When the bond sells at par, the implicit SF/$ exchange rate at maturity of a Swiss franc/U.S. dollar dual currency bonds that pay $581.40 at maturity per SF1,000, is?
Find the value today of a 2-year dual currency bond with annual coupons (paid in U.S. dollars at a 5 percent coupon rate) that pays £500 per $1,000 par value at maturity. The cash flows of the bond are:
Year 0: $0
Year 1: $50
Year 2: $50 + 500 British Pounds
The dollar-based yield to maturity is i$ = 3%; the spot exchange rate is $1.80 = £1.00; expected inflation over the next three years is π$ = 2% in the U.S. and π£ = 3% in the U.K.
Zero-coupon bonds issued in 2006 are due in 2016. If they were originally sold at 55 percent of face value, the implied yield to maturity at issuance is?
Consider a bond with an equity warrant. The warrant entitles the bondholder to buy 25 shares of the issuer at €50 per share for the lifetime of the bond. The bond is a 30-year zero coupon bond with a €1,000 par value that has a yield to maturity of i€ = 5 percent. The price of the bond is €500. What is the value of the warrant?
A convertible bond pays interest annually at a coupon rate of 5% on a par value of $1,000. The bond has 10 years maturity remaining and the discount rate on otherwise identical non-convertible debt is 6.5%. The bond is convertible into shares of common stock at a conversion price of $25 per share (i.e. the bond is exchangeable for 40 shares). Today's closing stock price was $20. What is the floor value of this bond?
A ten-year Floating-rate note (FRN) has coupons referenced to 3-month pound LIBOR, and pays coupon interest quarterly. Assume that the current 3-month LIBOR is 3 percent. If the risk premium above LIBOR that the issuer must pay is 1/8 percent, the next period's coupon rate on a £1,000 face value FRN will be?