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Risk and return
Manila Bulletin
|April 24, 2025
In business school, one of the fundamental lessons is that the greater the risk you undertake, the higher the return you should anticipate. Government-issued bills, notes, and bonds represent essentially sovereign risk and are typically regarded as the safest instruments in the market, consequently offering the lowest interest rates.
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Slightly riskier are the debts issued by blue-chip companies, which yield a marginally higher interest rate, followed by the borrowings of lower-tier or higher-risk companies that offer a more substantial interest rate.
What drives this risk-return relationship? Fundamentally, weaker companies carry a greater risk of default on timely interest payments or even principal repayment upon maturity. To attract investors to these lower-quality debt instruments, issuers are compelled to offer a higher rate of return, compensating investors for the increased risk they assume. This, of course, assumes that these companies still operate with manageable risk under normal circumstances.
This story is from the April 24, 2025 edition of Manila Bulletin.
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