
Benchmark bond definition
A benchmark bond is a bond that provides a standard against which the performance of other bonds can be measured. While the characteristics of the bond determine the decision regarding what equity to include as a benchmark is made by a committee following broad rules about the operations of the companies represented by a benchmark index, including a benchmark bond or replacing one benchmark bond with another. The concept of a benchmark bond is similar to benchmark equity, but a benchmark bond works in a slightly different way. Bond investors and fund managers use the benchmark bond as a yardstick for measuring bond performance and to understand what rate of return to demand in excess of the benchmark return. An investor that wants to gauge the return for a 10-year corporate bond, which most likely has more risk than a government bond, will compare the yield to the 10-year Treasury bond.

What Is a Benchmark Bond?
A benchmark bond is a bond that provides a standard against which the performance of other bonds can be measured. Government bonds are almost always used as benchmark bonds such as on-the-run U.S. Treasuries.
A benchmark bond is sometimes referred to as an example of a benchmark issue or bellwether issue.



How Benchmark Bonds Work
Benchmark equity, like the S&P 500 or Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), is used to track the performance of company stocks trading on the markets. Stock investors can run a comparison of a company’s shares with similar equity in the benchmark to understand what level the company’s shares are performing at. The concept of a benchmark bond is similar to benchmark equity, but a benchmark bond works in a slightly different way.
Essentially, the benchmark bond is a security which the prices of other bonds react to. Bond investors and fund managers use the benchmark bond as a yardstick for measuring bond performance and to understand what rate of return to demand in excess of the benchmark return. For a comparison to be appropriate and useful, the benchmark and the bond being measured against it should have comparable liquidity, issue size, and coupon. For example, the 10-year US Treasury bond is mostly used as a benchmark for 10-year bonds in the market. Because Treasury securities are considered to be riskless investments guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the US government, these securities offer a risk-free return. An investor that wants to gauge the return for a 10-year corporate bond, which most likely has more risk than a government bond, will compare the yield to the 10-year Treasury bond. If the yield on a 10-year T-bond is going for 2.85%, the investor will demand a risk premium above 2.85% from the corporate bond issuers.
More specifically, the benchmark bond is the latest issue within a given maturity. While the characteristics of the bond determine the decision regarding what equity to include as a benchmark is made by a committee following broad rules about the operations of the companies represented by a benchmark index, including a benchmark bond or replacing one benchmark bond with another. Characteristics include maturity date, credit rating, issue size, and liquidity. A bond that meets the stated criteria is included as a benchmark. In addition, on the rebalance date, which could change the bond index constituents, bonds no longer meeting the index criteria will be removed, and any new bonds that do meet the criteria will be added.
Examples of Benchmark Bonds
The Treasury, for example, issues and re-issues 5-year bonds, used as a benchmark bond for 5-year bonds, on a frequent basis. As months and years go by, the 5-year bond maturity date reduces to 4.5, 4, 3.8, 3.7, 3 years, and so on, until it reaches its maturity date. However, in a normal interest rate environment, bond yields go down as the bond approaches maturity. In effect, longer-term bonds have higher yields than shorter-term bonds. Therefore, a benchmark that approaches maturity will be valued at successively lower yields. To bring the yield back up, the government will issue another 5-year bond. This latest issue will replace the older issue as the benchmark bond for 5-year bonds.
Related terms:
30-Year Treasury
The 30-Year Treasury, formerly the bellwether U.S. bond, is a U.S. Treasury debt obligation that has a maturity of 30 years. read more
Bond Equity Earnings Yield Ratio (BEER)
The bond equity earnings yield ratio (BEER) is a measure that enables investors to use the bond yield to estimate the direction of the stock market. read more
Bellwether
A bellwether is a leading indicator that suggests the presence of a trend. Discover the pros and cons of using bellwethers as investment tools. read more
Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is
A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more
Corporate Bond
A corporate bond is an investment in the debt of a business, and is a common way for firms to raise debt capital. read more
Credit Rating
A credit rating is an assessment of the creditworthiness of a borrower—in general terms or with respect to a particular debt or financial obligation. read more
Debenture
A debenture is a type of debt issued by governments and corporations that lacks collateral and is therefore dependent on the creditworthiness and reputation of the issuer. read more
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) is a popular stock market index that tracks 30 U.S. blue-chip stocks. read more
Fixed Income & Examples
Fixed income refers to assets and securities that bear fixed cash flows for investors, such as fixed rate interest or dividends. read more
Government Bond
A government bond is issued by a government at the federal, state, or local level to raise debt capital. Treasuries are issued at the federal level. read more