Title: Investments: Background and Issues
1Investments Background and Issues
- Real vs Financial Assets
- Real assets are used to produce goods and
services - Financial assets are claims on real assets
- All financial assets are derivative assets (i.e.,
prices derived from their underlying assets) - Why financial assets exist?
2- Financial Market
- Channel funds from the surplus units (typically
from the consumer sector) to the deficit units
(from the business sectors or government) - Financial intermediaries are institutions help
the fund flows in the financial market for
efficient fund allocation - Means to overcome market impediments, e.g., taxes
3Financial Intermediaries
- Brokerage Function Financial intermediaries that
bring together buyers and sellers to complete the
transaction and charges a fee, e.g., investment
banks - Asset TransformationFinancial intermediaries
that pool short-term funds and transform them
into longer-term assets, e.g., commercial banks
4Market Structures
- Direct Marketbuyers and sellers find each other
directly, e.g., resale of real assets - Brokered MarketBroker brings buyer and sellers
together, e.g., direct placement of debt - Dealer MarketDealer purchases the asset and
later sells it to the investor, e.g., OTC market - Auction marketAll transactions converge in one
place to buy or sell, e.g., NYSEcontinuous vs
discrete auction market
5Recent Developments in Financial MKT
- Globalization
- Integration of financial markets across nations,
e.g., mutual fund flows1993, mutual funds
invested in LDC grew substantially, but
correction later. - SecuritizationPackage assets and sell off to
market, e.g., A/R loans - Credit Enhancementallows insurance company to
back credit of a corporation - Financial Engineeringunbundling and bundling of
existing assets to create new instruments (dual
funds)
6Financial Instruments
- Money Market (short-term)Tbill when issued
with maturities if 13-w, 26-w or 52-w and are
sold at a discount basisDY (10,000-price)/10,0
00(360/n)where DY discount yield n
days to maturityBEY (10,000-P)/P(365/n) - BEY is the bond equivalent yieldEffective Yield
is the yield to maturity that equates the present
value of the Tbill face value to its current
price
7- Certificate of Deposit (CD)time
depositinstrument with banks. Denominations
equal to or less 100,000 due to FDIC insurance
limit. - Commercial paper Corporate IOUs, less than
270-day maturity due to SEC ruleIncreasing
importance instruments that shapesthe banking
industry - Bankers Acceptance trade discount instrument
backed by banks. - Eurodollar CD deposits with Eurobonds
- Federal Funds bank deposits at FRB as reserve.
Excess amount than required can beloaned out on
a overnight basis to satisfy theFRB requirement
8Capital Market Instruments
- Treasury notes/bonds medium to long-term federal
government debt instruments at a fixed rate. - Corporate Bonds private firms debt issues
- Mortgages and Mortgage-backed Securities a
portfolio of mortgage loans or claims in a pool
of mortgage loans. - Preferred stocks dividend typically cumulative
institutions may have 70 exclusion tax
consideration - Common Stocks
9Stock Index
- Price-Weighted Indice Dow Jones Industrial Index
(DJIA), 30 stocks.Suppose two stocks, their
prices are 25 and 100 Index
(25100)/divisorSince there is 2 stocks,
divisor2Index (25100)/2 62.5If
(1) the new price of first one is 30 and the
second stock undertakes 2/1 split and its new
price is 45, thenNew Divisor (2550)/62.5
1.25New Index (3045)/1.25 62.5 (same!) - Value-Weighted Index e.g., SP 500
10- Bond Indexes there are many bond indexes, such
as Lehman Brothers, andIbbotson that indicate
overall bond marketconditions. - Other InstrumentsOptions a right to buy/sell a
security in the futureFutures
an obligation to buy or sell in
the future
11Hong Kong Money Market
- Interbank Market
- most important component of the money market in
HK - a short-term unsecured loans between
deposit-taking institutions (licensed banks,
restricted licensed banks and deposit-taking
companies) - maturity overnight to 12-months
- quote bid-ask spread using HIBOR (Hong Kong
Interbank Offered Rate) as a reference rate - its liquidity is influenced by Hong Kong Monetary
Authority (HKMA)
12- when HK is under pressure to depreciate from the
7.8/US, HKMA will raise the interbank rate to
induce more dollars to interbank market. - Repo Market
- HKMA provides a discount window called the
Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) for banks
between 400-500 pm, i.e., after the close of
the interbank market - banks sell securities at discount to HKMA and
repurchasing back next day. - Two types of securities are acceptable in
- in the repo market (1) securities issued by the
statutory bodies, such as Mass Transit Railway
Corporation and Provisional Airport Authority,
(2) Securities that arenot lower than A- (SPs)
or A3 (Moodys) if issued by banks, and not lower
than A (SPs) or A2 (Moodys) issued by non-banks
13- Exchange Fund Market
- exchange fund bill (short-term) started in 1990
and later managed by HKMA - its maturity 91-day, 182-day, and 364-day
- size HK1.5b, 1b and 0.5 b
- Exchange Fund Notes are longer-maturity with 2-y,
3-y, 5-y, and 7-yr - Commercial Paper (CP)
- short-term, 30-days to 1-yr
- unsecured and mainly primary market
- Firms only issued CP if highly rated by rating
agencies (SP, Moody) - minimum size, HK500,000, institutional
participants in the market - Negotiable CD
- large denominations in HKD (70) andforeign
currencies - most in 3-year maturity, primary market
14- Bankers Acceptance
- largely denominated in foreign currencywith 10
in HK - 3-6 months maturity, which is the timefor
shipment and settlement of goods - lenders are largely banks and deposit-taking
companies - the rate is typically below HIBOR