Files & Resources: youtube-breakingintowallstreet-com.s3.amazonaws.com/Convertible-Bond-Valuation-Analysis.xlsx youtube-breakingintowallstreet-com.s3.amazonaws.com/Convertible-Bond-Valuation-Analysis-Slides.pdf The Table of Contents and written summary are in the video description above if you click "more" next to the title.
This is such a well packaged video. I don’t often comment on channels, but I have to say, I haven’t found anything around as concise and clear on the topic of convertible bonds, specifically their valuation and factoring into the cost of capital, as this video. Well done, congratulations on deconstructing a complex topic with such ease. I am curious though, most convertible bonds are callable by the issuer, so how would convertibility factor into the valuation formula if the bond was callable? Say, in your example, after two years? Also, if it was callable at any time after two years (like an American option) or at every 6 month interval (like a European option) until maturity?
Thanks! Callability is a complex topic that we didn't have time to get into here, but in short, you would have to come up with some type of decision/probability tree and look at the callable dates and assign a probability to the call happening on each one. This gets very complex/time-consuming and is not something that most bankers or even convertible bond investors do frequently (there may be automated approaches to simulate it, though). In general, this will tend to reduce the value of convertible bonds and make them more like traditional debt because if a company can call the bond on certain dates or intervals, it reduces the probability of a conversion into equity. You might be able to simulate this by using shorter periods in Black-Scholes and doing some type of weighted average over time based on the call dates.
If I am in India would modelling be different for me as we follow Ind AS which is 80% similar to US GAAP, would I have a problem if I buy your package.
We cover both U.S. GAAP and IFRS and feature case studies from companies worldwide. So if Indian accounting rules are very similar to U.S. GAAP, the courses should be fine.
You can do that, yes, assuming you have access to the data (forward/implied numbers are better if available). We assumed no Bloomberg/FactSet/other data access here, so the historical volatility was easier to retrieve.
This "bond discount" happens most often under IFRS because there, most convertible bonds are split into liability and equity components. The liability starts out at less than the face value, and the amortization of the bond discount boosts it each year until it reaches the face value by the maturity. The amortization is counted as a non-cash interest expense on the Income Statement.
Market value isn't relevant because it mostly reflects changes in interest rates and credit quality, and these do not impact the shares a convertible bond converts into. Book value is not relevant because it deducts unamortized issuance fees (which also do not affect the shares) and may deduct the convertible bond discount (more common under IFRS now). And this discount also doesn't change the shares it converts into.
Always good content. But , sometimes i feel , that your videos sometimes becomes lengthy or become difficult to keep track of. It requires person to have expertg knowledgealready to understand the content.
Thanks. Unfortunately, there's only so much we can do to simplify/shorten these "crash course" topics. A 30-minute video may seem long, but it's much faster to get through than a 500-page textbook or long and detailed written chapters on the same topic.
Files & Resources:
youtube-breakingintowallstreet-com.s3.amazonaws.com/Convertible-Bond-Valuation-Analysis.xlsx
youtube-breakingintowallstreet-com.s3.amazonaws.com/Convertible-Bond-Valuation-Analysis-Slides.pdf
The Table of Contents and written summary are in the video description above if you click "more" next to the title.
Absolutely love this video! Would love if you could talk more about Convert Arb stuff in the future.
Love ur videos and thank you very much
Thanks, I'll see what we can do for more convertible-related topics.
This is such a well packaged video. I don’t often comment on channels, but I have to say, I haven’t found anything around as concise and clear on the topic of convertible bonds, specifically their valuation and factoring into the cost of capital, as this video. Well done, congratulations on deconstructing a complex topic with such ease. I am curious though, most convertible bonds are callable by the issuer, so how would convertibility factor into the valuation formula if the bond was callable? Say, in your example, after two years? Also, if it was callable at any time after two years (like an American option) or at every 6 month interval (like a European option) until maturity?
Thanks! Callability is a complex topic that we didn't have time to get into here, but in short, you would have to come up with some type of decision/probability tree and look at the callable dates and assign a probability to the call happening on each one. This gets very complex/time-consuming and is not something that most bankers or even convertible bond investors do frequently (there may be automated approaches to simulate it, though). In general, this will tend to reduce the value of convertible bonds and make them more like traditional debt because if a company can call the bond on certain dates or intervals, it reduces the probability of a conversion into equity. You might be able to simulate this by using shorter periods in Black-Scholes and doing some type of weighted average over time based on the call dates.
If I am in India would modelling be different for me as we follow Ind AS which is 80% similar to US GAAP, would I have a problem if I buy your package.
We cover both U.S. GAAP and IFRS and feature case studies from companies worldwide. So if Indian accounting rules are very similar to U.S. GAAP, the courses should be fine.
@@devm.9189 do we know each other?
You used the historical vol to price the convertible, can we/Should we use the implied vol instead? What is the market practice ?
You can do that, yes, assuming you have access to the data (forward/implied numbers are better if available). We assumed no Bloomberg/FactSet/other data access here, so the historical volatility was easier to retrieve.
Hi! What do you mean as "Bond Discount" when calculating total interest expense?
This "bond discount" happens most often under IFRS because there, most convertible bonds are split into liability and equity components. The liability starts out at less than the face value, and the amortization of the bond discount boosts it each year until it reaches the face value by the maturity. The amortization is counted as a non-cash interest expense on the Income Statement.
@@financialmodeling thank you!
Do the non-convertible bonds (used for the equivalent rate on non-convertible bonds) also need to be non-callable?
They should be as close as possible in terms of other features, but if you can't find anything close that's also non-callable, it's fine.
Why do we translate nominal value into shares and not book or market value ?
Market value isn't relevant because it mostly reflects changes in interest rates and credit quality, and these do not impact the shares a convertible bond converts into. Book value is not relevant because it deducts unamortized issuance fees (which also do not affect the shares) and may deduct the convertible bond discount (more common under IFRS now). And this discount also doesn't change the shares it converts into.
Always good content. But , sometimes i feel , that your videos sometimes becomes lengthy or become difficult to keep track of. It requires person to have expertg knowledgealready to understand the content.
Thanks. Unfortunately, there's only so much we can do to simplify/shorten these "crash course" topics. A 30-minute video may seem long, but it's much faster to get through than a 500-page textbook or long and detailed written chapters on the same topic.