Learn how par value works for bonds versus stocks, why it matters for coupon payments and legal capital, and why par value is not the same as market price.
Par value means something very different in bonds than it does in stocks.
That is why the phrase par value of stocks and bonds can confuse beginners. The label is the same, but the financial meaning depends on the security.
For a bond, par value is the face amount repaid to the bondholder at maturity.
If a bond has par value of $1,000, the issuer typically repays $1,000 at maturity unless there is a default or restructuring.
Par value also matters for coupon payments. A bond with:
$1,0005%normally pays:
That is $50 of annual coupon, usually split into scheduled payments.
For common stock, par value is usually a small nominal legal amount assigned in the corporate charter.
In modern markets it often has little to do with the stock’s economic worth. A company may issue common stock with par value of $.01 per share even when the stock later trades at $40, $120, or more.
So for stocks, par value is usually closer to a legal or accounting concept than an investing valuation concept.
If you see the word par in bonds, think:
If you see the word par in common stock, think:
This is one of the most important distinctions.
A bond can trade:
Stocks also trade at market prices that have no necessary relationship to their stated par value.
So par value should not be confused with fair value, market value, or intrinsic value.
Preferred stock often uses a stated par or liquidation preference in a way that feels closer to fixed-income conventions than common stock does.
That is one reason preferred securities often sit conceptually between plain common equity and debt instruments.