Coupon stripping is a financial process in which the coupons are stripped off a bearer security and then sold separately as a source of cash, with no capital repayment; the bond, bereft of its coupons, becomes a zero coupon bond and is also sold separately.
A General Obligation Bond (GO Bond) is a type of municipal bond backed by the full faith and credit of the issuing government, which has the authority to levy taxes to repay bondholders.
A fund set up by a corporation, labor union, governmental entity, or other organization to pay the pension benefits of retired workers. Pension funds invest billions of dollars annually in the stock and bond markets, playing a significant role in the financial markets. Earnings on the investment portfolios of pension funds are tax-exempt.
A bond issued in the primary market that carries no equity or other incentive to attract the investor; its only reward is an annual or biannual interest coupon together with a promise to repay the capital at par on the redemption date.
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