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Chapter_03

Chapter 3 discusses how securities are traded, differentiating between primary and secondary markets, and the processes involved in issuing securities such as IPOs and SPACs. It also covers various trading mechanisms, order types, and the evolution of electronic trading, highlighting the importance of trading costs and margin buying. Additionally, the chapter addresses regulations governing securities markets, including insider trading and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

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

Chapter_03

Chapter 3 discusses how securities are traded, differentiating between primary and secondary markets, and the processes involved in issuing securities such as IPOs and SPACs. It also covers various trading mechanisms, order types, and the evolution of electronic trading, highlighting the importance of trading costs and margin buying. Additionally, the chapter addresses regulations governing securities markets, including insider trading and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

Uploaded by

Ku n Tao
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter

3 How Securities Trade

Bodie, Kane, and Marcus


Essentials of Investments
2024 Release

© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
3.1 How Firms Issue Securities: Primary vs. Secondary

• Primary market
• Market for new issues of securities

• Secondary market
• Market for already-existing securities.

© McGraw Hill LLC. 2


3.1 How Firms Issue Securities: Private

• Privately held firms


• Primary offerings where shares are sold directly
to a small group of investors
• Up to 2,000 shareholders
• Fewer obligations to release financial statements to
public

© McGraw Hill LLC. 3


3.1 How Firms Issue Securities: Public

• Publicly Traded Companies


• Securities sold to the general public; investors
to trade shares
• Unlimited number of share holders
• Obligated to release financial statements to the public
• Sold to the Public (often with an Underwriter)

© McGraw Hill LLC. 4


3.1 How Firms Issue Securities: IPO

• Publicly Traded Companies


• Initial public offering (IPO): First public sale of
stock by a formerly private company
• Underwriters: Purchase securities from issuing
company and resell them
• Prospectus: Description of firm and security
being issued

© McGraw Hill LLC. 5


Figure 3.1 Relationship among a Firm Issuing Securities, the
Underwriters, and the Public

© McGraw Hill LLC. 6


3.1 How Firms Issue Securities: Shelf Registration

• SEC Rule 415

• Security is preregistered

• Offered at any time within the next two years

• 24-hour notice: Any or all of preregistered


amount may be offered
• Introduced in 1982

Why would a firm use Rule 415?

© McGraw Hill LLC. 7


3.1 How Firms Issue Securities

• Initial Public Offerings


• Issuer and underwriter put on “road show”

• Purpose: Bookbuilding and pricing

• Underpricing

• Post-initial sale returns average 10% or more


“winner’s curse”
• Easier to market issue → costly to issuing firm

© McGraw Hill LLC. 8


Figure 3.2 Average First-Day Returns, European IPOs, 1980 - 2022

© McGraw Hill LLC. 9


Figure 3.2 Average First-Day Returns, non-European IPOs, 1980 - 2022

© McGraw Hill LLC. 10


3.1 How Firms Issue Securities: SPACs versus Traditional IPOs

• Special purpose acquisition company (SPAC)


• The sponsor of the SPAC raises funds in its own
IPO and goes public with no underlying
commercial operations then seeks to acquire a
private firm
• Can be taken public much faster with less
information disclosure and at a lower cost than a
traditional IPO
• Allowed to make more extensive business
projections than would be permitted for a
traditional IPO
© McGraw Hill LLC. 11
3.2 How Securities Are Traded: Financial Markets

• Overall purpose: Facilitate low-cost


investment
• Bring together buyers and sellers at low cost

• Provide adequate liquidity


• Minimize time to trade

• Promotes price continuity

• Set and update prices of financial assets

• Reduce information costs associated with investing

© McGraw Hill LLC. 12


3.2 How Securities Are Traded: Market Types

• Direct Search Markets


• Buyers and sellers locate one another on their
own

• Brokered Markets
• Third-party assistance in locating buyer or seller

© McGraw Hill LLC. 13


3.2 How Securities Are Traded: Market Types

• Dealer Markets
• Third party acts as intermediate buyer/seller

• Auction Markets
• Brokers and dealers trade in one location
• Trading is more or less continuous

© McGraw Hill LLC. 14


3.2 How Securities Are Traded: Order Types
• Market order:
• Execute immediately at best price
• Bid price: price at which dealer will buy security
• Ask price: price at which dealer will sell security

• Price-contingent order:
• Limit buy/sell order: specifies price at which investor
will buy/sell
• Stop order: not to be executed until price point hit

© McGraw Hill LLC. 15


Figure 3.3 Market Orders: Average Market Depth, Median Stock

© McGraw Hill LLC. 16


Figure 3.3 Market Orders: Average Market Depth, Large Stocks

© McGraw Hill LLC. 17


Figure 3.4 Limit Order

© McGraw Hill LLC. 18


3.2 How Securities Are Traded

• Trading Mechanisms
• Dealer markets
• Over-the-counter (OTC) market: Informal network of
brokers/dealers who negotiate securities sales
• Nasdaq stock market: Computer-linked price quotation
system for OTC market

© McGraw Hill LLC. 19


3.2 How Securities Are Traded
• Trading Mechanisms Continued
• Electronic communication networks (ECNs)
• Computer networks that allow direct trading
• Individual investors need a broker to execute trades

• Specialist markets
• A market maker is a trader that quotes both bid and ask
price to the public
• Provide liquidity to other traders
• Designated market maker (DMM) accepts the obligation
to commit its own capital to provide quotes and help
maintain a “fair and orderly market” by trading from its
own inventory of shares
© McGraw Hill LLC. 20
3.3 Rise of Electronic Trading: Timeline of Market Changes
• 1969: Instinet (first ECN) established
• 1975: Fixed commissions on NYSE eliminated
• Securities and Exchange Act amended to create
National Market System (NMS)
• 1994: Nasdaq scandal
• SEC institutes new order-handling rules
• Nasdaq integrates ECN quotes into display
• SEC adopts Regulation Alternative Trading
Systems, giving ECNs ability to register as stock
exchanges

© McGraw Hill LLC. 21


3.3 Rise of Electronic Trading: Timeline of Market Changes

• 1997: SEC drops minimum tick size from 1/8 to 1/16


of $1
• 2000: National Association of Securities Dealers
splits from Nasdaq
• 2001: Minimum tick size $.01
• 2006: NYSE acquires Archipelago Exchanges and
renames it NYSE Arca
• SEC adopts Regulation NMS, requiring exchanges
to honor quotes of other exchanges

© McGraw Hill LLC. 22


Figure 3.5 Effective Spread vs. Minimum Tick Size

© McGraw Hill LLC. 23


3.4 U.S. Markets
• Nasdaq
• Approximately 3,300 firms
• New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
• Stock exchanges: Secondary markets where
already-issued securities are bought and sold
• NYSE is largest U.S. Stock exchange
• ECNs
• Latency: Time it takes to accept, process, and
deliver a trading order

© McGraw Hill LLC. 24


Figure 3.6 Market Share of Trading in NYSE-Listed Shares

© McGraw Hill LLC. 25


3.5 New Trading Strategies
• Algorithmic Trading
• Use of computer programs to make rapid
trading decisions

• High-frequency trading
• A subset of algorithmic trading
• Computer programs make very rapid trading
decisions for very small profits

© McGraw Hill LLC. 26


3.5 New Trading Strategies
• Dark Pools
• ECNs where participants can buy/sell large
blocks of securities anonymously
• Blocks: Transactions of at least 10,000 shares
• Internalization
• Brokers practice of matching buy and sell
orders internally rather than bringing them to
exchanges, capturing bid-ask spread for itself
and avoiding exchange access fees
• Bond trading
© McGraw Hill LLC. 27
3.6 Globalization of Stock Markets

• Moving to automated electronic trading

• Current trends will eventually result in 24-


hour global markets

• Moving toward market consolidation

© McGraw Hill LLC. 28


Figure 3.7 Market Capitalization of World Stock Exchanges, 2021

© McGraw Hill LLC. 29


3.7 Trading Costs
• Commission: Fee paid to broker for making
transaction
• Spread: Cost of trading with dealer
• Bid: Price at which dealer will buy from you

• Ask: Price at which dealer will sell to you

Spread = Price Ask − Price Bid


• Combination: On some trades both are
paid
© McGraw Hill LLC. 30
3.8 Buying on Margin
• Margin
• Securities purchased with money borrowed from broker
• Net worth of investor's account

• Initial Margin Requirement (IMR)


• Minimum set by Fed (Regulation T): 50%
• Minimum percent of initial investor equity
• 1 − IMR = Maximum percent investor can borrow

© McGraw Hill LLC. 31


3.8 Buying on Margin
• Equity
• Position value – Borrowing + Additional cash

• Maintenance Margin Requirement (MMR)


• Minimum value before additional funds must be added
• Exchanges mandate minimum 25%

• Margin Call
• Notification from broker that you must put up additional
funds or have position liquidated
© McGraw Hill LLC. 32
3.8 Buying on Margin

• If Equity / Market value  MMR, then


margin call occurs
Market Value - Borrowed
 MMR
Market Value
• Solve for market value
• A margin call will occur when:

Borrowed
Market Value 
1 − MMR

© McGraw Hill LLC. 33


3.8 Buying on Margin
• Margin Trading: Initial Conditions
• X Corp: Stock price = $70

• 50%: Initial margin

• 40%: Maintenance margin

• 1000 shares purchased

Initial Position
Stock $70,000 Borrowed $35,000
Equity $35,000

© McGraw Hill LLC. 34


3.8 Buying on Margin
• Stock price falls to $60 per share
• Position value – Borrowing + Additional cash

• Margin %: $25,000/$60,000 = 41.67%


New Position
Stock $60,000 Borrowed $35,000
Equity $25,000

• How far can price fall before margin call?


• Market value = $35,000/(1 – 0.40) = $58,333

© McGraw Hill LLC. 35


3.8 Buying on Margin

• With 1,000 shares, stock price for margin


call is $58,333/1,000 = $58.33
• Margin % = $23,333/$58,333 = 40%
• To restore initial margin requirement, equity = ½
x $58,333 = $29,167

New Position
Stock $60,000 Borrowed $35,000
Equity $23,333

© McGraw Hill LLC. 36


Table 3.1 Illustration of Buying Stock on Margin

© McGraw Hill LLC. 37


3.9 Short Sales
• Sale of shares not owned by investor but
borrowed through broker

• Mechanics
• Borrow stock from broker; must post margin
• Broker sells stock, and deposits proceeds/margin
in margin account
• Covering or closing out position: Buy stock; broker
returns title to original party

© McGraw Hill LLC. 38


3.9 Short Sales
• Required initial margin: Usually 50%
• More for low-priced stocks

• Liable for any cash flows


• Dividend on stock

• Zero tick, uptick rule


• Eliminated by SEC in July 2007

© McGraw Hill LLC. 39


3.9 Short Sales: Example
• Sell 100 short shares of stock at $60 per
share
• $6,000 must be pledged to broker

• Pledge 50% margin, or $3,000

• Now there is $9,000 in margin account

• Short sale equity = Total margin account –


Market value

© McGraw Hill LLC. 40


3.9 Short Sales: Example

• Example
• Maintenance margin for short sale of stock with
price > $16.75 is 30% market value:
.30  $6, 000 = $1,800
• You have $1,200 excess margin

• What price for margin call?

© McGraw Hill LLC. 41


3.9 Short Sales: Example, Margin Call
• Margin Call: Equity  (.30 × Market value)
Equity = Total Margin account − Market Value
• When Market value = Total margin
account / (1 + MMR)
• Price for margin Market value = $9,000/(1
+ 0.30) = $6,923
• Margin call: PMargin Call =
$6, 293
= $69.23
100 shares

© McGraw Hill LLC. 42


3.9 Short Sales: Example, Continued
• If the call occurs, then:
• Equity = $9,000 − $6,923 = $2,077 (30% of
Market Value)

• To restore 50% initial margin:


• ($6,923/2) − $2,077 = $1,384.50

© McGraw Hill LLC. 43


Table 3.2 Cash Flows from Purchasing vs. Short-Selling

© McGraw Hill LLC. 44


3.10 Regulation of Securities Markets

• Self-Regulation

• The Sarbanes-Oxley Act

• Passed by Congress in 2002

• Created the Public Company Accounting


Oversight Board
• Requires independent financial experts to serve
on audit committees

© McGraw Hill LLC. 45


3.10 Regulation of Securities Markets

• Insider Trading
• Nonpublic knowledge about a corporation
possessed by officers, major owners, etc., with
privileged access to information
• SEC requires officers, directors, and major
stockholders to report all transaction in their
firm’s stock

© McGraw Hill LLC. 46

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