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In finance, the clean price[1] is the price of a bond excluding any interest accrued since bond's issuance and the most recent coupon payment. Comparatively, the dirty price is the price of a bond including the accrued interest. Therefore,
- Clean Price = Dirty Price − Accrued Interest
In Bloomberg Terminal or Reuters, bond prices are quoted using the clean price. Traders tend to think of bonds in terms of their clean prices.
Clean prices are more stable over time than dirty prices. When clean prices change, it is for an economic reason such as a change in interest rates or the bond issuer's credit quality. Dirty prices change day to day depending on the date relative to the coupon payment dates, as well as economic reasons.
Example
editPrice example:
XYZ Ltd. issues a bond with a $1000 face value and a $980 published price, with a coupon rate of 5% paid semi-annually and a maturity date of five years. The annual coupon payment is 5% of $1000, or $50. The investor receives a $25 coupon payment every six months until the maturity date.
In this case, $980 is the clean price of the bond. The bond price quoted to investors is $980 plus the accrued interest. Brokers quote the dirty price, found by adding the clean price and accrued interest since that day.
If the bond's last coupon payment was made on 1 June, on 1 September, the dirty price is: Clean Price + Accrued Interest (where accrued interest is the interest accumulated from 1 June to 31 August on the bond according to its coupon rate.)
The price changes continuously, as it depends on how many days have passed since the last coupon payment on the bond.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Clean Price Definition | Investopedia". Investopedia. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
Further reading
edit- Calculation of the clean price of a bond in a cash management bond repurchase operation, Bank of Canada. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
External links
edit- Clean price By Investopedia
- Calculate clean and dirty price of a bond by Financetrain