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Yield to Maturity Is Always Received as Promised [PDF]
This note comments on a misconception that yield to maturity from holding a coupon bond until maturity is only promised, but not really received, unless coupon payments are reinvested at the same rate as the (original) yield to maturity. It shows that yield to maturity is always earned no matter how coupon payments are allocated, i.e., whether spent or
Cebula, Richard, Yang, Bill
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The Ageing of Balsamics: Residence Time, Maturity, and Yield
2015It is a common opinion that “matured”, referring to balsamics, means selective products of high quality and special sensorial properties. This general idea is supported by advertisements, marketing strategies, gourmets, chefs, and dealers and is widespread on the Internet. It is obvious that balsamic age is considered a very distinctive trait, and many
Paolo Giudici +2 more
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Maturity parameters of grapevine (Vitis sp) yield
2021The biochemical composition of table and wine grapes is affected by the cultivar properties, vintage and viticultural practices. Most of the research has been done with different grapevine (Vitis vinifera) cultivars. There is a little information about interspecific hybrid grapevine cultivars yield in cool climate conditions.
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A yield-tenderometer relationship in shelled peas for adjusting yields to a given maturity
The Journal of Agricultural Science, 1966A model relating the yield of shelled peas to maturity, as measured by the tenderomoter, has been given. The model has been fitted satisfactorily to data from pea experiments carried out over a period of 4 years and covering a range of plant densities and irrigation treatments.
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Default Risk, Yield Spreads, and Time to Maturity
The Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 1988This paper extends the default model of yield spreads for bonds by showing that, in gen? eral, they are a complex function of maturity and, in particular, are not always monotoni? cally increasing, contrary to what one traditional view suggests. Our results may help explain the apparently conflicting empirical results found in the literature.
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Yield to Maturity Is Always Received as Promised: A Reply [PDF]
This theoretical note elaborates upon why it is a myth that YTM is viewed as only a promised but not really earned interest rate. It addresses some misconceptions in Shirnani and Wilbratte (2009) on what, between YTM and RCY, is a true rate of return of a coupon bond, why YTM is not just a "fictitious mathematical construct," and why YTM has nothing to
Cebula, Richard, Yang, Bill
openaire
The Effects of the Yield-Maturity Curve on True Yields
Financial Analysts Journal, 1949openaire +1 more source

