Canada, RRB 2% 1dec2041, CAD (FIGI BBG0000J4DX8, CA135087YK42, WKN A0NW7L)
国内債券, 物価連動元本, Senior Unsecured
国内債券, 物価連動元本, Senior Unsecured
|
Canada is a country in North America. Its advanced economy relies chiefly upon its abundant natural resources and well-developed international trade networks.
The Canadian bond market is represented by government, municipal and corporate bonds. There are ...
Canada is a country in North America. Its advanced economy relies chiefly upon its abundant natural resources and well-developed international trade networks.
The Canadian bond market is represented by government, municipal and corporate bonds. There are also “maple bonds” - Canadian-dollar denominated bonds issued by foreign corporations or borrowers in the Canadian fixed income market. The Canadian government bond market is represented by Government of Canada Bonds which consist of two segments: Canadian dollar bonds and US dollar bonds issued by the Bank of Canada on behalf of the Canadian Government. Government of Canada Bonds are represented by: • Government of Canada Domestic Nominal Bonds - bonds with a semi-annual coupon income and a maturity of 2, 3, 5, 10, 30, 50 years. • Government of Canada Domestic Treasury Bills - short-term bonds with a zero coupon, with a maturity of less than a year. • Regular Treasury Bills are bills that are issued for a maturity of three months or more. • Fungible and Non-fungible Cash-management Bills are bills that are issued with a maturity of less than three months. • Government of Canada Domestic Real Return Bonds (RRBs) are Canadian government bonds. Unlike standard marketable bonds, RRBs are fixed-coupon, interest payments consist of a standard coupon amount and an inflation component that is paid on the maturity date. RRBs provide protection from inflation. Corporate bonds in Canada are held mainly by institutional investors such as life insurance companies, pension funds, deposit-taking institutions, and mutual funds. Life insurance companies have traditionally been the largest holders of corporate bonds. Since corporate bonds are mainly a buy-and-hold investment for most institutional investors, secondary market activity does not provide much insight into the inner workings of the market. Secondary market trading of corporate bonds is quite thin and generally represents a small portion of bond market trading in Canada. As a result, the level of liquidity is low and transaction costs are typically higher than for government bonds. |
|
CPI for the purposes of the ...
CPI for the purposes of the Bonds is defined as the All-items Consumer Price Index for Canada, not seasonally adjusted, as published by Statistics Canada. Interest on the Bonds consists of both a cash entitlement (Coupon Interest) payable in semi-annual installments on the Coupon Payment Dates in each year and an Inflation Compensation payable on Maturity for such series. Interest will accrue daily in such manner as will give rise to the Coupon Interest and Inflation Compensation entitlements set forth below. The Inflation Compensation accrued to any Date for the Bonds is defined as the product of the principal and the Index Ratio for that Date minus the principal.
もっと見る
非表示
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 次営業日 |
最も包括的なデータベースを探索
1 000 000
債券
80 234
株
167 970
ETF&投資信託
70 000
インデックス
最も効率的な方法でポートフォリオを追跡