Corporate bond interest in terms of cost of capital A company can raise capital for a project or to cover other expenses, issuing bond in the market. Depending on the credit rating and other risk factors the company will have to offer coupon rate on the bond. A corporate can issue bond at a fixed bond rate, say 5%, par value of $1000, the corporate will have to pay the bondholder $50 as coupon payment. Bonds come with a maturity date too. It is usually few years. The coupon rate in most of the cases are fixed, but could be floating too. In case of a floating coupon rate the bond rate usually changes with US treasury or some other benchmark rate. The coupon rate the corporate offers is usually the cost of capital (Investopedia, n.d.). Corporate bonds usually yield higher than inflation and make good return on investment for investors. But the income from bonds are usually taxable. But from the corporate’s perspective the cost of capital will depend on the coupon rate it offers. Th...
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