Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Investing 101 Lecture 2 Fixed Income Products. Stock Game Tickers  Please write your name and your five chosen ones on a piece of paper and pass it to.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Investing 101 Lecture 2 Fixed Income Products. Stock Game Tickers  Please write your name and your five chosen ones on a piece of paper and pass it to."— Presentation transcript:

1 Investing 101 Lecture 2 Fixed Income Products

2 Stock Game Tickers  Please write your name and your five chosen ones on a piece of paper and pass it to the front.

3 Reality Check!  Did anyone bring their Andex charts?  If so pleas pull them out. We are going to have a harder look at the importance of time horizon.

4 Wealth Accumulation of Stocks and Bonds (1926- 2002)

5 What About Investment Expenses?  The previous performance ignores investment expenses  How much would investors have accumulated with a 1 percent annual expense ratio?

6 Wealth Accumulation after Expenses

7 What About Taxes?  The government taxes interest, dividend income, and realized capital gains  How much do taxes affect our wealth accumulations?  I assumed that dividends and interest income is taxed at the marginal tax rate of the average stock and bond holder and that capital gains are not taxed

8 Wealth Accumulation after Expenses and Taxes

9 What About (The real killer) Inflation?  $1 in 1926 could buy much more than $1 in 2002  Consumer prices increased over this period about ten-fold  How much does inflation affect our wealth accumulations?

10 Real Wealth Accumulation after Expenses and Taxes

11 Review!  What is a stock?  What is a Dividend?  What is a Capital Gain?  What is a Mutual fund?  How long does a stock live?

12 Main Teaching Points  What is a bond?  Where do bonds come from?  What are the benefits/rights of ownership?  How do bonds Work?  What are the risks of ownership?  Why do interest rates matter?

13 Just What The Hell Is A Bond Anyway?  A debt investment with which the investor loans money to an entity (company or government) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a specified interest rate.  A bond is NOT ownership  A bond does NOT give you any say in how a company is run.  A bond is a LOAN

14 What is a Coupon?  A coupon is a payment of interest on the loan.  A coupon can be paid quarterly, semi annually, annually or not at all.

15 Where Do Bonds Come From?  Bonds are born in the same way as stocks.  A company will approach an Investment Bank needing a debt issue.  The investment bank will analyze the market and the company to determine the best duration, rate, etc of the bond.

16 Why Are They Needed?  Difficult to explain however…..  M&M proposition II with taxes, optimal capital structure. (Graph)  Stock price unfavorable for an equity issue.  Excess debt capacity (D/E ratio off balace)  Gov’t financing projects (ie bridge) or borrowing in a pinch (ie war victory bonds).

17 Break  BEFORE you run off, find someone in class and explain to them the most interesting thing you have learned thus far.  10 min Break

18 Differences Between Bonds and Stocks  Bonds  A loan  No ownership  No vote  Guaranteed by assets (usually)  Seniority in Liquidation  Finite life span  Regular coupons.  Stocks  A purchase  Of ownership  A vote  Not Guaranteed  Subordinate to Debt, Preferred shares and any higher classes  Infinite lifespan  No sure dividends

19 Bond Benefits  “Guaranteed” return (if held to maturity)  Secured By Assets (in most cases)  Capital gain possiblities  “Safer” invesment  Steady Income Stream  Negative Correlation to stocks.

20 Bond Risks?!  Inflation risk  Interest rate risk  Default risk  Liquidity risk

21 Types Of Fixed Income Instruments  Strip Bond  Zero Bond/T-Bill  Coupon Bond  Floating Rate Bond  C – Paper  Preferred Shares*

22 What Makes One Bond Different From Another?  Governments are much less likely to go bankrupt than are companies. They can also print money if need be.  Large, established companies can borrow at lower rates.  Different bonds have different features. Ie callable, retractable, extendable.

23 Bond Rating  Dominion Bond Rating Service of DBRS rates bonds as to the investability of the bond.  Rating is from AAA to D  Anything below BB is considered “Junk.”(GM)

24 How Bonds Work  Always helpful to use a picture.  PV=(C/r)(1-1/(1+r)^t)/r + FV/(1+r)^t.  Inverse relationship between PV and r in that PV= FV/(1+r)^t.

25 Questions?

26 Extra  Bond Features. (callable, extendable, retractable, convertable)  GM Bonds.  Bell Curve.  Volatility of returns.  Balance Sheet  Cash flow statement  Income Statement  Prospectus.  Business models (Sole, partner etc)  Shorting  Google IPO  Financial Leverage. Margin Accounts.


Download ppt "Investing 101 Lecture 2 Fixed Income Products. Stock Game Tickers  Please write your name and your five chosen ones on a piece of paper and pass it to."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google