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Chapter 6 Common Stock Investments

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Title: Chapter 6 Common Stock Investments


1
Chapter 6 Common Stock Investments
2
What Stocks Have to Offer
  • The Appeal of Common Stocks
  • The offer investors a way to tailor their
    investment programs to meet their needs and
    preferences.
  • No matter what the investment objective, there
    are common stocks to fit the bill.
  • Putting Stock Price Behavior in Perspective (See
    Figure 6.1)
  • From Stock Prices to Stock Returns (See Table 6.1
    6.2)
  • The Dow, The SP, and the Nasdaq (See Table 6.3
    and Figure 6.2)

3
Figure 6.1 The Great Bull Market of 1982-2000
4
What Stocks Have to Offer
  • The Pros and Cons of Stock Ownership
  • Pros
  • They have greater return opportunities relative
    to other investments
  • Stocks make ideal inflation hedges
  • They are easy to buy and sell and transaction
    costs are modest
  • Price and market data is widely disseminated
  • The cost of a share is within reach of most
    individual investors
  • Cons
  • Risk (business risk, financial risk, purchasing
    power risk, market risk, and event risk)
  • The earnings and performance are subject to wide
    swings making it difficult to consistently pick
    superior stocks.
  • In general, common stock investors sacrifice the
    receipt of current income (See Figure 6.3 on the
    following slide).

5
Figure 6.3 The Current Income of Stocks and Bonds
6
Basic Characteristics of Common Stocks
  • Common Stock as a Corporate Security
  • Equity Capital. Evidence of ownership position
    in a firm in the form of shares of common stock.
  • Publicly Traded Issues. Shares of stock that are
    readily available to the general public and are
    bought and sold in the open market.
  • Public Offering. An offering to sell to the
    investing public a set number of shares of a
    firms stock at a specified price (See Figure
    6.4).
  • Rights Offering. An offering of a new issue of
    stock to existing stockholders who may purchase
    new shares in proportion to their current
    ownership position.

7
Basic Characteristics of Common Stocks
  • Common Stock as a Corporate Security (continued)
  • Stock Spin-off. The conversion of one of a
    firms subsidiaries to a stand-alone company by
    distribution of stock in that new company to
    existing shareholders.
  • Stock Split. A financial maneuver in which a
    company increases the number of shares
    outstanding by exchanging a specified number of
    new shares of stock for each outstanding share.
  • Treasury Stock. Shares of stock that have been
    sold and subsequently repurchased by the issuing
    firm.
  • Classified Common Stock. Common stock issued by
    a company in different classes each of which
    offers different privileges and benefits to its
    holders.

8
Basic Characteristics of Common Stocks
  • Buying and Selling Stocks
  • Reading the Quotes (See Figure 6.5)
  • Transaction Costs
  • Round lot. 100 shares or multiples thereof.
    Higher fees are generally charged for odd lot
    transactions.
  • Odd Lot Differential. 10 to 25 cents per share in
    addition to the normal fee.
  • Brokerage fee. The cost of the transaction paid
    by both the buyer and seller. They generally
    amount to 1 to 5 but can go much higher for
    smaller trades.
  • Common Stock Values
  • Par Value. The stated or face value of a share of
    stock.

9
Basic Characteristics of Common Stocks
  • Common Stock Values (continued)
  • Book Value. The amount of stockholders equity in
    a firm equals the amount of the firms assets
    minus the firms liabilities and preferred stock.
  • Market Value. The prevailing market price of a
    security.
  • Investment Value. The amount that investors
    believe a security should be trading for, or what
    they think its worth.

10
Common Stock Dividends
  • The Dividend Decision
  • By paying dividends (usually quarterly),
    companies share with their stockholders the
    profits theyve earned and is decided by the
    Board of Directors (BOD) based on the firms
    performance.
  • Corporate Versus Market Factors. When assessing
    whether and how much to pay in dividends, the BOD
    evaluates a number of factors, including
  • Current Earnings Per Share (EPS). See Equation
    6.1
  • The firms growth prospects.
  • Market effects and responses (economic conditions
    and investor expectations).

11
Common Stock Dividends
  • The Dividend Decision (continued)
  • Some Important Dates (See Figure 6.6)
  • Date of Record. The date on which an investor
    must be a registered shareholder of a firm to be
    entitled to receive a dividend.
  • Payment Date. The actual date on which the
    company will mail dividend checks to shareholders
    (a.k.a. the payable date).
  • Ex-Dividend Date. Three business days before the
    date of record determines whether one is an
    official shareholder of a firm and thus eligible
    to receive a declared dividend (See page 241).
  • Types of Dividends
  • Cash Dividend. Payment of a dividend in the form
    of cash.
  • Stock Dividend. Payment of a dividend in the
    form of shares of stock.

12
Common Stock Dividends
  • The Dividend Decision (continued)
  • Cash or Stock
  • Most firms use cash dividends and they tend to
    grow with as their companies grow (the average is
    about 3 to 5 annually).
  • Dividend Yield. The dividend yield is a measure
    that relates dividends to share price and puts
    common stock dividends on a relative percentage
    basis rather than on a dollar basis (See Equation
    6.2).
  • Dividend Payout Ratio. The dividend payout ratio
    is the portion of earnings per share (EPS) that a
    firm pays out as dividends (See Equation 6.3).
  • Stock Dividend. A stock dividend is a dividend
    paid out in additional share rather than in cash
    (for example, a 10 stock dividend) in
    actuality, stock dividend have no real value.

13
Common Stock Dividends
  • Dividend Reinvestment Plans (DRIPs). DRIPs are
    plans in which stockholders have cash dividends
    automatically reinvested into additional share of
    the firms common stock (See Table 6.4 for an
    illustration).

14
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Types of Stocks
  • Blue Chip Stocks. Financially strong,
    high-quality stocks with long and stable records
    of earnings and dividends (See Figure 6.7).
  • Income Stocks. Stocks with long and sustained
    records of paying higher-than-average dividends.
  • Growth Stocks. Stocks that experience high rates
    of growth in operations and earnings (See Figure
    6.8).
  • Tech Stocks. Stocks that represent the
    technology, new-economy sector of the market
    (See Figure 6.9).
  • Speculative Stocks. Stocks that offer the
    potential for substantial price appreciation but
    lack sustained records of success.

15
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Types of Stocks
  • Cyclical Stocks. Stocks whose earnings and
    overall market performance are closely linked to
    the general state of the economy.
  • Defensive Stocks. Stocks that tend to hold their
    own, and even do well, when the economy starts to
    falter.
  • Mid-Cap Stocks. Medium-sized stocks, generally
    with market values of less than 4 or 5 billion
    but more than 1 billion (See Figure 6.10).
  • Small-Cap Stocks. Stocks that generally have
    market values of less than 1 billion but can
    offer above-average returns (See Figure 6.11).

16
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Investing in Foreign Stocks
  • World Equity Markets (See table on page 252)
  • Comparative World Equity Market Returns (See
    Table 6.5)
  • Going Global Direct Investments in ADRs
  • Easier and safer than investing directly
  • Each ADR represents a specific number of shares
    in a specific foreign firm.
  • ADRs are bought and sold on U.S. markets like any
    other stock and prices are quoted in dollars, not
    in foreign currencies.
  • Although there are 400 companies (200 of them
    Canadian) whose shares are listed directly on
    U.S. exchanges, there are more than 1,000
    companies from more than 40 countries traded as
    ADRs on U.S. exchanges.
  • How they work

17
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Investing in Foreign Stocks (continued)
  • Putting Returns in a Global Perspective
  • When investing globally, you have to pick both
    the right stock and the right market.
  • The same variables that U.S. stock prices
    (earnings, dividends, etc.) and markets
    (inflation, interest rates, etc.) also drive
    foreign share prices.
  • In addition to dividends and capital gains,
    currency exchange rates also affect the return on
    foreign shares (See Equation 6.4, 6.5, and 6.6)
  • A stronger dollar has a negative impact on total
    returns to U.S. investors, and a weaker dollar
    has a positive impact.
  • Thus, you want both the foreign stock and the
    foreign currency values to go up over the life of
    your investment.

18
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Alternative Investment Strategies
  • Buy and Hold
  • The objective is to place money in a secure
    investment (safety of principal is vital) and
    watch it grow over time.
  • Investors select high quality stocks that offer
    current income and/or capital gains and hold them
    for extended periods (as long as 10 to 15 years).
  • Often used to finance retirement and child
    education funds.
  • Investors regularly add fresh capital and
    reinvest dividends back into their portfolios.
  • High Income
  • The objective is to select stocks with high and
    growing dividend levels.
  • Safety of principle and stability of income are
    vital (not capital gains).

19
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Alternative Investment Strategies (continued)
  • Quality Long-Term Growth
  • This strategy is less conservative than the first
    two in that it seeks capital gains as the primary
    source of return.
  • Most of the considerable amount of trading is
    confined to quality growth stocks that offer the
    chance for considerable price appreciation.
  • This strategy is risky due to the reliance on
    capital gains so considerable diversification is
    also often employed.
  • The Total Return Approach is a variation of this
    approach which combines quality long-term growth
    with high income.
  • Aggressive Stock Management
  • Aggressive stock management also uses quality
    stocks but seeks attractive rates of return
    through fully-managed portfolios.

20
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Alternative Investment Strategies (continued)
  • Aggressive Stock Management (continued)
  • Investors aggressively trade in and out of stocks
    in an attempt to achieve superior returns through
    capital gains.
  • This strategy may even include small cap stocks
    and investment horizons are often shorter (6
    months to a year).
  • Speculation and Short-Term Trading
  • Speculation and short-term trading characterize
    the least conservative of all investment
    strategies where the sole objective is strictly
    short-term capital gains.
  • Investors primarily trade in small-cap, tech
    stocks, and foreign shares.
  • Many speculators find that information about the
    industry or company is much less important the
    market psychology or mood of the market.

21
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Some Popular Investment Styles
  • Defined
  • Investment styles depend in large part on ones
    investment objectives and risk tolerance.
  • It defines the types of securities you want to
    hold in your portfolio.
  • Growth investing and Value investing depend
    primarily on fundamental analysis while Sector
    Rotation and Momentum Investing are based more on
    perceived market conditions.
  • Growth Investing
  • Investing in stocks with above-average forecasts
    of earnings growth and high price/earnings ratios
    in expectation of higher returns.
  • Growth investors believe that investing in stocks
    with high earnings growth rates (15 - 20 per
    year) should ultimately yield higher returns.
  • These companies have high prices, high
    price-to-book ratios and high price/earnings
    ratios.

22
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Some Popular Investment Styles
  • Growth Investing (continued)
  • Most growth stocks depend on capital gains and
    pay little or no dividends.
  • They are much riskier in that their prices tend
    to rise and fall much faster than the average
    stock.
  • Growth investors typically employ the Quality
    Long-Term Growth Strategy, the Aggressive Stock
    Management Strategy, and possibly Speculation.
  • Value Investing
  • Value investing focuses on stocks that are out of
    favor with the market as reflected by low
    price/earnings ratios and low prices compared to
    their fundamentals (utilizes the Buy-and-Hold
    Strategy).
  • Value investors evaluate why a stock is low and
    invest if they think some sort of corrective
    action will result in a higher price.
  • Value companies are often in older/cyclical
    industries such as automobiles, chemicals, steel,
    and financial services.

23
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Some Popular Investment Styles
  • Sector Rotation
  • With Sector Rotation, investors select stocks
    based on the premise that certain industry
    sectors perform better during specific stages of
    the economic cycle.
  • These investors start by forecasting the economy
    as a whole, then identify industries that should
    perform well in such an economy, and then finally
    identify superior companies within those
    industries.
  • Ways of defining sectors include
    Interest-Sensitive, Consumer Durables, Capital
    Goods Manufacturers, and Defensive Stocks.
  • Momentum Investing
  • Momentum investing relies heavily on technical
    analysis (how market forces affect stock prices)
    to determine when to buy and sell.

24
Types and Uses of Common Stocks
  • Some Popular Investment Styles
  • Momentum Investing (continued)
  • Momentum investors focus on relative price
    movements in the market rather than on the
    fundamentals of the underlying companies.
  • Momentum investors look for stocks in high-growth
    industries that have high trading volume and
    price movements.
  • They tend to follow the Aggressive Stock
    Management or Speculation and Short-Term Trading
    Strategies.
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