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BU473 Notes

This document provides an overview of various financial markets and instruments. It discusses the default priority order in bankruptcy, types of short-term and long-term debt, money market instruments, government and corporate bonds, equities like common stock and preferred shares, derivatives, securities trading mechanisms, underwriting initial public offerings, and mutual funds, ETFs and hedge funds. It also summarizes lecture content on optimal portfolios, the asset pricing theory, performance measurement, market timing, and the efficient market hypothesis.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
103 views

BU473 Notes

This document provides an overview of various financial markets and instruments. It discusses the default priority order in bankruptcy, types of short-term and long-term debt, money market instruments, government and corporate bonds, equities like common stock and preferred shares, derivatives, securities trading mechanisms, underwriting initial public offerings, and mutual funds, ETFs and hedge funds. It also summarizes lecture content on optimal portfolios, the asset pricing theory, performance measurement, market timing, and the efficient market hypothesis.

Uploaded by

kk234321
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Summary

Financial markets and instruments


Default waterfall

 Senior debt
 Junior bond
 Preferred shares
 Common shares
Debt

 Short term debt: less than 1 year


 Long term debt: more than 2 years
Money market (short term debt)

 T-bills – Issued by Gov


o No coupons
o Yield based on diff b/w purchase price and value at maturity
 Commercial paper – Issued by large corporations
 Banker’s acceptance – for small corporation who cannot issuer their own
commercial paper, they start a line of credit at Canadian banks. Note that Banker
acceptance use bank’s credit rating
 Repo
 Interbank lending
Long term debt

 Some gov bond are inflation protected


o Canada: real return bond (RRB)
o US: Treasury Inflation protected Securities (TIPS)
 Provincial bond
 NHA MBS
 Corporate bond
 Equities
o Common stock
 Residual claim and limited liability
o Income trust
 Income trust hold some underlying assets which generate income.
Most income is then distributed to the holders of the income trust
units
 Current popular type is REIT (Real estate Investment Trust) –
allow investors access to real-estate income that they would
otherwise be excluded from
o Preferred shares
o American depository receipts
 Certificates represents shares of foreign corporations
 Made it easier for US investors to trade shares of foreign
corporations
Derivatives
 Warrants: similar to call options but are issued by the firm whose shares are
involved rather than exchanges (as options)
 Swaps: trade a set of liabilities b/w 2 parties

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:

 Advising the firm on the number and price of new shares.


 Advising the firm on the preparation of the prospectus. •
 Marketing the securities to potential investors on road shows

 IPO: is conducted by one or more ibs called the underwriter.


 Firm commitment (bought deal): the underwriter buys the shares from the
company directly at a pre-agreed price. Then sell to the market
 Best efforts: underwriter agrees to get the best price available from investors
 Alternatives to IPO
o Remaining private
o Direct listing: allow initial investors to sell their shares on exchange
Trading process

 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

Mutual Funds, ETFs and Hedge funds


Investment companies

 Benefit for investors


o Lower transaction cost
o Record keeping and admin
o Diversification and asset divisibility
o Professional management
 Closed vs. Open
o Open ended fund: allow investors to create new shares or redeem old
shares directly from the fund itself
o Closed ended fund: don’t allow investors to create or redeem shares
Major types of funds

 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

Lecture 8: Optimal Risky Portfolio


Risk

 Diversifiable risk (non-symmetric risk): can be reduced/eliminated by holding


additional type of securities
 Non-diversifiable risk (symmetric risk): cannot be eliminated by holding add.
Securities

Lecture 10: APT & Factor Model


APT is used to price well diversified portfolios, while Factor model can model a single
stock

 Difference: all points (portfolio) APT models are on a regression line, while factor
model has residuals (error term) – firm specific risks

Lecture 11: Performance Measure


Investor mistakes

 Hesitate to sell
 Stick to current portfolio
Performance measure

 Arithmetic avg of holding period return

 Time weighted avg / geometric avg

 Dollar weighted avg / IRR


o When portfolio size change
Risk adjusted return

 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

Timing the market

Lecture 12: The Efficient Markets Hypothesis

Efficient market hypothesis

 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

Lecture 13: Bhavioural Finance and Technical Analysis


Why price may not reflect all avlb info – investors not fully rational
Behavioural finance

 Relies on 2 fundamental differences


o Investors not fully rational – push price away from fundamental value
o Limited arbitrage opportunity – prevent correction
 Key diffb/w conventional financial theories and behavioral finance: market
efficient / inefficient
Type of behavioral finance errors

 Information processing error


o Definition: investor do not accurately estimate true prob of events, price
or return
o Forecasting error / memory bias: weight recent experience heavier
o Overconfidence bias: overestimate precision of their forecast, believe
extreme unlikely
o Conservation bias: conservative updating forecast/beliefs
o Representative bias: treat single events as representative of broader trend
 Behavioral biases
o Definition: do not make correct decision even of they have correct
estimate
o Framing: affect by how choice are framed (5$ for bag vs. 5$ free bring bag)
o Anchoring: anchor beliefs on single info. (view but in price as base)
o Mental accounting: separate info rather than whole (view wining/losing
stocks differently)
o Regret avoidance: avoid decision they may regret
 Affect error
o Definition: attach emotional or moral weights to their decision
o Loss aversion: view losses inherently bad and gains inherently good
(more negatively impacted by loss)
o Prospect theory: risk averse w.r.t. gains and loss averse w.r.t. losses.
Unwilling to accept fair gamble for gains but willing to accept unfair
gambles for losses

Limit to arbitrage

 Example: limits to arbitrage premium/discount paid on closed-end mutual fund


o In theory: price move towards NAV, but many have persistent
premium/discount over long time
o Why hard to arbitrage:
 Underlying basked may change frequently/difficult to recreate
 Fund price may not trend toward NAV quickly
 Cost to maintain a short position may exceed profit
Technical analysis

 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

 International – raise money in other jurisdictions


o Issue in foreign curr – protect investors from EX rate risk
 Different names: Yankees (USA), Maples (Canada), Samurai Bonds
(Japan), Bulldog Bonds (UK).
o In domestic curr but sell in other country
 Referred to Eurobonds
 Eurodollar (issued in USA), Eurocanadians (issued in CAD)
 Special bond types
o Callable – corp can buy back after period of time
 YTC (yield to call)
o Convertible – covert to equity at a certain ratio
o Extendable/retracable – can extend/decrease maturity
o Floating rate – adjust based one external factor (t-bill yield)
 cZero-oupon bond constructed from coupon bond is call strip

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

 Coverage ratio – future cash flow issues


 Leverage (D/E)
 Liquidity ratio – curr asset/curr liab i.e. current ratio and quick ratio
 Profitability ratio – rate of return compared to assets or equity
 Cash flow to debt ratio
 Altman’s Z score
o
o --vulnerable to default--1.23---somewhat risky---2.90-----safe---------
Lecture 15: Bond term structure
Yield curve

 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

 (yi) Spot rate – YTM of zero-coupon bond – time 0 to time t


 (ri) Short rate – yield b/w 2 specific point of time – time t to time 1
 Forward rate – with uncertainty
o Diff b/w forward rate and expectation of short rate is liquidity premium
o Expectation hypothesis
 Yield curve
o Liquidity preference theory
 YTM depends on expectation of future I and shape of liquidity
premium
Lecture 16: Bond Duration and Convexity
Duration – relatively maturity of bond’s CF, rather than FV -> avg timing of all bond’s CF

 Macaulay Duration: weights the rime of maturity of a bond by the relative,


discounted CF in each period of time


 Modified duration


 Duration of perp with yield = y is (1+y)/y
Convexity

 Measure: change in slope of pricing curve


 High convexity – when rate fall, price raise more; when rate rise, price fall less
Passive bond management

 Index funds – hold a representative sampling of bonds which match the


maturities, coupons and issuers of the entire index.
 Duration immunization – match interest rate exposure of assets and liability
o Steps:
o Find duration of liability
o Calculate duration of asset
o Calculate necessary asset mix s.t. asset match liab
o Fund the obligation
 CF matching
Active 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

 Leading – move before econ activity become to change


o Employment
o New orders
o Financial indicator (yield curve)
o Consumer expectation
 Lagging
o Duration of unemployment
o Ratio of inventories to sales
o Labour cost / output
o Loan outstanding
Industry analysis
 Curr stat of business cycle
o Business cycle: trough-expansion-peak-recession
o Sensitivity to business cycle – how strongly an industry follows the trend
of business cycle

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

Lecture 18: Equity valuation models


Valuation

 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

Lecture 19: equity valuation and financial statement analysis


Ratio analysis

 Profitability ratio – efficiency generating revenue using asset


o ROA = EBIT/Total Asset
o ROC (return on capital)
o
o EVA (economic value added)
 EVA = (ROC-WACC) * total capital
o ROE = Net income / Shareholder’s Equity

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

Lecture 20 Options and futures


Basic of options

 Premium (market price): price that option itself traded for


 Strike price (exercise price): option allow holder to sell/buy for
 In the money: profit immediately
 Out of the money: not profit immediately
 At the money: same price
 Option trading
o Canada: Montreal exchange
o USL Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) and the International
Securities Exchange (ISE).
 Options clearing
o If exercise, write face loss, need margin
o Cleated at
 Canada: Canadian Derivatives Clearing Corporation (CDCC).
 USA: Options Clearing Corporation (OCC).
Basic options strategies

 Goal
o Hedging cash pos
o Eliminating up/down risk
o Profiting from volatility
Basic of futures

 Definition: contract for delivery of some asset at a given point in future


 Diff from option: must buy/sell
 Future price: Futures contracts transact at the future price, which is the amount
that the buyer will pay the seller at expiry.
 Open interest: active contracts in a given future that haven’t expired
 Profit:
o Long: sport price at maturity (actual price) – future price (in contract)
o Short: the opposite (Po-Ft)
 Futures trading
o Clearinghouse and CCP

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