Title: Chapter Eleven
1Chapter Eleven
2Assets
- An asset is a commodity that provides a flow of
services over time. - E.g. a house, or a computer.
- A financial asset provides a flow of money over
time -- a security.
3Assets
- Typically asset values are uncertain.
Incorporating uncertainty is difficult at this
stage so we will instead study assets assuming
that we can see the future with perfect
certainty.
4Selling An Asset
- Q When should an asset be sold?
- When its value is at a maximum?
- No. Why not?
5Selling An Asset
- Suppose the value of an asset changes with time
according to
6Selling An Asset
Value
Years
7Selling An Asset
Maximum value occurs when
That is, when t 50.
8Selling An Asset
Value
Max. valueof 24,000is reachedat year 50.
Years
9Selling An Asset
- The rate-of-return in year t is the income earned
by the asset in year t as a fraction of its value
in year t. - E.g. if an asset valued at 1,000 earns 100 then
its rate-of-return is 10.
10Selling An Asset
- Q Suppose the interest rate is 10. When should
the asset be sold? - A When the rate-of-return to holding the asset
falls to 10. - Then it is better to sell the asset and put the
proceeds in the bank to earn a 10 rate-of-return
from interest.
11Selling An Asset
The rate-of-return of the asset at time t is
In our example,
so
12Selling An Asset
The asset should be sold when
That is, when t 10.
13Selling An Asset
Value
Max. valueof 24,000is reachedat year 50.
slope 0.1
Years
14Selling An Asset
Value
Max. valueof 24,000is reachedat year 50.
slope 0.1
Sell at 10 yearseven though theassets value
isonly 8,000.
Years
15Selling An Asset
- What is the payoff at year 50 from selling at
year 10 and then investing the 8,000 at 10 per
year for the remaining 40 years?
16Selling An Asset
- What is the payoff at year 50 from selling at
year 10 and then investing the 8,000 at 10 per
year for the remaining 40 years?
17Selling An Asset
So the time at which an asset should besold is
determined by
Rate-of-Return r, the interest rate.
18Arbitrage
- Arbitrage is trading for profit in commodities
which are not used for consumption. - E.g. buying and selling stocks, bonds, or stamps.
- No uncertainty ? all profit opportunities will be
found. What does this imply for prices over time?
19Arbitrage
- The price today of an asset is p0. Its price
tomorrow will be p1. Should it be sold now? - The rate-of-return from holding the asset isI.e.
20Arbitrage
- Sell the asset now for p0, put the money in the
bank to earn interest at rate r and tomorrow you
have
21Arbitrage
- When is not selling best? WhenI.e. if the
rate-or-return to holding the asset
the interest rate, then keep the asset. - And if thenso sell now for p0.
22Arbitrage
- If all asset markets are in equilibrium then
for every asset. - Hence, for every asset, todays price p0 and
tomorrows price p1 satisfy
23Arbitrage
I.e. tomorrows price is the future-value
oftodays price. Equivalently,
I.e. todays price is the present-valueof
tomorrows price.
24Arbitrage in Bonds
- Bonds pay interest. Yet, when the interest
rate paid by banks rises, the market prices of
bonds fall. Why?
25Arbitrage in Bonds
- A bond pays a fixed stream of payments of x per
year, no matter the interest rate paid by banks. - At an initial equilibrium the rate-of-return to
holding a bond must be R r, the initial bank
interest rate. - If the bank interest rate rises to r gt r then
r gt R and the bond should be sold. - Sales of bonds lower their market prices.
26Taxation of Asset Returns
- rb is the before-tax rate-of-return of a taxable
asset. - re is the rate-of-return of a tax exempt asset.
- t is the tax rate.
- The no-arbitrage rule is (1 - t)rb re
- I.e. after-tax rates-of-return are equal.
27Financial Intermediaries
- Banks, brokerages etc.
- facilitate trades between people with different
levels of impatience - patient people (savers) lend funds to impatient
people (borrowers) in exchange for a
rate-of-return on the loaned funds. - both groups are better off.