L1 02 Fixed Income Market Issuance, Trading and Funding - Study Notes (2023)
L1 02 Fixed Income Market Issuance, Trading and Funding - Study Notes (2023)
1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................................................3
2. Classification of Fixed-Income Markets..................................................................................................3
2.1 Classification of Fixed-Income Markets...........................................................................................3
2.2 Fixed-Income Indices..............................................................................................................................5
2.3 Investors in Fixed-Income Securities ...............................................................................................5
3. Primary Bond Markets ..................................................................................................................................5
3.1 Primary Bond Markets ...........................................................................................................................5
4. Secondary Bond Markets .............................................................................................................................7
5. Sovereign Bonds ..............................................................................................................................................8
6. Non-Sovereign, Quasi-Government, and Supranational Bonds ....................................................8
6.1 Non-Sovereign Bonds .............................................................................................................................8
6.2 Quasi-Government Bonds .....................................................................................................................9
6.3 Supranational Bonds ...............................................................................................................................9
7. Corporate Debt: Bank Loans, Syndicated Loans, and Commercial Paper .................................9
7.1 Bank Loans and Syndicated Loans ....................................................................................................9
7.2 Commercial Paper ....................................................................................................................................9
8. Corporate Debt: Notes and Bonds ......................................................................................................... 11
9. Structured Financial Instruments.......................................................................................................... 13
9.1 Capital Protected Instruments ......................................................................................................... 13
9.2 Yield Enhancement Instruments ..................................................................................................... 13
9.3 Participation Instruments.................................................................................................................. 13
9.4 Leveraged Instruments ....................................................................................................................... 14
10. Short-Term Bank Funding Alternatives ............................................................................................ 14
10.1 Retail Deposits ..................................................................................................................................... 14
10.2 Short-Term Wholesale Funds ........................................................................................................ 15
11. Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase Agreements ...................................................................... 16
Summary .............................................................................................................................................................. 18
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Version 1.0
1. Introduction
This reading will cover:
How the bond markets are classified.
Who the major issuers of debt are and what types of bonds they issue.
How new bond issues are introduced in primary markets and then traded in
secondary markets.
Sovereign bonds and non-sovereign bonds.
Different types of corporate debt.
The sources of short-term funding available to banks.
2. Classification of Fixed-Income Markets
2.1 Classification of Fixed-Income Markets
Fixed-income markets are often classified based on the following criteria:
Classification by Type of Issuer
Bond markets may be divided into four categories based on the type of issuers:
1) Households
2) Non-financial corporates
3) Government
4) Financial institutions
Classification by Credit Quality
Investors face credit risk, i.e., the risk of loss if the issuer fails to make timely payments of
interest and principal as they come due. Rating agencies like Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch assign
credit ratings to bonds. Bonds with a rating of BBB or above are considered investment
grade. Bonds below this rating are considered junk bonds.
This differentiation is important as certain investors such as banks and life insurance
companies may not be allowed to invest in junk bonds but only in investment grade bonds.
Classification by Maturity
Fixed-income securities can also be classified by the original maturity of the bonds when
they are issued:
Money market securities: They are issued with a maturity at issuance that ranges
from overnight to one year. For example, T-bills issued by the US government or
commercial paper with short maturities issued by the corporate sector.
Capital market securities: The original maturity is usually longer than a year.
Classification by Currency Denomination
Fixed-income securities can also be classified based on the currency in which they are
issued. The bond’s price (and cash flows) is affected by the interest rates of the country
whose currency the bond was issued in.
Classification by Type of Coupon
Bonds can be classified into the following based on the coupon rate:
Fixed-rate: In a fixed-rate bond, the coupon rate and coupon payment are fixed.
Floating-rate: In a floating-rate bond, the coupon payment is linked to a floating rate,
which is usually a reference rate plus a spread.
There are two parts to a floating rate: a reference rate and a spread.
The reference rate is reset periodically at the coupon date. As a result, the coupon rate more
or less reflects the market interest rates. The reference rate contributes to most of the
coupon rate and is usually an interbank offered rate. The most commonly used interbank
rate is Libor.
Interbank offered rates are the average interest rates at which banks may borrow unsecured
funds from other banks. The rates differ for different periods ranging from overnight to one
year. Examples of interbank offered rates include Libor, Euribor (Euro interbank offered
rate), Mibor (Mumbai interbank offered rate), etc. The respective currencies for Euribor and
Mibor are the Euro and Indian rupee.
The spread, on the other hand, is fixed at issuance and is a function of the issuer’s credit
quality or creditworthiness. The higher the quality, the lower the spread and vice versa. It is
a small component of the coupon rate.
Classification by Geography
Fixed-income markets may be classified based on where the bonds are issued and sold (we
saw this in detail in the previous reading):
Domestic bonds: Bonds issued in a country in that country’s currency. The issuer is
domiciled in that country. For example, Ford issuing U.S. dollar denominated bonds in
the U.S.
Foreign bonds: Bonds issued by an entity domiciled in another country. For example,
Toyota issuing dollar denominated bonds in the U.S.
Eurobonds: International bonds sold outside the jurisdiction of any single country.
Investors further classify bonds into those issued by developed economies and
emerging economies.
Other classifications:
Among other classifications, we have tax-exempt bonds and inflation-linked bonds.
Tax-exempt bonds: Bonds whose interest/coupon payments are not taxable. For
example, munis or municipal bonds issued by local governments in the United States
are tax-exempt bonds.
Inflation-linked bonds: Bonds whose coupon and/or principal are indexed to
inflation. The objective is to give some protection (hedge) to investors against high
inflation and offer real returns in a high inflation environment.
2.2 Fixed-Income Indices
Fixed-income indices are used by investors for two purposes: to evaluate the performance of
investments and investment managers and to describe a given bond market or sector. The
index construction - security selection and weight of each security in the index- varies from
index to index.
The most popular fixed-income indices include Barclays Capital Global Aggregate Bond
Index, J.P. Morgan Emerging Market Bond Index, and FTSE Global Bond Index.
2.3 Investors in Fixed-Income Securities
Major categories of fixed-income investors include:
Central banks: They use fixed-income securities as a tool to implement monetary
policy. Purchasing domestic bonds increases money supply. Similarly, selling bonds
decreases money supply. Central banks also buy and sell bonds denominated in other
currencies to manage the value of their currency and foreign reserves.
Institutional investors: They are the largest group of investors in fixed-income
securities. This includes pension funds, hedge funds, endowments, charitable
foundation, insurance companies, and banks. Unlike equities that trade in primary
and secondary markets, bonds primarily trade over-the-counter. Many issues are not
liquid and tradable, making them out of reach for retail investors, but are preferred
by institutional investors.
Retail investors: Unlike central banks and institutional investors, retail investors
primarily invest in bonds through mutual funds or ETFs. Many retail investors prefer
to invest in bonds because of the certainty of income in the form of interest payments
and principal payment at maturity. Also, fixed-income securities are not as volatile as
their equity counterparts.
3. Primary Bond Markets
Primary bond markets are markets in which bonds are sold for the first time by issuers to
investors to raise capital. Bonds can be sold initially via a public offering or a private
placement. Secondary bond markets are markets in which existing bonds are subsequently
traded among investors. After the initial offering, bonds are bought and sold among
investors in the secondary market.
3.1 Primary Bond Markets
A company/government/any entity issues bonds in two ways: public offering and private
placement.
Public Offerings
As the name indicates, in a public offering, any member of the public may invest in a new
bond issue. The issuer does not sell bonds directly to each investor. Instead, the issuer avails
the services of an intermediary called the underwriter to facilitate the selling (placement)
process. The underwriter is usually an investment bank because banks have a good
understanding of how to market a new issue, can tap their networks to locate investors, and
successfully place the issue.
The different bond issuing mechanisms are:
Underwritten offering
Best effort offering
Shelf registration
Auctions
Underwritten offerings: In an underwritten offering, an investment bank negotiates an
offering price with the issuer; the offering price is the price at which the issue will be sold. It
then buys the entire issue at the offering price and takes the risk of reselling it to investors
or dealers. Underwritten offering is also known as a firm commitment offering. The
underwriting process is graphically depicted below:
While small-size bond issue may be underwritten by a single investment bank, larger-size
bond issues are often underwritten by a group (or syndicate) of investment banks. Such
issues are called ‘syndicated offerings.’ A lead underwritten heads the syndicate and the
group collectively establishes the pricing of the issue and takes the risk of reselling it to
investors or dealers.
Best effort offering: Contrary to an underwritten offering, in a best effort offering issue, the
investment bank acts as a broker and only sells as many securities as it can instead of
committing to sell 100% of the issue. The unsold bonds are returned to the issuer. The
investment bank gets a commission for bonds sold at the offering price, faces less risk and
has less incentive to sell the issue than in an underwritten offering. Best effort offering is
usually preferred for riskier issues and corporate bonds.
Shelf registration: Shelf registration is a type of public offering where the issuer is not
required to sell the entire issue at once. The issuer files a single document with regulators
that describe a range of future issuances. The advantage is that the issuer does not have to
prepare a new document for every bond issue provided there is no change in the issuer’s
business and financial terms stated in the prospectus. This allows the issuer to save on
repeated administrative expenses and registration fees.
Auctions: Government bonds across the world are usually sold to investors via an auction.
Governments finance public debt by borrowing money through the central bank. An auction
is a public offering method that involves bidding, and is helpful in price discovery and
allocating securities. The United States follows a single-price auction method for its
sovereign securities such as T-bills, T-notes, TIPS, etc. In this method, all winning bids pay
the same price for the security and receive the same coupon rate.
Private Placement
As the name implies, the securities are not sold to the public in this type of funding. Instead,
they are sold only to a select group of investors such as institutional investors. Other
characteristics are as follows:
It is typically a non-underwritten, unregistered offering of bonds, i.e., a private issue
need not comply with the registration requirements of a public offering such as
preparing a prospectus.
It is also exempt from securities laws that govern a public issue.
It can be accomplished directly between the issuer and the investor(s) through an
investment bank. Because privately placed bonds are unregistered and may be
restricted securities that can only be purchased by some types of investors, there is
usually no active secondary market to trade them.
Institutional investors such as insurance companies and pension funds are typical
investors of privately placed bonds.
4. Secondary Bond Markets
Securities are traded among investors in the secondary market. Large institutional investors
and banks are the primary participants. Retail investors are limited here, unlike in the
equities market.
Secondary bond markets are structured as organized exchanges or as over-the-counter
markets.
Organized exchange: Where buyers and sellers meet to arrange trades and comply
with the rules of the exchange.
Over-the-counter (OTC) markets: Buy and sell orders are matched through a
communications network. Most bond trading happens in the OTC market.
It is important to understand the liquidity of a bond market:
Liquidity is a measure of how quickly an investor can sell the bond and turn it into
cash. Similarly, it should also measure how quickly one can buy a bond to cover a
short position.
Bid-ask or bid-offer spread reflects the liquidity of a market. The lower the spread,
Summary
LO: Describe classifications of global fixed-income markets.
Fixed-income markets are often classified based on the following criteria:
The type of issuer: This can be further divided into four categories based on the type
of issuers: households, non-financial corporates, government, and financial
institutions.
The bond’s credit quality. The bonds must be classified based on their
creditworthiness such as investment-grade, high-yield, or junk bonds.
Maturity: Long term, medium term, short term.
Currency denomination.
Type of coupon: Bonds pay either a fixed rate or a floating rate of interest.
Geography: Based on where the bonds are issued and sold.
Other classifications: Among other classifications, we have inflation-linked bonds and
tax-exempt bonds.
LO: Describe the use of interbank offered rates as reference rates in floating-rate debt.
Interbank offered rates are the average interest rates at which banks may borrow unsecured
funds from other banks. The rates differ for different periods ranging from overnight to one
year. Examples of interbank offered rates include Libor, Euribor (Euro interbank offered
rate), Mibor (Mumbai interbank offered rate), etc. In a floating-rate bond, the coupon
payment is linked to a floating rate that is usually a reference rate plus a spread. The
reference rate contributes to most of the coupon rate and is usually an interbank offered
rate.
LO: Describe mechanisms available for issuing bonds in primary markets.
Primary markets are markets in which bonds are sold for the first time by an issuer to raise
capital. Bonds may be issued in the primary market through a public offering or a private
placement.
Public offering: Any member of the public may buy the bonds.
Four types are:
Underwritten offerings: The investment bank buys the entire issue and takes the risk
of reselling it to investors or dealers.
Best effort offerings: The investment bank serves only as a broker and sells the bond
issue only if it is able to do so.
(Underwritten and best effort offerings are frequently used in the issuance of
corporate bonds).
Shelf registrations: The issuer files a single document with regulators that allows for
additional future issuances.
Auction: Price discovery through bidding. It is frequently used in the issuance of
sovereign bonds.
Private placement: Securities are not sold to the public directly, instead the entire issue is
sold to a qualified investor or to a group of investors (typically, large institutions).
LO: Describe secondary markets for bonds.
Secondary markets are markets in which existing bonds are subsequently traded among
investors. Most bonds are traded in over-the-counter (OTC) dealer markets. Some bonds are
traded on public exchanges. Institutional investors are the major buyers and sellers of bonds
in secondary markets.
LO: Describe securities issued by sovereign governments
Sovereign bonds are issued by national governments, primarily for fiscal reasons. Recently
issued sovereign securities are called on-the-run. Off-the-run refers to securities that were
issued some time ago. Sovereign bonds are not backed by collateral. Instead, they depend on
the taxing authority to repay the debt. The types of sovereign bonds include fixed-rate
bonds, floating-rate bonds and inflation-linked bonds.
LO: Describe securities issued by non-sovereign governments, quasi-government
entities, and supranational agencies.
Non-sovereign bonds are issued by local government instead of national government. They
have a higher credit risk than sovereign bonds and therefore demand a higher yield.
Quasi-government bonds or agency bonds are issued by quasi-government entities. These
are not government entities, but they are usually backed by the government. The credit risk
is low. They fund specific projects, and cash flows from the project are used to service the
debt.
Supranational bonds are issued by international organizations such as the World Bank, IMF,
EIB, ADB, etc. They are usually plain-vanilla bonds. Sometimes callable or floaters are also
issued.
LO: Describe types of debt issued by corporations.
Debt issued by companies includes the following types:
Bank loans and syndicated paper: A bilateral loan is a loan from a single lender to a single
borrower. A syndicated loan is a loan from a group of lenders, called the syndicate, to a
single borrower.
Commercial paper: It is a flexible, readily available, and low-cost instrument issued by
companies to meet their short-term needs.
Corporate notes and bonds: Corporate bonds can be categorized as short-term, medium-
term, and long-term security. Coupon payments for corporate notes and bonds vary based
on the type of bond. Principal repayment can be based on serial maturity structure, term
maturity structure, and sinking fund arrangement. Corporate bonds have a varying amount
of risk so they are backed by collateral to protect the investors. These bonds can have a call
provision, a put provision, or can be convertible bonds.
LO: Describe structured financial instruments
Structured financial instruments include:
Capital Protected Instruments
Yield Enhancement Instruments
Participation Instruments
Leveraged Instruments
LO: Describe the short-term funding alternatives available to banks.
Retail Deposits: One of the primary sources of funds for a bank is the money deposited by
retail investors in their accounts. The three types of retail accounts are demand deposits,
saving accounts, and money market accounts.
Central bank funds: When a bank receives deposits from customers, a certain percentage of
this money must be kept as a reserve with the national central bank. The funds stashed in
the central bank by all banks are collectively known as central bank funds market.
Interbank Funds: Banks lend to and borrow from each other in the interbank market. It is an
unsecured system of lending and the term may vary from overnight to one year.
Certificate of deposit: It is a savings instrument with a maturity date, a fixed interest rate,
and can be issued in any denomination. The investor or bearer of the certificate receives an
interest at the end of the deposit period. There are two forms of CD: negotiable and non-
negotiable CD.
LO: Describe repurchase agreements (repos) and the risks associated with them.
A repurchase agreement or repo is a sale and repurchase agreement. It is an agreement
between two parties where the seller sells a security with a commitment to buy the same
security back from the purchaser at an agreed-upon price at a future date. The interest rate
negotiated between both the parties is called the repo rate.
A haircut or repo margin is the difference between the market value of security (collateral)
and the amount lent to the dealer. Repurchase agreements are a common source of funding
for dealer firms and are also used to borrow securities to implement short positions. If you
look at the agreement from a lender’s perspective, it is a reverse repo agreement.