Fixed-Income Segments, Issuers, and Investors

Fixed-income instruments and markets are typically categorised along three dimensions: issuer type (often known as sector), credit quality, and time to maturity. Sometimes, instruments and markets are additionally classified by issuers’ geography, currency, and ESG characteristics. In contrast to equities, where issuers typically issue just one or two instruments, issuers often have many fixed-income instruments outstanding.  A…

Features of Fixed-Income Securities

Fixed-income instruments are debt instruments, such as loans and bonds. Loans are debt instruments formed and governed by a private agreement usually between an individual or company and a financial intermediary, such as bank. Bonds or fixed-income securities are more standardised contractual agreements between larger issuers and investors. A bond issuer borrows money most often…

Asset-Based Valuation

Asset-based valuation models are frequently used together with multiplier models to value private companies. As public companies increase reporting or disclosure of fair values, asset-based valuation may be increasingly used to supplement present value and multiplier models of valuation. Important facts that the practitioner should realise are as follows:

Enterprise Value

In practice, analysts may have difficulty accurately assessing enterprise value if they do not have access to market quotations for the company’s debt. When current market quotations are not available, bond values may be estimated from current quotations for bonds with similar maturity, sector, and credit characteristics. Substituting the book value of debt for the…