Corporate Bond Redemption

Below is information on corporate bond redemption. When a corporate bond’s principal is repaid, the corporate bond is considered redeemed. Redemption of Corporate Bonds usually occurs on the maturity date.

To reduce or refinance their outstanding Corporate Bonds obligations — particularly when interest rates decline — corporations may retire or call away Corporate Bonds prior to the Corporate Bonds‘ maturity.

It is important that you find out the potential bond redemption provisions of a corporate bond before investing in the corporate bond.

The following are the most common types of corporate bond redemption methods:
The Call – the first type of bond redemption

Many Corporate Bonds are issued with call features, enabling a company to call or retire a corporate bond at specific dates and prices, prior to maturity. To compensate for this potential early redemption, callable Corporate Bonds typically offer corporate bond holders higher yields, and a call premium, as opposed to non-callable Corporate Bonds.

Corporate Bonds are generally callable at par plus a premium (the specified amount over par that a holder receives). This premium amount gradually declines to par (face amount) as the corporate bond reaches maturity.

Refunding – the second type of bond redemption

With refunding, a corporation sells a new corporate bond issue, then uses the proceeds from the sale to retire an outstanding Corporate Bonds issue. As a corporate bond holder you are generally protected from refunding for a set period of time, usually five or 10 years, depending on the type of issue and its maturity date.

Sinking Fund – the final type of bond redemption

A sinking fund provision requires a corporation to retire a certain percentage of a corporate bond issue annually, at random — regardless of where interest rates are — until the entire issue is retired.

Like other bond redemption methods, sinking funds typically provide corporate bond holders with a specified protection period before the issuer can begin retiring the Corporate Bonds.

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