Sake Price
Merchandise – Information – Recipes
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Japanese Sake set / cherry blossom $17.99 JAPANESE SAKE SET in a Gift Box. The Set includes 1 Sake Bottle and 4 Sake cups The bottle size is app. 2.25″ Dia. 7″H. The cup size is app. 1.75″Dia. 1.75″H…. |
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Washoku: Recipes from the Japanese Home Kitchen $24.49 “Elizabeth Andoh’s groundbreaking cookbook introduces Western audiences to the age-old concept of washoku, the art of creating nutritional and aesthetic harmony at the table, one that transforms our thinking about Japanese cuisine and culture. Composed with deep scholarship and loving craftsmanship, Washoku is filled with authentic recipes and personal stories that place the Japanese cooking and d… |
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For Heaven’s Sake $11.49 * A fabulous new release from the three-time Tony Award winner! * A recipient of the 1995 Lifetime Achievement Tony Award, Carol Channing has been a star of international acclaim since a Time magazine cover story hailed her performance as Lorelei Lee in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. * Since her 1948 Broadway debut in Blitzstein’s No For An Answer, Channing’s Broadway appearances include Pygmalion, Wo… |
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1960s Japan Studio Sake Bottle hand made!PRICE CUT $15.88 |
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1970’s Geisha Sake Cup trad. Heian Pattern! Price cut $11.77 |
sake price
How do you calculate the yield of a bond from its trading price?
Can you do it?
Say (for arguments sake) the German/European 10 year bond is trading 114.50 and it’s the Dec 08 contract…
Can you work out it’s yield from this info, if so how please?
I am afraid you haven’t provide enough information but you might find this of use.
Yield calculations on bonds aim to show the return on a gilt or bond as a percentage of either its nominal value or its current price. There are three types of yield calculation that are commonly used:
1. Nominal Yield (also known as ‘flat yield’)
This is calculated by dividing the annual income on the bond by its nominal or ‘par’ value. So the nominal yield on a £100 bond which pays 5% interest per year is 5/100 x 100 = 5%.
2. Current or ‘Running Yield’
This is calculated by dividing the annual income on the bond by its current market price. So if the market price of the £100 bond dropped to £95, the current yield on the bond at that time would be 5/95 x 100 = 5.36%. Note that as the market price of a bond drops, its yield goes up.
3. Redemption Yield’
The Redemption Yield shows what the total return on a bond would be if held to its maturity date. It reflects not only the interest payments a bondholder will receive, but also the gain/loss he will make when it matures. The income element is the same ‘current yield’ calculation performed above. The gain/loss element is calculated by taking the difference between the current market price and the nominal value of the bond (e.g. in our example 100 – 95 = 5), dividing it by the number of years til maturity (assume 5 years for simplicity, so 5/5 = 1) and then dividing that figure by the current price of the bond (1/95 x 100 = 1.05%) The yield to redemption is the sum of the current yield (5.36%) and the capital yield (1.05%) = 6.41%.

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