What are Corporate Bonds?
Company debt securities - higher returns than FD with moderate risk
What are Corporate Bonds?
Corporate Bonds are debt securities issued by companies to raise funds for business operations, expansion, or refinancing existing debt. When you buy a corporate bond, you're essentially lending money to the company in exchange for regular interest payments and return of principal at maturity.
Unlike stocks where you become a part-owner, bonds make you a creditor. The company promises to pay you a fixed interest rate (coupon) periodically and return your principal amount when the bond matures. Corporate bonds typically offer higher returns than government bonds and fixed deposits.
💡 Key Point: Corporate bonds offer a middle ground between the safety of FDs and the volatility of stocks, providing predictable income with moderate risk.
How Corporate Bonds Work
1. Bond Issuance
- • Company decides to raise funds
- • Sets coupon rate and maturity
- • Gets credit rating from agencies
- • Issues bonds to investors
- • Receives funds for business use
2. Interest Payments
- • Regular coupon payments (quarterly/annual)
- • Fixed percentage of face value
- • Paid regardless of company profits
- • Priority over dividend payments
- • Taxable as per income tax slabs
3. Trading & Liquidity
- • Can be traded on stock exchanges
- • Price fluctuates with interest rates
- • Lower liquidity than stocks
- • Bid-ask spreads may be wide
- • Hold to maturity for guaranteed returns
4. Maturity & Redemption
- • Principal repaid at maturity
- • Face value returned to investors
- • Early redemption possible (callable bonds)
- • Default risk if company fails
- • Recovery depends on company assets
Types of Corporate Bonds
Secured Bonds
- • Backed by company assets
- • Lower risk, lower returns
- • Asset liquidation in default
- • Priority in bankruptcy
- • Examples: Asset-backed securities
Unsecured Bonds (Debentures)
- • No specific asset backing
- • Higher risk, higher returns
- • Based on company creditworthiness
- • Most common type in India
- • Examples: Most corporate bonds
Convertible Bonds
- • Can convert to company shares
- • Lower coupon rates
- • Upside potential with equity
- • Complex pricing mechanism
- • Popular with growth companies
Callable Bonds
- • Company can redeem early
- • Higher coupon to compensate
- • Reinvestment risk for investors
- • Called when rates fall
- • Common in falling rate environment
Credit Ratings & Risk Assessment
Rating Agencies in India
CRISIL, ICRA, CARE Ratings, India Ratings & Research, Brickwork Ratings
Investment Grade
Speculative Grade
Bond Returns Calculator
vs Other Investments
Risk Factors
⚠️ Credit Risk
Company may default
⚠️ Interest Rate Risk
Bond prices fall when rates rise
⚠️ Liquidity Risk
May be hard to sell quickly
⚠️ Inflation Risk
Fixed returns lose purchasing power
How to Invest
🏦 Through Banks
Private placement bonds
📈 Stock Exchanges
NSE, BSE bond platforms
💼 Brokers
Zerodha, Groww, Angel One
🏛️ Mutual Funds
Debt funds investing in bonds
Frequently Asked Questions
Are corporate bonds safe investments?
Safety depends on the company's credit rating. AAA-rated bonds are very safe, while lower-rated bonds carry higher risk. They're generally safer than stocks but riskier than FDs.
How is interest from corporate bonds taxed?
Interest income is added to your total income and taxed as per your income tax slab. Capital gains on bond trading are taxed separately based on holding period.
Can I sell corporate bonds before maturity?
Yes, if listed on exchanges, but liquidity may be low. You may have to sell at a discount or premium to face value depending on interest rate movements.
What happens if the company defaults?
Bondholders have priority over shareholders in asset liquidation. Recovery depends on company assets and may take years through legal processes. Rating helps assess this risk.
Should I invest in individual bonds or bond funds?
Individual bonds offer predictable returns if held to maturity but require large investments. Bond funds provide diversification and professional management with smaller amounts.
What's the minimum investment in corporate bonds?
Typically ₹10,000 to ₹1,00,000 depending on the bond. Some bonds have higher minimum investments. Bond funds allow investment from as low as ₹500.