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Corporate Bond: Definition, How It Works, Types & Risks

Corporate Bond — A debt security issued by a corporation to raise capital. The investor lends money to the company and, in return, receives periodic coupon payments plus the return of face value at maturity. Corporate bonds typically offer higher yields than government bonds to compensate for the additional credit risk.

How Corporate Bonds Work

When a company needs capital — for expansion, acquisitions, refinancing debt, or general operations — it has two primary options: issue equity (sell ownership) or issue debt (borrow). Corporate bonds are the borrowing route.

The mechanics are straightforward. The company issues bonds with a set face value (usually $1,000), a fixed coupon rate, and a maturity date. Investors buy these bonds on the primary market (at issuance) or the secondary market (from other investors). The company makes semiannual interest payments and returns the face value when the bond matures.

Corporate bonds are governed by an indenture — a legal contract between the issuer and bondholders that specifies the coupon rate, maturity, payment schedule, covenants (restrictions on the issuer’s behavior), and what happens in default. A trustee (usually a bank) oversees compliance on behalf of bondholders.

Why Companies Issue Bonds Instead of Stock

Debt has structural advantages over equity for issuers. Interest payments are tax-deductible, which lowers the effective cost of debt. Bonds don’t dilute existing shareholders — no new shares are created, so earnings per share isn’t affected. And bondholders have no voting rights, so management retains full control.

The tradeoff: debt creates a fixed obligation. Miss a coupon payment, and the company can be forced into default or bankruptcy. Equity has no such obligation — dividends are optional.

Types of Corporate Bonds

TypeDescriptionRisk / Yield
Investment-GradeRated BBB− or higher (S&P) / Baa3 or higher (Moody’s); issued by financially stable companiesLower yield, lower default risk
High-Yield (Junk)Rated below BBB− / Baa3; issued by companies with weaker financials or higher leverageHigher yield, higher default risk
SecuredBacked by specific collateral (property, equipment, receivables)Lower risk — investors have a claim on assets if the issuer defaults
Unsecured (Debentures)Backed only by the issuer’s creditworthiness — no specific collateralHigher risk than secured; most corporate bonds fall into this category
CallableIssuer can redeem before maturity, typically after a set periodSlightly higher coupon to compensate for call risk
ConvertibleBondholder can convert to a specified number of the issuer’s sharesLower coupon — the conversion option has value on its own
Zero-CouponNo periodic interest; sold at a deep discount to face valueAll return comes from price appreciation to par at maturity

Credit Ratings and Corporate Bonds

The credit rating is the single most important factor in determining a corporate bond’s yield. Rating agencies — S&P Global, Moody’s, and Fitch — assess the issuer’s financial health and assign a grade that reflects the probability of default.

S&P / FitchMoody’sCategoryTypical Issuers
AAAAaaInvestment GradeMicrosoft, Johnson & Johnson (rare — very few AAA corporates remain)
AAAaInvestment GradeApple, Google parent Alphabet
AAInvestment GradeLarge-cap corporates with solid fundamentals
BBBBaaInvestment Grade (lowest tier)The largest segment of the corporate bond market
BBBaHigh YieldLeveraged companies, fallen angels
BBHigh YieldSpeculative-grade issuers
CCC and belowCaa and belowHigh Yield (distressed)Companies at significant risk of default

The yield difference between a corporate bond and a Treasury bond of the same maturity is called the credit spread. This spread widens when the economy weakens (investors demand more compensation for credit risk) and tightens during expansions (confidence is high, defaults are low).

Corporate Bond Yields

A corporate bond’s yield to maturity can be broken into components:

Corporate Bond Yield Components Corporate YTM = Risk-Free Rate + Credit Spread + Liquidity Premium

The risk-free rate is typically the Treasury yield for the same maturity. The credit spread compensates for default risk. The liquidity premium reflects the fact that most corporate bonds trade less frequently than Treasuries, making them harder to sell quickly at a fair price.

Risks of Corporate Bonds

Credit / default risk. The issuer might fail to make coupon payments or return principal. This is the defining risk that separates corporates from Treasuries. If the company goes bankrupt, bondholders line up in the creditor hierarchy — senior secured bondholders get paid first, subordinated bondholders last, and equity holders get whatever remains (often nothing).

Interest rate risk. Like all bonds, corporates lose value when interest rates rise. The sensitivity depends on duration — longer-maturity and lower-coupon bonds are more exposed.

Downgrade risk. Even without default, a credit rating downgrade pushes the bond’s price down as the market demands a wider spread. A downgrade from BBB to BB (investment grade to junk) can trigger forced selling by institutional investors whose mandates prohibit holding below-investment-grade debt.

Liquidity risk. Corporate bonds trade over-the-counter (OTC), not on centralized exchanges. Many issues trade infrequently, and the bid-ask spread can be wide. Selling a large position quickly may require accepting a lower price.

Call risk. Callable bonds can be redeemed early when rates fall, forcing you to reinvest at lower yields — right when you’d rather keep collecting the higher coupon.

Corporate Bonds vs. Other Bond Types

FeatureCorporate BondsTreasury BondsMunicipal Bonds
IssuerCorporationsU.S. federal governmentState / local governments
Credit riskVaries (AAA to CCC)Essentially zeroGenerally low (varies by issuer)
YieldHighest (for comparable maturity)Lowest (risk-free benchmark)Lower pre-tax, but competitive after-tax
Tax treatmentFully taxable (federal + state)Exempt from state/local taxesOften exempt from federal tax (and state if in-state)
LiquidityModerate (varies by issue)Very highLow to moderate
Typical investorIncome seekers, institutional investorsSafety-first investors, benchmarksHigh-tax-bracket individuals

For a full side-by-side, see Stocks vs. Bonds. For more on how bonds fit into a portfolio, see How Bonds Work and Corporate Bonds Guide.

How to Buy Corporate Bonds

Individual corporate bonds can be purchased through most brokerage accounts. FINRA’s TRACE system provides pricing transparency for the OTC market. However, the minimum purchase is typically $1,000 (one bond), and liquidity can be limited for smaller issues.

Many investors prefer corporate bond ETFs or mutual funds, which offer instant diversification across hundreds of issuers and much better liquidity. Investment-grade corporate bond ETFs track indices like the Bloomberg U.S. Corporate Bond Index, while high-yield ETFs focus on below-investment-grade issuers.

Key Takeaways

  • Corporate bonds are debt securities issued by companies, typically offering higher yields than Treasuries to compensate for credit risk.
  • They range from AAA-rated investment-grade bonds to CCC-rated junk bonds — the credit rating drives the yield.
  • The credit spread (yield above Treasuries) reflects default risk, liquidity risk, and overall market sentiment.
  • Key risks include credit/default risk, interest rate risk, downgrade risk, liquidity risk, and call risk.
  • Most investors access corporate bonds through ETFs or mutual funds rather than buying individual issues.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are corporate bonds safe?

Investment-grade corporate bonds from blue-chip companies like Apple or Microsoft have very low default rates historically — well under 1% over 10 years. High-yield bonds carry significantly more risk, with historical default rates ranging from 2–5% annually depending on economic conditions. No corporate bond is as safe as a U.S. Treasury.

How are corporate bonds taxed?

Interest income from corporate bonds is taxed as ordinary income at both the federal and state level. If you sell a bond for more than you paid, the capital gain is taxed separately. This full taxation is a disadvantage compared to Treasuries (exempt from state tax) and munis (often exempt from federal tax).

What happens if the company goes bankrupt?

Bondholders are creditors and have priority over stockholders in bankruptcy. Senior secured bondholders are paid first from asset liquidation. Unsecured (debenture) holders come next. Subordinated bondholders are last among debt holders. Recovery rates vary widely — investment-grade bonds typically recover 40–60 cents on the dollar in bankruptcy, while deeply distressed debt may recover far less.

What is the difference between a corporate bond and a corporate note?

The difference is maturity. Bonds technically mature in more than 10 years, while notes mature in 1–10 years. In practice, the market uses “bond” loosely to refer to any corporate debt security regardless of maturity. The mechanics — coupons, face value, credit ratings — are the same.

Should I buy individual corporate bonds or a bond fund?

For most investors, bond ETFs or mutual funds are the better choice. They provide diversification across hundreds of issuers (reducing the impact of any single default), better liquidity, and professional management — all for a modest expense ratio. Individual bonds make sense primarily for larger portfolios where you can build a diversified ladder of 20+ positions.