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The notion of par value (or
stated value) has somewhat archaic
origins,
dating back several hundred years. Par value was the stated price at which a
new corporation's
stock would be issued. For investors, par value served
as a guarantee that other investors would not receive
shares on more
favorable terms. Par values would be printed prominently on stock
certificates. They would also be stated in the articles of incorporation.
These might read something like
250,000 shares of common stock will be issued, each with
a par value of $10, and 10,000 shares of preferred stock will be issued,
each with a par value of $100.
Bonds were also issued with stated par values.
Accordingly, par value can be thought of as, in some sense, a stated value of any
security.
The protection par values provided investors became less
important over time. Financial regulation and increased transparency—due
to newspapers and telecommunications—made them less important. Also, as
markets became more liquid, with prices responded more rapidly to market
developments, it became increasingly difficult for a corporation to commit
in advance to issue securities at their par value.
For common stocks, par value became a stated minimum issue price.
In the United States, a corporation could issue stock at a price in excess
of par value. If it issued the stock below par value, the stock was called
watered. Purchasers of watered stock were
liable to the corporation for the difference between the par value and the
price they paid. Today, in many jurisdictions, par values are no longer
required for common stocks. In jurisdictions that still require them,
corporations typically state nominal par
values, perhaps listing a
USD .01 par value for a stock that will be issued at USD 25.00.
For preferred stocks, par value remains relevant.
Preferred stock is typically issued at a price close to the par value.
Preferred stock dividends are calculated as a percentage of par value.
Also, if common stock is callable, it is usually at par value or at a
small premium over par value.
In fixed income markets, par values are very relevant.
For discount instruments, such as
T-bills,
the instrument's par value is its maturity value. A
standard coupon bond, on the other hand, is designed to be sold for some par value, pay
periodic coupon payments equal to a percentage of that par value, and then
return the par value to the investor at maturity. Accordingly, the par
value, together with any final coupon, is the maturity value of the bond.
Due to interest rate fluctuations between the time that a bond's coupon is
set and the time when the bond is actually issued, bonds rarely sell at
exactly par value. A bond's par value is sometimes also called its
face value.
When issued, or in the secondary market, a bond sells
above par if the
clean price exceeds its par value. It sells
below par if the clean price is below par. It
sells at par if the clean price equals the par
value. A bond's price may be above or below par due to changes in
interest rates or change in the bond'
credit quality.
When cash or cash equivalents
are invested, that investment is called
principal. Principal is
capital. As related in this article,
par value traditionally represented an amount of principal to be invested,
either in debt or equity. Obviously, that is no longer exactly true. Bonds are
often issued or traded at prices other than their par values, and the par
value of stocks today is unrelated to prices at which the stock might be
issued or trade. However, "principal" is still often used synonymously
with "par value" in situations where the actual principal
amount does approximate the par value. For example, coupon bonds are
often issued close to par, and a bond's par value is called its principal
amount. However, in the case of a
discount instrument,
par value is the instrument's maturity value, which is very different from
the investor's principal investment.
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