Corporate Bonds in Sri Lanka:
Understand Before You Invest
Corporate bonds and debentures can provide predictable interest income, but they depend entirely on the issuer’s ability to pay. In Sri Lanka, listed corporate debt is accessed through regulated market channels governed by SEC and CSE rules.
Types of Corporate Debt Instruments
Commercial Paper
Short-term, unsecured debt securities issued by companies and financial intermediaries — usually by creditworthy institutions and often at a discount. Best for short-duration income positioning.
Corporate Bond
Medium to long-term debt requiring the issuer to pay periodic interest and redeem principal at maturity. Used by companies to raise capital outside ordinary bank borrowing.
Debenture
Unsecured, interest-bearing bonds backed by the issuer’s general credit. Debenture holders are creditors and rank ahead of shareholders in a liquidation scenario.
Recent Listed-Debt Context
| Data Point | Verified Figure | Source and Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate debt turnover, 2024 | Rs. 1.285 million (debt trading statistics) | CSE Annual Report 2024. Listed debt trading can be much thinner than equity trading. |
| Corporate debt trades, 2024 | 76 trades | CSE Annual Report 2024. This highlights the importance of checking secondary-market liquidity before buying. |
| Debentures traded, 2024 | 12.168 million debentures | CSE Annual Report 2024. Volume alone does not guarantee easy exit for a particular issue. |
| Green bond applications, 2024 | 3 applications; 2 approved; 1 successfully listed | CSE Annual Report 2024. Sustainable debt instruments are emerging, but issue-by-issue due diligence remains essential. |
What Investors Should Compare
| Feature | Investor Question | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Credit rating | What is the issue or issuer rating, and who provided it? | Rating is a starting signal of default risk, not a guarantee |
| Issuer strength | Does the company generate sufficient cash flow to service debt? | Interest and principal are paid from issuer resources |
| Coupon type | Fixed, floating, step-up, listed, subordinated or senior? | Terms affect income certainty and risk priority |
| Maturity | When is principal due? | Longer maturities may carry more interest-rate and liquidity risk |
| Security and ranking | Is the bond secured, unsecured, senior or subordinated? | Determines recovery priority if the issuer fails |
| Liquidity | Can it be sold before maturity? | Thin trading may force investors to hold until maturity or accept price discounts |
Need Guidance on Corporate Debt Investment?
InvestmentLanka can help you understand the corporate bond market and connect you with licensed advisers who specialise in Sri Lankan fixed income securities.
