Title: The Global Stock Market
1The Global Stock Market
2Background
- A variety of different stock markets exist
- For instance, Germanys market is over 400 years
old while Tanzanias began in 1998 - Macedonia has only two companies trading on its
stock exchange while India has 5,840 - The market capitalization of the U.S. is 10
trillion while that of Guatemala is only 2
billion (in U.S. dollars) - Many stock markets also trade other financial
instruments - Consolidations are merging stock markets and
technology is pulling national markets together
3The Global Stock Market
- Aggregate market capitalization of equity shares
in the world grew from 9.6 trillion in 1990 to
over 35 trillion in 2000 - An average rate of 14.8 annually
- Financial capital is very mobile
- In 1990 the Tokyo Stock Exchange was 30.5 of the
global market but only 12.7 in 1999 - North America increased its share of the world
equity market from 28.0 (1990) to 50.28 (1999)
4The Global Stock Market
- Technological advances are automating experienced
stock exchange employees out of jobs - Stock markets are active in every time zone
5Brokerage Services
- Brokers
- Sales people (earning a commission) employed by
dealers - Have no money invested in the dealers security
inventory - Help create markets by buying and selling from
employers inventory - Brokerage firms extend credit (margin accounts)
to clients - Enables client to do more securities trading
6Brokerage Services
- Types of stock brokerage services
- Full-service
- Take buy and sell orders
- Extend margin credit to customers
- Hold clients securities in safe keeping
- Collect cash dividends
- Provide free investment research
- Perform hand-holding services
- Pleasant telephone conversations
- Investment counseling
- Birthday cards
- All paid for by clients trading commissions
- Range from 30 - 150 for one common stock
transaction
- Examples
- Merrill Lynch
- Goldman Sachs
- PaineWebber
- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
- Salomon Smith Barney
7Brokerage Services
- Discount Brokers
- Simply take orders
- Offer little or no investment advice
- No hand-holding services provided
- Little opportunity for churning
- Lower commissions
- Range from 20 to 50
- Examples
- Charles Schwab Company
- Quick Reilly
- Muriel Siebert
- Jack White Company
- Fidelity Investments
- Vanguard Brokerage Services
8Brokerage Services
- Electronic brokers
- Take buy and sell orders via Internet
- No hand-holding services
- May provide investment research
- May or may not be free
- Low commissions
- Range from almost free to 35 a trade
- Examples
- Discover Brokerage
- DLJdirect
- ETrade
- Archipelago
- Bloomberg Tradebook
- Accutrade
- Ameritrade
- Charles Schwab
- SURETRADE
- Wall Street Access
- CyberCorp.com
9Transacting
- When making a trade, the investor must specify
- Type of order
- Whether or not margin will be involved
10Types of Trading Orders
- Market orderorder to buy or sell ASAP at the
current market price - Simplest, most common order type
- Executed immediately with virtual certainty
- Limit orderorder to buy or sell with a limit
- Limit as to the maximum price paid for a buy
order - Limit as to the minimum price received for a sell
order - If order cannot be immediately transacted, it is
recorded in the market-makers limit order book
and held for possible future execution - Order may never be executed if limit price is not
reached - May attach a time frame to the limit order
11Types of Trading Orders
- Stop orders
- To buy (sell) are written at prices greater
(lower) than the current market price - Activated when (if) the market price reaches the
stop price - Once activated becomes a market order
- Dangers with stop orders
- Execution price cannot be known in advance
- Investor may be whip-sawed in volatile market
- Variation on stop order
- Stop limit orders
- When stop order is activated it becomes a limit
order rather than a market order
12Types of Trading Orders
- Scale order
- Requires buying or selling part of the order at
each price as market prices change - Cumbersome and not all brokers accept them
- Fill or kill (FOK) order
- Specifies price at which order must be filled or
order is immediately canceled - Good till canceled order
- Remains in effect until canceled
- Day ordermust be filled on the day order is
issued - Market on close ordercan only be executed at the
days closing price
13Trading on Margin
- When opening a new account with a brokerage firm,
can have either - Cash account
- Must pay cash for securities
- Margin account
- Offers ability to buy securities on credit
- Money put forth by investor serves as a down
payment - Amount investors may borrow is controlled by the
Federal Reserve Board of Governors - For example, the Fed may stipulate a 60 margin,
meaning the investor must put forth at least 60
of the purchase price
14Trading on Margin
- Federal Reserves margin requirements for stocks
- Varied from 10 (1929) to 100 (1940)
- In recent years has been 50
- Margin requirements are different for different
types of securities
15How Margin Works
- Example You wish to purchase 100 shares of XYZ
Company for a price of 100 per share. The
initial margin requirement is 50. - Purchase price is 100 x 100 shares 10,000
- You put forth 50, or 5,000
- Borrow the remaining 5,000 from your broker
- Broker charges you the brokers call rate for a
margin loan
16How Margin Works
- Assume that the market value of the stock rises
to 150 a share - Your total profit will be 50 a share times 100
shares, or 5,000, ignoring interest (on margin
loan), taxes and commissions - Your return is 100 Profit of 5,000 ?
Investment of 5,000 - If you had not used margin, you could have only
afforded 50 shares, and your profit would only
have been 2,500 - Your return would have been 50 Profit of
2,500 ? Investment of 5,000
17How Margin Works
- Assume that the market value of the stock falls
to 50 a share - Current market value of the investment is now
only 5,000 (which exactly equals the amount that
was borrowed from the broker) - Your total loss will be 50 a share times 100
shares, or 5,000, ignoring interest (on margin
loan), taxes and commissions - Your return is -100 Loss of 5,000 ?
Investment of 5,000 - If you had not used margin, you could have only
afforded 50 shares, and your loss would only have
been 2,500 - Your return would have been -50 Loss of 2,500
? Investment of 5,000
18Maintenance Margin
- If a margined portfolio decreases sufficiently in
value, investor will receive a margin call - Investor must put up more margin money ASAP
- Otherwise, broker liquidates enough of the
investors securities to bring account up to the
required minimum margin - Easy for broker to do because investor with a
margined account must keep securities at the
brokers office as collateral for their loan - The NYSE has a maintenance margin requirement of
25 - Investors equity cannot fall below 25 of the
accounts market value - Or, investors loan amount cannot exceed 75 of
the accounts market value
19Maintenance Margin
- Continuing the example, if you had purchased
10,000 of stock with a 50 margin, you would
face a margin call when - Market value of stock dropped below 6,666.67
- Because your loan of 5,000 cannot exceed 75 of
the market value of portfolio - 75 X 5,000
- X 6,666.67
- Some brokers set a higher maintenance margin than
the 25 minimum
20Investment Banks Make Primary Markets
- Initial public offerings (IPOs) occur when
corporations and governments issue new securities
into the primary market - Sometimes corporations and governments with
existing securities raise additional capital by
issuing a new issue of seasoned securities - Investment bankers find buyers for both IPOs and
seasoned new issues
21Investment Banks
- A few thousand investment banking firms exist in
the U.S., including - Merrill Lynch Co.
- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
- Lehman Brothers
- Credit Suisse First Boston
- Goldman, Sachs Co.
- Salomon Smith Barney
- Bear Stearns Cos.
- Paine Webber
22Investment Bankers Functions
- Each public offering has four steps
- Consulting with the issuer
- Carrying out administrative duties
- Underwriting the issue
- Distributing the securities to investors
23Consulting
- The investment bank that serves as the IPOs
originator must analyze the clients needs and
suggest a financing plan - What type of security should be issued?
- How much financing is needed?
- When should the new securities be issued?
- The originator will also manage
- The underwriting syndicate
- Ranges from 5 to 200 investment banking firms
that share the financing and underwriting risk - The selling group
- Investment banks and brokerage firms that sell
the securities to investors
24Administration
- Deals with legal issues associated with an IPO
- Helps obtain necessary government permissions
- Has the prospectus printed
- Makes public announcements
25Underwriting
- An underwriter guarantees the issuer will receive
a pre-specified amount of cash for the new
securities - Days or weeks from the time the underwriter buys
the securities from the issuer till they sell the
securities to the investors are very risky to
underwriter - Market conditions may fluctuate and underwriter
may lose money on the securities because they
have to sell them at a lower price - It is important to set the right price for an
IPO - If price is too high, underwriters may not be
able to sell securities - If price is too low, issuer may find it costly to
issue securities
26Distribution
- Investment banker may sell securities to a wide
group of investors - Or may act as intermediary between issuer and
buyer in a private placement - The difference between the investment bankers
cost and the sale price is known as the spread - Ranges from 5 16 for stocks
- About 4 for bonds
27Electronic Investment Bankers
- There are several investment banking firms
offering internet services - DLJdirect
- Freidman, Billings, Ramsey Group
- EOffering
- OpenIPO
- E-InvestmentBank
- Wit Capital
- Vary in size and sophistication
28Full Disclosure
- In U.S. the SEC requires most primary issues be
accompanied by a prospectus - 10 to 20 page document that fully discloses,
among other items - Purpose for which the proceeds of the issue will
be spent - Offering price to the public
- Offering price for special groups, in any
- Underwriters fees
- Net proceeds to the issuer
- Information on the issuers products, history and
location - Names and remuneration of officers
- Detailed statement of capitalization
- Detailed financial statements
- Details about any pending litigation
29Full Disclosure
- Approval of a prospectus by the SEC does not mean
the investment is a good value, but that all the
necessary information required by the SEC has
been disclosed - Full disclosure allows investors to estimate
value of new securities
30Secondary Market
- Once securities are issued in the primary market,
they can begin trading in the secondary market - Types of secondary markets
- Organized exchange run by dealers (NYSE)
- Electronic market in which dealers compete with
one another (Nasdaq) - Electronic communication networks
31NYSE
- New York Stock Exchange (www.nyse.com) lists
approximately - 3000 common and preferred stocks issued by
American corporations - 300 foreign stocks
- 250 American Depository Receipts (ADRs)
- Also trades bonds
32NYSE
- Each stock traded on the NYSE is assigned a
specialist who must - Continuously post bid and ask prices for the
stocks in which they make a market - Stand at assigned posts on the trading floor
- Act as market-makers (dealer)
- Always ready to buy at their bid price and sell
at their ask (or offer) price - Invest their own capital (risky) but may earn a
return - Execute orders for others (broker)
- Earn the bid-ask spread on every transaction
33Decimalization
- A tick represents the minimum amount by which a
price can change - Prior to 1997 the tick was 1/8 but then became
1/16 - However the tick size is now 1 since the
exchanges instituted decimalization - Expected to reduce the bid-ask spread and trading
costs
34NYSE Listing Requirements
- To be listed on the NYSE must have
- A minimum taxable annual income of 2.5 million
- A minimum net tangible assets of 18 million
- A minimum of 1.1 million shares of publicly held
stock with a minimum market value of 18 million - A minimum number of 2,000 investors owning
round-lots (100 shares) - One specialist
35NYSE Operations
- Approximately 460 specialists with about 8 stocks
assigned to each specialists trading post - About 1,500 trading booths with telephones
surround the perimeter of the trading floor - Allows for order transmission and confirmation
between brokers offices and exchange floor - NYSE has 1,366 members who must own a seat on the
exchange - Almost all members are either specialists or
floor brokers
36Floor Brokers
- Buy and sell securities for the clients of
brokerage houses or for their own accounts - Order process
- Broker receives order via phone from the
brokerage - Walks to trading floor and executes transaction
at the specialists post - Phones brokerage and provides confirmation
37Specialists
- Accepts obligation to make a fair and orderly
market by - Selling shares out of their own inventory if
there are more buy orders than sell orders (or by
raising the price of the security they control) - Buying shares for their own inventory if there
are more sell orders than buy orders (or by
lowering the price of the stock) - Keeps a limit order book (LOB) for each stock in
which they make a market
38Limit Order Book
- Today is kept on a computer
- Records buy and sell orders from potential
traders - Outlines the supply and demand curves that
determine market price of security - Helps specialists earn trading profits
39NYSE
- NYSE has lagged behind other organizations in
terms of technology - Uses Super Designated Order Turnaround (SuperDOT)
system - Routes small market orders and limit orders
directly from member firms to specialists - Bypasses floor brokers
- Specialists usually let PCs execute SuperDOT
transactions automatically
40Block Trades
- A single transaction involving 10,000 or more
shares - Increased steadily throughout the 1960s-1980s but
leveled off in the 1990s - Specialists are not involved in block trades that
occur outside the NYSE by block positioners - Special brokers/dealers that line up multiple
buyers for a large block - Some large investment banks have a block
positioning department - Have the capital to carry a large block for a few
days and the connections to distribute it - The upstairs market
- Economies of scale lead to small commissions per
share
41Nasdaq Market
- Electronic, over-the-counter (OTC) market
- Lists over 15 of the worlds stock market
capitalization - Over 6,400 common and preferred stocks
- About 320 foreign stocks
- About 140 ADRs
42Nasdaq Market
- National Association of Securities Dealers
Automated Quotations (Nasdaq) is the
communications network that services the OTC
market - About 61,000 computer terminals are connected to
Nasdaqs mainframe via phone lines - Can obtain current bid and ask prices for all
Nasdaq stocks - Updated continuously by about 540 competing
Nasdaq market-makers (dealers) - Investors broker can access the system to find
the best bid/ask price for a security - Broker then calls dealer to execute transaction
as trades cannot be executed via Nasdaq computer
43Nasdaq Market
- Centralizes a geographically dispersed market
into a mainframe computer - When a broker or dealer inquires about a
securitys price, bid-ask quotes are instantly
provided even if the dealers are many miles apart - Designed to handle up to 20,000 stocks
- Currently lists about 6,500 actively traded
stocks - In 1999 Nasdaq merged with AMEX
- Nasdaq plans to cross-list stocks with various
international exchanges - Positioning itself to more effectively compete
with NYSE
44CQS, ITS and Law of One Price
- SEC requires that the Consolidated Quotation
System (CQS) report current transactions for
NYSE, OTC, AMEX, regional U.S. stock exchanges
and the third market - Helps investors find the best prices
- CQS cannot perform executions
- SEC urged NYSE to create the Intermarket Trading
System (ITS) - Electronic trading network linking various U.S.
markets - Nasdaq supplemented ITS with an electronic
communications network called Primex - Gives faster access to NYSE-listed stocks
- Combining CQS with ITS and Primex allows
arbitrageurs to enforce the law of one price
45Non-Nasdaq National Quotation Bureau (NQB)
- To be included in Nasdaqs national daily list, a
stock must have - At least two market makers
- A minimum of 1,500 stockholders
- Significant investor interest
- A stock not meeting these requirements are listed
with the National Quotation Bureau (NQB) - NQB lists 3,600 stocks, some of which are not
actively traded - Includes
- Domestic U.S. micro-cap stocks
- Shares in foreign corporations that cannot be
listed on an organized exchange - ADRS and GDRs for stocks that do not meet the
accounting standards for listing on an organized
exchange
46Third U.S. Market
- Third marketsubset of OTC market where
exchange-listed stocks are traded - Competes with organized exchanges
- Offers cost savings in the form of better bid-ask
prices - Nasdaq and regional stock exchanges are the core
of the third market - For instance, in 1999 Chicago Stock Exchange
(CHX) traded over 90 of the NYSE-listed stocks - Majority of CHXs trading volume is from dual
listings - CHX pays for order flow
- Specialists take a penny or so (per share) from
their bid-ask spread and give it to brokers to
encourage brokers to execute their orders on the
CHX rather than NYSE
47Fourth U.S. Market
- Fourth marketa network of market-makers, block
traders and institutions - Bypass normal dealer services and negotiate
directly with each other - Instinet (short for Institutional Network) has
operated in the fourth market since 1970 - Has computer terminals in over 5,000 subscribers
offices - Millions of shares are traded in secrecy daily
via Instinet - Commissions range from 2 to 8 a share
48Order Crossing Networks
- An electronic communication network that tries to
match buy and sell orders - The price may be
- The last reported price from an organized
exchange - Midway between the current bid-ask prices on an
organized exchange - Traders may pay a fixed annual fee to use
alternative market systems - Variable trading costs are zero
- Rapid executions are possible if the other half
of the transaction is already present in network - Offers anonymity
- Sometimes the network is not operating when it is
needed - Or the other half of the transaction is
unavailable
49Order Crossing Networks
- Instinet operates the Crossing Network and
competes with Investment Technology Groups (ITG)
Portfolio System for Institutiional Trading
(POSIT) - Bloomberg runs Tradebooka continuous matching
system mainly for Nasdaq stocks - In 1999 Bloomberg ITG created SuperECN
- Offers a crossing network with a larger order
flow - Other crossing networks include
- Investors Liquidity Network by Fidelity
Investors - E-Crossnet is for European stocks
50Electronic Order Working Systems
- Electronic order working systems
- Screen telecommunication networks, capture
current market information and use it to make
ongoing transactions - Needs the following information
- Securities that are to be traded
- Limit order prices
- Quantities available at different prices
- Binding time limits
- Markets where the securities are traded
- Any additional information
51Electronic Order Working Systems
- Various EOWS include
- QuantEX by Investment Technology Group
- Order Management System by Instinet
- Lattice Trading System by Credit Suisse First
Boston - REDIBook
- Archipelago Exchange
52Electronic Stock Exchanges
- Arizona Stock Exchange (AZX)
- Formed in 1990 in Phoenix
- Periodic call market
- Automated auction process that attempts to equate
the supply and demand for a broad list of common
stocks at a few specified times each trading day - Client submits order as if it were a limit order
- The limit order book is open to all participants,
but anonymity of participants is maintained - Each time an auction occurs, the AZX computer
calculates supply and demand curves for each
security being auctioned - The intersection of the curve determines the
securitys market clearing price - All sell (buy) orders below (above) the market
clearing price are matched - On a daily basis, about two dozen institutional
investors used the AZX system, trading several
hundred thousand shares
53Electronic Stock Exchanges
- European Association of Securities Dealers
Automated Quotations (EASDAQ) - Based in Brussels
- Nasdaq acquired EASDAQ in 2001
- Lists and trades about 50 technology stocks
- Primex
- Patterned after NYSE
- Takes a customers buy or sell order to the NYSE
and other competing exchanges in search of best
available price - Allows users to haggle for the best prices
54Electronic Stock Exchanges
- Tradepoint
- Conducts auctions for U.K. equities
- Operates with a transparent order book
- Jiway
- Stockbrokers can transact with each other in over
6,000 European and American stocks - Auctions off the right to be the designated
market-maker for each stock in its system to
member firms - Provides custody services, etc.
55Electronic Stock Exchanges
- European Alliance
- Informal alliance of eight stock exchanges,
including - London Stock Exchange
- Amsterdam Stock Exchange
- Brussels Stock Exchange
- Reg ATS Exchanges
- SEC rule that allows alternative trading systems
in the U.S. to register as stock exchanges - Exchanges must
- report their prices via the Consolidated
Quotation System - Operate as a self-regulating organization
- Participate in the intermarket trading system
56The Twenty-First Century
- In 1999 NYSE and Nasdaq announced that they are
interested in reorganizing as for-profit
corporations - Would allow them to raise outside capital in
order to obtain better technology - In 2000 Merrill Lynch started an electronic
brokerage subsidiarythe last full-service
brokerage in U.S. to do so - In 2000 several companies submitted a joint
proposal to SEC to establish a central limit
order book - Would reduce market fragmentation and increase
transparency within U.S.
57The Twenty-First Century
- Electronic technology will continue to accelerate
change - Trading volume will increase as transaction costs
fall - There will be pressure on stock exchanges and
ECNs to consolidate - A global market will eventually emerge
58Liquidity
- Perfectly liquid assets are highly marketable
- Do not suffer from a decline in price if they are
liquidated quickly - For example, the U.S. dollar is perfectly liquid
whereas most real estate is not because - To quickly sell a house, seller must offer a
price discount - Real estate brokers commonly have commissions of
6 of the property value
59Liquidity Continuum
- Assets categorized from most liquid to least
liquid - U.S. dollar bills
- U.S. Treasury bonds
- NYSE-listed stocks and large Nasdaq stocks (such
as Microsoft) - Nasdaq stocks
- Corporate bonds
- Most municipal bonds
- Most real estate
- Art objects and collectibles
Investors pay a liquidity premium for the
convenience of owning liquid assets.
60Liquidity in Securities Markets
- A liquid securities market possesses the
following qualities - Depthbuy-sell orders exists both above and below
the price at which the security is transacting - A market lacking depth is shallow
- Breadthwhen a large amount of buy-sell orders as
described above exist - Markets lacking breadth are called thin markets
- Resiliencyif new orders occur in response to
price changes due to temporary order imbalances
61Transaction Costs
- Direct transaction costs
- Brokers commissions
- Income taxes
- Transfer fees
- Custodial fees
- Outlays for research information
- Indirect transaction costs
- Bid-ask spreaddetermined by the cost of
market-making expenses such as - Interest expense for financing inventory of
securities - Risk premium for investing capital
- Administrative costs
62Transaction Costs
- Indirect transaction costs
- Market impact
- Buying (selling) tends to bid up (down) the price
of a security - Large transactions tend to move prices more than
smaller transactions - Opportunity cost (implicit)
- Decay of information value of a trade incurred
when market moves against a trader waiting to
trade - Tends to increase with time between decision to
trade and the actual execution of the trade
63Transaction Costs
- Total transactions costs can range from less than
1 of the value to much of the investors return
(in countries with high capital gains taxes) - The cost of transaction varies inversely with the
markets liquidity - Large cap stocks are usually more actively traded
than small cap - Thus, small cap stocks generally have a higher
transaction cost - Large industrialized nations generally have lower
transaction costs because - The stock markets are more active
- More political stability
- More efficient legal systems
64The Bottom Line
- Small and large stock markets provide varying
degrees of liquidity - Institutional investors may use block positioners
to execute large trades - Full-service brokers charge high commissions
- Discount brokers, electronic brokers or ECNs
offer less costly services - Most trades are market orders, however other
order types exist
65The Bottom Line
- Investors may buy on margineffectively borrowing
money from their brokerage - Margin trading enhances gains and losses
- Investment bankers assist their clients in
raising money in the primary market - Organizing distribution syndicates
- Underwriting the issue
- Distributing the securities
66The Bottom Line
- NYSE is the largest stock market in the world
- Continuous auction market
- Specialists
- NASDAQ is a large electronic market
- ECNs involve several different categories of
market technology - Technology is
- Increasing the array of brokerage services
- Increasing the competition between brokerage
- Reducing transaction costs
- Speeding executions
- Creating new types of stock exchanges
- Altering the IPO process
- Integrating the worlds stock markets into a
global one