25 KiB
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Session Notes - October 24, 2025
Session Overview
- Date: 2025-10-24
- Duration: ~60 minutes
- Format: Practice problems - Investment Planning focus (bond valuation, technical analysis, stock valuation)
- Main Topics: Preferred stock valuation, zero-coupon bond taxation, technical analysis (support/resistance), bond yields (YTM/YTC), bond yield rankings
- Days Until Exam: 17 days
Practice Problems Completed
Question 1: Preferred Stock Intrinsic Value (D.32)
Topic: D.32 Bond and stock valuation - Investment Planning domain (17% of exam)
Problem Given: What is the intrinsic value of a preferred stock yielding a 7% dividend, par value of $35, currently priced at $33, if the required rate of return is 9%?
Options:
- A) $25.67
- B) $27.22 ✓
- C) $33
- D) $35
Student's Initial Knowledge: "No ideas about this at all"
Student's Understanding After Teaching:
- ✓ Preferred stock has fixed dividends (like bonds)
- ✓ Common stock dividends are optional
- ✓ Preferred stock acts more like bonds than stocks
- ✓ Priority in bankruptcy: Bonds → Preferred → Common
Correct Answer: B) $27.22
Key Concept Taught: Preferred Stock Valuation
Formula: Intrinsic Value = Annual Dividend ÷ Required Rate of Return
This is a perpetuity formula because preferred stocks pay dividends forever.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Step 1: Calculate Annual Dividend
- Par value: $35
- Dividend yield: 7% of par
- Annual Dividend = $35 × 7% = $2.45 per year
Step 2: Calculate Intrinsic Value
- Intrinsic Value = $2.45 ÷ 0.09
- Intrinsic Value = $27.22
Why Not the Other Answers?
A) $25.67 ❌
- Wrong calculation
C) $33 ❌ - Common trap!
- This is the current market price
- Intrinsic value ≠ Market price
- Intrinsic value = What it SHOULD be worth
- Market price = What people are currently paying
D) $35 ❌ - Another trap!
- This is the par value
- Not the same as intrinsic value
Investment Analysis:
Current Price: $33 Intrinsic Value: $27.22
Conclusion: Stock is OVERVALUED
- If you buy at $33 when it's only worth $27.22, you're overpaying
- Your actual return: $2.45 ÷ $33 = 7.4% (less than your 9% requirement)
Decision: Don't buy at current price (wait for price to drop to $27.22 or below)
Understanding Level: EXCELLENT - Student had no prior knowledge, understood perpetuity formula perfectly after explanation
Question 2: Zero-Coupon Bond Taxation - OID Accretion (D.27, E.37)
Topics: D.27 Investment vehicles, E.37 Income tax calculations
Problem Given: On January 1, client purchased 10-year zero-coupon bond for $445 (par $1,000). Assuming annual compounding, what is the taxable interest in Year 2?
Options:
- A) 0%
- B) 37.53%
- C) 40.69% ✓
- D) 55.50%
Student's Initial Understanding:
- ✓ Buy at discount ($445), get $1,000 at maturity
- ✓ No coupon payments during life of bond
- ✓ Have to pay tax every year on "phantom income"
- ✗ Thought calculation was straight-line: ($1,000 - $445) ÷ 10 = $55.50/year
Correct Answer: C) $40.69 (closest to calculated $40.57)
The Critical Error: Straight-Line vs. Compound Interest
Student's Method (WRONG for IRS):
- ($1,000 - $445) ÷ 10 years = $55.50 per year
- Same amount every year
- This is straight-line amortization
IRS Required Method (CORRECT):
- Use compound interest accretion
- Bond grows at its yield-to-maturity rate each year
- Taxable amount increases each year
Step-by-Step Solution:
Step 1: Find the Implied Interest Rate (Yield to Maturity)
The bond grows from $445 to $1,000 in 10 years.
Formula: FV = PV × (1 + r)^n
$1,000 = $445 × (1 + r)^10
Solving:
- (1 + r)^10 = $1,000 ÷ $445 = 2.247
- 1 + r = 2.247^(1/10) = 1.0841
- r = 8.41% (yield to maturity)
Step 2: Calculate Year 1 Taxable Interest
Beginning of Year 1: $445.00
Year 1 interest = $445.00 × 8.41% = $37.42
End of Year 1: $445.00 + $37.42 = $482.42
Step 3: Calculate Year 2 Taxable Interest
Beginning of Year 2: $482.42
Year 2 interest = $482.42 × 8.41% = $40.57
End of Year 2: $482.42 + $40.57 = $522.99
Answer: Closest to $40.69 (Option C)
Year-by-Year Accretion Table:
| Year | Beginning Value | Interest (8.41%) | Ending Value | Tax Owed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $445.00 | $37.42 | $482.42 | $37.42 |
| 2 | $482.42 | $40.57 | $522.99 | $40.57 |
| 3 | $522.99 | $43.98 | $566.97 | $43.98 |
| ... | ... | ... | ... | ... |
| 10 | ~$922 | ~$78 | $1,000.00 | ~$78 |
Notice: Tax owed increases each year because the bond's value grows!
Why Not the Other Answers?
A) 0% ❌
- Completely wrong! You definitely pay tax on zero-coupon bonds
B) 37.53% ❌
- This is close to Year 1 interest ($37.42)
- Question asks for Year 2, not Year 1
D) 55.50% ❌
- This is the straight-line calculation: $555 ÷ 10
- Would be correct if interest didn't compound
- But IRS requires compound interest method
Key Concept: OID (Original Issue Discount)
OID = Original Issue Discount = $1,000 - $445 = $555 total
OID Accretion Rules:
- Must use compound interest method (not straight-line)
- Each year's accretion is taxable as ordinary interest income
- Taxable amount increases each year
- This is called "phantom income" - you pay tax on money you didn't receive!
Comparison: Straight-Line vs. Compound
Straight-Line (Student's method - WRONG):
- Every year: $55.50 tax
- Total over 10 years: $555 ✓
Compound Interest (IRS method - CORRECT):
- Year 1: $37.42
- Year 2: $40.57
- Year 3: $43.98
- ... increases each year
- Total over 10 years: $555 ✓
Same total, different timing! (Timing matters for taxes)
The Painful Reality of Zero-Coupon Bonds:
What You Receive: $0 cash each year What You Pay Tax On: $37.42 (Year 1), $40.57 (Year 2), etc.
This is "phantom income" - paying tax on money you didn't receive!
Why Would Anyone Buy These?
- Tax-deferred accounts (IRA, 401k) - no annual tax problem!
- Predictable future value - know exactly what you'll get
- No reinvestment risk - no coupons to worry about reinvesting
Understanding Level: VERY GOOD - Student understood concept of phantom income but needed correction on calculation method (compound vs. straight-line)
Question 3: Technical Analysis - Support and Resistance (D.29, D.34)
Topics: D.29 Market cycles, D.34 Investment strategies
Problem Given: CFP professional using technical analysis to purchase 500 shares of XYZ stock. Stock has been trading between $20 and $26. How would a technician refer to these pricing levels?
Options:
- A) $20 is support; $26 is resistance ✓
- B) $20 is resistance; $26 is support
- C) $20 is resistance; $26 is breakout
- D) $20 is support; $26 is breakout
Student's Initial Knowledge: "No idea about support, breakout, resistance - all these things at all"
Student's Understanding After Teaching:
- ✓ Technical analysis focuses on price movements and charts
- ✓ Fundamental analysis focuses on company financials
- ✓ Support = floor where price bounces up
- ✓ Resistance = ceiling where price bounces down
- ✓ Breakout = breaking through support or resistance
Correct Answer: A) $20 is support; $26 is resistance
Key Concepts Taught:
Technical Analysis vs. Fundamental Analysis
Technical Analysis:
- Focuses on price movements and chart patterns
- Believes past price patterns repeat
- Studies: Charts, volume, trend lines, support/resistance
Fundamental Analysis:
- Focuses on company financials
- Studies: Earnings, P/E ratio, revenue, balance sheet
- Determines intrinsic value
Support = The Floor
SUPPORT is a price level where stock tends to STOP FALLING and BOUNCE UP.
Why?
- Buyers think: "Wow, $20 is a great price! I'll buy!"
- Lots of buying demand at $20 → price stops falling
- Acts as a FLOOR holding the price up
In the Question: $20 is SUPPORT
- Stock has bounced up from $20 multiple times
Resistance = The Ceiling
RESISTANCE is a price level where stock tends to STOP RISING and BOUNCE DOWN.
Why?
- Sellers think: "Great! It hit $26 again, time to take profits!"
- Lots of selling pressure at $26 → price stops rising
- Acts as a CEILING holding the price down
In the Question: $26 is RESISTANCE
- Stock has bounced down from $26 multiple times
Breakout = Breaking Through
BREAKOUT happens when price breaks through support or resistance.
Two Types:
1. Upward Breakout (breaks through resistance):
- Stock breaks ABOVE $26 (old resistance)
- Seen as bullish signal (price going higher)
- Technical analysts might buy
2. Downward Breakout (breaks through support):
- Stock breaks BELOW $20 (old support)
- Seen as bearish signal (price going lower)
- Technical analysts might sell
Visual Representation
Price Chart for XYZ Stock:
$28 |
$27 |
$26 |------------------------● ← RESISTANCE (ceiling)
$25 | ● /|\
$24 | ● / \ / | \
$23 | ● / \ / \ / | \
$22 | / \ / ● \ / | ●
$21 | / ● \/ | / \
$20 |●--------------------●--------● ← SUPPORT (floor)
$19 |
└─────────────────────────────────→ Time
Stock is trading in a range between $20 (support) and $26 (resistance).
Memory Trick
Think of a ball bouncing in a room:
SUPPORT = FLOOR (ball bounces UP when it hits floor)
RESISTANCE = CEILING (ball bounces DOWN when it hits ceiling)
BREAKOUT = Ball breaks through floor or ceiling
Why Not the Other Answers?
B) $20 is resistance; $26 is support ❌
- BACKWARDS!
- $20 can't be resistance (stock bounces UP from there)
- $26 can't be support (stock bounces DOWN from there)
C) $20 is resistance; $26 is breakout ❌
- Wrong on both counts
- $20 is support, not resistance
- $26 is resistance, not breakout (it's holding price down, not being broken through)
D) $20 is support; $26 is breakout ❌
- $20 is support ✓ (correct!)
- But $26 is resistance, not breakout
- A breakout would only happen if price went ABOVE $26 or BELOW $20
Technical Analysis Strategies:
Strategy 1 - Range Trading:
- Buy near support ($20) ← "Buy low"
- Sell near resistance ($26) ← "Sell high"
- Repeat while stock bounces in range
Strategy 2 - Breakout Trading:
- Wait for stock to break above $26 → BUY (bullish momentum)
- Or wait for stock to break below $20 → SELL (bearish)
Understanding Level: EXCELLENT - Student had zero prior knowledge, grasped all three concepts (support, resistance, breakout) perfectly
Question 4: Bond Yields - YTM vs. YTC for Callable Bonds (D.32)
Topic: D.32 Bond and stock valuation
Problem Given: QRP Company has 25-year bond, 10% coupon paid annually, trading at par. Bond can be called in 5 years at $105. What are YTM and YTC?
Options:
- A) YTM 10.80%, YTC 10.00%
- B) YTM 10.00%, YTC 10.50%
- C) YTM 10.00%, YTC 10.80% ✓
- D) YTM 9.47%, YTC 10.80%
Student's Understanding:
- ✓ Trading at par = trading at $1,000
- ✓ Coupon rate = annual payment
- ✓ Callable = company can buy back early
- ✓ Why call: Refinance at lower rate when interest rates drop
- ✗ Small error: Said 10% of $1,000 = $10 (corrected to $100)
Correct Answer: C) YTM = 10.00%, YTC = 10.80%
Part 1: Yield-to-Maturity (YTM) - The Easy Shortcut
Given:
- Bond trading at par ($1,000)
- Coupon rate: 10%
- Maturity: 25 years
The Magic Rule: When a bond trades AT PAR, YTM = Coupon Rate
YTM = 10.00% ← Super easy!
Why?
- You pay $1,000 (par)
- You get $100/year for 25 years (10% coupon)
- You get $1,000 back at maturity
- Your total return = exactly 10%
This immediately eliminated Answers A and D (wrong YTM)
Part 2: Yield-to-Call (YTC) - The Calculation
Callable Bond Scenario:
- Can be called in 5 years
- Call price: $105 = $1,050 (5% premium!)
- Still get $100/year coupons until then
What Changes?
- Instead of holding 25 years and getting $1,000 back
- You might only hold 5 years and get $1,050 back
- That extra $50 is a bonus!
YTC Calculation (Conceptual):
What You Pay: $1,000
What You Get (if called):
- $100/year for 5 years (coupons)
- $1,050 at year 5 (call price - bonus $50!)
Rough Approximation:
- Regular return: $100/year = 10% ✓
- PLUS: Extra $50 gain spread over 5 years = $10/year additional
- Total: $100 + $10 = $110/year
- Approximate YTC: $110 ÷ $1,000 = 11%
Exact YTC = 10.80% (from financial calculator/formula)
Key Insight: Why YTC > YTM
YTM scenario (hold to maturity):
- Hold 25 years
- Get $1,000 back (par)
- Return = 10%
YTC scenario (called in 5 years):
- Hold only 5 years
- Get $1,050 back (that's $50 extra!)
- This $50 bonus boosts your return
- Return = 10.80%
Rule: YTC > YTM when call price > current price
Why Not the Other Answers?
A) YTM 10.80%, YTC 10.00% ❌
- Backwards!
- YTM must be 10% (trading at par)
- YTC must be higher (getting $1,050 instead of $1,000)
B) YTM 10.00%, YTC 10.50% ❌
- YTM correct ✓
- But YTC too low (should be 10.80%)
D) YTM 9.47%, YTC 10.80% ❌
- YTC correct ✓
- But YTM wrong (should be 10% when trading at par)
Key Bond Yield Relationships (Shortcuts):
Trading at Par (Price = $1,000):
- YTM = Coupon Rate ← MEMORIZE THIS!
Trading at Premium (Price > $1,000):
- YTM < Coupon Rate
Trading at Discount (Price < $1,000):
- YTM > Coupon Rate
For Callable Bonds:
- If call price > current price → YTC > YTM
- If call price < current price → YTC < YTM
Real-World Implication: Call Risk
Investor's Dilemma:
- YTC = 10.80% (looks good if called!)
- BUT: If called, you must reinvest at NEW lower rates (maybe 6%!)
- You lose the high 10% coupon payments
Company's Perspective:
- Rates dropped from 10% to 6%
- Call the old 10% bonds (pay $1,050)
- Issue new bonds at 6% (save 4% per year forever!)
This is why callable bonds pay slightly higher coupons (to compensate for call risk)
Understanding Level: EXCELLENT - Student understood bond basics perfectly, learned YTM shortcut and YTC calculation
Topic 5: Bond Yield Rankings - Premium, Par, Discount (D.32)
Topic: D.32 Bond and stock valuation - Comprehensive yield relationships
Student Request: "Tell me the ranking when trading at premium - there is CY, CR, YTM, YTC and all these things together"
This is a CRITICAL CFP exam pattern!
The Four Yield Measures Explained
1. Coupon Rate (CR or Nominal Yield)
- The stated interest rate on the bond
- Formula: Annual Coupon ÷ Par Value
- Example: $80 coupon on $1,000 bond = 8%
- NEVER CHANGES (it's printed on the bond!)
2. Current Yield (CY)
- What you earn per year based on what you PAID
- Formula: Annual Coupon ÷ Current Market Price
- Example: $80 coupon ÷ $900 price = 8.89%
3. Yield-to-Maturity (YTM)
- Total return if you hold to maturity
- Includes: Coupons + capital gain/loss at maturity
- Most comprehensive measure
4. Yield-to-Call (YTC)
- Total return if bond is called early
- Includes: Coupons + capital gain/loss at call date
THE MASTER RANKING TABLE
| Bond Price | Lowest → Highest Yield |
|---|---|
| PREMIUM (> $1,000) | YTC < YTM < CY < CR |
| PAR (= $1,000) | YTC = YTM = CY = CR |
| DISCOUNT (< $1,000) | CR < CY < YTM < YTC |
SCENARIO 1: Bond Trading at PREMIUM (Price > $1,000)
Example: 8% coupon, $1,000 par, trading at $1,100
Ranking from LOWEST to HIGHEST:
YTC < YTM < CY < CR
The Numbers:
- CR = $80 ÷ $1,000 = 8.00% ← Highest (never changes)
- CY = $80 ÷ $1,100 = 7.27% (lower because you paid more)
- YTM = ~6.50% (even lower - you lose $100 at maturity)
- YTC = ~6.00% ← Lowest (you lose $100 even sooner!)
Why this order?
- CR is fixed at 8%
- CY is lower (you paid premium for the bond)
- YTM is even lower (you have capital loss at maturity: paid $1,100, get back $1,000)
- YTC is lowest (you lose the premium SOONER if called early)
SCENARIO 2: Bond Trading at PAR (Price = $1,000)
Example: 8% coupon, $1,000 par, trading at $1,000
Ranking: ALL EQUAL!
YTC = YTM = CY = CR = 8.00%
Why?
- No capital gain or loss
- All yields equal the coupon rate
- Super simple!
SCENARIO 3: Bond Trading at DISCOUNT (Price < $1,000)
Example: 8% coupon, $1,000 par, trading at $900
Ranking from LOWEST to HIGHEST:
CR < CY < YTM < YTC
The Numbers:
- CR = $80 ÷ $1,000 = 8.00% ← Lowest (never changes)
- CY = $80 ÷ $900 = 8.89% (higher because you paid less)
- YTM = ~10.00% (even higher - you gain $100 at maturity)
- YTC = ~11.00% ← Highest (you gain $100 even sooner!)
Why this order?
- CR is fixed at 8%
- CY is higher (you paid discount for the bond)
- YTM is even higher (you have capital gain at maturity: paid $900, get back $1,000)
- YTC is highest (you get the gain SOONER if called early)
MEMORY TRICKS 🧠
For PREMIUM bonds: Think "Call Yields Terrible Misery"
- YTC < YTM < CY < CR
- Call is worst (lowest yield)
For DISCOUNT bonds: Think "Can't You Try Calling?"
- CR < CY < YTM < YTC
- Call is best (highest yield)
For PAR bonds: "Everyone's Equal!"
- All the same
Why YTC Changes Position
The Pattern:
Premium bonds: YTC is LOWEST
- Getting called means you lose your premium SOONER
- BAD for you! (you want to keep collecting high coupons)
Discount bonds: YTC is HIGHEST
- Getting called means you get your gain SOONER
- GOOD for you! (you get the capital gain faster)
The Rule:
- YTC assumes bond is called early (5-10 years typically)
- YTM assumes you hold to maturity (20-30 years)
- Whichever scenario gets you to the capital gain/loss FASTER = more extreme yield
Visual Example with Real Numbers
8% Coupon, $1,000 Par Bond
Premium ($1,100):
CR: 8.00% ← Highest (fixed)
CY: 7.27%
YTM: 6.50%
YTC: 6.00% ← Lowest
YTC < YTM < CY < CR ✓
Par ($1,000):
CR: 8.00%
CY: 8.00%
YTM: 8.00%
YTC: 8.00%
All Equal ✓
Discount ($900):
CR: 8.00% ← Lowest (fixed)
CY: 8.89%
YTM: 10.00%
YTC: 11.00% ← Highest
CR < CY < YTM < YTC ✓
CFP Exam Quick Check Method
Step 1: Identify bond price status
- Price > $1,000 = Premium
- Price = $1,000 = Par
- Price < $1,000 = Discount
Step 2: Apply ranking
- Premium: YTC < YTM < CY < CR
- Par: All equal
- Discount: CR < CY < YTM < YTC
Step 3: Remember
- Coupon Rate NEVER changes
- For callable bonds:
- Premium: You DON'T want it called (YTC lowest)
- Discount: You DO want it called (YTC highest)
Understanding Level: EXCELLENT - Student requested comprehensive overview, received master ranking table with memory tricks
Topics Covered Today
| Topic | CFP Code | Confidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Preferred Stock Valuation | D.32 | High | Perpetuity formula mastered |
| Zero-Coupon Bond Taxation (OID) | D.27, E.37 | High | Compound accretion vs. straight-line understood |
| Technical Analysis - Support/Resistance | D.29, D.34 | High | Floor/ceiling concept mastered |
| Bond Yields - YTM vs YTC | D.32 | High | Shortcuts and relationships learned |
| Bond Yield Rankings | D.32 | High | Premium/Par/Discount master table learned |
Key Concepts Mastered
Preferred Stock Valuation (D.32)
- Formula: Intrinsic Value = Annual Dividend ÷ Required Return
- Perpetuity calculation (pays forever)
- Annual Dividend = Par Value × Dividend Yield
- Intrinsic value ≠ Current market price
- Compare to determine if overvalued or undervalued
Zero-Coupon Bond Taxation - OID Accretion (D.27, E.37)
- Original Issue Discount (OID): Par value - Purchase price
- IRS Method: Compound interest accretion (NOT straight-line)
- Calculate implied interest rate (YTM)
- Apply rate to growing basis each year
- Taxable amount increases each year
- "Phantom income" - pay tax on money not received
- Best held in tax-deferred accounts (IRA, 401k)
Technical Analysis - Support and Resistance (D.29, D.34)
- Technical analysis: Focus on price patterns, charts
- Fundamental analysis: Focus on company financials
- Support: Floor where price bounces UP (buying demand)
- Resistance: Ceiling where price bounces DOWN (selling pressure)
- Breakout: Price breaks through support or resistance
- Trading strategies:
- Range trading: Buy at support, sell at resistance
- Breakout trading: Buy when breaks above resistance (bullish)
Bond Yields - YTM vs YTC (D.32)
- YTM: Total return if held to maturity
- YTC: Total return if called early
- Shortcut: When trading at par, YTM = Coupon Rate
- Callable bonds: YTC > YTM when call price > current price
- Call risk: Bond called when rates drop (must reinvest at lower rates)
Bond Yield Rankings (D.32) - MASTER PATTERN
Premium bonds (> par): YTC < YTM < CY < CR
- YTC lowest (lose premium soonest)
- Getting called is BAD (lose high coupon)
Par bonds (= par): YTC = YTM = CY = CR
- All equal to coupon rate
Discount bonds (< par): CR < CY < YTM < YTC
- YTC highest (gain capital appreciation soonest)
- Getting called is GOOD (get gain faster)
Memory tricks:
- Premium: "Call Yields Terrible Misery"
- Discount: "Can't You Try Calling?"
- Par: "Everyone's Equal"
Progress Assessment
New Topics Added:
- D.27 Investment vehicles (zero-coupon bonds)
- D.29 Market cycles (technical analysis)
- D.32 Bond/stock valuation (preferred stocks, bond yields)
- D.34 Investment strategies (technical analysis)
- E.37 Income tax calculations (OID taxation)
Domain Progress Update:
- Investment Planning (D): 44% → Moving toward completion
- D.27 ✓ (partial - zero-coupon bonds)
- D.29 ✓ (partial - technical analysis)
- D.32 ✓ (NEW - comprehensive bond/stock valuation)
- D.34 ✓ (partial - technical analysis strategies)
Strengths Observed
- Quick learner - grasped new concepts without prior knowledge
- Good foundation (understood bonds, stocks, callable features)
- Asked clarifying questions when confused
- Requested comprehensive overview (yield rankings) showing desire for complete understanding
- Corrected own errors (10% of $1,000 = $10 → $100)
Areas for Continued Practice
- D.27: Continue with investment vehicles (REITs, ETFs, mutual funds, etc.)
- D.30: Quantitative concepts (standard deviation, beta, Sharpe ratio)
- D.31: Asset allocation and MPT
- D.32: Continue with dividend discount model, P/E ratios, duration
- D.33: Portfolio development and IPS
Session Statistics
Session Duration: ~60 minutes Practice Problems Completed: 5 topics (preferred stock, zero-coupon, technical analysis, YTM/YTC, yield rankings) Topics Covered: D.27, D.29, D.32, D.34, E.37 Performance: Excellent - strong understanding of new material with no prior knowledge Coverage: Investment Planning domain deepening (17% of exam - HIGH PRIORITY)
Days Until Exam: 17 days
Notes
Day 5 of Study Plan - October 24, 2025
Focused Investment Planning session covering bond and stock valuation, technical analysis, and tax implications. Student demonstrated excellent ability to learn new concepts from scratch.
Major Learning Achievements:
- Mastered preferred stock perpetuity valuation
- Understood zero-coupon bond compound accretion (corrected straight-line misconception)
- Learned technical analysis fundamentals (support, resistance, breakout)
- Grasped YTM vs YTC for callable bonds
- Mastered comprehensive bond yield rankings (premium/par/discount)
Key Patterns Learned:
- Trading at par → YTM = Coupon Rate (critical shortcut)
- Premium bonds: YTC < YTM < CY < CR
- Discount bonds: CR < CY < YTM < YTC
- Support = floor (bounces up), Resistance = ceiling (bounces down)
- OID must use compound interest, not straight-line
Ready for: Continue Investment Planning domain (D.30 quantitative concepts, D.31 asset allocation) OR move to General Principles (B domain at 30% - needs attention)
Investment Planning Progress: 4/9 topics → Moving toward 5-6/9 with today's additions
Session Status: COMPLETE - Ready to save