A convertible bond is a corporate bond that comes with an embedded choice: hold it to maturity and collect your principal back, or swap it for a fixed number of the issuer’s shares if the stock climbs high enough. That single feature turns an ordinary debt instrument into something that behaves like a bond when markets are bad and like a stock when they are good. The investor gets a floor. The company gets cheaper debt. Neither side gives something for nothing — which is why understanding the trade-off is the whole point of this article.
What Is a Convertible Bond?
According to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), a convertible bond is “a bond with the option to convert into shares of common stock of the same issuer at a pre-established price.” That pre-established price — called the conversion price — is fixed at issuance, typically set above where the stock is trading on the day of the deal.
Like any corporate bond, a convertible pays a regular coupon (interest). FINRA notes that bond coupon payments are “generally paid out semiannually.” At maturity, if no conversion has occurred, the issuer repays the full face value (par). Bondholders can skip that cash repayment and take shares instead — but only if the math makes it worthwhile.
The Anatomy of a Convertible: Four Numbers That Drive Everything
Every convertible has four components. Work through them once and the rest of the topic falls into place.
- Face value (par): The principal amount, almost always $1,000 per bond for institutional-grade issues.
- Coupon rate: Annual interest, paid in two semi-annual installments per standard bond convention.
- Conversion price: The stock price at which one bond converts to shares. Set above today’s stock price at issuance.
- Conversion ratio: Face value ÷ Conversion price — the number of shares you receive per bond. If face value is $1,000 and conversion price is $50, the ratio is 20 shares per bond.
| Term | What It Means | NovaTech Example |
|---|---|---|
| Face Value (Par) | Principal amount repaid in cash at maturity if the bond is not converted | $1,000 |
| Coupon Rate | Annual interest paid in two semi-annual installments | 2.0% ($10 every 6 months) |
| Conversion Price | Stock price at which one bond converts to shares; set above today’s stock price | $50 / share |
| Conversion Ratio | Shares received per bond = Face Value ÷ Conversion Price | 20 shares / bond |
| Conversion Value | Equity value of converting now = Conversion Ratio × Current Stock Price | 20 × stock price |
| Bond Floor | Present value of all future coupon + principal payments at the straight-debt yield | ≈$870 at issuance |
| Conversion Premium | (Market Price − Conversion Value) ÷ Conversion Value | ≈7% at issuance |
A Worked Example: NovaTech 2.0% Convertible Notes Due 2030
All company names and numbers in this section are hypothetical and for illustration only.
NovaTech, a growth-stage technology company, issues five-year convertible notes with these terms: face value $1,000, coupon 2.0% per year ($10 every six months), conversion price $50 per share (NovaTech stock is trading at $40 today), and a conversion ratio of 20 shares per bond.
An investor buys one bond for $1,000 and collects $10 every six months for five years regardless of what the stock does. At maturity, two outcomes are possible:
Stock below $50 at maturity: Converting 20 shares at $35 yields only $700 — worse than the $1,000 par repayment. The investor takes cash. Total receipts: $1,000 principal + $100 in coupons = $1,100 on a $1,000 investment.
Stock at $80 at maturity: Converting 20 shares at $80 = $1,600 — far better than $1,000 cash. The investor converts. The convertible outperformed a straight bond by $600 on the principal alone.
The break-even stock price at maturity is exactly the conversion price: 20 × $50 = $1,000 = par. Above $50, conversion wins. Below $50, cash redemption wins.
Bond Floor vs. Conversion Value: The Hybrid Payoff
Two theoretical values underpin every convertible at all times.
Bond floor: What the bond would be worth as plain straight debt with no conversion option — the present value of all future coupons and face value, discounted at the yield the issuer would pay on equivalent non-convertible debt. Because convertibles carry lower coupons, the bond floor is typically below par at issuance. In the NovaTech example, if the company would pay 5% on straight debt, the bond floor is approximately $870.
Conversion value: What the bond is worth if you converted right now — conversion ratio × current stock price. When the stock is well below the conversion price, this is well below par. When the stock surges past the conversion price, conversion value can be multiples of par.
The convertible’s actual market price sits above both lines at all times. The gap between the convertible’s price and the conversion value is the conversion premium — the market’s pricing of remaining optionality. The further the stock is from the conversion price, the larger the premium. The closer it gets, the more the convertible trades like pure equity.
Why Companies Issue Convertibles
The core appeal is cost of capital. Because the conversion option has value to investors, companies can pay a lower coupon on a convertible than they would on equivalent straight debt. A company that might pay 6% on straight bonds could issue a convertible at 2% and hand investors the conversion option in exchange for the 4-percentage-point coupon difference.
This makes convertibles especially attractive for growth companies that:
- Have limited near-term free cash flow and want to minimize interest expense
- Believe their stock will be worth significantly more in the future, making the conversion option cheap to grant today
- Want to avoid the execution risk of a secondary equity offering in a volatile or uncertain market
- Need to borrow more than their credit rating would support at affordable straight-debt rates
The trade-off: if the stock does perform, conversion creates new shares — and existing shareholders are diluted.
What Investors Get in Return
The convertible structure is sometimes described as “equity upside with a bond floor.” The asymmetry is real:
- Downside protection: If the stock collapses, the bond floor limits the loss. The bondholder still has a claim on coupons and principal. A common equity investor could lose everything; a convertible bondholder’s downside is bounded by credit quality, not share price.
- Upside participation: If the stock rallies well above the conversion price, the convertible captures that gain through conversion value.
- Current income: The coupon — even if lower than straight debt — provides income that common equity typically would not, unless the company pays dividends.
The cost: investors give up yield relative to a straight bond and accept the issuer’s credit risk throughout.
The Conversion Premium and When It Shrinks
Conversion premium = (Convertible Market Price − Conversion Value) ÷ Conversion Value. At issuance, this is often 20–40%: the stock is well below the conversion price and the option is out-of-the-money. As the stock approaches the conversion price, the premium erodes — equity character dominates, bond character fades. Once the stock is significantly above the conversion price, the convertible trades almost entirely on conversion value.
When the stock falls far below the conversion price and the issuer’s credit deteriorates, the convertible can trade below both the bond floor and conversion value — the so-called “busted convertible,” where both the debt option and the equity option have failed simultaneously.
When Does Conversion Actually Happen?
Bondholders convert voluntarily when conversion value exceeds the cash they would receive by holding to maturity. Many convertibles also include a call provision allowing the issuer to redeem bonds once certain conditions are met — which effectively forces holders to choose between converting (if conversion value is higher) or taking the call price in cash. Mandatory conversion features exist in some structures, but the standard convertible leaves the choice with the bondholder.
Dilution: What Conversion Means for Existing Shareholders
When bonds convert, new shares are issued in exchange for the bonds. Share count rises, diluting existing holders. In the NovaTech example, if $500 million of convertibles convert at 20 shares per bond (conversion price $50), 10 million new shares enter circulation. If there were 100 million shares outstanding before, dilution is 10%.
This effect appears in the diluted EPS figure that public companies report in their income statements. Diluted EPS assumes all outstanding convertibles are converted — which reduces earnings per share relative to the basic count. Any investor analyzing a company with outstanding convertibles should use the diluted share count for per-share metrics, not the basic count.
Three Mistakes New Convertible Investors Make
- Treating the bond floor as permanent protection. The bond floor is based on the issuer’s credit quality and prevailing interest rates. If credit deteriorates, the bond floor falls too. A convertible from a financially stressed issuer can trade well below par with no conversion value — neither side of the hybrid provides protection.
- Ignoring the coupon give-up. A 2% coupon instead of a 6% straight-bond coupon is a 4-percentage-point annual shortfall that compounds over the bond’s life. If the stock never reaches the conversion price, the convertible underperforms a straight bond by that differential every year.
- Overlooking dilution in per-share analysis. A large convertible issuance can significantly expand the diluted share count. Any per-share metric — EPS, book value per share, free cash flow per share — must use the diluted count to be accurate.
What to Learn Next
Convertible bonds sit at the intersection of fixed income and equity. The bond side is covered in Bond Pricing, Yield, Duration & Convexity Explained, which explains how the bond floor calculation actually works. The equity side connects to What Is the P/E Ratio? and What Is DCF? — both matter when assessing whether the stock above the conversion price is reasonably valued or speculative.
Sources
- FINRA — Types of Bonds (convertible bond definition and structure)
- Investor.gov (SEC) — Bonds Glossary
- SIFMA Capital Markets Research
Disclosure: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.