Callable bonds are a type of bond that the issuer can “call” or redeem before the maturity date. The specifics vary from bond to bond, but callable bonds always have one thing in common — the issuer ...
When companies and governments issue bonds, they do so with a specific maturity date attached to the bond. For example, a five-year corporate bond will pay interest for five years before it’s ...
Bond investors are used to studying features like yield, maturity and credit quality. But many municipal and corporate bonds throw a curve: a "call" feature that ends the income flow, adding a layer ...
When thinking of interest rates in the taxable world, practitioners look at bellwether indicators such as the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield, and more broadly at the Treasury yield curve — a ...
If a bond is "callable," it means that the issuer has the right to buy the bond back at a predetermined date before its full maturity date. The call could happen at the bond's face value, or the ...
Bonds can be categorised based on issuer, tenure, credit rating, interest type and payment frequency, security, and early ...
03.18.2010 - PHOTO BY CHARLOTTE SOUTHERN - The Signal verses Noise: Using Quantitative Analysis to Improve Efficiency panel during The National Municipal Bond Summit at the Doral Resort in Miami, ...