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Par

Par (also known as 'par value' or 'face value') is the nominal, stated value of a security, determined by the issuing company. Think of it as the official “sticker price” printed on a financial instrument. However, its importance varies dramatically depending on whether you're looking at a bond or a stock. For a bond, par value is king—it's the amount the issuer promises to pay you back when the bond matures. A $1,000 par value bond means you'll get $1,000 back at the end of its term. For a stock, par value is mostly a ghost from the past; it's a tiny, arbitrary accounting figure (like $0.01) with virtually no connection to the stock's actual market price or its true worth. Mistaking a stock's par value for its real value is a surefire way to get tangled in financial history instead of making sound investment decisions.

Par Value in Bonds - The Real Deal

For bond investors, par value is the North Star. It's the fundamental number around which a bond's life revolves. The par value, typically $1,000 or €1,000, serves two critical functions:

Bonds don't always trade at their par value in the open market. Their prices fluctuate based on prevailing interest rates and the issuer's creditworthiness. This leads to three scenarios:

Par Value in Stocks - A Historical Footnote

If par value is the star of the show for bonds, for common stock, it's a barely remembered understudy. A stock's par value is a purely nominal figure assigned for accounting and legal purposes. It's often set at a trivial amount, like $0.01 or even $0.0001 per share. Historically, par value represented the minimum legal price for a share at its Initial Public Offering (IPO) and established a company's stated capital. Companies were forbidden from paying dividends or buying back shares if it meant dipping into this stated capital base. The idea was to protect creditors by ensuring a minimum cushion of equity. Today, however, these rules are largely obsolete. Most companies issue “no-par value” stock to avoid the legal hassle altogether. For investors, the takeaway is simple: a stock's par value has no correlation with its market price, its book value, or its intrinsic value. A share of Apple or Microsoft might have a par value of a fraction of a penny while trading for hundreds of dollars.

What Par Means for a Value Investor

Understanding the two faces of par is crucial for practical investing. For the bond investor, par value is an anchor for analysis. It allows you to:

For the stock investor, par value is noise. Ignore it. Focusing on a stock's par value is a classic beginner's mistake. A value investor is concerned with the underlying business—its earnings power, its competitive advantages, and the value of its assets. A stock's par value tells you nothing about any of these critical factors. It's an accounting relic, not an indicator of investment merit.