FIN 350 Chapter Notes - Chapter 6: High-Yield Debt, Business Cycle, Yield Curve

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28 Feb 2017
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Relationship between interest rates and the term-to-maturity of a financial instrument: yield curves represent the relationship between yield and term-to-maturity. Yield curves may be upwards sloping, downward sloping, flat, or humped. Liquidity premium theory: risk-averse investors require yield premiums to hold longer-term securities because of greater price or liquidity task, yield premiums cause an upward bias in the slope of the yield curve. Market segmentation theory: the shape of the yield curve is determined by the supply of and demand for securities when narrow maturity ranges. Preferred-habitat theory: investors will leave their proffered maturity range if they are adequately compensated for the additional risk. Meaning and measurement of default risk premium: default risk. Municipal securities: securities issued by state and local governments that sell for lower market yields than comparable securities issued by the u. s. treasury and private corporations: they are exempt from federal taxes. Bonds rated in the top four categories.

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