Bonds
What Is a Bond?
A bond is basically a loan you give to a company or government.
- They borrow money from you (by selling the bond)
- They promise to pay you back later (maturity date)
- They also pay interest regularly (like every 6 months) until the bond matures
Simple Example:
You buy a 10-year bond from the U.S. government for $1,000.
- They pay you 5% interest each year = $50/year.
- After 10 years, they give you your $1,000 back.
Bond Calculator
Annual Interest
$50.00
Total Interest
$500.00
Total Return
$1500.00
How Bonds Work
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| 1. You buy the bond | You pay the face value (e.g., $1,000) |
| 2. You earn interest | You get regular payments (e.g., $50 every year) |
| 3. Maturity date arrives | The borrower pays you back your original $1,000 |
Types of Bonds
| Type | Who Issues It | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| Government Bonds | U.S. Treasury, other governments | Low (very safe) |
| Corporate Bonds | Companies (like Apple, Tesla) | Medium (depends on company) |
| Municipal Bonds | Local cities or states | Low–Medium |
Why Invest in Bonds?
💰
Steady income
You get regular interest payments
🛡️
Lower risk
Safer than stocks (especially government bonds)
⚖️
Diversification
Helps balance your portfolio
📅
Predictability
You know how much you'll get and when
Risks of Bonds
| Risk | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Interest Rate Risk | If rates go up, bond prices go down |
| Default Risk | The borrower might not pay you back |
| Inflation Risk | Inflation can erode your returns |
Bonds vs. Stocks
| Feature | Bonds | Stocks |
|---|---|---|
| What you own | Debt (you're a lender) | Equity (you're an owner) |
| Risk | Lower | Higher |
| Return potential | Lower but steady | Higher but unpredictable |
| Income | Fixed interest payments | Dividends (optional) |
| Maturity | Yes (you get money back) | No (stock can go to zero) |
Summary
Bonds = You lend money → Get interest → Get your money back later
- Safer than stocks
- Good for steady income
- Helps balance your portfolio