Workout Period

  

Time to work out. And one! And two! And three! Those temporary yield discrepancies aren’t going to work out themselves!

The workout period is a time when temporary yield discrepancies between fixed income securities are fixed to correct any market inefficiencies. Over time, the spread gets...worked out. Or narrowed.

Let’s break this down so you can, um...work it out.

There’s a fixed income market that sells bonds to investors. Over time, the yields on similar bonds might get skewed, resulting in very different yields for issues of similar risk and duration. This is a problem, since those similar bonds should be giving out similar yields at the same time in the marketplace. The workout period, then, is the market working to correct these inefficiencies. Working out those kinks. Fifty Shades of Bonds, or something like that.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a 1099?0 Views

00:00

Finance, a la shmoop. What is a 1099? Well it's a tax form for the rest of us the

00:09

non fully employed, the non recipients of crappy health care and benefit plans, the [Man looks shocked at his medical bill]

00:16

non recipients of fancy corporate business cards those of us who choose to [Business card for Brett Corporate]

00:21

go it on our own as consultants, contractors, day laborers and

00:25

independents who self employ under the yoke of many masters trying to make our [A contractors diary]

00:31

own little way in the world, yeah. Corporations who hire contractors in

00:35

whatever form, must deliver to those contractors a form 1099 which outlines [Corporation giving out 1099s to contractors]

00:41

and stipulates the details of the job performed for the contractee. That 1099

00:47

is a direct conduit to the IRS holding out their arm to shake your hand and [The form 1099s are sent to the IRS]

00:53

then turning it 90 degrees to the right. [IRS's hand out expecting something]

Up Next

Finance: What is Bankruptcy?
260 Views

What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...

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