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Find out the best practices for most financial modeling to price a bond, calculate coupon payments, and calculate a bond's yield to maturity in Microsoft Excel.
Find out how to calculate the yield to maturity of a zero-coupon bond, and learn why this calculation is simpler than one with a bond that has a coupon.
Yield to maturity measures a bond's expected returns if held to maturity. Unlike dividend yields, yield to maturities are forwards-looking, and take into consideration both income and capital gains.
How to calculate interest expense under three scenarios: bonds sold at a discount, at premium, and at face value.
Yield to maturity (YTM) is the annual expected return of a bond if held until maturity, also referred to as book yield.
Yield to Maturity is the estimated rate of return that an investor can expect from a bond. The value assumes that you hold the bond until maturity.
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