Nominal Rate Of Return

A nominal rate is the named rate…of interest…on a bond.

Here’s a bond: Eastern Airlines, 11 3/4%ers. Famously bankrupt a zillion years ago. But what’s key here is the nominal rate on the face of the bond. That 11 ¾% thingy? That’s the nominal rate. The named rate.

But when the bond was sold, it was actually a somewhat better than lukewarm, or almost hot offering, and it sold for 105 cents on the dollar, or a 5 percent premium. So investors did not receive the nominal rate because they paid $1,050 for a $1,000 par value bond.

Instead, they received 11.75 divided by 1.05, or about 11.2 percent. So that’s nominal rate. And the performance of the bond was not, uh...pheNOMINAL.

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)