investing

junk bond

A high-risk, high-yield bond rated below investment grade (below BBB− by S&P or Baa3 by Moody's), issued by companies with weaker credit profiles.

Example

Michael Milken became famous in the 1980s for using junk bonds to finance corporate takeovers.

Memory Tip

Junk bond = corporate JUNK. Riskier companies offering higher rates to attract buyers.

Why It Matters

Junk bonds matter because they represent a trade-off between higher potential returns and significantly greater risk of default. Understanding this term helps investors make informed decisions about portfolio allocation and assess whether the extra yield compensates them for the possibility of losing their entire investment.

Common Misconception

Many people assume junk bonds are always a bad investment to avoid entirely, but experienced investors sometimes include them strategically in diversified portfolios to earn higher yields. The term junk is descriptive of credit quality, not necessarily a judgment that they should never be purchased.

In Practice

A struggling retail company might issue a junk bond offering 10 percent annual yield when government bonds pay only 4 percent. An investor who buys 10000 dollars of these bonds receives 1000 dollars yearly in interest, but faces real risk that the company could default and they lose their principal investment entirely.

Etymology

Colloquial American term popularized in the 1980s during the leveraged buyout era.

Common Misspellings

jung bondjunk bondejunk bonnd
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Related Terms

high-yield bondcredit rating

More in investing

Other investing terms you should know

appreciationAn increase in the value of an asset over time.bondA fixed-income investment where an investor loans money to adiversificationA risk management strategy that mixes a wide variety of invedividendA payment made by a corporation to its shareholders, usuallyexpense ratioThe annual fee that mutual funds or ETFs charge investors, efixed incomeInvestments that provide a regular, predetermined return, su

See Also

speculative gradedefault risk
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