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- Bonds can someone explain them to me.? (1)
- Can you make just as much profit trading financial bonds as you can trading short term stock options? (3)
- What is the best online brokers for trading bonds AND options ? (2)
- How are Options Trade different from Stock Trading? (4)
- Might someone with background in currency trading and interest rate tell if following is true? (1)
- Can someone explain the stock and bond markets? (2)
- Leveraging Options With Bonds? (3)
- looking for barry bonds mvp 2002 upper deck trading cards? (3)
- stocks, bonds, mutual funds, day trading? (5)
- what are the 2 important laws that regulate the trading of stocks and bonds in the U.S? (1)
- Which online trading tool is best for investing in stocks and bonds? (2)
- Whats it mean when you say bonds are trading at “20 cents on the dollar”? (2)
- Option Trading – The Simplest Way To Trade Options Successfully (0)
- does anyone know the trading price on barry bonds mvp 2002? (1)
- Beginner with question on how to start trading stocks, bonds etc., online!!? (9)
- Can somebody explain stock, bonds, etc. to me? I REALLY don’t get it…? (3)
- What is the most challenging type of trading e.g. Stocks, Bonds, Forex, Futures etc;? (0)
- Can anyone please explain how Bonds work? (2)
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Tagged as: Blue, Bonds, chips, detail, difference, explain, Options, someone, Trading, Trusts, Unit
{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }
You ask a lot for 2, maybe 10, points.
Bonds, like corporate debt, are commonly $1,000 units of a debt issue. You have a pre-set interest rate. When the general interest rates fall, these bonds will rise in value so that the effective yield falls, and vice versa for general interest rates rising. At the maturity, you still get your $1,000, so if you bought at a premium, a percentage over 100 percent, then you should have meanwhile amortized the interest earned to compensate for the loss you will take in principle, or vice versa. Will the company still be operating then, still able to pay off that debt when the time comes? That is the issue of ratings agencies like Moody’s and a couple others. Think of it like a golf handicap. Junk bonds are rated poorly because there is increasingly higher risk that they will survive (like Revlon, for instance, I own stock but not bonds, and probably shouldn’t own either, but if its good product lines start making money, or someone buys them out, then I make more money faster with the stock). But a solid company, the IBM and Coke types, these are called blue chips, after the supposedly more expensive poker chips (but then I don’t play cards for money so I have to take other’s word on that). The amount of risk you face with IBM or a cash cow like Microsoft or Exxon, is far and away from the risky stuff like Revlon or Gateway before the buy-out offer.