Financial Glossary  
           
 Glossary Tutorials Articles About Advertise Contact
Browse the largest investing glossary online.   Search
A
1|2|3
B
1|2
C
1|2|3
D
1|2|3
E
1|2|3
F
1|2|3
G
1|2|3
H
1|2|3
I
1|2|3
J
1|2
K
1|2|3
L
1|2|3
M
1|2|3
 
N
1|2|3
O
1|2|3
P
1|2|3
Q
1|2
R
1|2|3
S
1|2|3
T
1|2|3
U
1|2|3
V
1|2|3
W
1|2
X
1|2
Y
1|2|3
Z
1|2
#
1|2

 
Include Definitions
(more results)
Browse by Category
 
Investing / Investments
Real estate investing
Stock investing
Investment management
Retirement investing
Bonds / bond funds
Mutual Funds
 
Personal Finance
Business and finance
Household finance
Mortgage
Finance dictionary
Corporate finance
Financial service
Money management
Estate planning
Loans
 
Stock Market Investing
Stock research
Stock trading
Stock options
Stock trading
Stock exchanges
 
 
InvestHub.com's
Finance Dictionary and Glossary of Investment Terms

redeemable bond  

Definition 1.

A bond which the issuer has the right to redeem prior to its maturity date, under certain conditions. When issued, the bond will explain when it can be redeemed and what the price will be. In most cases, the price will be slightly above the par value for the bond and will increase the earlier the bond is called. A company will often call a bond if it is paying a higher coupon than the current market interest rates. Basically, the company can reissue the same bonds at a lower interest rate, saving them some amount on all the coupon payments; this process is called "refunding." Unfortunately, these are also the same circumstances in which the bonds have the highest price; interest rates have decreased since the bonds were issued, increasing the price. In many cases, the company will have the right to call the bonds at a lower price than the market price. If a bond is called, the bondholder will be notified by mail and have no choice in the matter. The bond will stop paying interest shortly after the bond is called, so there is no reason to hold on to it. Companies also typically advertise in major financial publications to notify bondholders. Generally, redeemable bonds will carry something called call protection. This means that there is some period of time during which the bond cannot be called. also called callable bond. opposite of irredeemable bond or non-callable bond.
 
  Home | Glossary | Tutorials | Articles | About
Webmasters |Advertise | Contact | Privacy


All material © Copyright InvestHub.com and IAT, Inc., 2003-2025