How Securities are Traded

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How Securities are Traded

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Sell stocks when price falls below a stipulated level ... Stocks purchased on margin must be maintained with the broker as collateral for the loan ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How Securities are Traded


1
Chapter 3
  • How Securities are Traded

2
How to place an order?
  • Instruct your broker the following order
    specification
  • Online vs. offline
  • Name and type of the security to trade
  • Indicate a purchase or sale
  • Order size round lots vs. odd lots
  • Order type market vs. limit orders, etc.
  • Length of time of the order

3
Types of Orders
  • Market order
  • Buy or sell orders are to be executed immediately
    at the best price currently available
  • Limit order
  • Specify prices at which buy or sell orders are
    executed
  • Stop-loss order
  • Sell stocks when price falls below a stipulated
    level
  • This is to stop further losses from a long
    position
  • Stop-buy order
  • Buy stocks when price rises above a stipulated
    level
  • This is to limit potential losses from a short
    position
  • Good-till-canceled order
  • Fill or Kill order (FOK)
  • immediately execute a trade completely, or else,
    cancel it
  • Market-on-close order

4
Evolution of limit order book
  • Suppose the following limit order book for stock
    XYZ observed at time 0 on a day.
  • Sell Price Buy (At time 0) Sell Price Buy (At
    time 4)
  • .... .... .... ....
  • 1000 32 ??? 32
  • 2000 31 ??? 31
  • 30 ? 30
  • 29 29
  • 28 3000 28 ???
  • 27 2000 27 ???
  • .... .... .... ....
  • What will be the trade prices for the following
    orders?
  • At time 1, a market buy order of 1000 shares
    arrived.
  • At time 2, a market buy order of 1500 shares
    arrived.
  • At time 3, a market sell order of 2000 shares
    arrived.
  • At time 4, a limit sell order of 1000 shares at
    31 arrived.
  • How would the limit order book look like just
    after time 4?
  • What would be the implicit cost of market buying
    and selling a share simultaneously just after
    time 4?

5
Costs of Trading
  • Brokerage commission
  • Fees paid to broker
  • Full-service vs. discount broker
  • Explicit cost of trading
  • Bid-ask spread implicit cost of trading
  • Bid price that a dealer is willing to buy from
    you
  • Ask price that a dealer is willing to sell to
    you
  • Typically, Ask gt Bid
  • and the difference ask bid is called as
    bid-ask spread, which is dealers gain for the
    market-making service

6
Margin Trading
  • Only a portion of the investment proceed comes
    from your own money
  • Remaining portion is borrowed from a broker
  • Bet on a rise in the price of the security
  • Higher leverage, magnifying upside and downside
    risks
  • Stocks purchased on margin must be maintained
    with the broker as collateral for the loan
  • Initial margin
  • Currently 50, set by the Fed
  • You can borrow up to 50 of the stock value
  • Maintenance margin
  • Minimum amount of equity maintained in the
    account
  • Margin call call from a broker to put up more
    equity funds
  • Margin arrangements differ for stocks and futures

7
Margin Trading Initial Margin
  • X Corp. 70 current price
  • 1,000 Shares Purchased
  • 50 Initial Margin
  • 40 Maintenance Margin
  • Initial Position
  • Stock 70,000 Borrowed 35,000
  • Equity 35,000

8
Margin Trading Maintenance Margin
  • If stock price falls to 60 per share,
  • New Position
  • Stock 60,000 Borrowed 35,000
  • Equity 25,000
  • Margin () Equity in account / Value of stock
  • 25,000 / 60,000 41.67
  • Rate of return (25,000 35,000)/35,000
    -28.57
  • Rate of return if own money of 35,000 is used to
    buy 500 shares
  • (30,000 35,000) / 35,000 14.28

9
Margin Trading Margin Call
  • How far can the stock price fall before getting a
    margin call?
  • Margin () Equity in account / Value of stock
  • (1,000P - 35,000) / 1,000P 40
  • ? P 58.33
  • If stock price falls below 58.33, one gets a
    margin call

10
Short Sales
  • Opposite case of the margin purchase, i.e., only
    a portion of the securities are supplied by the
    seller
  • Remaining portion of the securities are borrowed
    from a broker
  • Bet on a decline in the price of the security
  • Higher leverage, magnifying upside and downside
    risks
  • The proceeds from the short sale must be
    maintained with the broker as collateral
  • Mechanics
  • Borrow stocks from a broker
  • Sell it, and deposit the proceeds and margin
    money in an account
  • Close out the position by buying the stock and
    returning it to the lender
  • Short-seller must pay any dividends paid during
    the short sale to the lender of the stock

11
Short Sale Initial Conditions
  • Z Corp 100 current price
  • 100 Shares sold short
  • 50 Initial Margin
  • 30 Maintenance Margin
  • Initial Position
  • Sale proceeds 10,000 Stock owed 10,000
  • Margin(cash,etc) 5,000 Equity
    5,000

12
Short Sale Maintenance Margin
  • If stock price rises to 110,
  • New Position
  • Sale proceeds 10,000 Stock owed 11,000
  • Initial margin 5,000 Equity
    4,000
  • Margin () Equity in account / Value of stock
  • 4,000 / 11,000 36.36
  • Rate of return (4,000 5,000) / 5,000 20
  • Rate of return if own 50 shares are sold at 100
  • (5,000 55,000) / 5,000 10

13
Short Sale Margin Call
  • How much can the stock price rise before getting
    a margin call?
  • Margin () Equity in account / Value of stock
  • (15,000 100P) / (100P) 30
  • ? P 115.38
  • If stock price rises above 115.38, one gets a
    margin call

14
How firms issue securities?
  • Primary Markets
  • New securities are issued to the public
  • For stocks
  • Initial public offerings (IPO)
  • Seasoned equity offerings (SEO)
  • For bonds
  • Public offering
  • Private placement
  • Issuer receives the proceeds from the sale
  • Secondary Markets
  • Subsequent trading occurs, where existing owners
    sell to another party
  • Issuing firm is not directly involved

15
Investment Banking (IB)
  • IBs are specialized in advising and marketing
    public offerings of stocks or bonds, and are
    called underwriters
  • An underwriting syndicate is formed to share the
    responsibility of large offerings
  • IBs provide services such as valuation, marketing
    plan, roadshow, bookbuilding, pricing,
    allocation, and price support in aftermarkets
  • IBs tend to offer a bargain price to induce
    potential investors to submit their interest in
    the bookbuilding process
  • This tendency commonly causes underpricing of
    IPOs, which is reflected in price jumps occurring
    on the first date of trading (New Issue Puzzle)
  • Besides underwriting fees of about 7, such
    underpricing is an implicit cost to the issuing
    firm
  • Highly expensive for small firms, and internet
    IPOs introduced

16
Public Offerings
  • Underwriting types Firm commitment vs. Best
    Efforts
  • Firm commitment IBs buy the issue and assume
    risk of selling
  • Best Efforts no firm commitment, and act as an
    intermediary
  • Negotiated vs. Competitive Bid
  • Negotiated issuing firm negotiates terms with
    investment banker
  • Competitive issuer structures the offering and
    takes bids from IBs
  • SEC registration required for new issues to the
    public
  • Registration of new securities must be approved
    by SEC (Preliminary prospectus, or Red herring)
  • Once approved, Prospectus is distributed to the
    public together with Tombstone advertisements
  • Shelf registration (SEC Rule 415, since 1982)

17
Private Placements
  • Sale to a small number of institutions and
    sophisticated investors
  • Does not require registration at the SEC (Rule
    144A), and thus, cheaper than public offerings
  • Very active market for debt securities, but not
    active for stock offerings

18
Secondary Markets
  • Organized exchanges
  • OTC market
  • Third market
  • Fourth market

19
Organized Exchanges
  • Auction markets with centralized order flow
  • NYSE, AMEX, and regional exchanges
  • Listing requirements
  • Dealership function by Specialists at NYSE
  • Have exclusive right to make the market in a
    specified stock on the NYSE
  • Must maintain a fair and orderly market
  • Can be competitive or assigned by the exchange
  • Traded securities
  • stock, bonds, futures, options contracts

20
OTC Market
  • An informal exchange of brokers and dealers
    negotiating trades, without centralized order
    flow
  • NASDAQ largest OTC market since 1971
  • Computer-linked system providing information on
    dealers quotation of bid and ask prices
  • Nasdaq National Market System
  • Nasdaq SmallCap Market
  • Lower volume securities
  • OTC Bulletin Board
  • Pink Sheets from NASD
  • Traded securities
  • Stocks, bonds and some derivatives
  • Most secondary bonds transactions

21
Third Market
  • Trading of exchange-listed securities away from
    the exchange
  • Institutional market, facilitating trades of
    larger blocks of securities
  • Involves services of dealers and brokers

22
Fourth Market
  • Investors trading directly with other investors
  • Originally developed for institutional trading
  • Technological developments lead to individual
    investors trading directly, without the need of
    market makers
  • Advent of ECN
  • Computer networks allowing direct trading
  • Captures about 30 of the trading volume for
    NASDAQ-listed stocks in 2001
  • (Ex) INSTINET, POSIT
  • Competing with Nasdaq and NYSE for volume
  • Implication of future structure of stock exchanges

23
Market Mechanics Alternative Ways of Trade
Execution
24
Regulation and Market Trends
  • ECNs present new challenges in regulation
  • Global markets with alliances are developing
  • Current Issues with Insider trading violations
  • Agency problems associated with investment
    banking and research
  • Most of top managers have long been engaged in
    earnings management with analysts and auditors,
    and they have been overly compensated by stock
    options or performance shares due to stock price
    increases
  • We are currently seeing Sarbanes-Oxley acts, SEC
    and FBI investigations, and criminal/civil
    actions against corporations, corporate
    executives, auditors, investment banks, and
    analysts

25
Regulation and Market Trends 2
  • Agency problems associated with investment
    banking and research (Continued)
  • Market for corp. control (takeovers) cannot solve
    the problem Recent evidence shows value
    destruction in a large scale
  • Equity-based compensation is like throwing
    gasoline on a fire
  • Real solution is to not allow the market price to
    get substantially out of line with the true value
    of the firm, and to reset the value
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