What Is Discount Yield?

What Is Discount Yield?

The discount yield is a way of calculating a bond's return when it is sold at a discount to its face value, expressed as a percentage. Bonds that use bond accretion can be issued a par value, at a discount or a premium, and accretion is used to move the discount amount into bond income over the remaining life of the bond. Securities that are sold at a discount use the discount yield to calculate the investor's rate of return, and this method is different than bond accretion. Discount yield computes a discount bond investor's return on investment (ROI) if the bond is held until maturity. Bond accretion means that the $80 discount is posted to bond income over the 10-year life, and an investor can use a straight-line method or the effective interest rate method.

Discount yield computes the expected return of a bond purchased at a discount and held until maturity.

What Is the Discount Yield?

The discount yield is a way of calculating a bond's return when it is sold at a discount to its face value, expressed as a percentage. Discount yield is commonly used to calculate the yield on municipal notes, commercial paper and treasury bills sold at a discount.

Discount yield computes the expected return of a bond purchased at a discount and held until maturity.
Discount yield is computed using a standardized 30-day month and 360-day year.
This calculation is commonly used for evaluating Treasury bills and zero-coupon bonds.

The Formula for Discount Yield Is:

Discount yield is calculated as and the formula uses a 30-day month and 360-day year to simplify the calculation.

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Understanding the Discount Yield

Discount yield computes a discount bond investor's return on investment (ROI) if the bond is held until maturity. A Treasury bill is issued at a discount from par value (face amount), along with many forms of commercial paper and municipal notes, which are short-term debt instruments issued by municipalities. U.S. Treasury bills have a maximum maturity of six months (26 weeks), while Treasury notes and bonds have longer maturity dates.

If a security is sold before the maturity date, the rate of return earned by the investor is different, and the new rate of return is based on the sale price of the security. If, for example, the $1,000 corporate bond purchased for $920 is sold for $1,100 five years after the purchase date, the investor has a gain on the sale. The investor must determine the amount of the bond discount that is posted to income before the sale and must compare that with the $1,100 sale price to calculate the gain.

A zero-coupon bond is a another example of a discount bond. Depending on the length of time until maturity, zero-coupon bonds can be issued at substantial discounts to par, sometimes 20% or more. Because a bond will always pay its full, face value, at maturity — assuming no credit events occur — zero-coupon bonds will steadily rise in price as the maturity date approaches. These bonds don't make periodic interest payments and will only make one payment of the face value to the holder at maturity.

Assume, for example, that an investor purchases a $10,000 Treasury bill at a $300 discount from par value (a price of $9,700), and that the security matures in 120 days. In this case, the discount yield is ($300 discount)[/$10,000 par value] * 360/120 days to maturity, or a 9% dividend yield.

The Differences Between Discount Yield and Accretion

Securities that are sold at a discount use the discount yield to calculate the investor's rate of return, and this method is different than bond accretion. Bonds that use bond accretion can be issued a par value, at a discount or a premium, and accretion is used to move the discount amount into bond income over the remaining life of the bond.

Assume, for example, that an investor purchases a $1,000 corporate bond for $920, and the bond matures in 10 years. Since the investor receives $1,000 at maturity, the $80 discount is bond income to the owner, along with interest earned on the bond. Bond accretion means that the $80 discount is posted to bond income over the 10-year life, and an investor can use a straight-line method or the effective interest rate method. Straight-line posts the same dollar amount into bond income each year, and the effective interest rate method uses a more complex formula to calculate the bond income amount.

Related terms:

Accreted Value

Accreted value is a bond’s current value on a balance sheet including the interest accrued even though that is not paid until the bond matures. read more

Accretion

Accretion is business growth from internal expansion or through mergers and acquisitions. read more

At a Discount

"At a discount" is a phrase used to describe the practice of selling stocks, or other securities, below their current market value read more

Bank Discount Basis

Bank discount basis is a convention used when quoting prices for fixed income securities sold at a discount, such as U.S. Treasury bills. read more

Coupon Equivalent Rate (CER)

The coupon equivalent rate (CER) is an alternative calculation of coupon rate used to compare zero-coupon and coupon fixed-income securities. read more

Discount Bond

A discount bond is one that issues for less than its par—or face—value, or a bond that trades for less than its face value in the secondary market. 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

What is Maturity Date?

The maturity date is when a debt comes due and all principal and/or interest must be repaid to creditors. read more

Money Market Yield

The money market yield is the interest rate earned by investing in securities with high liquidity and maturities of less than one year. read more

Par Value

Par value can refer to either the face value of a bond or the stock value stated in the corporate charter. read more