FI 455 Lecture Notes - Lecture 36: Credit Risk, Current Liability, Quick Ratio

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Creditors assign interest rates based on the risk of default as well as the expected inflation rate. Creditors lending at 7% with inflation expected at 2%, are expecting to make 5%. But if inflation actually increases to 4%, they are only making 3% A perpetual bond has no maturity date and is not redeemable; therefore, it pays only coupon payments. It just pays back its face value at maturity. If a zero-coupon bond is also a perpetual bond, it will never pay out anything, and is therefore worth nothing. Since a zero-coupon bond doesn"t have any interest payments, and a perpetual bond has no par value, the value of a zero-coupon perpetual bond is zero because it will pay anything. When the stock market falls, investors flee to safer securities, like bonds. This increases the demand for those securities and therefore raises their price. Since prices and yields move inversely, if bond prices rise, their yields will fall.

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