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Bearer bonds are fixed-income securities owned by whoever physically holds the bond certificate, rather than by a registered owner listed in official records. Interest payments and repayment of principal are claimed by presenting the physical bond or its attached coupons, which historically made bearer bonds easy to transfer but also exposed them to theft, loss, money laundering, and tax evasion risks.
Benchmark is a reference standard used to measure and evaluate performance. In investment practice, a benchmark typically represents a market index or defined set of securities against which the return, risk profile, and overall effectiveness of a portfolio, fund, or individual asset are assessed.
A Bermuda option is a type of option that can be exercised only on specific dates set in advance in the contract, rather than at any time before expiry or only on the expiration date. It stands between American and European options in terms of flexibility and is often used in structured and interest rate products.
A blue bond is a type of sustainable bond issued to raise money for projects related to the ocean, clean water, and marine ecosystems. Its proceeds are typically used for activities such as marine conservation, sustainable fisheries, wastewater treatment, and other initiatives that support the sustainable blue economy.
A bond is a type of debt security under which a bond issuer borrows money from investors and agrees to pay interest at fixed intervals and repay the face value on the maturity date. Bonds are commonly issued by governments, corporations, and local authorities to raise money for public spending, infrastructure, or business activities.
A bond coupon is the annual interest rate paid on a bond, expressed as a percentage of its face value. It determines the amount of regular interest payments a bondholder receives from the bond issuer over the life of the bond. The coupon rate remains fixed from the issue date until the bond matures, regardless of changes in market interest rates or the bond’s market price.
Bond redemption is the repayment of a bond’s principal and accrued interest by the issuer, either at maturity or earlier under call, put, or mandatory provisions. It marks the termination of the debt obligation and determines the final cash flow received by the investor.
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.