This is how you make money on the bonds. You will put in the money and will receive that money and the interest on it at the end of the term.
The price of bonds are not equal to the present value and principal upon purchase. The interest is accrued over a certain time period, then collected.
It depends. YTM is calculated in the same way as IRR. You take all future cash flows and discout it by x% and equate to current market price. Then you solve for x% and what you get will be YTM. So if current price of bond is calculated by current market rate of interest than YTM=Current Market Rate of Interest. How ever bond price not always is equal to that price. Very often current yield(coupon/current market price) is different from current rate of interest. In such case YTM will differ from Current Market Rate of Interest.
It can mean many things depending on the context. With respect to mortgage interest, your effective (net) interest rate will be nominal rate (quoted rate) less tax savings you can achieve when itemizing deductions on your 1040. net interest rate = nominal rate - (nominal rate * your income marginal tax rate) or net interest rate = nominal rate * (100% - your marginal income tax rate) It will be analogical calculation with respect to corporate bonds or treasury bonds, since interest on them is taxable on federal level. But here you will be worse off, not better off, since you will be making less due to taxes. For municipal bonds, which are exempt from federal income taxes - your nominal coupon interest will be equal to your net coupon interest when analyzing federal tax implications. I am pretty sure the term Net Interest can be used in many more situations.
It prorated in it's decrease to face value
Because the bond is no longer making money at the rate of current prices. Its future value is less than other equally face bonds so its market price dropes to compensate
If you are equal owners, the contract can only encumber your sister's half interest. She cannot contract to sell your interest.
This is how you make money on the bonds. You will put in the money and will receive that money and the interest on it at the end of the term.
The price of bonds are not equal to the present value and principal upon purchase. The interest is accrued over a certain time period, then collected.
Annual interest divided by the current market price
Zero Coupon Municipal Bonds are special because, unlike other bonds, they have no periodic interest payments. Rather, the investor receives one payment at maturity. This payment is equal to the amount invested, plus the interest earned, compounded semiannually.
The actual interest rate, however, determined at auction, is referred to as the market rate. The market rate may equal the stated rate, or it may be higher or lower.
It depends. YTM is calculated in the same way as IRR. You take all future cash flows and discout it by x% and equate to current market price. Then you solve for x% and what you get will be YTM. So if current price of bond is calculated by current market rate of interest than YTM=Current Market Rate of Interest. How ever bond price not always is equal to that price. Very often current yield(coupon/current market price) is different from current rate of interest. In such case YTM will differ from Current Market Rate of Interest.
Goods market equilibrium occurs when the amount of desired saving and desired investment are equal, i.e. no unplanned changes in inventory. Both the investment and saving curves are a function of the real interest rate.
Market equilibrium is this situation when market demand is equal of market supply
In a competitive market, the price does equal the marginal revenue.
All other things being equal, the per share value will drop because the capitalization has been diluted.