Yield (finance)
Encyclopedia : Y : YI : YIE : Yield (finance)
| Finance | |
| |
|
Finance Overview Capital Investment Cash flow Credit Debt Funding Hedging Interest Risk Yield | |
|
Types of Finance Corporate finance Personal finance Public finance | |
|
Financial Vehicles Real Estate Securities Arbitrage Trusts Mutual funds Hedge funds Commodities Futures | |
|
See Also Entrepreneur Financial market Economy | |
| [edit this box] | |
The absolute yield levels vary mainly with expectations of inflation. How yields compare between financial instruments tends to depend mainly on the credit worthiness of the lender, and the maturity of the instrument. The least risky instruments, such as government bonds, virtually always yield less than more risky corporate bonds. The relationship between yields and the maturity of instruments of similar credit worthiness, is described by the yield curve. Long dated instruments typically have a higher yield than short dated instruments.
The yield of a debt instrument is generally linked to default probability of the issuer. The more the default risk, the higher the yield would be in most of the cases since issuers need to offer investors some compensation for the risk.
In bond markets, US Treasury bond yields are the benchmark debt instruments because they are backed by the US Government and the risk of default is almost nil. All the other debt instruments' yields are then linked to their default risk.
Inflation is linked to the yield in the sense that fears of high inflation in the future would mean that investors would ask for high yield today.
See also
- Dividend yield
- Ecological yield
- Yield curve
- 30-day yield
- Nominal yield
- Current yield
- Yield to maturity
- Bond (finance)
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
