Serial Bond

Serial Bond

A serial bond is a bond issue that is structured so that a portion of the outstanding bonds mature at regular intervals until all of the bonds have matured. If, for example, a serial bond for a $10 million stadium bond misses bond interest payments 15 years after the issue date, a certain dollar amount of bonds are already paid off before year 15. A serial bond is a bond issue that is structured so that a portion of the outstanding bonds mature at regular intervals until all of the bonds have matured. A bond issue with a sinking fund or a serial maturity has more creditworthiness than a bond issue that matures entirely on one maturity date. In a sinking fund, the issuer makes periodic payment to the bond issue's trustee, and the trustee purchases bonds in the open market and retires the bonds.

A serial bond is a multiple debt issue that matures at staggered intervals before all segments finally mature.

What Is a Serial Bond?

A serial bond is a bond issue that is structured so that a portion of the outstanding bonds mature at regular intervals until all of the bonds have matured. Because the bonds mature gradually over a period of years, these bonds are used to finance projects that provide a consistent income stream for bond repayment. The entire bond issue is sold to the public on the same date, and the maturity dates are stated in the offering documents.

A serial bond is a multiple debt issue that matures at staggered intervals before all segments finally mature.
Each maturation segment in the serial bond is issued concurrently, with the terms of the repayment schedule spelled out in the offering prospectus.
Serial bonds do not utilize sinking funds, and instead rely on the revenues generated from the project that the bond is used to fund, making them popular for certain municipal bonds.

Understanding Serial Bonds

If an issuer reduces the dollar amount of bonds outstanding, it reduces the risk that the issuer misses a principal repayment or interest payment and defaults on the bond issue. While a serial bond issue requires the issuer to repay specific bondholders on a stated date, other bond issues are structured with a sinking fund.

A serial bond structure is a common strategy for municipal revenue bonds because these bonds are issued for fee-generating projects built by states and cities. Assume, for example, that a city builds a sports stadium that is funded with parking fees, stadium concession income, and lease income. If the bond issuer believes that the facility can generate income consistently each year, it can structure the bond for serial maturity dates. As the total amount of bonds outstanding decreases, the future risk on the bond issue defaulting also declines.

The Differences Between Sinking Funds and Serial Bond Issues

In a sinking fund, the issuer makes periodic payment to the bond issue's trustee, and the trustee purchases bonds in the open market and retires the bonds. The trustee represents the interests of the bondholders and must use the sinking fund payments to buy bonds and retire them. Instead of retiring bonds according to a specific schedule, the trustee purchases bond from any bondholder who is willing to sell his holdings. Both sinking funds and serial bond issues reduce the total dollar amount of bonds outstanding over time.

Examples of Bond Rating Companies

Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investor Services both provide bond ratings that assess the ability of a bond issuer to repay principal and interest payments on time. A bond issue with a sinking fund or a serial maturity has more creditworthiness than a bond issue that matures entirely on one maturity date. If, for example, a serial bond for a $10 million stadium bond misses bond interest payments 15 years after the issue date, a certain dollar amount of bonds are already paid off before year 15. Because fewer bonds are outstanding, the issuer may be able to recover financially and pay the interest payments that were missed.

Related terms:

Average Life

Average life is the length of time the principal of a debt issue is expected to be outstanding. The average life is an average period before a debt is repaid through amortization or sinking fund payments. read more

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

Bondholder

A bondholder is an individual or other entity who owns the bond of a company or government and thus becomes a creditor to the bond's issuer. read more

Closed-End Indenture

A closed-end indenture is a term in a bond contract which guarantees that the collateral used to back the bond is not backing another bond. read more

Concession

In investing, a concession is a selling group's compensation in a stock or bond underwriting agreement. Discover more about concessions here. read more

Creditworthiness

Creditworthiness is how a lender determines that you will default on your debt obligations or how worthy you are to receive new credit. read more

Default

A default happens when a borrower fails to repay a portion or all of a debt, including interest or principal. 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

Holdings

Holdings are the securities held within the portfolio of a mutual fund, hedge fund, pension fund, or any other fund type. read more