Investment and Portfolio Management For Chapter 1
Investment and Portfolio Management For Chapter 1
FOR CHAPTER 1
Investment - is the current commitment of fund for a period of time in order to derive
MEANING OF INVESTMENT
Investment is the employment of funds with the aim of getting return on it. In general
terms, investment means the use of money in the hope of making more money. In
finance, investment means the purchase of a financial product or other item of value with
an expectation of favorable future returns.
The objectives can be classified on the basis of the investors approach as follows:
a) Short term high priority objectives: Investors have a high priority towards
achieving certain objectives in a short time. For example, a young couple will
give high priority to buy a house. Thus, investors will go for high priority
objectives and invest their money accordingly.
b) Long term high priority objectives: Some investors look forward and invest on
the basis of objectives of long term needs. They want to achieve financial
independence in long period. For example, investing for post retirement period or
education of a child etc. investors, usually prefer a diversified approach while
selecting different types of investments.
c) Low priority objectives: These objectives have low priority in investing. These
objectives are not painful. After investing in high priority assets, investors can
invest in these low priority assets. For example, provision for tour, domestic
appliances etc.
d) Money making objectives: Investors put their surplus money in these kinds of
investment. Their objective is to maximize wealth. Usually, the investors invest in
shares of companies which provide capital appreciation apart from regular
income from dividend.
Every investor has common objectives with regard to the investment of Capital.
The importance of each objective varies from investor to investor and depends upon the
age and the amount of capital they have. These objectives are broadly defined as
follows.
a. Lifestyle – Investors want to ensure that their assets can meet their financial
needs over their lifetimes.
b. Financial security – Investors want to protect their financial needs against
financial risks at all times.
c. Return – Investors want a balance of risk and return that is suitable to their
personal risk preferences.
d. Value for money – Investors want to minimize the costs of managing their
assets and their financial needs.
e. Peace of mind – Investors do not want to worry about the day to day
movements of markets and their present and future financial security.
ELEMENTS OF INVESTMENTS
The Elements of Investments are as follows:
a. Return:
Investors buy or sell financial instruments in order to earn return on
them. The return on investment is the reward to the investors. The return
includes both current income and capital gain or losses, which arises by the
increase or decrease of the security price.
INVESTMENT ATTRIBUTES
Every investor has certain specific objective to achieve through his long term or short
term investment. Such objectives may be monetary/financial or personal in character.
1. EQUITY SHARES
Equity investments represent ownership in a running company. By ownership, we mean
share in the profits and assets of the company but generally, there are no fixed returns. It is
considered as a risky investment but at the same time, depending upon situation, it is liquid
investments due to the presence of stock markets. There are equity shares for which there is a
regular trading, for those investments liquidity is more otherwise for stocks have less
movement, liquidity is not highly attractive.
2. DEBENTURES OR BONDS
Debentures or bonds are long-term investment options with a fixed stream of cash
flows depending on the quoted rate of interest. They are considered relatively less risky. An
amount of risk involved in debentures or bonds is dependent upon who the issuer is. For
example, if the issue is made by a government, the risk is assumed to be zero. However,
investment in long term debentures or bonds, there are risk in terms of interest rate risk and
price risk. Suppose, a person requires an amount to fund his child’s education after 5 years. He
is investing in a debenture having maturity period of 8 years, with coupon payment annually. In
that case there is a risk of reinvesting coupon at a lower interest rate from end of year 1 to end
of year 5 and there is a price risk for increase in rate of interest at the end of fifth year, in which
price of security falls. In order to immunize risk, investment can be made as per duration
concept. Following alternatives are available under debentures or bonds:
Government securities
Savings bonds
Public Sector Units bonds
Debentures of private sector companies
3. Preference shares
Money market instruments are just like the debentures but the time period is very less.
It is generally less than 1 year. Corporate entities can utilize their idle working capital by
investing in money market instruments. Some of the money market instruments are
Treasury Bills
Commercial Paper
Certificate of Deposits
4. MUTUAL FUNDS
Mutual funds are an easy and tension free way of investment and it automatically
diversifies the investments. A mutual fund is an investment only in debt or only in equity or mix
of debts and equity and ratio depending on the scheme. They provide with benefits such as
professional approach, benefits of scale and convenience. Further investing in mutual fund will
have advantage of getting professional management services, at a lower cost, which otherwise
was not possible at all. In case of open ended mutual fund scheme, mutual fund is giving an
assurance to investor that mutual fund will give support of secondary market. There is an
absolute transparency about investment performance to investors. On real time basis, investors
are informed about performance of investment. In mutual funds also, we can select among the
following types of portfolios:
Equity Schemes
Debt Schemes
Balanced Schemes
Sector Specific Schemes etc.
6. REAL ESTATE
Every investor has some part of their portfolio invested in real assets. Almost every
individual and corporate investor invest in residential and office buildings respectively. Apart
from these, others include:
Agricultural Land
Semi-Urban Land
Commercial Property
Raw House
Farm House etc.
7. PRECIOUS OBJECTS
Precious objects include gold, silver and other precious stones like the diamond. Some
artistic people invest in art objects like paintings, ancient coins etc.
8. DERIVATIVES
Derivatives means indirect investments in the assets. The derivatives market is growing
at a tremendous speed. The important benefit of investing in derivatives is that it leverages the
investment, manages the risk and helps in doing speculation. Derivatives include:
Forwards
Futures
Options
Swaps etc.
9. NON-MARKETABLE SECURITIES
Non-marketable securities are those securities which cannot be liquidated in the
financial markets. Such securities include:
Bank Deposits
Post Office Deposits
Company Deposits
Provident Fund Deposits
Financial Instrument
- is a monetary contract between parties. We can create, trade, or modify them. We can also
settle them. A financial instrument may be evidence of ownership of part of something, as in
stocks and shares. Bonds, which are contractual rights to receive cash, are financial instruments.
- contracts that we give a value to and then trade, are financial instruments.
The Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) has the following definition or a financial
instrument:
“A financial instrument is any contract that gives rise to a financial asset of one entity and a financial
liability or equity instrument of another entity.”
“The definition is wide and includes cash, deposits in other entities, trade receivables, loans to other
entities. investments in debt instruments, investments in shares and other equity instruments.”
1. Debt-based financial instruments reflect a loan the investor made to the issuing entity.
2. Equity-based financial instruments, on the other hand, reflect ownership of the issuing entity.
Investment
Financial instrument: the most widely used definition of a financial instrument is the one used for
International Financial Reporting Standards (accounting standards).
cash
an equity instrument of another entity
a contractual right:
to receive cash or other financial asset from another entity; or
to exchange financial assets or financial liabilities with another entity under conditions that are
potentially favorable to the entity; or
a contract that will or may be settled in the entity’s own equity instruments and is:
a non derivative for which the entity is or may be obliged to receive a variable number of the
entity’s own equity instruments
a derivative that will or may be settled other than by the exchange of a fixed amount of cash or
another financial asset for a fixed number of the entity’s own equity instruments. For this
purpose, the entity’s own equity instruments do not include instruments that are themselves
contracts for the future receipt or delivery of the entity’s own equity instruments
puttable instruments classified as equity or certain liabilities arising on liquidation classified by
IAS 32 as equity instruments
Financial Liability
a contractual obligation:
to deliver cash or another financial asset to another entity; or
to exchange financial assets or financial liabilities with another entity under conditions that are
potentially unfavorable to the entity; or
a contract that will or may be settled in the entity’s own equity instruments and is
a nonderivative for which the entity is or may be obliged to deliver a variable number of the
entity’s own equity instruments; or
a derivative that will or may be settled other than by the exchange of a fixed amount of cash or
another financial asset for a fixed number of the entity’s own equity instruments. For this
purpose, the entity’s own equity instruments do not include: instruments that are themselves
contracts for the future receipt or delivery of the entity’s own equity instruments; puttable
instruments classified as equity; or certain liabilities arising on liquidation classified as equity
instruments
Equity Instrument is any contract that delivers a residual interest in the assets of an entity after
deducting all of its liabilities.
Fair value is the amount for which an asset could be exchanged, or a liability settled, between
knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s-length transaction.
Puttable instrument is a financial instrument that gives the holder the right to put the instrument back
to the issuer for cash or another financial asset, or is automatically put back to the issuer on occurrence
of an uncertain future event or the death or retirement of the instrument holder.