Module - Iii Long Term Debt Securities: Ms. Alfia Thaha
Module - Iii Long Term Debt Securities: Ms. Alfia Thaha
• Equity Shares
Fixed Income Securities
• A claim on a periodic stream if income over a given
time.
• The holder gets a fixed income during the holding
period from the company issuing the securities. For a
borrower, these are called fixed charge securities or
debt which represents an obligation to repay the
loan.
Bond and Debentures
• A bond or debenture is a basic fixed income security
which is issued by a borrowing unit under a
borrowing arrangement/agreement.
• Coupon rate – rate of interest
• Repayment is made as per the terms and conditions
of the agreement and may be equal to, less than or
more than the face value of the bond.
Bonds
• Issued for 7-10 years
• Some public sector unit bonds carry tax concessions
• Income from bonds from firms in infrastructure
sector like petrochemicals, electricity and railways
are tax –free under Sec 10 of the IT Act.
• Bonds are listed on BSE or NSE
Features of Bond
• Credit Instrument
• Interest Rates
• Collateral
• Maturity Date
• Voting Rights
• Face value and Redemption Value
• Priority in Liquidation
Difference between bonds and debentures
• Bonds are issued by government or public sector enterprises
and debentures are issued by the private sector.
• Issuance of stamp duty on bonds is under Indian Stamp Act
1899, Debenture issuance stamp duty is paid by the state
where the principle mortgage deed is registered. Stamp duty
differs from state to state.
• Transfer stamp duty not paid in case of bonds while it is paid in
case of debentures
• Bond is transferable by endorsement while debentures can be
transferred only through transfer form prescribed under
Companies Act.
Features of debentures
• Fixed interest debt with varying periods of maturity.
• Placed privately or offered through subscription
• May or may not be listed in stock exchange
• If listed, should be prior rated by credit rating
agencies designated by SEBI
• When offered for subscription, a debenture
redemption reserve has to be maintained.
Types of Debt Instruments
• Secured and Unsecured Debentures
• Convertible and Non- Convertible Debentures
• Zero Interest Fully Convertible Debentures (ZFCD)
• Secured Premium Notes (SPN)
• Callable and Putable Bonds
• Floating Rate Bonds
• Deep Discount Bonds
• Junk Bonds
• Inverse Floaters
• Municipal Bonds
• Indexed Bonds
• Government Securities
Secured and Unsecured Debentures
• Secured Debentures – long term source of funds
having fixed or floating charge on the assets of the
company. The security helps in reducing risk of debt
investors.
• Unsecured Debentures – which do not have any
specific charge as security. Unsecured debentures are
issued with a maturity period of 17 months and 29
days.
Convertible and Non- convertible
debentures
• Default risk
• Interest rate risk
• Liquidity risk
• Inflation risk
• Reinvestment rate risk
Bond Yield
• Bond Yield – refers to the % rate of return on the
amount invested in buying one bond.
• http://www.moneycontrol.com/fixed-
income/bonds/listed-bonds/
Relationship between YTM and Coupon rate