Title: Introduction to Financial Markets
1Introduction to Financial Markets
2Fixed Income Securities
3Characteristics of a Bond
- A Bond is simply a standardized loan agreement.
It generally has the following characteristics - Face Value Principal Amount repaid at Maturity.
- Coupon Interest Payment Periodic Interest
Payment to holder over life of the Bond. - Maturity Date Date at which loan is repaid.
- Indenture Provisions Legal restrictions on
borrower. - Main sources of risk for a Bond are
- Default Risk Borrower not able to pay principal
and/or interest. - Interest Rate Risk Changes in interest rates
affect Bond value and reinvestment returns of
coupons.
4Valuing a 5-Year Bond
Time 0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
- Discounted Cash Flow Approach
- Current Bond Price Present value of all future
Cash Flows (Interest Principal) at required
return, i.
5Calculating Yields for a Bond
- Coupon Rate
- Annual Coupon Interest Payment
- Face value of the Bond
- Current Yield
- Annual Coupon Interest Payment
- Current Market Price of the Bond
- Yield-to-Maturity (YTM)
- Interest rate that makes Present Value of Bonds
Cash Flows equal to its Current Market Price if
bond held to maturity no default. - One-Period Rate of Return
- (Capital Gain/Loss) Coupon Interest
Purchase Price of the Bond
6Money Market Securities
- Money Markets
- Short-term, zero coupon debt purchased at
discount to Face Value. - Types of Money Market Securities
- U.S. Treasury Bills lowest risk, issued by U.S.
govt - Federal Funds Deposits at Federal Reserve
- Certificates of Deposit (CDs) Issued by Banks.
- Eurodollar Deposits US deposits outside of U.S.
- Commercial Paper unsecured loan to large firms.
- Repurchase Agreements collaterized loans
7Corporate Bonds
- Corporate Bonds
- More than one year to maturity.
- Contain indenture provision (limits on issuer
behavior) - Most bonds pay coupon interest based on Face
Value. - Quality Rated according to default risk of corp.
issuer. - Bond ratings by Moodys, Standard Poor
- Depend on issuers financial condition
indenture provisions. - Highest rating Moodys Aaa, SP AAA - Blue Chip
stocks - Adequate rating Moodys Baa, SP BBB - economic
risk - Poor quality Moodys Caa, SP CCC - danger of
default - Junk Bonds Moodys Ba, SP BB or lower rated
8U.S. Treasury Agency Bonds
- Types of U.S. Treasury Bonds (very liquid)
- Treasury Bills (T-Bills) Short-term, sold at
discount. - Treasury Notes Mature 1-10 yrs, pay coupon
interest. - Treasury Bonds (T-Bonds) Mature 10 to 30 years,
pay coupon interest, callable prior to maturity
by govt. - Special Issues sold only to govt agencies with
cash. - Types of U.S. Agency Bonds
- Agency Securities FHA, FNMA, GNMA, SLMA, etc
have implicit or explicit govt guarantee - Zero Coupon Bonds pay no interest, sell at
discount.
9Equity Instruments
10Common Preferred Stock
- Common Stock
- Residual claim (ownership) on firm earnings
assets. - Voting power Preemptive right to new stock
issues. - Receive Cash Dividends at management discretion.
- Preferred Stock
- Preferential treatment to common stock
- First claim to dividends up to set level.
- First owner claim to assets (after bondholders)
in bankruptcy. - Little or no voting power but Preemptive right to
new issues of stock. - Receive stipulated Cash Dividend amount each year.
11Valuing Common Stock I
- Annual Holding Period Return
- rt (Pt1- Pt) Dt/Pt Capital Gain/Loss
Dividend - Pt Share Price at time t, Dt Dividends in
Period t - Book Value of Common Stock
- Firm Assets - Firm Liabilities
- Total Shares Outstanding
- Easy to calculate but means very little because
Assets and Liabilities are carried at historic
costs rather than current market values on
Balance Sheet.
12Valuing a Companys Shares
- Value based on a satisfactory trend must be
wholly arbitrary and hence speculative, and hence
inevitably subject to exaggeration and later
collapse - Graham and Dodd, Security Analysis
13Valuing Common Stock
Uncertain Dividends, Dt
Time 0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Dividend Discount Model (DDM) Current Stock
Price Present value of all future Expected
Dividends at required return, rE.
14Constant Earnings Dividends
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
- Assume firm has constant earnings per share (E)
of 100 forever. - It payouts half of these earnings each year
(payout ration, k.5) as dividends (D) of 50 per
share. - What is one share of this company worth?
- Share price equals present value of 50 each year
forever at required return. - Assume required return on equity is 20, i.e. rE
.20 - Can show PS D/rE kE/rE 50/.20 250 or
PS/E k/rE 2.5
15Constant Earnings Growth
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
- Firm has current earnings per share (E) of 100.
- Earnings expected to grow at 10 a year forever
(g .10). - It payouts half of these earnings each year
(payout ration, k.5) as dividends (D). - What is one share of this company worth?
- Share price equals present value of constantly
growing dividends. - Required return on equity is 20, i.e. rE .20
- Can show PS D1/(rE g) kE1/(rE g)
55/(.20 - .10) 550
16Valuing Firm using Cash Flows
- Majority of firms do not issue dividends.
- How to value these firms?
- Look at cash flows generated by firm in excess of
what is needed to operate - Called Free Cash Flows, FCF
- Total value of firm (Debt Equity) equals
present value of these future FCFs. - Analyst forecasts these FCFs, arrives at
estimate of firms total value. - Subtract off value of firms debt. What remains
is value for shareholders. - Divide by of shares outstanding to arrive at
share price.
17Financial Statements
- How do Accounting Statements help us in thinking
about a Shares value?
18What Does The Investment Analyst Scrutinize?
- The Balance Sheet
- Assets vs. Liabilities Shareholder Equity
- The Income Statement
- Revenues vs Costs
- The Cash Flow Statement
- Sources and Uses of cash
"Financial statements are like fine perfume to
be sniffed but not swallowed. Abraham
Brilloff
19Sources of Information
- Company issues
- Annual quarterly reports Press releases
investor relations materials - SEC Filings for the Company
- 10K, 10Q, Form 4
- Online Filings with Edgar
- www.edgar-online.com or www.sec.gov
20Balance SheetOwn Owe Statement
- Assets
- Current Assets
- Cash
- Accounts Receivable
- Inventories
- Marketable Securities
- Non-current Assets
- Land Property
- Equipment- Accumulated Depreciation
- Liabilities
- Current Liabilities
- Accounts Payable
- Accrued Expenses, e.g. taxes
- Short-term Borrowings
- Dividends
- Non-current Liabilities
- Long-term Borrowings
- Shareholders Equity
- Capital Stock
- Retained Earnings
Assets Liabilities Shareholders Equity
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22Income StatementAbility to Make Sales Control
Expenses
- Revenues/Sales Other Income - Costs
- Operating Income (EBIT)
- - Provisions for income tax
- Net Earnings (Income) of common
shares - Earnings per Share (EPS) - Dividends
- Retained Earnings
- Costs includeCOGSRDS G ADepreciationAmort
izationInterest Expense
and earn Profits over Time.
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24Cash Flow StatementThe Ins and Outs of Money ...
- Net Income
- / Changes in Assets and Liabilities
- Depreciation and Amortization Expenses
- Operating Cash Flow
- Investing Activities
- Financing Activities
- Increase / (Decrease) in Cash
- Over a
Set Period - of Time.
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26Whats Important To A Company?
- To show
- Consistent earnings growth
- Positive public image
- Efficient management/process/service
- Perception of market savvy
- Ahead of its competition
27 What Are the Clues?
- The Easy ones
- Asset Turnover Sales / Assets
- ProfitabilityIncome / Sales
- Financial Leverage Assets / Equity
- Return on Equity Income / Equity
- The Hard(er) Ones
- Investments for the Future, e.g. RD, MA
strategy - Trends in sales, costs, unit growth, margins
- Accounting Practices (a black hole into which
much can be hidden) -
The Secret Much of this is in the Notes to the
Financial Statements
28How Is It All Tied Together?
- A dose of skepticism never hurts.
- Hidden costs (deception) and fraud are different
and have brought more than one company down. - Extrapolation of the past is good but not enough.
- Not all investors are the same Different
strokes for different folks. - Read the Notes to Financial Statements
- Accept that - in general - Markets are Efficient.
29Financial Markets
- Primary Secondary Markets
30Primary Markets
- When a firm sells new securities to raise funds,
offering is called a primary issue. - Generally employ an agent to find buyers for the
securities investment banker or underwriter. - Advisory Determine financing strategy
- Administrative Satisfy regulations red tape.
- Underwriting Guarantees certain minimum price or
cash. - Distribution services Finds investors to
purchase issue. - Market stabilization Stabilizes new issue price
for some period by making market .
31Secondary Markets I
- Organized Security Exchanges
- provide continuous market where investors can buy
or sell securities immediately at fair market
prices. - provide liquidity and marketability to securities
investors. - Largest Organized Exchanges
- New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
- American Stock Exchange (AMEX)
- Regional Exchanges
- NYSE
- Voluntary association with memberships.
- Trading floor with member market-makers quoting
prices. - Listing Requirements for Corporations.
32Secondary Markets II
- Over the Counter (OTC) Markets
- provide continuous market where investors can buy
or sell securities immediately at fair market
prices. - No organized central exchange.
- Broker-Dealers linked by phone or computer.
- Securities traded cover govt bonds through
speculative stocks. - OTC Markets
- Broker-Dealers make markets (buy/sell) in certain
security. - Natl Assoc. of Security Dealers (NASD)
- NASDAQ Automated Quote System with current
bid/ask prices. - Competition among market-makers is setting quoted
prices.
33Security Market Indexes
- Market Indexes Pure numbers indexed to a base
year. - Normally a weighted average ratio calculated from
an average of a large number of securities of
interest. - Weights chosen as either Value-weights or
Equal-weights on prices of securities included in
index. - Denominator is the weighted average value in a
chosen base year. - Many different indices used depending on interest
- Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
- Standard Poors 500 composite stocks average
- NYSE index
- Dow Jones 40 bond index
- Dow Jones indices of spot commodity prices.
34Efficient Markets Hypothesis
35Market Efficiency
- Generally assume that financial markets are
efficient. - Financial market is efficient if it fully and
correctly reflects all available information in
determining security prices. - Formally, a market is efficient with respect to
some set of information. - In an efficient market, no systematic excess
profits are made by investors trading on this
information. - An investor may beat the market this year, but
very few investors will beat the market in
several consecutive years.
36Forms of Market Efficiency
- Weak Form Market Efficiency
- Information includes only history of past prices
or returns. - Technical Analysis
- Semi-Strong Form Market Efficiency
- Information includes all information known to
market, i.e. all publicly available
information. - Fundamental Analysis
- Strong Form Market Efficiency
- Information set includes all information known to
any market player, all publicly privately
available information. - Insider Trading
- Tend to find markets are Weak Semi-Strong
efficient but not Strong efficient.
37Deviations from Efficiency
- Most studies support Weak or Semi-Strong
efficiency but there are some anomalies to
efficient securities markets. - Weekend Effect Monday returns slightly lower.
- January Effect Small firm returns higher in
January. - Low P/E Stocks Low P/E stocks outperform market.
- Small-Firm Effect Small firm stocks beat the
market. - Unexpected Quarterly Earnings Firms whose
earnings beat estimates have positive excess
returns. - Neglected Firm Effect Stocks with little analyst
coverage have abnormal returns.
38Technical Analysis
- Technical analysts reject efficient markets.
- They believe important information about future
price moves can be found from past price moves. - Market value determined by Demand and Supply.
- Supply Demand governed by many factors.
- Security prices tend to move in trends that
persist. - Changes in the trend are caused by changes in
demand and supply. - Shifts in demand or supply can be detected from
market transactions. - Some price patterns tend to repeat themselves.