Coupon Stripping

Coupon Stripping

Coupon stripping is the separation of a straight bond's periodic interest payments from its principal repayment obligation to create a series of individual securities. In coupon stripping, the underlying bond becomes a zero-coupon bond known as a strip bond and each interest payment becomes its own separate zero-coupon bond. For example, if an investment bank held a $50 million Treasury note that paid 5% interest annually for five years, coupon stripping would turn that bond into six new zero-coupon bonds — one $50 million bond that matures in five years and five $2.5 million (5% x $50 million) bonds that would each mature in one of the coming five years. Coupon stripping can also divide up a larger bond with a particular interest rate into a series of smaller bonds with different interest rates to satisfy investors' demands for particular types of bonds. Coupon stripping bifurcates the coupon interest and principal repayment features of a bond, creating two individual securities that both function as zero-coupon bonds.

Coupon stripping bifurcates the coupon interest and principal repayment features of a bond, creating two individual securities that both function as zero-coupon bonds.

What Is Coupon Stripping?

Coupon stripping is the separation of a straight bond's periodic interest payments from its principal repayment obligation to create a series of individual securities. In coupon stripping, the underlying bond becomes a zero-coupon bond known as a strip bond and each interest payment becomes its own separate zero-coupon bond.

Coupon stripping bifurcates the coupon interest and principal repayment features of a bond, creating two individual securities that both function as zero-coupon bonds.
Since interest payments are not made on the strip bond before maturity, there is no reinvestment risk.
Stripping coupons from U.S. Treasuries creates STRIPS, or Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities.
For tax purposes, the IRS treats the value earned at maturity on a strip bond as earned interest.

How Coupon Stripping Works

Coupon stripping is a structural technique that involves purchasing a bond and detaching its principal and interest components into individual securities that can be sold independently. The bond is repackaged into a number of zero-coupon or strip securities with varying maturity dates.

The securitization of a bond’s interest payment coupons is worthwhile when it results in the sum of the parts being larger than the whole. In contrast, if the proceeds from stripping turn out to be the same as the cost of purchasing the bonds then coupon stripping would be a losing proposition.

Each coupon payment entitles its holder to a specified cash return on a specific date. In addition, the body of the security calls for repayment of the principal amount at maturity.

The market price of a strip bond reflects the issuer’s credit rating and the present value of the maturity amount which is determined by the time to maturity and the prevailing interest rates in the economy. The farther away from the maturity date, the lower the present value, and vice versa. The lower the interest rates in the economy, the higher the present value of the zero-coupon bond, and vice versa.

The present value of the bond will fluctuate widely with changes in prevailing interest rates since there are no regular interest payments to stabilize the value. As a result, the impact of interest rate fluctuations on strip bonds, known as the bond duration, is higher than the impact on periodic coupon-paying bonds.

Coupon stripping is common practice in U.S. Treasuries, where they are known by the acronym STRIPS (Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities).

For example, if an investment bank held a $50 million Treasury note that paid 5% interest annually for five years, coupon stripping would turn that bond into six new zero-coupon bonds — one $50 million bond that matures in five years and five $2.5 million (5% x $50 million) bonds that would each mature in one of the coming five years. Each bond will sell at a different discount to face value based on its time to maturity.

Special Considerations

Coupon stripping can also divide up a larger bond with a particular interest rate into a series of smaller bonds with different interest rates to satisfy investors' demands for particular types of bonds. This practice is seen in the mortgage-backed security (MBS) market.

The zero-coupon bonds created from coupon stripping make no periodic interest payments to investors. The bondholder receives a payment at maturity. The spread between the purchase price and the par value at maturity represents the return earned on the investment. If the security is held to maturity, the return earned is taxable as interest income.

Even though the bondholder does not receive interest income, they are still required to report the imputed interest on the bond to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) each year. The amount of interest an investor must claim and pay taxes on a strip bond each year adds to the cost basis of the bond. If the bond is sold before it matures, a capital gain or loss may ensue.

Related terms:

Bond Valuation

Bond valuation is a technique for determining the theoretical fair value of a particular bond. 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

Capital Gain

Capital gain refers to an increase in a capital asset's value and is considered to be realized when the asset is sold. read more

Cost Basis

Cost basis is the original value of an asset for tax purposes, adjusted for stock splits, dividends and return of capital distributions.  read more

Certificate Of Government Receipts (COUGRs)

Certificates of Government Receipts are one of several synthetic stripped Treasury securities. read more

Coupon

A coupon is the annual interest rate paid on a bond, expressed as a percentage of the face value, also referred to as the "coupon rate." 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

Duration

Duration indicates the years it takes to receive a bond's true cost, weighing in the present value of all future coupon and principal payments. read more

Face Value

Face value is the nominal value or dollar value of a security stated by the issuer, also known as "par value" or simply "par." read more

Imputed Interest

Imputed interest describes interest the IRS considers paid for tax purposes, even though the debtor has made no interest payments.  read more