Transfer agent and Yield to maturity: Difference between pages

From ACT Wiki
(Difference between pages)
Jump to navigationJump to search
imported>Doug Williamson
m (Deletion of See also repair)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
(Update & differentiate Yield to redemption.)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
An individual or company that records, on behalf of a company, the sale and purchase of a company’s securities as well as maintaining detailed ownership records of the company’s shares and other registered securities.  
(YTM).
Sometimes a called registrar in the USA.
 
The measure of yield on a financial instrument - for example a bond - from the current date until its final maturity.
 
It takes into account the capital gain on a bond (or other financial instrument) trading at a discount, or the capital loss on a bond (or other financial instrument) trading at a premium.
 
 
More specifically the return on a security held to maturity, taking account of the coupon and re-investment rates and the buying price compared to its face value.  
 
 
YTM assumes that all coupons are fully paid out on their due dates and reinvested at the same yield and that the principal is paid back in full upon maturity. 
 
It is an internal rate of return calculation performed on the security’s expected cash flows, including the initial investment outflow (= the current market value).
 
 
== See also ==
* [[Bond]]
* [[Cost of debt]]
* [[Internal rate of return]]
* [[Macaulay duration]]
* [[Yield]]
* [[Yield to redemption]]
* [[Yield to worst]]

Revision as of 12:07, 25 August 2019

(YTM).

The measure of yield on a financial instrument - for example a bond - from the current date until its final maturity.

It takes into account the capital gain on a bond (or other financial instrument) trading at a discount, or the capital loss on a bond (or other financial instrument) trading at a premium.


More specifically the return on a security held to maturity, taking account of the coupon and re-investment rates and the buying price compared to its face value.


YTM assumes that all coupons are fully paid out on their due dates and reinvested at the same yield and that the principal is paid back in full upon maturity.

It is an internal rate of return calculation performed on the security’s expected cash flows, including the initial investment outflow (= the current market value).


See also