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Understanding Securities and Investments

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Title: Understanding Securities and Investments


1
CHAPTER 20
  • Understanding Securities and Investments

2
Securities Markets
  • Securities
  • Stocks and bonds representing secured, or
    asset-based, claims by investors against issuers
  • Primary Securities Market 
  • Market in which new stocks and bonds are bought
    and sold

3
Investment Banking
  • Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) 
  • Federal agency that administers U.S. securities
    laws to protect the investing public and maintain
    smoothly functioning markets
  • Investment Bank
  • Financial institution engaged in issuing and
    reselling new securities
  • Secondary Securities Market
  • Market in which stocks and bonds are traded

4
Investment Banking
  • Provides three important services
  • They advise companies on the timing and financial
    terms of new issues.
  • By underwriting (buying) new securities, they
    bear some of the risks of issuing them.
  • They create the distribution networks for moving
    new securities through groups of other banks and
    brokers into the hands of individual investors.

5
Stocks
  • Common Stocks
  • Par Value Face value of a share of stock, set by
    the issuing companys board of directors
  • Market Value Current price of a share of stock
    in the stock market
  • Capital Gain Profit earned by selling a share of
    stock for more than it cost
  • Book Value Value of a common stock expressed as
    total shareholders equity divided by the number
    of shares of stock

6
Investment Traits of Common Stock
  • Blue-Chip Stock
  • Common stock issued by a well-established company
    with a sound financial history and a stable
    pattern of dividend payouts

7
Preferred Stock
  • Preferred stock is usually issued with a stated
    par value, and dividends are typically expressed
    as a percentage of par value.

Cumulative Preferred Stock Preferred stock on whi
ch dividends not paid in the past must be paid to
stockholders before dividends can be paid to
common stockholders
8
Example of Cumulative
  • Company begins business in 2001. Issue 1000
    shares of 100 par value ,6, preferred stock and
    100,000 shares of common
  • Pay no dividends in 2001
  • Pay dividends of 8,000 in 2002
  • Pay dividends of 40,000 in 2003
  • How are the dividends split between common and
    Preferred?

9
Stock Exchanges
  • Stock Exchange Organization of individuals
    formed to provide an institutional setting in
    which stock can be traded
  • The Trading Floor Actual physical location
    trading may occur

The floor is equipped with a vast array of
electronic communications equipment for conveying
buy-and-sell orders or confirming completed
trades.
10
Brokers
  • Individuals or organizations who receive and
    execute buy-and-sell orders on behalf of other
    people in return for commissions
  • Discount Brokers
  • Online Trading
  • Full Service Brokers

11
The Major Exchanges and the OTC Market
  • New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
  • American Stock Exchange (AMEX)
  • Regional Stock Exchanges (i.e., Chicago Stock
    Exchange and Pacific Stock Exchange in Los
    Angeles and San Francisco)
  • Foreign Stock Exchanges (i.e., London and Tokyo)

12
Differences Between Exchanges and the Electronic
Market
  • The most important differences between exchanges
    and the electronic market are
  • the activity of dealers
  • and
  • (2) the geographic location of the market

13
Over-the-Counter (OTC) Market
Organization of securities dealers formed to
trade stock outside the formal institutional
setting of the organized stock exchanges
  • National Association of Securities Dealers Inc.
    (NASD)
  • Largest securities-regulation organization in the
    United States
  • Every broker/dealer in the United States who
    conducts securities business with the public is
    required by law to be a member
  • National Association of Securities Dealers
    Automated Quotation (NASDAQ) system
  • Organization of over-the-counter dealers who own,
    buy, and sell their own securities over a network
    of electronic communications

14
Capitalization
  • The dollar value (market value) of stocks that
    are listed on a stock exchange

15
Bonds
  • Bond Security through which an issuer promises
    to pay the buyer a certain amount of money by a
    specified future date
  • Government Bond Bond issued by the federal
    government
  • Municipal Bond Bond issued by a state or local
    government
  • Corporate Bond Bond issued by a company as a
    source of long-term funding

16
Interest PaymentRegistered Bearer Bonds
  • Registered Bond Bond bearing the name of the
    holder and registered with the issuing company
  • Bearer (or Coupon) Bond Bond requiring the
    holder to clip and submit a coupon to receive an
    interest payment
  • Secured Bond Bond backed by pledges of assets to
    the bondholders
  • Debenture Unsecured bond for which no specific
    property is pledged as security

17
The Retirement of Bonds
  • Callable Bonds
  • The issuer of callable bonds may call them in and
    pay them off at a price stipulated in the
    indenture, or contract. Usually, the issuer
    cannot call the bond for a certain period of time
    after issue.

Example Most Treasury bonds cannot be called
within the first 5 years.
Sinking Fund Provisions The issuing company is re
quired annually to put a certain amount of money
into a special bank account. At the end of a
certain number of years, the money (including
interest) will be sufficient to redeem the bonds.
Failure to meet the sinking fund provision places
the issue in default.
18
Serial and Convertible Bonds
  • Serial Bond
  • Firm retires portions of the bond issue in a
    series of different preset dates.

Example A company with a 100 million issue
maturing in 20 years may retire 5 million each
year. Serial bonds are most popular among local
and state governments.
Convertible Bonds Can be converted into the commo
n stock of the issuing company. At the option of
the holder, payment is made in stock instead of
in cash.
19
Secondary Markets for Bonds
  • Nearly all secondary trading in bonds occurs in
    the OTC market rather than on organized
    exchanges. Thus, precise statistics about annual
    trading volumes are not recorded. As with stocks,
    however, market values and prices change daily.
    The direction of bond prices moves opposite to
    interest rate changes. As interest rates move up,
    bond prices tend to go down. The prices of
    riskier bonds fluctuate more widely than those of
    higher-grade bonds.

20
Other Investments
  • Mutual Fund
  • Company that pools investments from individuals
    and organizations to purchase a portfolio of
    stocks, bonds, and short-term securities
  • No-Load Fund
  • Mutual fund in which investors pay no sales
    commissions when they buy in or sell out
  • Load Fund
  • Mutual fund in which investors are charged sales
    commissions when they buy in or sell out

21
Commodities
  • Futures Contract
  • Agreement to purchase specified amounts of a
    commodity at a given price on a set future date
  • Commodities Market
  • Market in which futures contracts are traded
  • Margin
  • Percentage of the total sales price that a buyer
    must put up to place an order for stock or
    futures contracts

22
Buying Selling Securities
  • The process of buying and selling securities is
    complex. First, you need to find out about
    possible investments and match them to your
    investment objectives. Then you must select a
    broker and open an account. Only then can you
    place orders and make different types of
    transactions.

23
Financial Information Services
  • Stock Quotations
  • Daily transactions for NYSE securities are
    reported in most city newspapers
  • Bond Quotations
  • Daily quotations on corporate bonds from the NYSE
    are also widely published

24
Reading a Stock Quotation
20 - 24
25
Reading a Bond Quotation
20 - 25
26
OTC Quotations
  • Most OTC (NASDAQ) stock quotations are reported
    in the same format as listed stock quotations.
    Some OTC trades, however, are reported in terms
    of bid and asked quotations.
  • Bid Price Price that an OTC broker pays for a
    share of stock
  • Asked Price Price that an OTC broker charges for
    a share of stock

27
Mutual Funds Quotations
  • Selling prices for mutual funds are reported
    daily in most city newspapers. Additional
    investor information is also available in the
    financial press.

28
Reading a Mutual Fund Quotation
4 wks.
3 yrs.
Year-to-Date
Latest 12 mos.
5 yrs.
20 - 28
29
Market Index
  • Summary of price trends in a specific industry
    and/or the stock market as a whole

Bull Market
Bear Market
Period of falling stock prices
Period of rising stock prices
30
Bull and Bear Markets, 1972-2000
20 - 30
31
Market Indexes
  • The Dow - Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
    Market index based on the prices of 30 of the
    largest industrial firms listed on the NYSE
  • The SP 500 - Standard Poors Composite
    Index Market index based on the performance of
    400 industrial firms, 40 utilities, 40 financial
    institutions, and 20 transportation companies
  • Nasdaq Composite Index Includes not only
    domestic stocks, but non-U.S.based common stocks
    listed on the Nasdaq market

32
The Dow and Interest Rates
20 - 32
33
Placing Orders
  • Market Order Order to buy or sell a security at
    the market price prevailing at the time the order
    is placed
  • Limit Order Order authorizing the purchase of a
    stock only if its price is equal to or less than
    a specified amount
  • Stop Order Order authorizing the sale of a stock
    if its price falls to or below a specified level
  • Round Lot Purchase or sale of stock in units of
    100 shares
  • Odd Lot Purchase or sale of stock in fractions
    of round lots

34
Financing Purchases
  • Margin Trading
  • Stock sale in which the buyer puts down a portion
    of the stocks price and borrows the rest their
    broker, who secures special-rate bank loans with
    stock
  • Short Sale
  • Stock sale in which an investor borrows
    securities from a broker to be sold and then
    replaced at a specified future date

35
Securities Market Regulation
  • Program Trading
  • Large purchase or sale of a group of stocks,
    often triggered by computerized trading programs
    that can be launched without human supervision or
    control

36
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
  • Oversees many phases in the process through which
    securities are issued
  • Regulates the public offering of new securities
    by requiring that all companies file prospectuses
    before proposed offerings commence
  • Prospectus Registration statement filed with the
    SEC before the issuance of a new security
  • Insider Trading Illegal practice of using
    special knowledge about a firm for profit or
    gain
  • Blue-Sky Laws Laws requiring securities dealers
    to be licensed and registered with the states in
    which they do business
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