Dirty price
The price of a bond is the present value of its future cash-flows. To avoid the impact of the next coupon payment on the price of a bond, this cash flow is excluded from the price of the bond and is called the accrued interest. In finance, the dirty price is the price of a bond including any interest that has accrued since issue of the most recent coupon payment. This is to be compared with the clean price, which is the price of a bond excluding the accrued interest.
- Dirty Price = Clean Price + Accrued Interest
When bond prices are quoted on a Bloomberg Terminal, Reuters or FactSet they are quoted using the clean price. The clean price is mostly quoted in the US bond markets. The dirty price is mostly quoted in the European bond markets.[1]
Bond pricing
Bonds, as well as a variety of other fixed income securities, provide for coupon payments to be made to bond holders on a fixed schedule. The dirty price of a bond will decrease on the days coupons are paid, resulting in a saw-tooth pattern for the bond value.[2] This is because there will be one fewer future cash flow (i.e., the coupon payment just received) at that point.
To separate out the effect of the coupon payments, the accrued interest between coupon dates is subtracted from the value determined by the dirty price to arrive at the clean price.[3] The accrued interest is based on the day count convention, coupon rate, and number of days from the preceding coupon payment date.[4]
The clean price more closely reflects changes in value due to issuer risk and changes in the structure of interest rates. Its graph is smoother than that of the dirty price. Use of the clean price also serves to differentiate interest income (based on the coupon rate) from trading profit and loss.
It is market practice in US to quote bonds on a clean-price basis. When a bond settles the accrued interest is added to the value based on the clean price to reflect the full market value.
Example
A corporate bond has a coupon rate of 7.2% and pays 4 times a year, on the 15th of January, April, July, and October. It uses the 30/360 US day count convention.
A trade for 1,000 par value of the bond settles on January 25. The prior coupon date was January 15. The accrued interest reflects ten days' interest, or $2.00 = (7.2% of $1,000 * (10 days/360 days)). Thus $2.00 is being paid to the seller as compensation for his or her share of the upcoming interest payment on April 15th.
The bonds are purchased from the market at $985.50. Given that $2.00 pays the accrued interest, the remainder ($983.50) represents the underlying value of the bonds. The following table illustrates the values of these terms.
The market convention for bond prices assigns a dirty price of 98.55 to the trade, not 0.9855. This is sometimes referred to as the price for 100 par value.
Term | Value |
---|---|
Par value | 1,000.00 |
Total amount at settlement | $985.50 |
Dirty price | $985.50 |
Accrued interest | $2.00 |
Market value less accrued interest | $983.50 |
Clean price | $983.50 |
Footnotes
- ↑ http://www.investopedia.com/terms/d/dirtyprice.asp
- ↑ see the figure in Bond Accrued Interest.
- ↑ see Clean and Dirty Prices.
- ↑ see Trade Interest Bought/Sold.
References
- Bond Accrued Interest, 2008, retrieved 2008-07-06. Discussion of dirty price, clean price, and accrued interest, including diagrams illustrating the relationships.
- Coupon Interest, 2008, retrieved 2008-07-06. Discussion of coupon interest, including trade interest figuration.
- Accrued Interest Defined, 2014, retrieved 2014-03-04. Glossary entry with examples of calculations.
- Bond Pricing in the Market, 2008, retrieved 2008-07-06. Explanation of how bonds are priced, including valuation, coupon interest, and clean and dirty pricing, with diagrams.
See also
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