Global Financial Instruments

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Global Financial Instruments

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Title: Global Financial Instruments


1
Chapter 2
  • Global Financial Instruments

2
Markets and Instruments
  • Money Marketincludes short-term, marketable,
    liquid, low risk debt securities (cash
    equivalents)
  • Debt Instruments
  • Derivatives
  • Capital Market includes longer-term riskier
    securities
  • Fixed income capital markets (longer-term)
  • Treasury bonds notes, Federal agency debts,
    Municipal bonds, Corporate bonds,
    Mortgage-backed securities. Bonds
  • Equity markets
  • common stocks, preferred stocks
  • Derivatives
  • options, futures

3
Money Market Instruments
  • Treasury bills
  • Certificates of deposit
  • Commercial Paper
  • Bankers Acceptances
  • Eurodollars
  • Repurchase Agreements (RPs) and Reverse RPs
  • Federal Funds

4
Treasury Bills
  • The government raises money by selling bills to
    the public. Investors buy the bills at a discount
    from the stated maturity value.
  • most marketable discount bond
  • maturities 91, 182 days, 52-week bills
  • minimum denomination 10,000
  • interest (income) exempt from all state and
    local taxes (not from federal tax)
  • T.B yields are quoted as the bank discount
    yield

5
Treasury Bills
  • Sales are conducted by an auction where investors
    can submit competitive or noncompetitive bids.
  • A competitive bid is an order for a given
    quantity of bills at specified offered price. The
    order is filled only if the bid is high enough
    relative to other bids to be accepted.
  • A noncompetitive bid is an unconditional offer to
    purchase bills at the average price of the
    successful competitive bids. The Treasury ranks
    bids by offering price and accepts bids in order
    of descending price until the entire issue is
    absorbed by the competitive plus noncompetitive
    bids.

6
Bank Discount Yield
  • rBD 10,000 - P x 360
  • 10,000 n
  • where P the bond price n the maturity
    in days rBD the bank discount yield
    10,000 par value.
  • To determine the T-bills true market price P
    10,000 x 1 - rBD x n/360
  • Ex. T-bill sold at 9,500 with a maturity of a
    half year (182 days)
  • rBD (500/10,000) x (360/182) 0.0989
    (9.89)
  • Effective annual yield reay
  • ( 1 500/9,500 )2 - 1 0.1080 (10.8)

7
Bond Equivalent Yield
  • Cant compare T-bill directly to bond
  • 360 vs 365 days
  • Return is figured on par vs. price paid
  • Adjust the bank discounted rate to make it
    comparable.
  • The bond equivalent yield of the T-bill APR
    (annual percentage rate)
  •   rBEY (10,000 - P)/P x (365/n)
    (500/9,500) x
  • (365/182) 10.555 (
  • note rBD

8
Certificate of Deposits (CD)
  • a time deposit with a bank
  • The bank pays interest and principal to the
    depositor only at the end of the fixed term of
    the CD.
  • denomination 100,000 are usually negotiable
  • Can be sold to another investor if the owner
    needs to cash in the CD before its maturity date.
  • insured up to 100,000 by the FDIC

9
Commercial Paper (CP)
  • short-term, unsecured debt (promissory) notes
    issued by large corporations with strong credit
    ratings
  • the biggest source of short-term funding for
    blue-chip U.S. corporations
  • maturities up to 270 days. Bought by money market
    funds, insurance companies, and any firm needing
    to park extra cash
  • issued in multiples of 100,000, about 1.6
    trillion market
  • Small investors can invest in commercial paper
    only indirect, via money market mutual funds.
  • fairly safe

10
Bankers Acceptance
  • widely used in foreign trade (creditworthiness)
  • an order to a bank by a banks customer to pay a
    sum of money at a future date
  • the bank endorses the order for payment
    (accepted)
  • The acceptance may be traded in secondary markets
    like any other claims on the bank.
  • Acceptances sell at a discount from the face
    value of the payment order.

11
Eurodollars (CD)
  • dollar-denominated deposits at foreign banks or
    foreign branches of American banks
  • Despite the tag Euro, these accounts need not
    be in European banks.
  • the liability of a non-US branch of a bank less
    liquid, riskier than domestic CDs, offer higher
    yields, no FDIC protection.

12
Repos and Reverses
  • Repurchase agreement
  • Short-term, usually overnight borrowing
  • the dealer sells government securities to an
    investor on an overnight basis, with an agreement
    to buy back these securities the next day at a
    slightly higher price.
  • A reverse repo is the mirror image of a repo.
  • Buy government securities from an investor and
    agree to sell them back at a specified higher
    price on a future date

13
Brokers Call
  • Individuals who buy stocks on margin borrow part
    of the funds to pay for the stocks from their
    brokers.
  • The broker in turn may borrow the funds from a
    bank, agreeing to repay the bank immediately (on
    call) if the banks requesta it.

14
Federal Funds
  • member bank maintains reserve requirement in
    federal funds
  • arise as a way for banks to transfer balances to
    meet reserve requirement
  • F. F. rate on very short-term loans among
    Financial Institutions.
  • While the Fed Funds rate is not directly relevant
    to investors, it is used as one of the barometers
    of the money market and so is widely watched by
    them.

15
LIBOR market (London Interbank Offered Rate)
  • the rate at which large banks in London are
    willing to lend among themselves
  • serves as a reference rate, in the European money
    market

16
Note
  • The risk premium over T-bills (i.e., the spread)
    increases with economic uncertainty (or crisis)
    because investors demand a greater premium on
    debt subject to default risk.
  • The risk premium increases with economic crises
    such as the energy price shocks associated with
    the OECD disturbances, the failure of Penn Square
    Bank, the stock crash in 1987, or the collapse of
    Long Term Capital Management in 1998.

17
Capital Market - Fixed Income Instruments
  • Publicly Issued Instruments
  • require registration with the OSC with proper
    disclosure
  • involve considerable accounting, legal, and
    selling costs
  • US Treasury Bonds and Notes
  • Agency Issues (Fed Gov)
  • Municipal Bonds
  • Privately Issued Instruments
  • avoid regulation and costs
  • Corporate Bonds
  • Mortgage-Backed Securities

18
Treasury Notes and Bonds
  • maturities up to 10 years/ 10 - 30 years
  • The treasury announced inlate 2001 that it would
    no longer issue bonds with maturity beyond 10
    years.
  • denominations of 1,000 or more
  • coupon bonds semiannual payments
  • T. bonds (not notes) may be callable, usually the
    last five years of the bonds life.
  • Quoations
  • Coupon 43/447.50/year
  • Bid 9112/3291.375 of par value
  • Ask 9114/32 91.4375 of par value
  • YTM6.08 based on the ask price

19
Federal Agency Debt
  • Home mortgages FHLB, FNMA (Fannie Mae), GNMA
    (Ginnie Mae), FHLMC (Freddie Mac)
  • FHLB borrow money by issuing sec. and lend this
    money to SL to be lent in turn to individual
    home buyers
  • Farm Credit related agencies (banks)
  • If the agencies are government owned, their debt
    is fully free of default risk.

20
International Bonds
  • Borrow money abroad
  • A Eurobond is a bond denominated in a currency
    other than that of the country in which it is
    issued.
  • A dollar-denominated bond sold in London
  • A foreign bond is to issue bonds in foreign
    countries but in the currency of the investors.
  • Yankee bonds
  • Samurai bonds

21
Municipal Bonds
  • issued by state and local governments
  • general obligation bonds and revenue bonds
    (airport, hospital, turnpike, etc)
  • GO bonds are backed by thefull faith and credi
    of the issuer.
  • Revenue bonds are issued to finance particular
    projects and are backed either by the revenue
    from the project or by the municipal agency
    operating the project.
  • tax-exempt interest income is exempt from
    federal income tax also is exempt from state
    local taxation in the issuing state capital
    gains are not exempt

22
Equivalent Taxable Yield
  • the equivalent taxable yield of the municipal
  • r rm / (1 - t),
  • where rm the rate on municipal bonds t the
    investors marginal tax bracket r the total
    before-tax rate of return on taxable bonds.
  •  
  • Ex. rm 10 t 28 then r 13.89,
  • if t 36 then r
    15.625
  • ? the higher the bracket, the more valuable the
    tax-exempt feature of municipals.
  •  
  • Ex. A municipal bond carries a coupon of 6 and
    is trading at par to a taxpayer in a 36 tax
    bracket, this bond would provide a taxable
    equivalent yield of 9.375.

23
Corporate Bonds
  • semiannual coupons
  • default risk
  • secured bonds collateral
  • unsecured bonds ( debentures)
  • subordinated debentures
  • lower priority claim
  • callable bonds
  • The option to repurchase the bond from the holder
    at a stipulated call price
  • convertible bonds

24
Mortgages Mortgage-backed securities
  • fixed rate/ adjustable rate
  • Ex, 2 above the current rate on one-year T-bills
    and might be adjusted once a year.
  • Set a cap
  • securitization of mortgage loans ex. A 10
    coupon GNMA
  • called pass-throughs
  • An ownership claim in a pool of mortgages
  • Rights to cash-inflows are sold
  • The mortgage originator continues to service the
    loan

25
Equity Securities
  • Common stock
  • ownership shares in a corporation
  • Residual claim
  • Limited liability

26
Equity Securities
  • Preferred stock
  • hybrid of equity debt
  • like a bond, pays fixed dividends (perpetuity),
    but no voting power
  • like a stock, the failure to pay dividends ? no
    bankruptcy dividends are cumulative
    (non-cumulative exists)
  • not tax-deductible expenses for the firm
  • corporations (not individuals) may exclude 70 of
    dividends received from domestic corporations in
    the computation of their taxable income
    (advantage over bonds)
  • a firm's preferred stock often sells at yields
    below its bond
  • may be callable (redeemable) by the issuing firm
  • may be convertible into common stock

27
Understand the Different Types and Uses of
Indices
  • Key Types of Indices
  • Asset Class
  • Stocks large cap, small cap., mid cap.,
    international, emerging markets, etc.
  • Bonds long-term, short-term, corporate bonds,
    government bonds, convertible bonds, etc.
  • Other Asset Classes real estate, currencies,
  • Geographical
  • Global, Regional, Country, Industry
  • Investment Style
  • Growth, Blend, Value

28
Geographical Indices
  • Global
  • Follows the performance of a set of assets from a
    specific set of countries, i.e., MSCI World, MSCI
    AC Free. International includes only countries
    outside the US
  • Regional
  • Follows the performance of a set of assets from a
    specific region of the world , i.e., MSCI EAFE,
    DJ Asia
  • Country
  • Follows the performance of a specific set of
    assets from a specific country , i.e., SP 500,
    Russell 5000, Dow Jones
  • Industry
  • Follows the performance of a set of assets from a
    specific industry, whether global, regional, or
    country.

29
Investment Style Indices
  • Growth
  • These indices follow a portfolio of stocks that
    are expected to achieve accelerated growth,
    whether because of increased earnings, dominant
    market position, or other factors
  • Value
  • This indices follow on stocks that are currently
    undervalued by the market. It is generally
    determined by using price-book or price-earnings
    ratios, discounted cash flow models, or other
    means.

30
Uses of Indices
  • Uses
  • 1. Tracks average returns for a specific asset
    class
  • 2. Used to compare performance of mutual fund
    managers in similar asset classes
  • 3. Use as a base on which derivatives are
    structured
  • Key Questions in Constructing or using an Index
  • Is it representative of the performance or assets
    desired?
  • Is it broad or narrow, i.e. how many securities
    in the index?
  • How is it constructed, i.e. price, market cap,
    equal, or float weighted?

31
How they are Indexes Constructed
  • How are stocks weighted?
  • Price weighted DJIA, Nikkei
  • Market-value weighted SP 500, NASDAQ, some
    MSCI country/regional indices
  • Equally weighted Value Line Index, MSCI Equal
    Weighted Indices

32
How They Are UsedThe Importance of
Understanding Indices
  • Indices are the standard from which an analyst or
    portfolio manager is judged
  • Get to know your standard in detailyour career
    (and bonus) depends on it!
  • How is it weighted?
  • How often are the constituents changed?
  • Which are the biggest companies in the index?
  • What strategies can help you to beat the index?
  • If you dont know what is in your index and how
    it is calculated, how can you ever expect to beat
    it (and hence advance in your job)?
  • Knowledge is power!

33
Stock Market Indexes
  • Dow Jones Averages
  • DJIA 30 large blue chip corporations since
    1896
  • 1896 12 stocks 1916 20 stocks 1928 30
    stocks
  • price-weighted average
  • DJIAt ?P/30 simple average of prices
  • the ? in the DJIA measures the return on a
    portfolio that invests one share in each of the
    30 stocks in the index
  • DJIAt
  • the divisor adjusted for stock splits
    replacements

34
What is a Blue Chip Stock?
  • Blue chip stocks is a general term that is
    loosely applied to companies that are generally
    considered to be leaders in their industry, are
    typically very large in terms of market
    capitalization (the number of shares outstanding
    multiplied by their current market price), are
    considered to be mature (ie. they are not
    necessarily rapidly growing in terms of sales or
    stock price) and often pay a substantial and
    consistent cash dividend.

35
Dow Jones Averages
  • Companies included in the average are those
    selected by Dow Jones Company, publisher of the
    Wall Street Journal
  • The composition of the average changes over time
    as companies are dropped because of a merger or
    bankruptcy has occurred, because a companys
    trading activity is low, or because a company not
    in the average becomes very prominent.
  • When a company is replaced by another company,
    the average is readjusted in such a way as to
    provide comparability with earlier values.

36
Dow Jones Averages
  • The use of the DJIA as a performance benchmark is
    sometimes criticized for the fact that
    high-priced stocks have a greater impact on the
    value of the index than low-price stocks. That
    is, changes in the price of a 100 stock like IBM
    will have a greater impact on the value of the
    DJIA than changes in the price of a 30 stock
    like Intel.

37
Dow Jones Averages
  • Example If firm B were to split two for one ()
  • ___________________________________________
  • firm initial final shares(mil)
    initial final
  • price(0) price(1)
    value value
  • A 20 25 20
    400 500
  • B 40 30 5
    200 150
  • B 20 15 10
    200 150
  •  
  • DJIA0 (2040)/230 DJIA1 (2530)/227.5
  • After a split (20 20)/d 30 ,
  • ? d 1.333 (new divisor)
  • After a split
  • DJIA0 (20 20)/d 40/1.333 30 ( DJIA0
    w/o split)
  • DJIA1 (25 15)/d 40/1.333 30 (? DJIA1 w/o
    split)
  • History10.03.05 0.12493117
  • 7.14.05    0.125608646.13.05   
    0.1303370811.15.04  0.135327756.21.04  
     0.13561241

38
Dow Jones Averages
  • Example If firm B were to split two for one ()
  • ___________________________________________
  • firm initial after shares(mil)
    final final
  • price split
    price shares
  • A 25 25 200
    30 200
  • B 100
  • B 50 45 20
    45 20
  •  
  • DJIA0 (25100)/262.5
  • After a split (25 50)/d 62.5 ,
  • ? d 1.2 (new divisor)
  • DJIA1(3045)/1.262.5
  • If stock XYZ had not split 2 for 1, the level of
    the price-weighted index at the close of trading
    on date 1 would have been
  • DJIA1(3090)/260

39
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41
Citicisms of the DJIA
  • Limited sample size
  • 30 nonrandomly selected blue-chip stocks make up
    the average
  • the stocks selected are the largest and most
    pretigious companies in various industries.
  • The DJIA, therefore, probably reflects price
    movements for large, mature, blue-chip firms
    rather than the typical company listed on the
    NYSE
  • Several studies have pointed out that the DJIA
    has not been as volatile as other market indexes
    and that the long-run returns on the DJIA are not
    comparable to other NYSE stock indexes.

42
Citicisms of the DJIA
  • Weighting Scheme
  • because the DJIA is price weighted, when
    companies split their stock, their prices
    decline, and therefore their weight in the DJIA
    is reduced - even though they may be large and
    important.
  • Therefore, the weight scheme casues a downward
    bias in the DJIA, because the stocks that have
    higher growth rates will have higher prices, and
    because such stocks tend to split, they will
    consistently lose weight within the index.

43
Dow Jones Averages
  • Dow Jones Averages 30 industrials, 20
    transportation, 15 utilities ? 65 composite
  • the DJIA based on small number of firms not
    value-weighted
  • as of Nov. 1, 1999
  • In Microsoft Corp., Intel Corp., Home Depot
    Inc., and SBC Communications inc.
  • Out Chevron, Goodyear, Sears Roebuck, Union
    Carbide
  • as of April 1, 2004
  • Out ATT Corp., Eastman Kodak Co., and
    International Paper,
  • In Verizon Communications Inc., a company formed
    after the breakup of the old ATT, insurer
    American International Group Inc., and Pfizer
    Inc., the nation's biggest drugmaker.
  • recognize trends within the U.S. stock market,
    including the continued growth of the financial
    and health care sectors,"

44
Dow Jones Averages
  • Currently Alcoa, Allied Signal, American
    Express, American International Group Inc,
    Boeing, Caterpillar, Citigroup, Coca-Cola,
    DuPont, Exxon, General Electric, General Motors,
    Hewlett-Packard, Home Depot, IBM, Intel, Johnson
    Johnson, McDonald, Merck, Microsoft, 3M, JP
    Morgan, Pfizer, Phillip Morris, Proctor Gamble,
    SBC Communications, United Technologies, Verizon
    Communications, Wal-Mart Stores, Walt Disney.

45
Standard Poors Indexes
  • the SP 500 improvement over the DJIA
  • a more broadly based index of 500 firms
  • a market-value-weighted index unaffected by
    stock splits
  • 400 industrials, 20 transportation, 40 utilities,
    40 financial indexes
  • the SP index funds provide a low-cost passive
    investment strategy
  • ? SP 500 Index ? P it Q it / ? P it-1 Q it-1
  • total mkt value today/ total mkt value on
    prev. day
  •  81 of the mkt value of companies on the NYSE

46
Value-Weighted Stock Indexes
  • If we set VWI0 (date 0 index level) equal to 100,
    the closing level of the value-weighted index at
    date 1, VWI1 , will be
  • which is equal to 115, giving a return for the
    value-weighted index of 15.

47
Example of a Computation of a Value-weighted index
  • Stock Share Price Number of Shares Market Value
  • March 1, 2006
  • A 10.00 1,000,000 10,000,000
  • B 15.00 6,000,000 90,000,000
  • C 20.00 5,000,000 100,000,000
  • Total 200,000,000
  • Base Value Equal to an Index of 100
  • March 2, 2006
  • A 12.00 1,000,000 12,000,000
  • B (2 for 1 split) 10.00 12,000,000 120,000,000
  • C (10 stock dividend)
  • 20.00 5,500,000 110,000,000
  • Total 242,000,000
  • New Index Value Current MV / Base Value
    Beginning Index Value
  • 242 M / 200 M 100 121

48
Value-Weighted Stock Indexes
  • In a value-weighted series, there is an automatic
    adjustment for stock splits and other capital
    changes (since the decreased price of the share
    is offset by an equal and opposite effect of an
    increase in the number of shares outstanding).
  • In a value-weighted index, the importance of
    individual stocks in the sample depends on the
    market value of the stocks. Therefore, a
    specified percentage change in the value of a
    large company has a greater impact than a
    comparable percentage change in a small company.

49
Value-weight Indexes
  • Price changes for the large market value stocks
    in a value-weighted index will dominate changes
    in the index over time.
  • This value-weighted effect was prevalent on U.S.
    stock markets (NYSE, OTC) in 1998 when the market
    was being driven by large growth stocks - that
    is, almost all of the gain for the year was
    attributable to the largest 50 of the SP 500
    Index.

50
Other market indexes
  • the NYSE Index a mkt value-weighted composite
    index of all NYSE listed stocks
  • the AMEX Index also mkt value-weighted
  • the NASDAQ (National Assoc. Sec. Dealers
    Automatic Quotations) mkt value-weighted
  • the Wilshire 5,000 Index the mkt-value of all
    NYSE AMEX stocks plus actively traded OTC
    stocks
  • called total mkt index
  • includes about 7,000 stocks
  • Russell 2000 small stock ( mkt capitalization
    below 1.5 bill) performance

51
Equally Weighted Index
  • places equal weight on each return
  • corresponds to an implicit portfolio strategy
    that places equal dollar value on each stock
  • Ex. Stocks A B C
  • return 10 -6 15
  • An equally weighted arithmetic avg rA
  • rA (0.10 - 0.06 0.15)/3 0.06333
  • An equally weighted geometric avg rG
  • rG (1.10)(0.94)(1.15) 1/3 - 1.0 0.0594
  • The Value Line Index an equally weighted
    geometrical avg of the performance of about 1,700
    firms

52
Construction of Indexes
  • How are stocks weighted?
  • Price weighted DJIA, Nikkei
  • Market-value weighted SP 500, NASDAQ, some
    MSCI country/regional indices
  • Equally weighted Value Line Index, MSCI Equal
    Weighted Indices
  • How returns are averaged?
  • Arithmetic (DJIA and SP500)
  • Geometric (Value Line Index)

53
Foreign Stock Mkt Indexes
  • the Nikkei 225 a price-weighted average of the
    largest Tokyo Stock Exchange stocks
  • the Nikkei 300 is a value-weighted index
  • Topix market value -weighted index
  • The Tokyo Stock Price Index('TOPIX') is a
    composite index of all common stocks listed on
    the First Section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange
    (TSE).
  • The index is basically a measure of the changes
    in aggregate market value of TSE common stocks.
    The base for each of the index is the aggregate
    market value of its component stocks as of the
    close on January 4, 1968, the first trading day
    of the year.

54
Foreign Stock Mkt Indexes
  • the FTSE 100 (footsie)
  • a value-weighted index of 100 of the largest
    London Stock Exchange corporations published by
    Financial Times of London
  • the DAX index is the premier German stock index
  • MSCI (Morgan Stanley Capital International) stock
    indexes
  • computes over 50 country indexes and several
    regional indexes market-value weighted indexes
    of other non-US stock markets
  • EAFE (Europe, Australia, Far East), the World
    Index
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