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A bookrunner is the lead bank or financial institution that manages a bond or other securities issuance on behalf of the issuer. It coordinates the book building process, collects investor demand, helps determine the final price, and oversees the allocation of securities to investors.
Brady bonds are U.S. dollar-denominated bonds created mainly in the late 1980s and 1990s as part of the Brady Plan to help developing countries restructure defaulted commercial bank loans. They replaced troubled bank debt with tradable sovereign bonds, often backed in part by U.S. Treasury zero-coupon securities, which helped reduce debt burdens and restore access to international capital markets.
A bull market is a period when the broad market shows a sustained upward trend in prices, usually accompanied by strong investor confidence, improving economic conditions, and rising corporate earnings. In capital markets, the term is most often used for equities, but it can also describe a broader risk-on environment that supports credit markets and other assets.
A bunny bond is a fixed-rate bond that gives investors the option to receive coupon payments either in cash or in the form of additional bonds of the same issue, usually with the same coupon rate and maturity date. This structure helps reduce reinvestment risk when market interest rates fall, because investors can increase their position instead of reinvesting cash coupons at lower yields.
Callable bond is a bond that gives the issuer the right, but not the obligation, to redeem the debt before its stated maturity date, usually at a predefined call price. Callable bonds typically offer higher yields than non-callable bonds because investors take on call risk and reinvestment risk: if interest rates fall, the issuer may refinance at a lower rate, leaving bondholders to reinvest at lower yields and lose future interest payments.
Clean price is the quoted price of a bond excluding accrued interest. It reflects the bond’s market value based on factors such as interest rates, credit risk, and time to maturity, while the actual amount paid at settlement (dirty price) includes accrued interest.
Close price is the official final transaction price of a security established at the end of the regular trading session through the exchange’s closing mechanism; it serves as the primary benchmark for daily performance measurement, portfolio valuation, and index calculation.
Current yield is the annual coupon payment of a bond divided by its current market price, expressed as a percentage. It measures the income generated relative to the price paid for the bond, without accounting for capital gains or losses at maturity.
A derivative is a financial contract whose value is linked to an underlying asset, rate, index, or other benchmark. It allows investors and institutions to hedge risk, gain exposure to price movements, or transfer market risk without directly buying or selling the underlying instrument. Common types of derivatives include futures, options, forwards, and swaps.
Dirty price is the total price a buyer pays for a bond, including both the clean price and the accrued interest accumulated since the last coupon payment. It represents the actual settlement amount in a bond transaction.