BU473 Notes
BU473 Notes
Senior debt
Junior bond
Preferred shares
Common shares
Debt
Securities trading
How to trade
Exchange
Over the counter
Some securities can only be traded by certain type of investor
Private and public firms
Underwriters perform a number of important jobs:
Market types
o Over the counter
o Exchanged traded
o ECN (Electronic Communications Network) OR AST (Alternative Trading
System) – an electronic venue on which securities are traded but listing
service not avlb.
Order types
o Limit order book
Orders to buy referred to as bids – highest bid is bid price
Orders to sell referred to as asks – lowest ask is ask price
Bid-ask spread is the difference
o Market order – immediately buy or sell
o Dark orders: similar to limit orders but other traders cannot view them in
the order book – used to hide trading intention
o Pegged orders – price change as market condition changes
o Stop-loss order – placed after trader buys, auto close the deal if lost too
much
o Intermarket sweep order: divide large order to small ones and send to diff
markets at the same time
o Margined trades
Margin ratio: % of the trade which the investor must own in equity
– typically 30%
Settlements
o The process where 2 parties actually exchange the securities and cash
involved in the trade
o T+2 – affects shareholder votes and dividend payment
o Bilateral vs. centrally cleared
Bilateral – each trader settles trades with all traders
Centrally cleared – each trader settles with single counterparty
o Transaction costs
Price impact – when a investor trades a large # of shares, price
move against them
Index trackers
o Used to track a pre-defined index
o Usually passively managed
Active funds – alter securities holding in order to achieve an object other than
tracking index
Inverse fund (bear funds)
o Offer return which are opposite to those of the performance of some other
assets
Leveraged fund (bull fund)
o Offer return which multiply the performance of other assets
Mutual funds
o Problems: high fee, traded at the end of the day only, may not beat index
ETFs
o Can be traded at any time during the day; less fee
Hedge funds
o Characteristic
Few disclosure standards
Only accredited investors can invest
Have min AMT of 1M
Have a locked-up period, during which investors cannot withdrew
fund
o Types
Statistical arbitrage funds – exploit price abnormalities b/w assets
Event driven funds – attempt to profit from M&A/default
Litigation funds – profit form successfully funding lawsuits
Catastrophe-oriented funds – sell bonds to insures which cover
catastrophic losses
o Fee
2-20 structure – 2% management fee + 20% incentive fee for
gains above performance benchmark
Difference: all points (portfolio) APT models are on a regression line, while factor
model has residuals (error term) – firm specific risks
Hesitate to sell
Stick to current portfolio
Performance measure
Sharpe ratio
M square – allow us to compare the return on our portfolio to the potential return
of a market portfolio
The Treynor Ratio – used when comparing a portfolios performance to its
expected performance under CAPM
o
Jensen’s Alpha – actual return of a portfolio vs. return it should have under CAPM
o
Information ratio – adjust Jensen’s Alpha for the risk taken
o We have adjusted systematic risk using alpha, only need non-systematic
risk (tracking error)
Segma (ep) is the sd of CAPM residual
Other alpha values – when operating under Fama-French 3 factor models or
Carhart 4 factor models
Basic idea: price should reflect the fundamental value of the assets
Stock price in the future can be viewed as random
o Still reflect fundamentals
o Do reflect today’s fundamentals
o Any predictable future info in the price
o Any unpredictable future info at random
Why market efficient – competition and arbitrage
Form
o Weak: stock prices reflect all avlb info that can be derived by examining
trading data
i.e. technical indicators, moving average – which relies on past
price and volume
Contradict example: momentum effect
o Semi-strong: stock price reflects all avlb public info
i.e. earning reports, FS, analyst report, macro news
Contradict examples: prevalence of fundamental analysis
o Strong: reflects all avlb info including public and insider info
o Application:
Technical analysis – rejection of EMH
Fundamental analysis – rejection of strong / semi-strong EMH
Active managed fund can be seen as a rejection of EMH
Tech indicator based – reject entirely
Fundamental analysis based – reject semi-strong and
strong
Measuring efficiency – cumulative abnormal returns (CAR)
o Abnormal return: different b/w actual return of the stock and expected
return of the stock
Abnormal return = return – E[return]
o Cumulative AR
o CAR measures the unexplained changes in stokc price before or after
event takes place
o If |CAR| large => info leak
o Rejection of strong form EMH – as
Limit to arbitrage
Tech analysis can attempt to use the slow movement of price to profit off others
Trends and corrections
Trends (momentum)
Moving avg
Volatility bands: create ranges around the moving avg which depend on the
stock’s volatility
Relative strength indicators: how security performed lately compared to full
market
Breadth indicator: measure how many stocks moving in a given direction
Sentiment identification: how optimistic market participants are
o Trin statistic: relative trading volume of stocks which gain vs. lose
o
o Pull/call ratio
Usually around 65%
Higher -> bearing; lower -> bullish
Lecture 14: Bond Pricing
Bond indenture: actual contract agreed to by the bond issuer. Contains any covenants that
form part of the bond, indentures include set of restrictions on firm.
Covenant – protect lenders from a borrower who takes deliberately risky action
Sinking funds – firm must purchase certain column of its own debt to reduce risk
Subordination of future debt – debt drop in value is senior than existing debt –
restrict ability to issue new debt
Dividend restriction – put limit on frims dividend
Collateral
Types of bonds
Bond pricing
Accrued interest
Dirty price:
o If coupon paid more frequently e.g. semi-annual
y/2, c/2, 2T
Clean price = dirty price – accrued interest
Bond safety
On the run
o Taking on the run coupon bond near pay values
Pure yield – want bond to have cash flows at the exact period of time
o Taking gov treasuries, zero-c bonds and strips with diff maturities and
imputing a curve
Rates
Modified duration
Duration of perp with yield = y is (1+y)/y
Convexity
High convexity – when rate fall, price raise more; when rate rise, price fall less
Passive bond management
Common strategies
o Substitution swap: 2 bond with identical char but one with higher yield,
sell low buy high
o Intermarket spread swap: when investor identifies rate misalignment
b/w 2
o Rate anticipation swap: when anticipate rate change (i.e. when rate cut,
sell short buy long)
o Pure yield swap- when yield curve steep, sell short buy long
o Tax swap
Lecture 17: Equity valuation with macro and industry analysis
Indicator
o
Curr industry life cycle
o Start up stage – fast growing, new ideas, high risk
o Consolidation state – stable growth high risk fall, small->large
o Maturity state – predictable, profits stabilize, start pay dividend & repur
shares, slow growth
o Relative decline
State of competition
o Vertical integration: single firm control many aspects of supply chain
o Reduce need to negotiate with supplier
o Complex
Composition of industry mean
o Industry composition: competitive environment within industry
o Competitive structure
Monopoly: single large
Oligopoly: several large
Competition: many firm
Book value
Dividend discount model
o Gordon growth model
o Discounting and earning retention
Plowback ratio (b) = (earning – D) / earning
Assume g= ROE * b
PVGO is the PV of growth oppor
o Multi-stage growth
Rate change after yeras
Price-earning
o Leading P/E ratio = P0/E1 where E1 is the expected upcoming earning
o Trailing P/E ratio = P0/E0
o Modify dividend growth model with earning retention
o
o Earning model and dividends
o
DCF
o FCF for the first t period
o
o Calculate terminal value
o Ke
o
o ROE decomposition
o
Turnover and asset utilization ratios
o
Liquidity ratios
o
Market price ratio
o
Comparability
2 firms compare
Compare with industry avg
Goal
o Hedging cash pos
o Eliminating up/down risk
o Profiting from volatility
Basic of futures