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Post by xlsander on Apr 8, 2010 12:42:51 GMT 4
looking for a bond with good rating - zero coupon maturity 3 or 5 years around 70% or little more - to secure client capital for forex investments and trade the funds above the discont in forex. anyone has a suggestion or an offer to make?
thank you
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Post by fireopal on Apr 8, 2010 22:08:15 GMT 4
good rating and only 70%, look for Greece, its still investment grade but as a zero coupon the discount is 12 month libor plus 5 for 5 years would mean a discount of 30%, even if the IMF steps in the Eurozone will cover Greece with 50 B Euro, however not sure what your client accepts
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Post by miriammuraba on Apr 8, 2010 22:13:17 GMT 4
Use a STRIP
The US Treasury does not issue zero-coupon securities with maturities greater than a year, but it has a program whereby the coupon and principal payments of standard Treasury securities can be disaggregated and traded separately as zero-coupon securities. This is called the STRIPS program, which the Treasury launched in 1985. STRIPS stands for Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities.
Under the program, a financial institution can present the Treasury with a standard Treasury note, Treasury bond or TIPS to be "stripped." The Treasury disaggregates the individual cash flows into separate securities, which are returned to the financial institution. For example, a newly issued 5-year note would be stripped into eleven separate securities—ten representing the note's semiannual coupon payments, and one representing its final principal payment. The new securities are called coupon strips and principal strips. Collectively, they are called Treasury strips or just strips.
To an investor, there is no practical difference between a coupon strip and a principal strip. Both are zero-coupon Treasury securities. But there is a technical difference. Each issue of Treasury securities is identified with a unique CUSIP number. When a note or bond is stripped, each new security receives a different CUSIP. Coupon strips maturing on the same date, even if they are stripped from different issues of notes or bonds, are given the same CUSIP. This makes them fungible. The principal strips are each given a unique CUSIP identifying it with the particular note or bond issue from which it was stripped.
This is important because, in addition to disaggregating securities under the STRIPS program, the Treasury will also reconstitute them. A financial institution must obtain the principal strip for the security to be reconstituted (identified by CUSIP) as well as coupon strips maturing on all that security's coupon dates. The Department of Treasury takes these and returns the reconstituted security.
TIPS are handled similarly. Coupon strips that mature on the same date are all given the same CUSIP, although this differs from the CUSIP of note or bond coupon strips maturing on that date. The principal strip for each TIPS is given a unique CUSIP identifying it with the particular TIPS issue from which it was stripped. They too can be reconstituted.
There is an active market for note and bond strips. These are widely held by both institutional and retail clients. There is little liquidity in TIPS strips. See the article Treasury Securities for more information on the secondary market for Treasuries.
With a yield of 2.62 you may reach for a 5 y paper a price of 13 to 14% face value
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sapuco
Junior Member
Posts: 92
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Post by sapuco on Apr 8, 2010 22:19:01 GMT 4
depends on the risk potential the client allows, a corporate bond which is BBB+ or a downgraded municipal bond like Pine County Housing&Redevelopment Authority, Minn.'s series 2005A which just went from A- to BBB+, so is still investment grade, you strip the bond into a principal and an interest part and sell the later off or get a line of credit and since in forex the factor 100 for speculation is usual that should give you enough money, just find the right bond your client would accept.
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