Convertible bond
A convertible bond is a corporate bond the holder can exchange for a fixed number of the issuer's shares, so it behaves like ordinary debt when the share price is low and tracks the shares once conversion becomes attractive.
See it move
A convertible bond with a €1,000 par value and a €25 conversion price converts into 40 shares. With the shares trading at €20, converting today would be worth 40 × €20 = €800. The bond actually trades at €880, €80 above that, an 80 ÷ 800 = 10% conversion premium — the price of keeping the coupon and the straight-bond floor while still holding the right to convert later.
The formula
Variables
- Conversion ratio (shares per bond)
- Par (face) value of the bond (€)
- Conversion price (€ per share)
- Conversion value (€)
- Current market price of the share (€ per share)
Gives the number of shares one bond converts into, and what those shares are worth at the current share price.
Variables
- Conversion premium (%)
- Market price of the convertible bond (€)
- Conversion value (€)
Measures how much extra, as a percentage of conversion value, the market is paying for the bond over converting it immediately.