A type of bond for which a firm other than the issuer guarantees its interest and principal payments.
Bond in which principal and interest are guaranteed by an entity other than the issuer. Guaranteed bonds are in effect debenture bonds (unsecured) of the guarantor. However, if the guarantor has stronger credit than the issuer whose bonds are being guaranteed, the bonds have greater value. An example of a guaranteed bond would be in the case of corporate parent-subsidiary relationships where the bonds are issued by the subsidiary with the parent's guarantee. See: Debenture; Debt Instrument; Principal; Unsecured Debt
A bond in which principal and interest are guaranteed by an entity other than the issuer. Guaranteed Bonds can be income or growth.
A lump sum life insurance policy, which invests in a with-profits fund. As the name suggests, the insurance company will guarantee to pay you a fixed amount at a stated time. Guaranteed Bonds can be income or growth.
A bond issued by a subsidiary corporation and guaranteed as to principal and/or interest by the parent corporation. For example, government-owned companies may issue bonds that are guaranteed by their central government.
A bond issue where a third party (e.g. parent company) guarantees the fulfilment of the terms of the issue Français: Obligation garantie Español: Obligación garantizada
In Canada, bonds that are issued by crown corporations but guaranteed by an appropriate government.
government securities General obligation bonds