ACCACIMAICAEWAATFinancial Management

Par Bond

AccountingBody Editorial Team

A par bond, or at-par bond, is a bond sold at 100% of its face value. If you pay $1,000 to purchase a bond with a $1,000 face value, you’re buying a par bond.
This guide explains what par bonds are, how they work, how they compare to discount and premium bonds, and when they might fit your investment strategy.

Understanding Par Bonds

When a bond is issued, it typically launches at its par value. Investors who purchase these bonds receive fixed interest payments—known as the coupon—over time. At maturity, the full face value is repaid.

Par bonds are foundational in fixed-income investing, often used in retirement portfolios, conservative asset allocations, and income-generating strategies.

How Bond Pricing Works

Bond pricing is directly tied to market interest rates. The relationship is inverse:

  • Wheninterest rates rise, bond prices fall.
  • Wheninterest rates fall, bond prices rise.

This happens because newly issued bonds become more attractive or less attractive than existing ones, depending on how their yields compare.

Par Bonds vs. Discount and Premium Bonds

Bonds can trade in three pricing states:

Type of BondPrice vs. Face ValueWhen It Occurs
Par BondEquals face valueCoupon rate = market rate
Discount BondBelow face valueCoupon rate < market rate
Premium BondAbove face valueCoupon rate > market rate

These shifts occur in secondary markets as investors evaluate returns based on the current rate environment.

Real-World Example

Let’s say you purchase a newly issued bond with:

  • Face value: $1,000
  • Coupon rate: 5%
  • Market interest rate: 5%

You pay $1,000—this is a par bond.

Now consider two changes:

  1. Market rate rises to 6%→ Your bond becomes less attractive. Its price drops below $1,000 →Discount bond.
  2. Market rate falls to 4%→ Your bond is more attractive. Its price rises above $1,000 →Premium bond.

Investment Considerations

Par bonds are often seen as neutral benchmarks in bond investing. They represent fair value at the time of issuance.

However, this does not mean they’re always better than discount or premium bonds. The best choice depends on:

  • Yourinvestment goals
  • Interest rate expectations
  • Tax implications
  • Portfolio duration strategy

Expert Tip: When to Use Par Bonds

According to fixed-income analysts at major investment firms, par bonds are often preferred when:

  • Rates are stableor expected to rise gradually.
  • Investors are building aladdered bond portfolio.
  • There’s a need forpredictable cash flowwithout paying a premium.

In contrast, premium bonds may offer higher coupons (income), while discount bonds might offer capital appreciation if held to maturity.

Common Misconceptions

Myth: "A bond at par is always better than one sold at a discount or premium."
Reality: A bond's pricing does not reflect its superiority. What matters is yield-to-maturity, duration, and whether the bond matches your strategy.

FAQs

Is a par bond a good investment?
Yes—if its yield, maturity, and credit risk align with your financial goals. Par bonds offer clarity in valuation and are a common building block for diversified portfolios.

Can a par bond become a discount or premium bond?
Yes. After issuance, its market price fluctuates with interest rates. If market rates rise, it may trade at a discount; if they fall, it may trade at a premium.

What happens when a bond matures?
You receive the bond’s face value back and the final interest payment. The bond then ceases to exist.

Key Takeaways

  • Apar bondis sold at its face value, typically $1,000.
  • Its price equals its value because thecoupon rate = market interest rate.
  • Bond prices and interest rates move in opposite directions.
  • Par bonds are neutral in valuation but can later trade at adiscount or premium.
  • The right bond depends on yourobjectives, not the price label.

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AccountingBody Editorial Team