Professional Documents
Culture Documents
By
GORDON SCOTT
Updated Apr 13, 2021
What Is Dollar Price?
The dollar price, in bond pricing, refers to the amount of money an investor pays
to purchase the bond. At issuance, the dollar price is the bond's face or par
value.
If that bond is later sold to someone else on the secondary market before
maturity then the price of the bond will likely differ from its face value and be
quoted as a percentage of par. Dollar price is one of two ways that a bond price
can be quoted, the other is by its yield.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
The price of a bond can be quoted in one of two ways by the various exchanges:
by dollar price and by yield. Frequently, providers of bond quotes publish both
the dollar price and yield concurrently. A bond's yield indicates the annual return
until the bond matures.
A bond that is selling at par (at its face value) would be quoted at 100 in terms of
dollar price. A bond that is trading at a premium will have a price greater than
100; a bond that is traded at a discount will have a price that is less than 100.
As the price of a bond increases, its yield decreases. Conversely, as bond prices
decrease, yields increase. In other words, the price of the bond and its yield are
inversely related.
If interest rates rise above 10%, the bond's price will fall if the investor decides to
sell it. For example, imagine interest rates for similar investments rise to 12.5%.
The original bond still only makes a coupon payment of $100, which would be
unattractive to investors who can buy bonds that pay $125 now that interest rates
are higher.
If the original bond owner wants to sell the bond, the price can be lowered so that
the coupon payments and maturity value equal yield of 12%. In this case, that
means the investor would drop the price of the bond to $927.90. In order to fully
understand why that is the value of the bond, you need to understand a little
more about how the time value of money is used in bond pricing, which is
discussed later in this article.
If interest rates were to fall in value, the bond's price would rise because its
coupon payment is more attractive. For example, if interest rates fell to 7.5% for
similar investments, the bond seller could sell the bond for $1,101.15. The further
rates fall, the higher the bond's price will rise, and the same is true in reverse
when interest rates rise.
In either scenario, the coupon rate no longer has any meaning for a new investor.
Examples
For example, say an investor purchases a bond with a 10% coupon and $1,000
par value. At issue, the dollar price is $1,000.
If the bond's market value increases to $1,120 its dollar price would be quoted at
112%. If the investor were to sell, they could make $120 profit from the trade, in
addition to whatever interest they had collected on the bond to that point.