The definitive guide to fixed income securities―updated and revised with everything you need to succeed in today’s market The Handbook of Fixed Income Securities has been the most trusted resource for fixed income investing for decades, providing everything sophisticated investors need to analyze, value, and manage fixed income instruments and their derivatives. But this market has changed dramatically since the last edition was published, so the author has revised and updated his classic guide to put you ahead of the curve. With chapters written by the leading experts in their fields, The Handbook of Fixed Income Securities, Ninth Edition provides expert discussions The Handbook of Fixed Income Securities is the most inclusive, up-to-date source available for fixed income facts and analyses. Its invaluable perspective and insights will help you enhance investment returns and avoid poor performance in the fixed income market.
Frank J. Fabozzi is a Professor in the Practice of Finance and Becton Fellow in the Yale School of Management. He is well known as the author of numerous books on finance, both practitioner-focused and academic. Professor Frank J. Fabozzi will be joining Edhec Risk Institute on August 1, 2011. EDHEC-Risk Institute is part of EDHEC Business School, one of Europe’s leading business schools.
Actually read it cover to cover when I was an intern at a big bank. My amazed bosses said it was meant to be a reference book and not to read straight through cover to cover... but that's what this nerd did!
Excellent coverage of almost all common fixed income instruments. The chapters are logically organized and contain a good mix of theoretical and practical knowledge. Although it might have been useful to include more mathematics. I actually have the 8th edition of this book.
This is not a book for casual reading. It is a solidly written text that explains the key elements of various fixed income securities. I like to use it as a reference for my research when I am trying to get a refresher on the basics of fixed income products.
DOUBLE BARREL BONDS!!! Additionally, certain general obligation bonds are secured not only by the issuer’s general taxing powers to create monies accumulated in the general fund, but also from certain identified fees, grants, and special charges, which provide additional revenues from outside the general fund. Such bonds are known as being double barreled in security because of the dual nature of the revenue sources.
TIPS: The only “cost” to Government is that, by issuing inflation-adjusted bonds, it fore goes the opportunity of reducing, through inflation, the real cost of borrowing . . . Since [the New Zealand] Government has no intention of stealing the money invested by bondholders, foregoing the right to steal through inflation hardly seems a significant penalty. TIPS reduce the expected cost of financing a govern ment’s debt because they are conceptually free of the inflation risk premium built into nominal long-term bond yields. Normally one might conclude that by reliev ing bond investors of this risk, the Treasury implicitly absorbs a burden or risk equal in magnitude. This is not the case here, however. By reducing nominal debt and increasing inflation-indexed (real) debt, the Treasury has in effect changed the structure of its liabilities to better match its only asset—its authority to tax. Put another way, the Treasury is the ideal issuer of inflation-indexed debt. The issuance of TIPS improves taxpayer welfare by eliminating the 0.5% to 1.0% inflation risk premium that researchers believe is embedded in nominal bond yields
Endowments, foundations, and other eleemosynary organizations also may have return objectives that are formulated in real terms. Typically their goal is to generate a 5% or higher real return on their investment portfolio. (The IRS generally requires that 5% of a charitable foundation’s assets be spent on the delivery of charitable services each year—so a 5% real return, net of expenses and contributions, is required to maintain the foundation’s inflation adjusted size.) Establishing a real-return target for investment performance makes sense for these organizations. Educational or charitable programs, whether they involve physical infrastructure or services, often are budgeted for using inflation-adjusted dollars. Implicitly, such goals, objectives, and plans represent real liabilities.
This book is 1000+ pages long. Its sheer size has detered me from reading it even though I got the book months ago. However, as soon as I started reading the first page, it's a breeze. Still long. I do intend to keep on reading it as a referenced book.