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Financial - YIELDMAT Function
Description
The YIELDMAT function returns the annual yield of a security that pays interest at maturity.
Syntax
YIELDMAT (settlement, maturity, issue, rate, pr, [basis])
Arguments
Argument | Description | Required/ Optional |
---|---|---|
Settlement | The security's settlement date. The security settlement date is the date after the issue date when the security is traded to the buyer. |
Required |
Maturity | The security's maturity date. The maturity date is the date when the security expires. |
Required |
Issue | The security's issue date, expressed as a serial date number. | Required |
Rate | The security's interest rate at date of issue. | Required |
Pr | The security's price per $100 face value. | Required |
Basis | The type of day count basis to use. Look at the Day Count Basis Table given below. |
Optional |
Day Count Basis Table
Basis | Day Count Basis |
---|---|
0 or omitted | US (NASD) 30/360 |
1 | Actual/actual |
2 | Actual/360 |
3 | Actual/365 |
4 | European 30/360 |
Notes
Dates should be entered by using the DATE Function, or as results of other formulas or functions. For example, use DATE (2008,5,23) for the 23rd day of May, 2008. Problems can occur if dates are entered as text.
Microsoft Excel stores dates as sequential serial numbers so they can be used in calculations. By default, January 1, 1900 is serial number 1, and January 1, 2008 is serial number 39448 because it is 39,448 days after January 1, 1900.
The settlement date is the date a buyer purchases a coupon, such as a bond.
The maturity date is the date when a coupon expires.
For example, suppose a 30-year bond is issued on January 1, 2008, and is purchased by a buyer six months later, then −
the issue date would be January 1, 2008.
the settlement date would be July 1, 2008
the maturity date would be January 1, 2038, which is 30 years after the January 1, 2008, issue date.
Settlement, maturity, and basis are truncated to integers.
If settlement, maturity, or issue is not a valid Excel date, YIELDMAT returns the #VALUE! error value.
If any of the specified arguments is non-numeric, YIELDMAT returns the #VALUE! error value.
If rate < 0 or if pr ≤ 0, YIELDMAT returns the #NUM! error value.
If basis < 0 or if basis > 4, YIELDMAT returns the #NUM! error value.
If settlement ≥ maturity, YIELDMAT returns the #NUM! error value.
If issue ≥ settlement, YIELDMAT returns the #NUM! error value.
Applicability
Excel 2007, Excel 2010, Excel 2013, Excel 2016