investment Alternatives

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Chapter 2 Chapter 2 Investment Investment Alternatives Alternatives

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Page 1: investment Alternatives

Chapter 2Chapter 2

InvestmentInvestment Alternatives Alternatives

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• Describe the major types of financial assets and how they are organized.

• Explain what non-marketable financial assets are.

• Describe the important features of money market and capital market securities.

• Distinguish among preferred stock, income trusts, and common stock.

• Understand the basics of options and futures.

Learning ObjectivesLearning Objectives

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• Examples: Savings accounts, Canada Savings Bonds (CSBs), Guaranteed Investment Certificates (GICs)

• Commonly owned by individuals• Represent personal transactions between the

owner and the issuer. (e.g. owner of a savings account in a bank must open the account personally)

• Usually “safe” investments which are easy to convert to cash without loss of value (i.e. high liquidity)

Non-Marketable Financial AssetsNon-Marketable Financial Assets

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Examples: Non-Marketable Examples: Non-Marketable SecuritiesSecurities

• A savings account (demand deposit) is a nonmarketable account at banks and other financial institutions (e.g. credit unions). The investor’s funds are available on demand, with no specific maturity date. It offers safety and liquidity.

• Guaranteed Investment Certificates (GICs) are non-transferable time deposits with banks and trust companies that offer investors higher returns than those available on savings accounts. They differ from savings accounts in that they are locked for a fixed period of time, and early withdrawals are not permitted, or else there are penalties.

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Marketable SecuritiesMarketable Securities

• Marketable securities are classified into one of three categories: money market securities, capital market securities, and derivatives.

1- Money market securities are short-term, highly liquid, low risk securities. They include Treasury bills, commercial paper, Eurodollars, repurchase agreements, and banker’s acceptances.

2- Capital market securities are long-term instruments of higher risk and varying degrees of liquidity. They are separated into fixed-income securities and equity securities.

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Marketable Securities (cont.)Marketable Securities (cont.)- Fixed-income securities promise to pay stated

amounts at stated times.- Equity securities represent ownership rights, with a

residual claim to assets and earnings.

3- Derivative securities derive their value in whole or in part by having a claim on some underlying security. They include warrants, options, and futures contracts.

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• Examples: Treasury bills, commercial paper, Eurodollars, repurchase agreements, banker’s acceptances (B/As)

• Marketable: claims are negotiable or saleable in the marketplace.

• Marketable securities trade in impersonal markets, the buyer and seller do not know one another.

• Short-term, liquid, relatively low-risk debt instruments

• Issued by governments and private firms

Money Market SecuritiesMoney Market Securities

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• Treasury Bills: Short-term promissory notes issued by

governments T-bills accounted for about one-half of all

outstanding money market securities. Sold at a discount from face value in

denominations of $5,000, $25,000, 100,000, and $1 million

Typical maturities are 91, 182, and 364 days although shorter maturities are also offered

Treasury bills are auctioned every two weeks

1- Treasury Bills (T-bills)1- Treasury Bills (T-bills)

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• Treasury Bills: Treasury bills are sold at less than face value (a

discount), and redeemed at maturity for the face value, with this spread constituting an investor's return. The greater the discount (the smaller the price paid for the bills), the larger the return.

Due to government backing, there is a very low risk of default

Widely distributed and actively traded – high liquidity In subsequent chapters we will use government T-bill

rates as a measure of the “riskless rate” available to investors, commonly referred to as the risk-free rate

1- Treasury Bills (cont.)1- Treasury Bills (cont.)

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• Commercial Paper: Short-term unsecured promissory notes

issued by large, well-known, and financially strong corporations (including finance companies)

Denominations start at $100,000 with maturities of 30 to 365 days, and it is sold at a discount either directly by the issuer or indirectly through a dealer, with rates slightly above T-bill rates.

2- Commercial Paper2- Commercial Paper

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• Repurchase Agreements (RPs): agreements between a borrower and lender

(typically institutions) to sell and repurchase money market securities

borrower initiates an RP by contracting to sell securities to a lender and agreeing to repurchase these securities at a pre-specified (higher) price on a stated future date

maturity is generally very short, from 3 to 14 days, and sometimes overnight

minimum denomination is typically $100,000

4- Repurchase Agreements4- Repurchase Agreements

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• Bankers Acceptances (B/As): Time drafts drawn on a bank by a customer, whereby

the bank agrees to guarantee payment of a particular amount at a specified future date

B/As are negotiable instruments that are sold at a discount in the money market

Differ from commercial paper (unsecured) because the associated payments are guaranteed by a bank, and thus possess the credit risk associated with that bank

Issued in minimum denominations of $100,000 Typical maturities range from 30 to 180 days, with 90

days being the most common

5- Bankers Acceptances5- Bankers Acceptances

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Fixed-Income Securities• Marketable debt with maturity greater than one

year• More risky than money market securities• Fixed-income securities have a specified

payment schedule Dates and amount of interest and principal

payments known in advance (e.g. bonds)

Capital Market SecuritiesCapital Market Securities

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• Bonds – long-term debt instruments representing the issuer’s contractual obligation. The buyer of a bond is lending money to the issuer who agrees to pay principal on this loan and repay the principal at a stated maturity date

• Why are bonds considered fixed-income securities?

Because the interest payments (if any) and the principal repayment for most bonds are specified at the time the bond is issued and fixed for its life.

Fixed-Income Securities (cont.) Fixed-Income Securities (cont.)

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Fixed-Income Securities (cont.)Fixed-Income Securities (cont.)

• Major bond types: Government of Canada bonds (are marketable,

transferable, fluctuate in price over time, and may sell above or below their stated par value).

U.S. Treasury bonds Provincial bonds U.S. federal agency securities – GNMAs (Ginnie

Maes), FNMAs (Fannie Maes)

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• Major bond types (cont.): Corporate bonds

• Usually pay semi-annual interest, are callable, and have a par value of $1,000

• Convertible bonds may be exchanged for shares of common stock of the same corporation at predetermined prices

• Default risk is the risk that issuer may default on payments

Fixed-Income Securities (cont.)Fixed-Income Securities (cont.)

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• Callable bonds give the issuer the option to “call” or repurchase outstanding bonds at predetermined “call” prices (generally at a premium over par) at specified times

• Generally, the issuer agrees to give 30 or more days notice that the issue will be redeemed

• Most callable bonds have a time period (referred to as call protection) prior to the first call date during which the cannot be called

• The call price declines with time (why?)

Bond CharacteristicsBond Characteristics

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• Extendible Bonds: gives the investor an option to extend the maturity date of the bond

• Retractable Bonds: gives the investor an option to sell the bond back to the issuer at predetermined prices at specified time

• Issuers are able to sell bonds with these features at higher prices (and accept lower returns) than straight issues

Bond Characteristics (cont.)Bond Characteristics (cont.)

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• Convertible Bonds may be converted into common shares at predetermined conversion prices.

• This feature makes the issue more saleable and lowers the interest rate that must be offered

• Permits the holding of a two-way security: The safety of a bond The capital gains potential of a share

• Convertibles are normally callable

Bond Characteristics (cont.)Bond Characteristics (cont.)

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• Represent an ownership interest in a corporation1- Preferred stock

A hybrid security that is part equity and part fixed-income (bond) because it increases in value but also pays a fixed dividend

Preferred shareholders are paid after bondholders but before common shareholders

Dividend amount is fixed and known in advance Dividends are cumulative, i.e., the firm has to pay all

preferred dividends (both current and arrears) before paying any dividends to current shareholders

Equity SecuritiesEquity Securities

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Equity Securities (cont.)Equity Securities (cont.)3- Common stock

Represents the ownership interest of corporations or the equity of shareholders

Common shareholders are residual claimants on income and assets, i.e., entitled to income remaining after fixed-income claimant (e.g. preferred shareholders) have been paid

Common shareholders can elect board of directors and vote on important issues

Each shareholder is allowed to cast votes equal to the numbers of shares owned when such vote takes place

Common stockholders have limited liability

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• Securities whose value is derived from some underlying security

• Examples of derivative securities: options, and future contracts Risk management tools

Derivative SecuritiesDerivative Securities

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• An option gives the owner of the option the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a certain asset at a fixed price (the strike price or exercise price) during a specified period of time.

• Options on stock and other assets are examples of derivative securities. The value of an option is derived from the price and other features of the underlying assets.

• The act of purchasing or selling the underlying asset, as specified in the option contract, is referred to as exercising the option.

• The maturity date of the option is called the expiration date; the owner of the option cannot exercise the option after the expiration date.

OptionsOptions

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Options (Cont.)Options (Cont.)

• An American option can be exercised anytime up to the expiration date.

• A European option can be exercised only on the expiration date.

• Options on stocks and bonds are traded on several exchanges, the largest of which is the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE).

• Option trading in Canada began in 1975 on the Montreal Exchange.

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• A future contract is a contract where two parties agree on the price of an asset today to be delivered and paid for at some future date

• The delivery date of the goods is called the settlement date• With futures contracts, gains and losses to the buyer or seller

are recognized on a daily basis. This daily settlement feature is referred to as marking-to-market

• This daily settlement greatly reduces the default risk associated with forward contracts

• Because of this, organized trading in futures contracts is much more common than in forwards contracts

FuturesFutures

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Futures ExchangesFutures Exchanges

• The largest futures exchange is the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT)

• Other major exchanges include:- The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (COMEX)- The London International Financial Futures

Exchange (LIFFE)- The New York Futures Exchange (NYFE)- The Winnipeg Commodity Exchange (WPG)