It is important to understand how bond features and issuer characteristics influence risk and return. A bond’s credit quality drives the likelihood of timely interest and principal payments. The coupon rate reflects both the issuer’s perceived risk and prevailing interest-rate environment, and the maturity profile determines exposure to interest-rate risk and reinvestment risk. Fixed-rate bonds are particularly sensitive to upward shifts in general yields, while floating-rate structures mitigate that but often offer lower yield premiums.
In financial markets, bonds serve as a strategic tool for diversifying portfolios, managing duration, and accessing steady income. Corporations and governments issue bonds to secure long-term funding beyond what bank lending or equity capital can provide. For investors, the nuance lies in understanding how a bond’s role complements the broader portfolio—literal income generation, inflation hedging, and a ballast against equity volatility. In markets like Kenya, corporate bonds are increasingly relevant as capital-market infrastructure deepens, expanding choices beyond sovereign paper.
The range of products expands beyond traditional fixed-coupon corporate and government bonds. Buy-and-hold investors may consider medium-term notes issued by large firms, subordinated debt structures, green and sustainability-linked bonds, and convertible debt. Each brings distinct trade-offs: subordinated instruments yield higher returns but carry greater risk of loss, convertibles offer equity upside but lower coupons, and sustainability-linked bonds follow predetermined non-financial targets in addition to financial ones. As an informed investor, it pays to evaluate the structure, redemption features, covenants, secondary market liquidity and tax implications as much as the headline yield.
When you invest in a bond, you commit capital for the duration unless you’re willing to accept price risk from an early exit. The issuer’s business model matters, as does its ability to generate cash flows under stress. Your expected return must account for inflation erosion, potential taxation, liquidity constraints and credit risk premium. Even a high-yield nominal coupon may deliver modest real returns if inflation is elevated or if the investor cannot remain invested until maturity. You should integrate the bond’s risk profile into your broader allocation.
An illustrative case in Kenya is the recent corporate issuance by Safaricom PLC. The company is issuing a green bond under its medium-term note programme, aiming for investors who understand that this is not a short-term liquid asset but a five-year commitment backed by corporate credit and linked to sustainable projects. The tax-exempt interest enhances net return but should not offset a rigorous assessment of the issuer’s business environment, its growth prospects, regulatory exposure, and the market for exit or secondary trading. For an investor comfortable with corporate-bond exposure and seeking diversification away from equities and bank deposits, this offers a good opportunity.














