What you have described is really a "bond with detachable warrants." While not common in the US, such structures are often issued in certain foreign markets.
Here is an (old) paper by a friend of ours on the above topic:
http://www.math.nyu.edu/research/carrp/papers/pdf/bdw.pdf
For convertible bonds, it's a bit more complicated than this.
The key reason is that Convertible Bonds generally contain not one option, but two:
A) You, as the bondholder, have the option to exchange the bond for (usually) a specified number of shares.
So, if a $1,000 bond has a
"conversion ratio" of 50 and, thus, a
"conversion price" of $20 (meaning that it converts into 50 shares of stock, at a strike price of $20 per share), then if the stock is trading at, say, $30 per share, then you could exercise your option to convert the bond into shares worth $1,500 (this figure is known as the
"parity value" of the bond.) If you were convert the bond and if you were to simultaneously execute a separate trade to sell 50 shares of the stock, then you would lock in a $500 net payoff.
Note, however, that when converting, you forfeit any interest accrual on the bond, so exercising your conversion option when the bond has 5 1/2 months of accrued interest may not be the brightest idea.
Also, the market price of the bond is likely a bit above the parity value. This excess (known as the
"conversion premium") would be lost when you convert the bond. (Of course, if the option is deep-in-the-money, the conversion premium is likely to be small.) When you do convert the bond, you lose this premium.
B) I, as the bond issuer, usually grant myself the option to
"call" the bond, for cash.
This means that if the stock is trading well above the bond's conversion price, but you have not yet converted your bond into shares (a good reason would be if the coupon rate which I pay you on this bond exceeds the rate of dividends -- if any -- that I would pay you on the converted shares) I can "force" you to convert it.
The way this works is as follows:
I (the company that issued the bond) make an announcement that the company is going to redeem all such bonds at their face value ($1,000) plus whatever interest has accrued as of a specific date (usually 30 days from now.)
In this case, you had better hurry up and convert your bonds -- because while they are worth $1,500 now, if you hold on to them and fail to exercise your conversion option (suppose, for example, that you are taking a long cruise, and cannot be reached) then you would lose all this extra money. Of course when you do convert the bond, I give you shares -- but (generally) I do not give you any of the accrued interest.
But, things get even more complicated.
Suppose that my company's stock is currently trading at $15 per share, and I sell convertible bonds on the above terms, paying interest of, say, 6 percent. Suppose further that my company does indeed do very well over the next several months -- the share price doubles.
Would you want to purchase a convertible bond from me if I had the right to call it back right away? Suppose that 4 months and 4 weeks later, I were to announce that I shall redeem all such bonds at par in 30 days -- that's 5 months and 4 weeks following the issuance date. It's also a couple of days before the first coupon payment
would have been paid. By forcing you to convert the bond, I have "screwed" you out of 6 months of interest. The ability for me to do such unto you is thus referred to as a
"screw clause."
Once upon a time, convertible issuers used to be able to do just that.
Because such action tends to make investors unhappy, more recent issues usually contain a
"make-whole" provision, which states that if I were to call the bond before a certain date, I would have to make an additional payment to you (often, a function of the unpaid coupons during a specified initial period).
Some bonds may have a
"hard call" provision, which would forbid the issuer from calling the bond for a specified period of time after issuance, regardless of the share price.
Another provision, known as a
"soft call", says that the issuer cannot call the bond unless the stock has traded above a certain price for a minimum period of time (say, 20 days out of 30). Here is a paper which discusses valuation of bonds with this restriction:
http://www.realtimerisksystems.com/pdf/paper1.pdf
A good summary of various convertible bond features, some common and others rare, can be found here:
Convertible bond - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Happy pricing,
m.y.