true
If a bond's price is greater than its Face Value, it is said to be "in premium" e.g. if the price is 105 with a FV of only 100. If the market price is below the Face Value, it is said to be "in discount" while should the market price equal the FV, the bond is said to be "at par".
Equity is bought and sold in the stock marketwhile debt is bought and sold in the bond market.
Examine the bond carefully. Some bonds have the value printed on them. If the bond has reached its full maturity, this is the value of your bond. If there is no value on it, you can take it to a bond specialist and have it appraised.
By definition itself, Current yield of this bond 6% of 1000/1027=60/1027=5.84%...... hope it solves ur doubt
Market rate of bond is that rate at which that bond will be sale in market and it is different from face value of bond as well as book value of bond.
true
145 trillion
As of July 2014, the market cap for Vanguard Total International Bond ETF (BNDX) is $1,480,633,000.00.
I think it's called a market value.
Market value or Market capitalization is the total value of all the shares of that company at the current trading day. For example, if there are 100,000,000 shares of XYZ limited and each share is trading at $5 per share, then the total market value or market capitalization of the company is $500,000,000/-
Bond premiums refer to bonds that are issued at a price above its face value. for example, if the market rate for a bond is 8% and the stated rate on the bond is 9% then it would be a premium bond. Bond discounts refer to bonds that are issued at a price below its face value. For example, if the market rate for a bond is 9% and the stated rate on the bond is 10%, then it would be a discount bond.
There are websites that will allow you to input the bond's CUSIP number and date, and it will tell you the value. Google "bond" "CUSIP" and "value".
I think it's called a market value.
by it's market capitalization
The best way is to find a value a similar bond http://investment-income.net/rates/corporate-bonds-rate-page
One of the key factors that can change the market and fair value of fixed rate notes and bonds is an increase or decrease in market interest rates. Even though a bond has a fixed rate, it's value is dependent on current yields in the market and the value of the bond will move inversely to interest rate changes.