Financial Markets Econ 173A: Mgt 183. Capital Markets & Securities

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Financial Markets Econ 173A: Mgt 183 Capital Markets & Securities

Financial Instruments Money Market Certificates of Deposit U.S. Treasury Bills Money Market Funds Equity Market Common Stock Preferred Stock Bond Market U.S Treasury Notes & Bonds Other Sovereign Debt State & Municipal Bonds Corporate Bonds Derivative Market Options Futures Other Swaps Pass-Thru s

The Financial System Suppliers of capital Households with savings Firms with cash Pension funds Mutual funds Insurance companies Intermediaries Banks Securities Markets Users of capital Firms that want to invest Governments that want to spend Households that want to buy a house

Capital Markets To help to finance Companies 1. Annual Working Capital increases = $ 150 Billion 2. Annual Capital Expenditures CAPEX = $ 900 Billion = $ 1,050 Billion Source of funds: 1. Annual Earnings = ($ 900 Billion) GAP $ 150 Billion 2. New Debt Issued ($ 450 Billion) 3. Shares of Equity repurchased = $ 300 Billion

The Role of Capital Markets Three Principal Functions Economic Function: facilitate the transfer of money between savers and borrowers. Continuous Price Function: provides a liquid market where prices are available moment to moment. Fair Pricing Function

Stock Returns Stock Returns: take into account both price changes and dividend income Over past 50 years, stock returns have ranged from: + 48 % in 1954 to - 34 % in 1974 and 2008 Stock returns over past 50 years have averaged around 11% From 1998 through mid- 03, DJIA averaged 1.7%

DJIA annual Returns since 2003 2003 8341.63 10453.92 2112.29 25.32% 2004 10453.92 10783.01 329.09 3.15% 2005 10783.01 10717.50-65.51-0.61% 2006 10717.50 12463.15 1745.65 16.29% 2007 12463.15 13264.82 801.67 6.43% 2008 13264.82 8776.39-4488.43-33.84% 2009 8776.39 10428.05 1651.66 18.82% 2010 10428.05 11577.51 1149.46 11.02% 2011 11577.51 12217.56 640.05 5.53% 2012 12217.56 13104.14 886.58 7.26% 2013 13104.14 16469.99 3365.85 25.69% 2014 16469.99 17804.80 1228.14 7.41% Average 5.95% Standard Deviation 16.02%

Advantages of Stock Ownership 1. Provide opportunity for higher returns than bonds. 2. Over past 50 years, stocks averaged 11% and high-grade corporate bonds averaged 6%. 3. Good inflation hedge since returns typically exceed the rate of inflation. 4. Easy to buy and sell stocks. 5. Price and market information is easy to find in financial media. 6. Unit cost per share of stock is lower than for bonds.

Disadvantages of Stock Ownership Stocks are subject to many different kinds of risk: Business risk Financial risk Market risk Event risk Difficult to predict which stocks will go up in value due to wide swings in profits and general stock market performance Low current income Dividends - compared to other investment alternatives

Common Stock Values Market Capitalization: the overall current value of the company in the stock market Total number of shares outstanding multiplied by the market value per share Investment Value: the amount that investors believe the stock should be trading for, or what they think it s worth Probably the most important measure for a stockholder

Current Income from Stocks versus Bonds

Market Capitalization Small-Cap Stocks: under $1 billion Mid-Cap Stocks: $1 billion to $5 billion Large-Cap Stocks: more than $5 billion

Types of Stock Small-Cap Stocks: small companies with market capitalizations less than $1 billion Provide opportunity for above-average returns (or losses) Short financial track record Erratic earnings Not widely-traded; liquidity is issue

Types of Stock (cont d) Mid-Cap Stocks: medium-sized companies with market capitalizations between $1 billion and $5 billion Provide opportunity for greater capital appreciation than Large-Cap stocks, but less price volatility than Small-Cap stocks Long-term track records for profits and stock valuation Baby Blues offer same characteristics of Blue Chip stocks except size Examples: Wendy s, Barnes & Noble, Petsmart, Cheesecake Factory

Types of Stock (cont d) Large-Cap Stocks: large companies with market capitalizations over $5 billion Number of companies is smaller, but account for 80% to 90% of the total market value of all U.S. equities Bigger is not necessarily better Tend to lag behind small-cap and mid-cap stocks, but typically have less volatility Examples: AT&T, General Motors, Microsoft

The Reward/RiskTrade-off

Types of Markets Direct Search Market: Buyers and sellers seek each other directly and transact directly. Brokered Market: A market where an intermediary (a broker ) offers search services to buyers and sellers, e.g. a real estate agent. Dealer Market: a market where traders specializing in particular commodities buy and sell assets for their own accounts. Auction Market: A market where all traders in a good meet to buy or sell an asset.

Financial Markets Financial markets are traditionally segmented into: Money markets Include short-term highly liquid and relatively low risk debt instruments. Capital markets Include longer term relatively riskier securities.

Primary and Secondary Markets Primary market: market for trading newly issued securities. Usually underwritten by an investment bank. Secondary markets: Markets where securities are bought and sold on the large Exchanges after the original issuance. i.e. the IPO.

Auction vs. Dealer Market Model Auction Market Floor-based Single Specialist Order-driven Trade halts Dealer Market Screen-based Competing Market Makers Quote-driven

Third Markets Third markets: Trading of exchange-listed securities, usually in Blocks, among institutional investors and broker/dealers for their own accounts (not as agents for buyers and sellers). The Upstairs Market. Fourth markets: direct trading of large blocks of securities between institutional investors through a computer network

Fixed Income Securities & Rates Fixed CDs bank time-deposits Paper unsecured, trade-able company debt Acceptances bank promises Eurodollars - $ denominated foreign bonds Repos, Reverse Repos of treasury debt Treasuries bills, notes, bonds Rates Prime Rate Fed Funds Rate LIBOR, HIBOR TED Spread : LIBOR less the 3-month Treasury yield

TED Spread Denominated in basis points (bps). Historically 10 to 50 bps average 30 bps A rising TED spread indicates shrinking liquidity an indicator of perceived credit risk: T-bills are considered risk-free LIBOR reflects the credit risk of lending banks. Widening TED spread is a sign that lenders believe default risk on interbank (counterparty) loans is increasing. ] 2007 average 150 200 bps September 2008 > 300 bps 10/10/2008 465 bps

Inflation? Or Deflation? The problem is losing dollar strength. Most people get this wrong. The effects are similar: Prices go up but the cause is subtly different. The weakening dollar due to the extreme moves by the Fed undermine American s buying power but strengthen, albeit artificially, America s selling power.

Bonds Debt Security corporate or government borrowing Also called a Fixed Income Security Covenants or Indenture define the contract (this can be complex) 2 types of Payments: interest principal Interest payments are the Coupon Principal payment is the Face

Treasury Bills, Notes, & Bonds Bills 90 days to 6 months Notes 1 year up to 10 years Bonds to 30 years Bond & Note: Face (denomination) of $1,000; quotes in $100 s Bills: Face = $10,000. Discounted and quoted at Yield. Bond & Note: Coupon (rate) paid semi-annually Prices quoted in points (of face) + 1 / 32 No default / credit risk

Corporate Bonds April 9, 2014 Maturity 4/9/2014 2yr AA 0.50 2yr A 0.70 5yr AAA 1.80 5yr AA 2.05 5yr A 2.18 10yr AAA 3.10 10yr AA 3.33 10yr A 3.59 20yr AAA 3.99 20yr AA 4.32 20yr A 4.64

US Treasury Bonds Rates Maturity 7-6-90 9-11-01 4-9-14 7-6-15 3 Month 3.36 % 8.08 % 0.02 % 2 bps 6 Month 3.23 % 8.14 % 0.04 % 9 bps 2 Year 3.53 % 8.32 % 0.40 % 55.7 bps 3 Year 3.82 % 8.41 % 0.87 % 95 bps 5 Year 4.41 % 8.44 % 1.69 % 148.5 bps 10 Year 4.84 % 8.51 % 2.71 % 219.8 bps 30 Year 5.43 % 8.51 % 3.56 % 308.0 bps http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interestrates/pages/textview.aspx?data=yield

Bond Basics Fixed Income Securities: A security such as a bond that pays a specified cash flow over a specific period. Fixed Income Securities vs. Common Stock Fixed Claim High Priority on cash flows Tax Deductible Fixed Maturity No Management Control Residual Claim Lowest Priority on cash flows Not Tax Deductible Infinite life Management Control Bonds Hybrids (Combinations of debt and equity) Common Stock

Bond Analysis Characteristics Types: mortgage, callable, convertible, senior or subordinated, floating rate, zero coupon. Denomination (Par value) Face Coupon, Dates of Coupon Payments Sinking Funds? Credit Rating Pricing present value of future cash flows Yields: Coupon yield = C / Price YTM = the DR that makes the NPV of CF s = 0 RCYTM = Compound all CFs to Term and do CAGR Sensitivity to Time, i.e. maturity Sensitivity to changes in interest rates

a Pick the Federal Reserve Bank Chairmen c b Click Glenn Hubbard for the parody d e

What s the problem with the Fed balance sheet? Not it s size. But the quality of the assets. The largest piece of the pie is pass-thru-securities (pass thrus from sub-prime mortgages) CDO s. No one knows the real value of this balance sheet. Did the Fed violate the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 by adding lower than Federal government backed securities?