Bonds pay interest periodically (commonly semiannually). Between interest payment dates, interest accrues daily. When a bond is sold in the secondary market, the buyer will receive the full next interest payment from the issuer on the scheduled coupon date—even though the buyer did not hold the bond for the entire coupon period. To make this fair, the buyer compensates the seller for the portion of interest that accrued while the seller owned the bond. This compensation is called accrued interest, and it is paid by the buyer to the seller as part of the transaction’s total cost.
Operationally, in most bond trades the quoted price is “clean” (excluding accrued interest). The settlement amount is the “dirty” price: clean price + accrued interest. From the seller’s perspective, accrued interest is added to the net proceeds of the sale, which is exactly what choice D states. Therefore, the correct answer is D.
Choice A is incorrect because the buyer is not receiving accrued interest; the buyer is paying it. Choice B is incorrect because accrued interest is not deducted from the seller’s proceeds; it is added. Choice C is incorrect because the seller does not wait until the next coupon date to receive their earned interest—accrued interest is settled in the trade. The bond issuer pays the coupon to the holder of record as of the relevant record date, which will be the buyer after settlement; the seller is compensated at settlement via accrued interest.
This is a core SIE bond settlement concept: buyer pays seller accrued interest, and the seller’s proceeds include it.