Chapter 2

15
Essentials of Investments © 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights Fourth Edition Irwin / McGraw-Hill Bodie • Kane • Marcus Chapter 2 Financial Markets and Instruments

description

Chapter 2. Financial Markets and Instruments. Major Classes of Financial Assets or Securities. Debt Money market instruments Bonds Common stock Preferred stock Derivative securities. Markets and Instruments. Money Market Debt Instruments Derivatives Capital Market Bonds Equity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 2

Page 1: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus1

Chapter 2

Financial Markets and Instruments

Page 2: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus2

Major Classes of Financial Assets or Securities

• Debt– Money market instruments– Bonds

• Common stock

• Preferred stock

• Derivative securities

Page 3: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus3

Markets and Instruments

• Money Market– Debt Instruments– Derivatives

• Capital Market– Bonds– Equity– Derivatives

Page 4: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus4

Money Market Instruments

• Treasury bills

• Certificates of deposit

• Commercial Paper

• Bankers Acceptances

• Eurodollars

• Repurchase Agreements (RPs) and Reverse RPs

• Federal Funds

Page 5: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus5

Money Market Instrument Yields

• Yields on Money Market Instruments are not always directly comparable

Factors influencing yields

• Par value vs. investment value

• 360 vs. 365 days assumed in a year (366 leap year)

• Bond equivalent yield

Page 6: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus6

Bank Discount Rate (T-Bills)

rrBDBD = bank discount rate= bank discount rate

PP = market price of the T-bill= market price of the T-bill

nn = number of days to maturity= number of days to maturity

rrBDBD == 10,00010,000 -- PP10,00010,000

xx 360360nn

90-day T-bill, P = $9,87590-day T-bill, P = $9,875

rrBDBD == 10,00010,000 -- 9,8759,875

10,00010,000 x x

360360

9090== 5%5%

ExampleExample

Page 7: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus7

Bond Equivalent Yield

• Can’t compare T-bill directly to bond– 360 vs 365 days – Return is figured on par vs. price paid

• Adjust the bank discounted rate to make it comparable

Page 8: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus8

Bond Equivalent Yield

P = price of the T-billP = price of the T-bill

n = number of days to maturityn = number of days to maturity

rr BEYBEY == 10,00010,000 -- PP

PP xx 365365

nn

rrBEYBEY == 10,00010,000 -- 9,8759,875

9,8759,875 x x 365365

9090rrBEYBEY = .0127 x 4.0556 = .0513 = 5.13% = .0127 x 4.0556 = .0513 = 5.13%

Example Using Sample T-BillExample Using Sample T-Bill

Page 9: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus9

Capital Market - Fixed Income Instruments

Publicly Issued Instruments

• US Treasury Bonds and Notes

• Agency Issues (Fed Gov)

• Municipal Bonds

Privately Issued Instruments

• Corporate Bonds

• Mortgage-Backed Securities

Page 10: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus10

Capital Market - Equity

• Common stock– Residual claim– Limited liability

• Preferred stock– Fixed dividends - limited– Priority over common– Tax treatment

Page 11: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus11

Uses

• Track average returns

• Comparing performance of managers

• Base of derivatives

Factors in constructing or using an Index

• Representative?

• Broad or narrow?

• How is it constructed?

Stock Indexes

Page 12: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus12

Examples of Indexes - Domestic

• Dow Jones Industrial Average (30 Stocks)

• Standard & Poor’s 500 Composite

• NASDAQ Composite

• NYSE Composite

• Wilshire 5000

Page 13: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus13

Examples of Indexes - Int’l

• Nikkei 225 & Nikkei 300

• FTSE (Financial Times of London)

• Dax

• Region and Country Indexes– EAFE– Far East– United Kingdom

Page 14: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus14

Construction of Indexes

• How are stocks weighted?– Price weighted (DJIA)– Market-value weighted (S&P500,

NASDAQ)– Equally weighted (Value Line Index)

Page 15: Chapter 2

Essentials of Investments

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fourth Edition

Irwin / McGraw-Hill

Bodie • Kane • Marcus15

Derivatives Securities

Options• Basic Positions

– Call (Buy)– Put (Sell)

• Terms– Exercise Price– Expiration Date– Assets

Futures • Basic Positions

– Long (Buy)– Short (Sell)

• Terms– Delivery Date– Assets