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§01 · INSIGHTS · GLOSSARY · 5 MIN · NOTE

Yield to Maturity (YTM)

The internal rate of return on all bond cash flows — coupons plus face-value redemption — assuming the bond is held to maturity and every coupon is reinvested at the same rate.

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Contents
  1. Definition
  2. How it is computed
  3. Why it matters for investors
  4. Worked example
  5. Caveats
  6. See also
  7. Primary source

Definition

Yield to Maturity (YTM) is the single discount rate that equates the present value of all future cash flows from a bond — periodic coupon payments plus the face-value repayment at maturity — to the bond's current market price (plus accrued interest). Mathematically it is the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) of the bond's cash-flow stream. The formula for a bond with n semi-annual periods, coupon C, face value F, and price P is:

P = Σ [C / (1 + y/2)^t] + F / (1 + y/2)^n

where y is the annual YTM and the sum runs from t = 1 to n. YTM is the fixed-income analogue of an equity's expected return — it tells investors how much they earn annually if every assumption holds. On NSE and BSE bond platforms, YTM is the primary quoted metric for secondary-market G-Secs and corporate bonds.

How it is computed

YTM has no closed-form algebraic solution; it is solved iteratively (Newton-Raphson or bisection). The inputs are: (a) current dirty price (clean price + accrued interest), (b) coupon rate and frequency, (c) face value, and (d) exact days to each cash-flow date. Indian G-Secs follow the Actual/Actual (ISDA) day-count convention; most corporate bonds use Actual/365. RBI's Negotiated Dealing System — Order Matching (NDS-OM) computes and displays YTM in real time on every trade. SEBI's ILDS Regulations 2008 require listed corporate bonds to disclose YTM in offer documents and on exchange platforms. A bond trading below par (market price < face value) will show a YTM higher than its coupon rate; above par, YTM < coupon rate; at par, YTM = coupon rate.

Why it matters for investors

YTM enables apples-to-apples comparison across bonds with different coupons, maturities, and prices. A 10-year G-Sec at 7.25% YTM and a 5-year AAA corporate bond at 7.90% YTM are immediately comparable after adjusting for credit spread and duration. YTM is also the basis for: (1) calculating current yield (annual coupon ÷ price — a cruder metric that ignores capital gain/loss to maturity); (2) deriving the G-Sec yield curve used by RBI for monetary policy signalling; and (3) pricing debt mutual fund NAVs daily via mark-to-market under SEBI's mutual fund regulations. However, YTM is a promised return, not a realised return — it assumes zero default and perfect reinvestment of every coupon at the same YTM, which rarely holds in practice.

Worked example

Consider the GOI 7.26% 2033 G-Sec (ISIN IN0020190042). On a hypothetical settlement date, the bond trades at a clean price of ₹99.60 with 180 days of accrued interest on a ₹100 face value. The dirty price = ₹99.60 + (7.26% × 180/365 × 100) = ₹99.60 + ₹3.578 = ₹103.178. Semi-annual coupon = ₹3.63 (half of 7.26%). With 9.5 years to maturity (19 semi-annual periods remain), solving iteratively:

₹103.178 = Σ [3.63 / (1 + y/2)^t] + 100 / (1 + y/2)^19

The YTM solves to approximately 6.98% per annum — below the coupon rate because the bond is trading above par. A NABARD AAA bond of similar tenor might quote YTM of 7.45%, implying a credit spread of ~47 bps over the G-Sec benchmark.

Caveats

Reinvestment assumption: YTM assumes coupons are reinvested at the same YTM — unrealistic if rates fall significantly after purchase. Realised yield (also called total return) will differ. Price sensitivity: YTM is inversely related to price; a 100 bps rise in yields on a 10-year bond causes roughly an 8–9% fall in price (quantified by modified duration). Credit events: If the issuer defaults, actual cash flows fall short of the YTM assumption. Tax drag: Post-Finance Act 2023, gains from debt MFs and bonds are taxed at slab rates (§50AA) for units acquired after 1 April 2023, reducing after-tax yield vs. the headline YTM figure. Always compare after-tax YTMs for personal finance decisions.

See also

Primary source

MintByte is registered with AMFI (ARN-314872) and APMI (APRN-01658). This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security.

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