Misplaced Pages

Bond market: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 14:55, 24 August 2006 edit80.169.156.244 (talk) External links← Previous edit Revision as of 15:01, 24 August 2006 edit undoChunt@euromoney.com (talk | contribs)27 edits External linksNext edit →
Line 31: Line 31:
==External links== ==External links==


*, Euromoney Magazine is the debt markets leading publication, a source of breaking news and in-depth analysis. *, Euromoney Magazine is the debt markets leading publication, a source of breaking news and in-depth analysis.
* - Euromoney Magazine
* *
* *

Revision as of 15:01, 24 August 2006

Securities
Securities
Markets
Bonds by coupon
Bonds by issuer
Equities (stocks)
Investment funds
Structured finance
Derivatives

The bond market refers to people and entities involved in buying and selling of bonds and the quantity and prices of those transactions over time. Participants in the market trade bonds issued by corporations and various government bodies.

Because of the relationship between bond prices and interest rates, references to the "bond market" are often used to indicate changes in interest rates or the shape of the yield curve. Other names for the bond market are the credit market and the debt market.

Market structure

Unlike the stock market, or markets for futures and options, bond markets in most countries remain decentralized and lack common exchanges. This has occurred, in part, because no two bond issues are exactly alike, and the number of different securities outstanding is far larger. In the United States, various banks act as market makers - though they are not obligated to buy or sell and may stop participation at any time.

Bond holders

Because of the individuality of individual bond issues, and the lack of liquidity in many smaller issues, in most countries, the majority of outstanding bonds are held by institutions like pension funds, banks and mutual funds. In the United States, approximately 10% of the market is currently held by private individuals.

Bond Investments

Individuals, however, can invest in bonds through Fixed income mutual funds. While most such funds will diversify, using the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index (LBAG) as a benchmark, some will specialize in municipal bonds or high-yield bonds.

Bond Market Volatility

Individual bonds are subject to two main risks: credit risk and interest rate risk.

When a company's (or government's) credit rating is lowered by a Credit rating agency (Moody's or Standard & Poor's) its bond price will decrease, due to the increased risk that the issuer will default. While this rarely affects the bond market as a whole, it can negatively affect other issuers when companies from the same industry are downgraded.

Much more detrimental to the larger bond market are interest rate increases. When interest rates increase, the value of existing bonds falls, since new issues pay a higher yield.

See also

External links

Part of a series on
Financial markets
Looking up at a computerized stocks-value board at the Philippine Stock Exchange
Bond market
Stock market
Other markets
Derivatives Foreign exchange
Over-the-counter (off-exchange)
Trading
Related areas


Stub icon

This economics-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: