Title: Lecture Presentation to accompany Investment Analysis
1Chapter 3
Organization and Functioning of Securities
Markets
2What is a market?
- Brings buyers and sellers together to aid in the
transfer of goods and services. - Does not require a physical location.
- The market does not necessarily own the goods or
services involved. - A market can deal in any variety of goods and
services.
3Characteristics of a Good Market
- Provide timely and accurate information
- Liquidity
- Marketability (likelihood of being sold quickly)
- price continuity
- Depth (many participants)
- Low transaction costs (internal efficiency)
- Rapid adjustment of prices to new information
(external efficiency/informational efficiency)
4Decimal pricing
- Stocks are quoted in eighths prior to 1997 (1/8,
2/8,) - In 1997, they used sixteenths (1/16, 2/16,) in
the US. - In April 2001, NYSE, AMEX and NSADAQ all use
decimal pricing.
5Benefits of using decimal pricing
- Easily understood
- Reduce bid-ask spread (minimum change from
0.125, to 0.0625, and to any small number)gt
save money (bid-ask spread is the compensation to
dealer) - More comparable with other exchanges gt lower
transaction costs and more competitive
6Organization of the Securities Market
- Primary markets
- Market where new securities are sold, and funds
go to issuer. - Secondary markets
- Market where outstanding securities are bought
and sold by investors. The issuer does not
receive any funds in a secondary market
transaction.
7Government Bond Issues
Primary Capital Markets
- 1. Treasury Bills negotiable, non-interest
bearing securities with original maturities of
one year or less - 2. Treasury Notes original maturities of 2 to
10 years - 3. Treasury Bonds original maturities of more
than 10 years
8Municipal Bond Issues
- Sold by three methods
- Competitive bid (require underwriters)
- Negotiation (require underwriters)
- Private placement
- Underwriters sell the bonds to investors
- Origination
- Risk-bearing
- Distribution
9The Underwriting Function
- The investment banker purchases the entire issue
from the issuer and resells the security to the
investing public. - The firm charges a commission for providing this
service. - For municipal bonds, the underwriting function is
performed by both investment banking firms and
commercial banks.
10The Underwriting Organization Structure(Corporate
bond issues)
Exhibit 3.1
11Corporate Stock Issues
- New issues (typically underwritten by investment
bankers) are divided into two groups - Seasoned new issues - new shares offered by firms
that already have stock outstanding - Initial public offerings (IPOs) - a firm selling
its common stock to the public for the first time
12Underwriting Relationships with Investment Bankers
- 1. Negotiated
- Most common
- Full services of underwriter
- 2. Competitive bids
- Investment bankers give less advice
- Lower costs
- Reduced services of underwriter
- 3. Best-efforts
- Investment banker acts as broker
13Secondary Financial Markets
- Why secondary financial markets are important?
- Provides liquidity to investors who acquire
securities in the primary market. - Lower required returns because of lower liquidity
risk. - Helps in pricing the new issues.
14Secondary Bond Market
- Secondary market for U.S. government and
municipal bonds (active trading) - U.S. government bonds traded by bond dealers
(large banks and investment banks) - Banks and investment firms make up municipal
market makers - Large investment firms also underwrite and trade
municipal bonds - Secondary corporate bond market (limited trading)
- Currently traded in OTC market
15Secondary Equity Markets
- 1. Major national stock exchanges (listed
securities exchanges) - New York, American, Tokyo, and London stock
exchanges - 2. Regional stock exchanges (listed securities
exchanges) - Chicago, San Francisco, Boston, Osaka, Nagoya,
Dublin, Cincinnati - 3. Over-the-counter (OTC) market
- Stocks not listed on organized exchange
162 major trading systems
- Pure auction market
- Buyers and sellers are matched by a broker at a
central location - Price-driven market
- Dealer market
- Dealers provide liquidity by buying and selling
shares - Dealers may compete against other dealers
17Call versus Continuous Markets
- Call markets trade individual stocks at specified
times. This occurs when - In the early stage of an exchange, few stocks
listed and few traders - orders build up overnight
- after trading is suspended.
- Call markets make themselves more orderly and
less volatile.
18Call versus Continuous Markets
- In a continuous market, trades occur at any time
the market is open, priced by auction or by
dealers. - Combination structure auction market basically
and intermediary (broker or dealer) appears if
the auction market has few activities.
19National Stock Exchanges
- Large number of listed securities
- Prestige of firms listed
- Wide geographic dispersion of listed firms
- Diverse clientele of buyers and sellers
20The introduction to the following stock exchanges
is skipped. Read these pages (pp 76-82)
skip
- NYSE
- AMEX
- Tokyo Stock Exchange
- London Stock Exchange
- Regional stock exchanges
21OTC market
- A negotiated market (investors negotiate directly
with dealers) - The largest segment of the US secondary market in
terms of the number of issues traded. (NYSE has a
larger total value of trading.) - Any security can be traded in OTC (no minimum
requirement) as long as a registered dealer wants
to make a market. - The securities include more than 100
exchange-listed stocks and government bonds.
22Third Market
- OTC trading of shares listed on an exchange
- Mostly well known stocks
- GM, IBM, ATT, Xerox
- Competes with trades on exchanges
- May be open when the stock exchange is closed or
trading suspended.
23Fourth Market
- Direct trading of securities between two parties
with no broker intermediary - Usually both parties are institutions
- Can save transaction costs
- No data are available regarding its specific size
and growth
24Detailed Analysis of Exchange Markets
- Exchange Membership
- Major Types of Orders
- Exchange Market Makers
25Exchange Membership
- Specialist (market maker, introduced later)
- Commission brokers
- Employees of a member firm who buy or sell for
the customers of the firm - Floor brokers
- Independent members of an exchange who act as
broker for other members (to earn service fees) - Registered traders
- Use their membership to buy and sell for their
own accounts (they add liquidity but their
trading obligations are limited)
26Major Types of Orders
- Market orders
- Buy at the lowest offering price available
- Sell at the highest bid available
- Provides immediate liquidity
- Limit orders
- Order specifies the buy or sell price
- Time specifications for order may vary
- Instantaneous - fill or kill, part of a day, a
full day, several days, a week, a month, or good
until canceled (GTC)
27Major Types of Orders
- Short sales
- Sell overpriced stock that you dont own and
purchase it back later (at a lower price) - Borrow the stock from another investor (through
your broker) - Can only be made on an uptick trade
- Must pay any dividends to lender
- Margin requirements apply
28Major Types of Orders
- Special Orders
- Stop loss
- Conditional order to sell stock if it drops to a
given price - Does not guarantee price you will get upon sale
- Market disruptions can cancel such orders
- Stop buy order
- Investor who sold short may want to limit loss if
stock increases in price
29Margin Transactions
- On any type of order, instead of paying 100
cash, borrow a portion of the transaction, using
the stock as collateral. - Interest rate on margin credit typically is 1.5
above the call money rate (banks). - Initial margin requirement was 50 (July 2002,
the Fed)
30Margin Transactions
- Buy 200 shares at 50 10,000 position
- Borrow 50, investment of 5,000
- If price increases to 60, position
- Value is 12,000
- Less - 5,000 borrowed
- Leaves 7,000 equity for a
- 7,000/12,000 58 equity position
31Margin Transactions
- Buy 200 shares at 50 10,000 position
- Borrow 50, investment of 5,000
- If price decreases to 40, position
- Value is 8,000
- Less - 5,000 borrowed
- Leaves 3,000 equity for a
- 3,000/8,000 37.5 equity position
32Leverage factor
- Leverage factor 1/margin()
- For example 50 margin, then leverage
factor1/502 - When stock price increase (decreases) 20, your
equity increases (decreases) 20240
See page 91 for considerations on transaction
costs
33Margin Transactions
- Initial margin requirement at least 50. Set up
by the Fed. - Maintenance margin
- Requirement proportion of equity to stock
- Protects broker if stock price declines
- Minimum requirement is 25
- Margin call on undermargined account to meet
margin requirement - If margin call not met, stock will be sold to pay
off the loan
34Margin call
- Using the prior example, lets determine the
stock price below which you will receive a margin
call (margin requirement is 25)
35Exchange Market Makers(U.S. Markets)
- Specialist is exchange member assigned to handle
particular stocks (about 15 stocks) - Has two major roles
- Broker to match buyers and sellers
- Dealer to maintain fair and orderly market (about
1530 of the trades on NYSE) - Specialist has two income sources
- Broker commission, without risk (for very liquid
stocks) - Dealer trading income from profit, with risk (for
less liquid stocks)
36Changes in the Securities Markets
- Since 1965, the growth of trading by large
financial institutions (institutionalization) has
had many effects - Negotiated (competitive) commission rates
- Influence on block trades
- Impact on stock price volatility
- Development of National Market System (NMS)
37Negotiated Commission Rates
- NYSE minimum commission schedule prohibited price
cutting since 1792 - No price break for large orders
- Initial reaction was give-ups paid to a
designated firm - soft dollars paid for market
research - Third market competed with flexible commissions
and grew - Fostered development of the fourth market
38Negotiated Commission Rates
- In 1970 SEC began phasing in negotiated
commissions - Commission rates have fallen
- Discount brokerage firms compete openly
- Many brokerage and research firms have merged or
liquidated (buying research by using soft dollars)
39The Impact of Block Trades
- Number and size of block trades has increased
- This strains the exchange specialist system
- Capital - 10,000 shares or larger blocks
- Commitment - large risk with large blocks
- Contacts - Rule 113 prohibited direct contact to
offer blocks to another institution
40The Impact of Block Trades
- Block houses (upstairs traders) are investment
firms that help institutions locate other
institutions interested in buying or selling
blocks of stock - A good block house has
- The capital required to position a large block
- The willingness to commit this capital to a block
transaction, and - Contacts among institutions
41Institutions and Stock Price Volatility
- Empirical studies have not supported the theory
that institutional trading increases price
volatility. - Where trading is dominated by institutions,
actively involved institutions may provide
liquidity for one another and noninstitutional
investors.
42Exercises