High Yield Bonds

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High yield bonds, also called junk bonds, are corporate bonds with lower credit quality than top credits. These companies are at much greater risk of default than higher quality credits and, as a result, pay higher coupon interest rates than comparable high quality corporate bonds.

Contents

Definition

High Yield Bond

Risks

High yield bonds inherit risks applicable to bonds, some of which are pronounced in high yield bonds.

Credit risk

Since high yield bonds are issued by companies with low credit ratings, there is a greater risk that the issuers default.

Call risk

Issuers call their bonds when the interest rate goes down. High yield bonds come with additional call risk. If the issuers' credit ratings improve, they can call the existing bonds and borrow money at a lower interest rate. This type of call risk is not applicable to bonds with high ratings.

Role in a portfolio

Funds

Papers

Further Reading


Bonds
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Bond Topics Bond BasicsBonds: Advanced TopicsLaddering Bonds or CDsIndividual Bonds vs a Bond FundI Bonds vs TIPS
Vanguard Bond Funds Vanguard Total Bond Market Index FundVanguard Inflation-Protected Securities FundVanguard High-Yield Corporate Fund
Research Resources Vanguard SEC Filings: Taxable Fixed Income FundsVanguard SEC Filings: Tax-Exempt Fixed Income Funds
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