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Introduction to Financial Markets

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Junk Bonds: Moody's Ba, S&P BB or lower rated. U.S. Treasury & Agency Bonds ... Pt = Share Price at time t, Dt = Dividends in Period t. Book Value of Common Stock ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Financial Markets


1
Introduction to Financial Markets
2
Fixed Income Securities
  • The Bond Markets

3
Characteristics 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.

4
Valuing 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.

5
Calculating 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

6
Money 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

7
Corporate 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

8
U.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.

9
Equity Instruments
  • The Stock Markets

10
Common 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.

11
Valuing 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.

12
Valuing 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

13
Valuing 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.
14
Constant 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

15
Constant 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

16
Valuing 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.

17
Financial Statements
  • How do Accounting Statements help us in thinking
    about a Shares value?

18
What 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
19
Sources 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

20
Balance 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
21
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22
Income 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.
23
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24
Cash 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.

25
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26
Whats 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
28
How 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.

29
Financial Markets
  • Primary Secondary Markets

30
Primary 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 .

31
Secondary 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.

32
Secondary 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.

33
Security 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.

34
Efficient Markets Hypothesis
  • Information Expectations

35
Market 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.

36
Forms 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.

37
Deviations 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.

38
Technical 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.
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