Discount Bond

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

A bond trading below its par value (typically $1,000), occurring when market interest rates rise above the bond's coupon rate. For discount bonds, yield hierarchy is: Yield to Maturity (YTM) > Current Yield (CY) > Coupon Rate. Bondholders receive capital appreciation at maturity when the bond returns to par value, creating a taxable capital gain.

Example

A corporate bond with a 4% coupon rate (paying $40 annually per $1,000 face value) now trades at $920 because newly issued bonds pay 5%. The bond trades at a discount because investors demand higher yields to compensate for the below-market coupon. At maturity, the bondholder receives the full $1,000 par value, realizing an $80 capital gain in addition to the annual interest payments.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse the yield hierarchy for discount bonds (YTM > CY > Coupon) with premium bonds (Coupon > CY > YTM). Another common error is forgetting that the capital appreciation from discount to par at maturity is taxed as a capital gain, not ordinary income. Remember: discount bonds provide TWO sources of return (coupon payments + price appreciation), while premium bonds lose value as they approach maturity.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying which yield is highest for a discount bond (always YTM)
  • Understanding why bonds trade at a discount when market rates rise above coupon rate
  • Calculating the capital gains tax implication when a discount bond matures at par
  • Comparing discount bonds to premium bonds based on yield relationships
  • Determining appropriate discount bond recommendations based on interest rate expectations

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Par Value Standard $1,000 per bond Discount bond trades below this standard par value
Yield Hierarchy (Discount Bonds) YTM > Current Yield > Coupon Rate This relationship always holds true for bonds trading at a discount

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Marcus, age 58, expects interest rates to decline over the next 5 years as the Federal Reserve eases monetary policy. His adviser recommends purchasing corporate bonds currently trading at a discount due to recent rate increases. Which of the following best explains the potential benefit of this strategy for Marcus?

Question 2

What causes a bond to trade at a discount to its par value?

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Question 3

A corporate bond with a 5% coupon rate is trading at $900 (90% of par). The bond matures in 8 years. Which of the following yield relationships is accurate for this discount bond?

Question 4

All of the following statements about discount bonds are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investor purchases a 10-year corporate bond with a 4% coupon rate at a price of $920. Which of the following statements about this discount bond are accurate?

1. The bond's current yield is higher than its coupon rate
2. The bond will experience price appreciation if held to maturity
3. The investor will receive a tax-free return of principal at maturity
4. The bond's yield to maturity is lower than its current yield

šŸ’” Memory Aid

Think "Discount = Deal that gets better": You buy below par and the bond climbs UP to par at maturity (capital appreciation). For yields, remember "YTM Wins" for discount bonds: YTM > Current Yield > Coupon. The YTM is highest because it includes BOTH coupon payments AND the price appreciation to par.

Related Concepts

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