruptcy in American history—$639 billion in assets, gone. Bondholders scrambled to understand their place in line. Secured creditors recovered most of their money. Unsecured bondholders? Not so much.

The hierarchy of corporate debt isn't just academic theory—it determines who gets paid when companies fail. This chapter covers both corporate debt structures and U.S. government securities, the backbone of the global fixed-income market.

Section 1: Corporate Debt

Characteristics of Corporate Debt

From Paper to Electronic

Bearer bonds were historically issued in physical form with coupons attached. No records were kept—whoever held the bond could collect interest. Today, we continue to use the term "coupon" to refer to the stated interest rate. Bearer bonds are no longer issued; all new issues are book entries.

Today, fully registered bonds are registered as to principal and interest. The registrar tracks owners, and the paying agent sends semiannual interest payments directly to the registered owner.

The Indenture

Bonds are issued under a bond contract called an indenture. It defines interest rate, maturity, collateral, and all features. An independent trustee monitors compliance.

Test Tip: All corporate issues of $50,000,000 or more must have a trust indenture as specified by the Trust Indenture Act of 1939. Municipal and government issues are exempt.

Secured Bonds

Secured bonds have collateral pledged to back the issue. Unsecured bonds have no collateral backing.

Secured Bond Advantage

Secured bonds are sold at lower interest rates than unsecured bonds because of the extra protection provided by collateral.

Type Collateral Key Features
Mortgage bonds Real estate or equipment Open-end or closed-end indenture
Equipment trust certificates Equipment (planes, trucks, trains) Serial form; non-callable; highly rated
Collateral trust certificates Portfolio of securities Parent uses subsidiary securities

Unsecured Debt Instruments

Type Description Key Features
Commercial paper Short-term (14-365 days) Sold at discount; $100K minimum; rarely exceeds 270 days
Debentures Intermediate/long-term unsecured Higher credit risk; backed only by promise to pay
Subordinated debentures Junior status in liquidation Paid after other creditors; may have conversion feature
Income bonds Issued in reorganization Pays only if issuer has sufficient earnings

Accrued Interest

Settlement and Day Count Conventions
Bond Type Settlement Day Count
Corporate bonds T+1 30/360
Municipal bonds T+1 30/360
Treasury bonds T+1 actual/actual

Convertible Bonds

Convertible bonds can be converted into common stock at a set conversion price.

Conversion Formulas
Conversion Ratio = Par Value ÷ Conversion Price

Example: $1,000 ÷ $50 = 20 shares


Parity Price of Bond = Conversion Ratio × Stock Price

Example: 20 × $40 = $800


Parity Price of Stock = Bond Price ÷ Conversion Ratio

Example: $900 ÷ 20 = $45

Convertible Bond Rules
  • Bond above parity: No reason to convert (stock worth less)
  • Bond below parity: Profitable to convert (arbitrage opportunity)
  • Forced conversion: When bondholders convert rather than accept a call

Priorities in Liquidation

Bankruptcy Payment Priority
Priority Creditor Type
1st Secured creditors (mortgage bonds, equipment trust certificates)
2nd Unpaid admin claims, wages, taxes, trade creditors
3rd Unsecured creditors (debenture bondholders)
4th Subordinated creditors
5th Preferred stockholders
6th Common stockholders (residual interest)

Section 2: U.S. Government and Agency Debt

In 2011, S&P downgraded U.S. government debt from AAA to AA+ for the first time in history. The market reaction? Investors bought more Treasuries, not fewer. When the world panics, it still runs to U.S. government debt—the ultimate safe haven.

Treasury Securities

Type Maturity Interest Quotes
T-Bills 1 year or less None (discount) Yield basis
T-Notes 2-10 years Semiannual 32nds
T-Bonds 10-30 years Semiannual 32nds

STRIPS

STRIPS are Treasury bonds stripped of interest payments, creating zero-coupon obligations. They eliminate reinvestment risk because there are no interest payments to reinvest.

TIPS

TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities) have principal that adjusts with the CPI, protecting against purchasing power risk.

TIPS Characteristics
  • Fixed interest rate paid on adjusted principal
  • Principal increases with inflation, decreases with deflation
  • Lower yield than regular Treasuries (trade-off for inflation protection)
  • Only available for long-term issues

Government Agency Securities

Government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are not directly backed by the U.S. Treasury but are considered low-risk.

Agency Type Function
Ginnie Mae (GNMA) Government agency Guarantees MBSs; highest credit rating
Fannie Mae (FNMA) GSE Issues MBSs and CMOs
Freddie Mac (FHLMC) GSE Issues MBSs and CMOs
Sallie Mae (SLMA) Government agency Buys student loans (not mortgages)

Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBSs)

How MBSs Work
  • $25,000 minimum denominations
  • Mortgages pooled and divided into pass-through certificates
  • Monthly payments of principal and interest passed to holders
  • Self-liquidating as mortgages are paid off
  • Subject to prepayment risk

Test Tip: Prepayment risk increases when interest rates fall—homeowners are more likely to refinance in low-rate environments.

Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs)

CMOs are structured in tranches to divide risk among investors. Different tranches have different risk/yield profiles.

Tranche Type Description
Sequential pay Most basic; payments applied to one tranche at a time
PAC (Planned Amortization Class) High cash flow stability
Principal-only (PO) Receives only principal payments; very sensitive to rates
Interest-only (IO) Receives only interest payments
Z-tranche Last to receive payments; highest yields
Section 2 Key Points
Concept Key Details
T-Bills Short-term; sold at discount; quoted on yield
STRIPS Zero-coupon; eliminates reinvestment risk
TIPS Principal adjusts with CPI; inflation protection
MBSs Pass-through; prepayment risk
CMOs Tranches with varying risk/yield

Chapter 4 Key Terms Glossary

Term Definition
Indenture Bond contract defining all terms and covenants
Trustee Independent party monitoring compliance
Secured bond Bond backed by collateral
Mortgage bond Secured by real estate
Equipment trust cert Secured by equipment; serial form
Debenture Unsecured bond
Subordinated Junior status in bankruptcy
Commercial paper Short-term unsecured; discount
Convertible bond Can convert to common stock
Conversion ratio Par value ÷ conversion price
Parity Bond and stock have equal value
T-Bill Short-term Treasury; discount
STRIPS Zero-coupon Treasury
TIPS Inflation-adjusted principal
GSE Government-sponsored enterprise
MBS Mortgage-backed security
CMO Structured mortgage product
Tranche Section of CMO with specific characteristics
Prepayment risk Mortgages paid early, ending payments

Chapter 4 covers corporate and government debt. Understanding secured vs. unsecured, the bankruptcy hierarchy, and Treasury/agency securities is essential before Chapter 5: Municipal Debt and Money Market Instruments.