Bonds & PV tables Flashcards

1
Q

what is a term bond?

A

a bond that will pay the entire principal upon maturity at the end of the term

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

what is a serial bond?

A

a bond in which the principal matures in installments

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

what are debenture bonds

A

unsecured bonds that are not supported by any collateral

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

what is the stated, face, coupon, nominal rate?

A

rate that is printed on the bond, represents the amount of cash the investor will receive every payment.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

what is the carrying amount of a bond?

A

the net amount at which the bond is being reported on the B/S and equals the face value of the bond plus the premium (when the bond was issued above face) or minus the discount (when the bond was issued below face value). it is also called the “book value” or “reported amount.” it will initially be the same as issue price but gradually approaches the face value as time passes since the premium or discount is amortized over the life of the bond.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

what is the effective, yield or market rate (all mean the same)

A

the actual rate of interest the company is paying on the bond based on the issue price. the effective rate is often called the market rate of interest or yield.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

what happens when a bond is issued at a premium?

A

the effective rate is lower than the stated rate, since cash interest and principal repayment are based on face value, but the company actually received more money than that

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

what happens when a bond is issued at a discount?

A

the effective rate of interest will be higher than the stated rate since the company must pay cash interest and principal based on a higher amount than the funds actually received upon issuance.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

what are convertible bonds?

A

a bond that is convertible into common stock of the debtor at the bondholders option

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

what are callable bonds

A

a bond which the issuer has the right to redeem prior to is maturity date

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

what are bond covenants

A

restrictions that borrowers must often agree to

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

when will the effective interest method of bond amortization NOT be used?

A

when the company elects the Fair Value option for reporting financial assets and liabilities, in particular w/bonds (financial liabilities) are reported @ fair value at the end of each reporting period.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

what is the journal entry when a bond is issued and the market & stated rate are the same?

A

bond is issued @ Par
debit- cash
credit- bonds payable

Interest payments

  • debit: Interest expense (face amnt X stated rate)
  • credit: cash (face amount X stated interest rate on bonds)

** for interest expense calculations; Cash is ALWAYS credited for the same amount each period and it is ALWAYS for the face amount X stated rate of interest

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

what is the journal entry when a bond is issued and the market is HIGHER THAN the stated rate?

A

the bond is issued at a discount so they will receive less cash.
@ issuance:
“debit” - cash (face amount less discount)
“debit” - discount on bond (amount at PV factor)
“credit”- bonds payable (face amount of bond)

recording of interest expense
debit-interest expense
credit- discount
credit -cash

Note the discount must be amortized over the life of the bond.

remember cash is always the face value X stated amount of interest on the bond

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

what is the journal entry when bonds are issued @ a premium?

A

debit-cash (face value + premium amount)
credit-premium (amount above face value)
credit-bonds payable (face amount of bond)

same rules apply as w/a bond discount. premium must be amortized over the life of the bond to bring the value down to the face amount

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

when amortizing a discount what happens to interest expense & the amortization amount of the discount?

A

Interest expense increases each year and the amortization amount increases each year.

17
Q

when amortizing a premium what happens to interest expense & the amortization amount of the discount?

A

when amortizing a premium the interest expense decreases each year and the amortization premium increases each year.

18
Q

what is the formula for calculating the discount or premium amortization over multiple years?

A

Year 1:
face amount of bond minus the discount (discount amount -face amount of bond) = the carrying value of the bond

Carrying value is then multiplied by the effective interest rate will equal the interest expense for that year.

interest expense is subtracted from the cash payment of interest which will always be the face of the bond multiplied by the stated interest rate on the bond multiplied by time.

the difference between the interest expense and the cash payment will be the amount of the amortization.

year 2:
the amortization amount is added to the carrying value if it is a discount on subtracted from the carrying value if it is a premium then the process is repeated

Note: the goal is to increase a discount to the face amount of the bond & decrease a premium to the face amount.

19
Q

how do you calculate the present value of the proceeds

A

two amounts needed

  • pv of the face of the bond (face X PV of a lump sum using the effective interest rate)
  • pv of the interest as an annuity (face amount X stated interest rate X time = the interest expense. The interest expense amount is then multiplied by the PV of an ordinary annuity rate at the EFFECTIVE INTEREST RATE.

The sum of these two amounts represents the PV of the bonds

20
Q

how is interest paid semi annually calculated?

A
  • # of years multiplied by 2

- the interest rate divided by 2

21
Q

what is compound interest

A

future values of interest - these look at cash flows and project them to some future date and the formula is as follows:
future value factor (the amount that you use to get the future value) is equal to 1 divided by the present value factor.

for example 10,000(future value factor) X 1/.8265 (1 divided by present value factor)

22
Q

how do you convert from an annuity due (one due at the beginning of the period) to an ordinary annuity (one that is due at the end of the period)

A

-use the factor from one more period than you need then subtract 1 from that rate

23
Q

how do you convert from an ordinary annuity (one that is due at the end of the period to an annuity due (one due at the beginning of the period)

A

-use the factor for one LESS period and ADD 1.0 to it.

24
Q

what is the journal entry at the issuance of a bond?

A

debit- cash (face + accrued interest-bond issuance cost)
debit- bond issuance cost
discount- (plug)
credit- bonds payable
credit - accrued interest payable (face amount of bond X stated rate of interest X time since LAST interest amount was paid)

25
Q

where are bonds payable and unamortized discount/premium reported on the financial statements

A

-in the NONCURRENT LIABILITIES section

26
Q

what are bond issue cost

A

**costs directly associated w/the issuance of the bonds are a NONCURRENT ASSET (DEFERRED CHARGE) and are amortized straight line over the period of time the BONDS ARE OUTSTANDING.

  • printing and engraving of bond certificate
  • legal and accounting fees
  • underwriter commissions
  • promotion costs
  • printing the prospectus

initially recorded as follows:
debit - to deferred bond issue cost
credit - a payable

in year 2:
debit-bond issue expense
credit-deferred bond issue cost

27
Q

what is the journal entry to retire a bond?

A

-reported as a gain or loss on the income statement as part of CONTINUING OPERATIONS unless determined to be both unusual & infrequent in which case it will be an extraordinary item net of taxes.

debit - bond payable (face amount)
debit - premium @ unamortized amount 
debit - loss (plug)
credit- BIC
credit- Discount
credit- Cash (amnt to retire)
credit- gain (plug)
28
Q

what are convertible bonds

A

bonds that give the bondholder the option of converting the bond into common stock and are normally ISSUED AT MORE THAN PAR VALUE because of this option. they are treated as a SINGLE SECURITY AND NO VALUE is given to the convertible feature.

29
Q

which method is GAAP when recording convertible bond?

A

BOOK VALUE method is GAAP & the market value method is not.

30
Q

how are convertible bonds accounted for under the book value method?

A

all accounts for the remaining balances are eliminated, credit common stock for PAR VALUE, and the plug is APIC

31
Q

bonds w/detachable warrants are accounted for how?

A

as two separate securities and the VALUE OF THE WARRANT IS INCLUDED IN APIC

Must use the relative FMV approach in order to value each security.

32
Q

what disclosures under GAAP are required for bonds in general?

A

disclosure about the combined aggregate amount of maturities and sinking fund requirements for all long-term borrowings for each of the next 5 years and in the aggregate.

33
Q

what is the J/E for detachable stock purchase warrants

A

debit-cash
debit-discount
credit-bond payable
credit-APIC -Warrants

34
Q

how are compound instruments accounted for under IFRS

A

they are separated into their liability and equity components and the straightline method of amortization is NOT allowed

35
Q

how is BIC accounted for under IFRS?

A

BIC cost reduce the carrying value of bonds and are amortized under the effective interest method.

36
Q

market price of a bond is accounted for how

A

the market price of a bond regardless of whether it is issued at a discount or premium, is equal to the present value of all cash flows that the bond represents. this includes the present value of the principal amount and the present value of all future interest payments. the present value is computed using the bonds’s effective rate of interest

37
Q

how is interest payable calculated?

A

interest payable is calculated by multiplying the face amount of the bonds by the stated rate, which gives the annual payment. divide the annual amount by 12 then multiply by the number of months SINCE the LAST interest payment.

38
Q

How do you calculate the relative fair market value approach when you have bonds w/stock warrants?

A

Bonds fair value w/o warrants + warrants fair value = total value.
Divide the Bonds FV by the total value to get the % that represents the bonds
Divide the warrants FV by the total value to the the % that represents the warrants.

If you are looking for the bonds payable amount: take the bonds % and multiply it by the total issue price