72 THE FISCAL PROBLEM IN MISSOURI
bonds issued are usually sold either at a premium or at a
discount, and only rarely at par. It follows that the true
rate of interest will be affected by the amount of the premium
or the discount, since in the one case more money is received
than will be required for purposes of redemption, and in the
other case the redemption payments will exceed the amount
of money originally received. A second factor is the nominal
or coupon rate of interest and the frequence of interest dates.
The annual or semi-annual interest payments are a function
of this rate and the par value of the obligations. While
these payments are not the sole factor in determining the
cost of money, under all ordinary conditions they are the
most important factor. A third factor is the maturity date
of the bonds, which is particularly important in cases where
the bonds were sold at a considerable premium or discount.
The premium or the discount depends in turn upon both the
coupon rate of interest and the maturity dates. Other
factors, such as callable or conversion features, need not be
discussed here, as they have no particular application to the
problem under consideration.
The requisite information being available, it was decided to
compute the cost of money or the true rate of interest on the
receipts from the $60 million of state highway bonds issued
during the years 1922 to 1927. The facts concerning the
ten series of bonds comprising this issue are shown in Table
24. The coupon rate of interest for the first three series
issued in 1922 and 1923 was 414%,. Series D and E bore a
coupon rate of 4%, and the later series a rate of 4249. The
coupon rate was changed in accordance with money market
conditions and the desired maturity dates, and such changes
as were made are not indicative of any change in Missouri’s
credit position. That the three earlier series were marketed
at a higher coupon rate than any of the later issues may be
attributed in large part to the relatively brief period for
which they were issued.
Five series! amounting to $32.5 million par were sold at a
premium, and the total received on account of premium was
$482,732.50. The other five series? were sold at a discount,
the total discount amounting to $186,691.50. The net
L Series A, F, H, I, and J. 2 Series B, C, D, E, and G.