Understanding best corporate bonds is essential for investors seeking higher yields than government issues, while accepting greater Credit and market risk. This page discusses key metrics, how to evaluate issuers, risk factors, tax and fee implications, and where to consult official resources, incorporating recent approaches for U.S. and international corporate bond markets.
Who This Is For & Suitability
Income-focused investors wanting higher coupons than Treasuries or CDs.
Portfolio builders seeking to balance yield, credit risk, and duration exposure.
Those able to analyze or diversify across issuers, understanding risks like default and liquidity.
Investors using U.S. dollars as base currency, but methods apply broadly—international conventions may differ.
Not recommended for those requiring daily liquidity, guaranteed principal, or uncomfortable with fluctuation in bond prices.
Suitable for medium- to long-term allocations; not for very short-term parking of funds due to spread and price volatility.
Key Facts (At-a-Glance)
Item
Details
Issuer Type
Corporations (investment grade or high yield); U.S., foreign, or emerging-market entities.
Credit Ratings
Investment Grade (BBB-/Baa3 and above); High Yield (< BBB-/Baa3); agency ratings (Moody’s, S&P, Fitch).
Coupon Structure
Fixed, floating, or zero-coupon; semiannual payments typical in U.S.; can be callable or putable.
Callable, Putable & Sinking Fund Provisions
Common—call features allow issuer to redeem before maturity; sinking fund provides amortization; put features rare.
Covenants
May restrict issuer leverage, asset sales, or dividend policy; outlined in indenture/prospectus.
Lot Size / Denominations
Often $1,000 or $5,000 face value minimums (sample); varies by issue/venue.
Settlement
Typical U.S. corporate bond settlement is T+1 (trade date plus one business day).
TRACE Visibility
Most U.S. corporate bonds report trades on FINRA TRACE (official); increases post-trade transparency.
Quoting
Quoted as percentage of nominal/par; “clean price” excludes accrued interest; “dirty price” includes it.
From Prospectus to Secondary Trading
Corporate bonds originate as primary offerings, detailed in a prospectus (SEC EDGAR filings outline covenants, use of proceeds, and risk factors).
After initial offering, most bonds trade in the secondary market via dealer networks; transparency on price and volume provided in the U.S. via FINRA TRACE (official).
Secondary liquidity varies—most trading is over-the-counter (OTC), not exchange-based.
Current Yield: Annual coupon divided by market price—good for income snapshot, ignores maturity value.
Yield to Maturity (YTM): True annualized return if bought at current price and held to maturity, assuming no default and reinvestment at same rate.
Yield to Worst (YTW): Reflects earliest call or put date; critical for callable/putable bonds.
Spread to Treasury: The yield difference versus a matched-duration government bond; reflects credit, liquidity, and market risk.
Credit Rating: Agency score of default risk; “downgrade” increases yield required and decreases bond price.
Default/Recovery: High yields typically signal higher default risk; “investment grade” is less risky than “high yield.”
Costs, Taxes & Accrued Interest
Bid-ask spreads: Difference between price to buy/sell—a main transaction cost, often wider for less-liquid, smaller-issuer, or longer-maturity bonds.
Dealer Markups/Markdowns: Fees are embedded in prices (sample/illustrative)—specific charges should be disclosed on trade confirmations.
Commissions/Platform Fees: Can be per trade or percentage-based; review broker schedule.
Clean vs Dirty Price: Clean is quoted price; dirty price includes accrued coupon interest (buyer pays seller for portion earned since last payment).
Taxation: In the U.S., interest is taxed as ordinary income; original issue discount (OID) rules may apply; check with IRS or a tax advisor for current details on treatment of zero-coupon or discounted bonds.
Capital Gains: If sold before maturity, you may realize gains or losses, taxed per IRS rules; official details on IRS homepage.
Component
What It Covers
How It’s Experienced
Bid-Ask Spread
Liquidity cost in dealer market
Implicit at execution
Dealer Markup/Markdown
Dealer compensation
Embedded in price (“sample/illustrative”)
Commissions/Platform Fees
Broker fees
Per trade (“sample/illustrative”)
Accrued Interest
Coupon earned since last payment
Paid/received at settlement
Taxes
Interest, OID, capital gains
Varies by account and jurisdiction
Call Features & Reinvestment Risk
Callable bonds allow issuer to redeem at set prices/dates, usually when rates fall; investors face “call risk”—bond may be repaid early, reducing future coupon income.
Yield-to-call (YTC): Calculates return if called at earliest date; lower than YTM if premium paid for bond.
Make-whole calls allow issuer to call bond at a premium tied to prevailing yields, limiting upside for investor.
Reinvestment risk: When bonds are called or mature, replacing income may require accepting lower current yields.
Risks
Credit/Default Risk: Issuer may fail to pay interest/principal; higher rated issuers (“investment grade”) are less risky than “high yield.”
Liquidity Risk: Some bonds trade infrequently; buying/selling could impact price or prove difficult in stressed markets.
Interest-Rate Risk (Duration/Convexity): Bond prices fall as rates rise; higher duration or convexity means greater price sensitivity. Check duration metrics for each bond.
Concentration Risk: Holding a few issuers increases risk versus a diversified portfolio.
Event Risk: Mergers, lawsuits, or regulatory action can alter credit quality fast.
Structural Subordination: Bonds can rank differently in issuer’s capital structure (senior, subordinated, hybrid).
Alternatives & Comparisons
Side-by-Side
Feature
Corporate Bonds
U.S. Treasuries
Bond Funds/ETFs
Certificates of Deposit (CDs)
Issuer Risk
Varies (IG/HY credit rating)
Virtually none (U.S. gov’t)
Diversified portfolio
Federal deposit insurance up to FDIC limits
Yield (Sample/Illustrative)
Generally higher than Treasuries; depends on credit spread
Typically lowest, “risk-free” baseline
Blended yield/net of fees
Often between Treasuries and corporates
Liquidity
Good (for actively traded issues)
Highest
Immediate (ETFs); daily (funds)
Penalty for early withdrawal
Transparency
TRACE post-trade reporting
Transparent via TreasuryDirect and brokers
Fund holdings and NAV reported
Bank disclosures
Minimum Investment
$1,000–$5,000 typical lot (sample)
$100 for T-Bills/Notes/Bonds
Fund/ETF: set by sponsor
$500–$1,000 often
Tax Treatment
Interest taxable as ordinary income; capital gains rules apply; no state/local break
Federal taxable, state/local exempt
Pass-through (see fund prospectus)
Interest taxable; early penalties may change tax
How to Evaluate a Bond (Foundations)
Issuer strength (financials, industry sector, history of payments, market standing).
Agency rating and outlook (watch for downgrades or negative outlook).
Covenants and call schedule (protection level, features that favor issuer or holder).
Does maturity/duration fit your portfolio and interest-rate outlook?
Spread to Treasury or benchmarks; implied compensation for credit/liquidity risk.