Coupon Equivalent Rate - CER

  

A given bond has a coupon. It pays, say, $60 a year for a $1,000 par bond, or 6 percent. That 6 percent is its coupon.

So then...what's an equivalent rate?

Well, let's say the bond went up to $1,200 par, i.e. the creditworthiness of the issuer got better, and investors bid up that bond's price. It still pays $60 a year, only now that rate is 5% of the $1,200. The new coupon is 5%. So what would be an equivlaent rate? Like...find another bond that pays a coupon, equivalent to that 5%.

And this can get complex in a mathy way, because bonds bought at a discount, for example, not only pay their coupons, but also pay interest along the way.

Say a similar bond fell in price to $800, but paid only 4%. Well, depending on when it came due (let's say it's 5 years from now), not only would investors get its 4% or $40 a year in interest (note that its yield is much higher if investors paid $800 for it), but they'd also get an appreciation of the bond of $200 / 5 year = $40 a year in addition to the coupon or interest.

So this concept basically equates other factors in bond calculation to try and dial in the real total coupon, keeping apples being compared with other apples, and not kumquats or prunes or something.

Equivalency. Just Shmoop it.

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Finance allah shmoop What are the tax implications of zero

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coupon bonds All right well from the investors side you

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think that a zero coupon bond would simply have attacks

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being paid when the bond and interest payments fully mature

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a goal that we hear it shmoop clearly have not

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yet achieved That is you buy a zero for half

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or two thirds or three force of its par value

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and something like that You get no interest or any

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payments of any kind along the way for years But

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then at the end you get par like three thousand

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box or whatever amount of the zero yabba like you

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spent two grand and it matures and pars three grand

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At that point you pay a tax right and you

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think it might be assessed as a long term game

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kind of tax because you bought and held it over

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a year just like you would have you bought in

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equity you'd be taxed the long term gains cheaper tax

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treatment iaea You know when you sold and turned into

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cash but oh so not the case with zero coupon

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bonds instead with zero coupon bonds taxes are paid on

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the annual imputed maturity of the bond itself such that

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if you paid say five hundred bucks for a zero

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coupon bond matures with all payments included at a thousand

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dollars five years later well you'd be paying tax on

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an imputed gain of one hundred bucks a year which

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would comprise basically a bundled gain of notional principal gagne

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plus whatever imputed interest was included in the bond And

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that is tax as ordinary income not long term game

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