Title: Chapter 3 - Market Structures II
1- Chapter 3 - Market Structures II
2This Lecture
This Lecture
- Financial Market Typology
- Non-tradadable and non-transferable
products - Securities
- Derivatives
3-
- In their purest form products in each category
share some fundamental characteristics that - distinguish them from others
- define a unique set of opportunities and risks
-
4In markets for traditionally non-tradable and
non- transferable products compared
to returns risks are too high to be borne by
non-specialists. This holds for both wholesale
and retail markets
5- Wholesale markets
- large amounts traded
- high flexibility
- short maturities
- high standardisation
-
-
-
6- Retail markets
- low standardisation
- long maturities
- individual performance matters
- high information requirements
-
7In securities markets techniques and
mechanisms prevail allowing a distribution of
risks among a wider public.
8In markets for derivatives transactions are
forward looking, allowing an unbundling and
separate trading of risks related to a financial
product, which asks for compensation via a
higher expected return the role of
leverage
9(No Transcript)
10Non-tradadables and non-transferables
- are among the earliest and most common forms of
financial relations - establish individual borrower-lender
relations - unwinding the transaction or ...
- stepping in for another counter-party is only
possible at high cost, if at all.
11Non-tradadables and non-transferables
12Nontradadables and non-transferables
- With rising securitisation the importance of
traditional money and credit or loan markets
decreased in recent years. - Two main reasons
- steady shift to off-balance-sheet instruments
in reaction to capital rules for
internationally operating banks - growing number of high-quality customers
issuing commercial paper and certificates of
deposits. - Advantages?
-
-
13Nontradadables and non-transferables
- Issuing short-term securities instead of
borrowing from banks - allows to diversify borrowing
- to reduce borrowing costs
- to reduce borrowers dependence on bank loans
- to circumvent credit limits
-
14Nontradadables and non-transferables
- In credit or loan markets securitisation is more
difficult than in short-term markets. - These markets are characterised by
-
- less transparency
- higher risks
- a more diverse clientele.
-
15Nontradadables and non-transferables
- In credit or loan markets
- individual borrowers are evaluated carefully
- often, repayment is guaranteed by collateral
-
- the role of mortgages
16Nontradadables and non-transferables
- Until the emergence of credit derivatives credit
markets were (and in many ways still are) among
the - least liquid
- most complicated to price
- most costly financial markets
-
17Nontradadables and non-transferables
In contrast to the money and credit markets, the
importance of the foreign exchange market grew in
recent years. Why?
18Nontradadables and non-transferables
- The foreign exchange market is a hybrid. As a
rule - transactions are very large
- most transactions are very short-term by
nature - it is a money market rather than a credit
market although very long maturities are
obtainable - it is an interbank or wholesale market rather
than a retail market although there is a
remarkable share of customer trading.
19Nontradadables and non-transferables
In 2002, the euro replaced national currencies in
12 countries
- Irish punt
- Portuguese escudo
- Finnish markka
- Austrian schilling
- Greek drachma
- Belgian/Luxembourg franc
- French franc
- German mark
- Italian lira
- Dutch guilder
- Spanish peseta
20Nontradadables and non-transferables
- The use of the euro is not limited to the 12 EU
member states. Euro territories include - territories outside Europe French overseas
departments, the Portuguese Azores, Madeira and
the Spanish Canary Islands - third countries surrounded by members of the
euro zone (Andorra, Monaco, San Marino, the
Vatican) - other areas that have the euro as official
means of payments examples Montenegro,
Kosovo -
21Nontradadables and non-transferables
- In addition, some 30 countries have exchange rate
regimes involving the euro in one way or the
other - countries whose currency is pegged to the euro
such as Denmark (participating in the Exchange
Rate Mechanism of the EMS), Cyprus, Macedonia - countries with euro(formerly D-mark)-based
currency boards (Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria,
Estonia) - countries whose currency is pegged to a basket
of currencies including the euro or one of the
currencies it replaced (examples Hungary,
Iceland, CFA zone) - countries having adopted a system of managed
floating using the euro informally as a
reference currency (Czech Republic, Slovakia,
Slovenia). -
22Nontradadables and non-transferables
- The hybrid nature of the foreign exchange market
has its roots in history - in the beginning demand and supply in the
market was largely determined by foreign trade - cross-border capital flows were long
restricted - it was only when currencies became convertible
for both trade and financial transactions and
capital flows were liberalised that cross-border
portfolio investments and professional
foreign-exchange dealing, which dominate the
market today, began to become more important - one explanation for the growth of the foreign
exchange market in recent years is investors
re- orientation they increasingly regard forex
as an asset class
23Nontradadables and non-transferables
In international financial markets the euro has
become a serious rival to the US dollar. In some
eastern European countries such as the Czech
Republic and Hungary it captures a dominant
market share. One reason why in the
following table it is still outweighed by the
US dollar in other countries such as Poland
and Russia is the fact that in the past these
countries had a high debt denominated in
dollar.
24 As two currencies are involved in each
transaction, the sum in individual currencies is
twice the total reported turnover. Source Bank
for International Settlements Triennial Central
Bank Survey Foreign Exchange and Derivatives
Market Activity in 2001, Basle, March 2001, Annex
Table E.4.
25Nontradadables and non-transferables
Since the introduction of the European System of
Central Banks (ESCB) there has been a common
monetary policy and a common money market in
Europe, consisting of three market segments
26Nontradadables and non-transferables
Money Market Segments in the Euro Area
Unsecured deposits
Repos
Swaps
27Nontradadables and non-transferables
Unsecured deposit market banks exchange
short-term liquidity without collateral Repo
market banks exchange short-term liquidity
offering collateral Swap market participants
exchange fixed for floating interest rate
payments
28Securities
- In securities markets, techniques and mechanisms
prevail allowing a distribution of risks among a
wider public - assets and liabilities are traded
- anonymity is the rule
- ownership may change frequently
- publication and listing requirements secure
that the information investors need for
decision making is provided
29Securities
- Trading takes place over the counter (OTC) or on
organised exchanges. The latter have two
important functions -
- as a ready market for securities, they ensure
their liquidity and thus encourage people to
channel savings into corporate investment - as a pricing mechanism, they allocate capital
among firms with prices assumed to reflect the
true investment value of a company's stock
(i.e. the present worth of the stream of
expected income per share).
30Securities
Primary markets new securities are issued for
cash Secondary markets existing securities
are sold by one investor to another
31Securities
Fixed-income markets claims on some nominal
amount of debt are traded Equity markets the
provider of the money becomes one of the owners
of the firm
32Securities fixed-income markets
33Securities fixed-income markets
- Treasury bills
-
- short-term securities issued by governments
- throughout the euro area unevenly distributed
supply four significant and relatively mature
markets in Belgium, France, Italy and Spain - in Germany (whose securities play a benchmark
role in other market segments) outstanding
volumes and issuance of Bubills remain
comparatively small
34Securities fixed-income markets
- CDs and CP
-
- often tailor-made to meet investors needs
- before the arrival of the euro rarely used
- only by very large internationally operating
European firms - often replacing bank loans in some countries
banks are the main buyers of CP
35Securities fixed-income markets
- CDs and CP
- In recent years, there has been a changing trend
in issuing activities. The main reasons are - the influence of the euro on firms financial
environment - the rise in mergers and acquisitions partly
financed by CP issuance - the attractiveness of the euro market which
has encouraged non-residents to participate - the overall tendency towards securitisation and
a rising preference for collateralised
lending
36Securities fixed-income markets
- Bonds
- With the introduction of the euro, the second
largest market worldwide for long- and
medium-term bonds emerged in the region. - although declining gradually in almost all
European countries government bonds are the
most important segment - only large firms with high ratings issue
corporate bonds - compared to the US market there is still a
considerable growth potential -
37Securities fixed-income markets
38Securities fixed-income markets
- Bonds
-
- compared to short-term debt risks are high
- in particular the risk of default
- in order to assess these risks bonds are rated
by investment advisory firms or rating
agencies -
39Securities fixed-income markets
- Bonds
- The biggest rating agencies worldwide are
- Moodys Investors Service
- Standard Poors Corporation
- Fitch
40Securities fixed-income markets
Bonds Ratings range from investment-grade
rating to junk bonds. Firms that have sunk
from investment-grade to junk are also called
fallen angels. Becoming a fallen angel
strongly affects a firms refinancing cost
In particular institutional investors follow
asset-allocation rules that prevent them from
buying bonds below investment grade.
41Securities fixed-income markets
- Bonds
- serve many purposes in national and
international markets - Investors hold them because of their low risk
profile and long maturities. - Government bonds are widely used as hedging
instruments, in the expectation that their
development may compensate for losses in other
markets. - Investment funds often take short positions on
some types of bonds betting that their price will
fall and, at the same time, take long positions
on other securities whose prices should rise. - Macro funds which base investments on expected
changes in global economies instead of focusing
on individual firms and industries, speculate in
currency, equity and bond movements. - Developments in bond markets also affect
mortgage funds as the amount of income owners of
mortgage securities receive changes with
fluctuations in bond yields. - In addition, there are managed futures funds,
which use statistical models to track market
trends their performance also depends on bond
market developments. -
-
42Securities fixed-income markets
- Bonds
- Government bonds usually serve as benchmarks
- Advantages of benchmark status
- reduced borrowing cost
- markets for benchmark securities are
characterised by - low risks, high efficiency and high liquidity
-
-
-
43Securities fixed-income markets
- Bonds
- Government debt is special
- considered as essentially risk free
- trading is facilitated by the often large
amount of debt outstanding - large borrowing needs and long life enable
governments to offer a wide range of maturities - in advanced economies well-developed repo and
derivatives markets exist for government
securities allowing participants to take short
and long positions reflecting their
expectations of future interest rate movements -
-
44Securities fixed-income markets
- Bonds
- Securities with benchmark status provide some
positive externalities. They - serve as orientation for pricing and quoting
yields on other securities - serve as hedging instruments
- are the most common form of collateral in
financial markets - are regarded as safe havens by investors
during periods of financial turmoil - their infrastructure (legal and regulatory
framework, trade execution arrangements,
clearing and settlement systems) enhances the
development of non-government markets -
-
45Securities fixed-income markets
- Bonds
- For longer maturities, there is a private repo
market bridging the gap between the money and
the bond markets - longer-term liquidity is provided in exchange
for securities - market participants are banks, corporations
and institutional investors -
46Securities fixed-income markets
- Convertible bonds
- have a bond structure, but offer the option of
being converted into equity if share prices
reach a certain level. Convertibles allow
companies - to raise money by issuing equity without
tapping the stock market directly (which might
upset existing shareholders) - to reduce their interest payments on debt
- Major investors in convertibles are
international hedge funds
47Securities fixed-income markets
Hedge funds buy the convertibles and sell the
debt component, keeping the call option. They
then sell the company's shares short they do
not own the securities they sell, but plan to buy
them at a later stage giving it a hedge against
movements in the share price. As the share price
moves up and down, the fund adjusts its short
position, a tactic known as delta hedging. The
hedge fund makes money if the shares turn out to
be more volatile than was assumed by the issuer
of the convertible
48Securities fixed-income markets
- Convertible bonds
- a special form which has become increasingly
popular is known as quasi-commercial paper - This comes with a put option allowing
investors to force companies to repurchase the
bonds at their original price at a fixed future
date. - Disadvantage When issuers' prospects worsen
and share prices fall, the likelihood of
conversion of debt into equity declines and
bondholders become less willing to keep the
bonds. This means additional strains in a
situation where a company's need for cash is
growing and sources are drying up.
49Securities fixed-income markets
- Asset-backed securities (ABS)
- a way to raise funds from the bond market by
- securitising "receivables",
- claims of seller firms that arise from the sale
of goods and services and present future
streams of payments. -
- Examples
- credit card revenues
- residential mortgages
- loans made to customers
- barrels of maturing whisky
50Securities fixed-income markets
- Asset-backed securities (ABS)
-
- Securitisation takes place by
- transfering the assets into a special purpose
vehicle (SPV) which is separate from the
original owner of the assets - the SPV guarantees that coupons will be paid
and the capital investment returned - the credit quality of the bond issue depends
on the SPV, not on the financial strength of the
underlying issuer - the SPV is supposed to be bankruptcy remote
because it is separate from the companys
operating business
51Securities fixed-income markets
Asset-backed securities (ABS) To
demonstrate the principle
assets
Originator
SPV
cash flows
cash flows
rating agencies
The quality of the assets can be enhanced by
insurance which guarantees cash flows. This would
allow rating agencies to apply a higher rating.
securities
Investors
insurer
52Securities fixed-income markets
- Asset-backed securities (ABS)
-
- Advantages
-
- otherwise illiquid assets are made liquid
- ABS transactions are highly rated and often
assigned a Triple A rating - they offer investors an additional level of
security from owning a bond backed by assets
and - higher interest payments than on similarly
rated bonds ... - thereby broadening the pool of potential
investors
53Securities fixed-income markets
- Asset-backed securities (ABS)
-
-
- were one of the most dynamic markets in the US
for almost 30 years. -
- However, critics point at recent downgrades, in
particular of collateralised debt obligations
(CDOs) backed by bonds, loans or derivatives
with poor performance. -
54Securities fixed-income markets
- Asset-backed securities (ABS)
-
-
- Other worries concerned
- securities backed by franchise loans
- aircraft leases
- mutual fund fees
- healthcare receivables
- and securities backed by complex or unusual
assets in general.
55Securities fixed-income markets
Asset-backed securities (ABS) In
Europe, their success so far has been
limited. Exception the Pfandbrief market
56Securities fixed-income markets
- Asset-backed securities (ABS) Pfandbriefe
-
- bonds backed by mortgages or local government
loans - usually issued by state-controlled savings
banks and mortgage institutions - highly rated, combining low levels of risk with
high returns - in bond market statistics counted as part of
the corporate bond sector - originating in Germany from where it spread to
other European countries - there is a Jumbo Pfandbrief with a minimum
issuance volume of 500 million
57Securities fixed-income markets
Asset-backed securities (ABS)
Pfandbriefe End of 2000, the Pfandbrief market
had become the largest bond market in Europe
exceeding the total amount of sovereign debt
outstanding of France, Germany and Italy
combined.
58Securities equity markets
In equity markets the provider of the money
becomes one of the owners of the
firm. There are different forms of
ownership
59Securities equity markets
60Securities equity markets
Private equity Venture capital
firms financial intermediaries that pool their
partners resources, using the funds to help
entrepreneurs start up new businesses
61Securities equity markets
Private equity Leveraged buyouts Leveraged
geared up refers to the relationship between
the companys own funds and borrowed
money the purchase of a company is financed
with a small proportion of share capital and a
large proportion (80 or more) of
debt. Consequence Interest charges absorb
most of the debt and pressures are considerable
to dispose of parts of the businesses to raise
cash, thereby reducing borrowings, as quickly as
possible.
62Securities equity markets
Private equity In Europe the concept of
private equitiy is only slowly gaining ground.
The main sources of private equity funds are
pension funds, insurance companies and banks,
mostly from the US.
63Securities equity markets
- Organised exchanges
- There is a long tradition of international or
cross-border equity investing in Europe. - Investor advantages
- expected value gains resulting from
inefficient or segmented markets in foreign
countries - diversification in order to reduce risk for a
given level of returns (or increase returns for
a given level of risk) -
-
-
64Securities equity markets
- Organised exchanges
- Competition between major stock exchanges is
fierce to attract foreign listings in order to
increase trading volumes and business
opportunities to exploit scale economies. - Companies motives for listing on more than one
exchange - securing cheap capital for new investment
- preparing for foreign acquisitions
- enhancing their reputation
65Securities
66Securities
- A hybrid subordinated debt
- In a company's capital structure subordinated
debt ranks between shareholder funds and senior
debt, that is, for interest and repayment it
comes after all other borrowings of the
company. - Advantages
- Rating agencies and regulators treat it as
shares rather than debt, thus supporting the
firms capital base - For investors it promises higher returns than
senior debt of comparable credit quality. - Disadvantage
- For issuers it is a more expensive source of
funding than senior debt.
67Derivatives
Derivatives differ from both credit and from
capital market instruments, in that they are
financial contracts whose value is closely
related to, and largely determined by, the value
of a related instrument. This can be a
security, but also a currency, an index, a
commodity or any other item the contracting
parties agree upon. There are three broad
categories
68Derivatives
69Derivatives
- Common to all derivatives is that they
- are forward-looking transactions tied to an
underlying instrument or as, for example, in
the case of stock index futures to a bundle
of instruments - allow an unbundling of price risks
- allow investors to exploit the effects of
leverage
70Derivatives
Traditionally, forward contracts are traded over
the counter. Since the early 1970s, there have
also been organised futures exchanges. The first
was the International Money Market of the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange (CME), established in 1972.
In Europe, the leading ones are the London
International Financial Futures Exchange (LIFFE)
and Eurex.
71Derivatives
- Futures
- are standardised exchange-traded forward
contracts with comparatively few fixed amounts
and maturities. - Futures exist for a wide variety of financial
and non- financial products. Examples are - currencies
- stock market indices
- pork bellies
- oil platforms
- weather conditions ...
- Both forwards and futures have advantages and
disadvantages
72Derivatives
73Derivatives
A swap is an exchange of two financial
instruments for a specific period and a reversal
of that exchange at the end of the
period. Example In the foreign exchange
market it may consist either of a combination of
a spot and a forward leg or of two forward trades
with differing maturities In a yen/dollar
foreign exchange swap a dealer may buy the yen
for delivery in two days at an agreed spot rate,
simultaneously selling it back for delivery in a
week, a month, or three months.
74Derivatives
Swaps may be used to exploit comparative
advantages that individual participants have in
different markets. Example a Spanish firm
facing a higher interest cost for borrowing in
the US dollar market than a German firm, while
the German firm may only receive less favourable
conditions than the Spanish one in the euro
market. In this case, it may pay for both of them
to borrow in the currency in which they face the
lower cost and then simply exchange currencies
for the period of the contracts Opportunities
like the one descibed may arise in segmented
markets
75Derivatives
- Swaps
- Explanations for segmented markets
- inefficiency
- lack of transparency
- saturation
- Investors tend to hold a portfolio of assets
from a broad range of borrowers, setting limits
to the share for individual ones. An issuer who
has not saturated the market in this sense may
enjoy better conditions than another.
76Derivatives
Swaps may be used for hedging purposes.
Again, the foreign exchange market may serve
as an example
77Derivatives
Figure 3.6 Hedging with a Foreign Exchange Swap
78Derivatives
Options are contracts sold for a premium that
give the buyer the right, but not the
obligation, to buy (in case of a call option) or
sell (in case of a put option) a financial asset
in the future at a specified price. In
contrast to other financial instruments, options
are so- called contingent claims based on the
insurance principle with an asymmetry in the
related risks. The worst that can happen to
the buyer of a call option is that the premium
is lost if the option is not exercised. In
contrast, for the seller who has the obligation
to deliver if the option is exercised, in
principle, the risk is unlimited if the
underlying asset must be bought in the market.
79Derivatives
Options Option trading has inherent
uncertainties that distinguish it from other
derivatives markets resulting from the way in
which options are valued
80Derivatives
- Options
- Standard approaches in one form or another rely
on a formula developed by Black, Merton and
Scholes in the early 1970s. - According to this formula the value of a stock
option, for example, depends on - the share price today
- its volatility
- a risk-free interest rate
- time to maturity
- the strike price at which the option is
exercised and - the probability that it will be exercised as
described by a normal distribution function.
81Derivatives
Options In principle, all components of the
formula can be observed except
volatility. Difficulties result from the fact
that, as a rule, financial time series have a
non-constant variance the standard measure of
volatility. Daily, monthly and yearly data,
and data for different time periods, give a
different picture of volatility.
82Derivatives
- Options
- One solution is to calculate "implied
volatilities" derived from observed options
prices of other market participants. -
- Disadvantages
- Implied volatilities do not always exist
- and if they do they may include price
components, such as transaction costs or risk
premiums, that are hard to judge. - Another problem is that for implied
volatilities there is a phenomenon known as the
"volatility smile
83Derivatives
Options that are far in or out of the money
with the exercise price highly above or below the
asset's value have much higher implied
volatilities
84Derivatives
- The late 1990s saw a dramatic rise in the volume
of two kinds of derivatives in European markets - interest rate swaps and
- credit derivatives
85Derivatives
Interest rate swaps are contracts that allow
parties to exchange streams of interest
payments. The pricing of swaps is typically
based on the London-InterBank Offered Rate,
LIBOR and for euro-denominated instruments on
the EURIBOR.
86Derivatives
- Interest rate swaps
- Explanations of market rise
- the introduction of the euro and the resulting
process of integration and standardisation. - Interest rate swaps increased by more than 60
percent during the first year after the
introduction of the euro. - the rising interest of market participants in
off- balance-sheet instruments. - Swaps spare capital in not consuming large
amounts of credit limits and, as a consequence,
are increasingly replacing deposits as a source
of funding and as a means of establishing hedge
positions in fixed-income instruments. - deficiencies of traditional hedge instruments.
87Derivatives
Interest rate swaps Swaps are increasingly
used as benchmarks Occasional squeezes in
German government bond futures contracts and
other events demonstrated that the features
accounting for the uniqueness of government
bonds quality and liquidity may cause their
prices and those of other credit products to
move out of sync, during periods of financial
turmoil in particular. This reinforced the
search for new hedging vehicles and made market
participants increasingly turn to derivative
products to construct yield curves one obvious
solution was interest rate swaps.
88Derivatives
Interest rate swaps as benchmarks In principle,
an interest rate swap is a contractual agreement
between two counter parties to exchange a fixed
rate instrument for a floating rate instrument.
No principal amount changes hands. Instead,
basically, a series of payments is calculated
by applying a fixed interest rate to a
notional principal amount, and another stream
of payments using a floating rate of interest,
and then both are exchanged.
89Derivatives
- Interest rate swaps as benchmarks
- Advantages
- credit risk in contrast to benchmark
government debt which usually has a triple-A
credit rating banks in the LIBOR contributor
panels are mostly rated double A. - This can be an advantage swap rates tend to
move more closely with prices of other credit
products, including during periods of financial
turmoil. - absence of an underlying asset there are no
limits to entering into swap contracts. - As a consequence, reverse price movements due to
supply and demand imbalances are rare.
90Derivatives
- Interest rate swaps as benchmarks
- Disadvantages
- liquidity Debt issued by the government of an
industrial country is still one of the most
liquid instruments. - As a consequence, transaction costs for hedging
with government securities are often lower than
those associated with other hedges, in
particular over shorter periods where the risk
of widening spreads between government and
non- government securities (credit spread risk)
is low. - credit risk the counter party in a swap
transaction may default at the end of the
agreement.
91Derivatives
Credit derivatives are the other instrument of
growing importance in Europe. The most common
form is the credit default swap. A credit
default swap is a contract which enables one
party to buy protection against the risk of
default of an asset paying a fee or premium for
the cover, until a credit event occurs or if
this does not happen until maturity.
92Derivatives
- Credit derivatives
- A credit event can be
- bankruptcy
- failure to pay interest or debt
- restructuring of obligations
- In practice, documentation of these instruments
and of what counts as credit events is still
fraught with uncertainties. -
93Derivatives
- Credit derivatives
- One of the fastest-growing markets is the one
for collateralised debt obligations (CDO), a
form of ABS which come in two variants - traditional "cash flow" CDOs are securities
backed by pools of debt such as high-yield
corporate bonds and loans. They are still the
dominant variety in the US. - In Europe, synthetic CDOs dominate, with London
as the market leader. -
94Derivatives
Credit derivatives traditional CDOs As a
rule, a special-purpose entity (SPE) is set up,
which issues securities to investors, using the
money to establish a portfolio of assets. The
returns these assets generate are passed through
to the investors. The securities are broken
up into different tranches representing
different levels of risk and reward. As a
broad range of assets of different quality are
required for diversification purposes, the top
tranche of a CDO may achieve a triple-A credit
rating even though the individual assets have a
far lower ranking.
95Derivatives
Credit derivatives synthetic CDOs CDOs using
credit derivatives instead of bonds and loans.
In the simplest form, the SPE issues notes to
investors and sells credit protection on a
notional "reference pool" of assets. The
buyer of the credit protection pays a premium to
the SPE that is passed through to the investors.
96Derivatives
- Credit derivatives synthetic CDOs
- One explanation for London's worldwide dominance
in this area is that, compared to the US, in
Europe the market for bonds from which a CDO pool
can be assembled is much smaller and more
transparent. - Other advantages
- high degree of flexibility. Instead of being
sold to a large number of investors, synthetic
CDOs are increasingly customised for one big
client such as an insurance company or pension
fund, who wants exposure to credit markets or to
hedge its bond portfolio - investors' influence over the assets held in
the portfolios compared to traditional CDOs
with synthetic CDOs, investors are much more
involved in the profile of the risks they are
assuming and the selection of credits in the
reference portfolios.
97- Summary
-
- Distinguishing between non-tradable and
non-transferable products, securities and
derivatives allows for the unique set of
opportunities and risks in each of these
categories. - Markets for non-tradables include traditional
money and credit markets and the foreign
exchange market. - In securities markets, government bonds play a
special role, serving as benchmarks for other
debt instruments. - While fixed-income markets establish
borrower-lender relations, in equity markets the
providers of funds become capital owners. - Derivatives are traded over the counter and on
centralised exchanges with each form having its
own advantages and disadvantages. - Forwards, swaps and options differ with respect
to market liquidity, flexibility and expected
risks and returns. - In recent years, there has been a dramatic rise
of interest rate swaps and credit derivatives
which indicates changing market structures and
preferences. -
98Key Words
- Securitisation - the transformation of illiquid
financial assets into marketable products. - Bank for International Settlements - a
financial international organisation
headquartered in Basel, Switzerland, which was
established under the Hague agreements of 1930.
Initially responsible for the collection,
administration and distribution of reparations
from Germany it is today primarily the central
bank's bank. It provides gold and foreign
exchange transactions for them and holds central
bank reserves. In addition, it offers a forum
of cooperation among member central banks,
produces research and statistics, and organises
seminars and workshops focused on international
financial issues. In offering services to
committees established and working at the BIS,
it also functions as an international "think
tank" for financial issues. - Capital rules - determine the amount of its own
money a bank needs relative to its total assets
(capital adequacy ratios). - Off-balance-sheet instruments - financial
products traded by banks which affect bank
profits but are not visible on banks balance
sheets. - Collateral - assets pledged as security for a
loan. -
99Key Words
- Mortgage - a long-term loan secured by
real-estate. - Leverage - the relationship between borrowed
money and equity money. For companies, leverage
is calculated by dividing long-term debt by
shareholders equity. For investors, leverage
means buying on margin or using derivatives such
as options, to enhance return on value without
increasing investment. - Hedge Funds - private investment funds that take
highly leveraged speculative positions or
engage in arbitrage. - Investment-grade securities - securities with
low risk/high ratings. - Junk bonds - bonds with low ratings
- Repos - repurchase agreements, whereby
securities are sold to the bank under an
agreement that they be bought back after a
stipulated time. - Collateralised debt obligations (CDOs) -
asset-backed securities whose underlying
collateral is typically a portfolio of bonds
(corporate or sovereign) or bank loans but may
also include a combination of bonds, loans and
securitized receivables, asset-backed securities,
tranches of other collateralized debt
obligations, or credit derivatives based on any
of the former.