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Financial Markets, Institutions & Derivative Instruments ECO 473 – Money & Banking – Dr. D. Foster
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Match savers and investors ◦ Savers want to wealth ◦ Investors want to create wealth Spread/share risk. Successful strategy - diversification ◦ Savers seek out mutual funds ◦ Savers seek out financial intermediaries ◦ Investors seek OPM
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◦ banks ◦ credit unions ◦ S&Ls ◦ thrifts ◦ savings banks pension funds Insurance companies mutual funds mortgage brokers investment bankers finance companies Why - Intermediation Who... Financial Markets - Why & Who
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New - Primary Markets ◦ stocks (IPO), bonds, mortgages, other. Used - Secondary Markets ◦ exchange of ownership. Where: NYSE, NASDAQ, OTC... Financial Markets - New & Used
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Short - Money Markets ◦ A financial instrument that matures w/in one year. ◦ Used to facilitate liquidity demands. Need funds soon. Have excess cash. 3 mo. & 6 mo. T-Bills Commercial paper Bank CDs Fed’l funds Repurchase agreements Bankers’ acceptances Euro$ funds Financial Markets - Short & Long
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Money Market Instruments Outstanding, 2000-2012
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Long - Capital Markets ◦ Maturities of more than one year. ◦ Used for capital purchases (investment). ◦ Less liquid & more risk than MM. Corporate stock Corporate bonds U.S. Treasury bonds Other U.S. & Munis Mortgages Comm./Con. loans Financial Markets - Short & Long
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Sell diversification to individual savers. Government regulations limit risks. 8,000 mutual funds in the United States. Raise money from wealthy people/institutions Largely unregulated ◦ Use leverage which magnifies gains/losses. ◦ Trade in derivative instruments. Mutual Funds Hedge Funds Financial Institutions
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broker A broker buys and sells securities for others ◦ May be “full service” or “discount.” dealer A dealer buys and sells for itself, making a market in these securities. Underwrites Underwrites and advises companies on mergers and acquisitions. Investment banks buy and sell securities and derivatives. Brokers and Dealers Investment Banks
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1930s Regs/diversification option? 2008 - collapse of the MBS market. Bear Stearns - couldn’t roll over debt. Lehman Brothers - $639 bill. in assets. Merrill Lynch - sold to BoA Goldman Sachs & Morgan Stanley- converted to commercial banks.
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Forward contracts Future contracts Options Swaps Interest rates Currency Stock Commodities Weather Weather Derivative Financial Instruments Derivatives in...
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Hedging/Insuring against adverse changes … You have $10 million in U.S. Treasuries, nominal yield is 5% and maturity date is 3 years from now. But, you only want to hold them for one more year. Risk – If interest rates rise, the price will fall. Hedge – execute a forward contract, promising to sell bonds in 2009 at a price yielding 5.1%. “Purpose” of a Derivative
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Hedging/Insuring against adverse changes … You need to buy €5 million in 6 months, the current exchange rate is $1.33/ €. But, you think the dollar will depreciate by then. Risk – If the dollar falls, it costs more to buy €. Hedge – go “long” and agree to buy €, through a futures contract, at $1.36 each. “Purpose” of a Derivative
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Forward: ◦ Variable in content. ◦ Settled at maturity date. ◦ Matching participants. Future: ◦ Standardized amounts and terms. ◦ Ongoing settlement cash flows. ◦ Active, liquid market. ◦ Default can’t hurt other party. Forward vs. Future Contract
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Hedging/Insuring against adverse changes … You need to buy €5 million in 6 months, the current exchange rate is $1.33/ €. But, you think the dollar will depreciate by then. Risk – If the dollar falls, it costs more to buy €. Alternative Hedge – buy a call option to purchase Euros at $1.40 each; exercise only if the rate moves higher than that. “Purpose” of a Derivative
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Hedging/Insuring against adverse changes … You pay a variable return on $25 million worth of outstanding bonds. Risk – If interest rates rise, so do your costs. Hedge – execute an interest rate swap, to gain a fixed payment schedule, and reducing your exposure to interest rate changes. “Purpose” of a Derivative
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Bank agrees to buy bonds in one year at a price that earns 5%... thinking rates will fall. Buy/sell currency futures if you expect rates to move contrary to market. Buy options to leverage your investment. Actions raise market liquidity for non-speculators!! Derivatives as speculative
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1992 – Nick Leeson becomes a trading manager at Baring Securities in Singapore. Charged with executing client option orders and arbitraging price differences between SIMEX and Osaka exchanges. Took “speculative positions” in futures linked to Nikkei 225 and Japanese gov’t. bonds. Hid losses in an unused error account: $400 m. – 1994 and $1.4 b. – 1995 Fled Singapore; arrested in Germany. Case: Barings Bank - 1762 to 1995
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Hedging against adverse changes.. You own $25 million worth of outstanding bonds. Risk – If the firm goes bankrupt... Hedge – buy a credit default swap, and make a fixed payment (insurance). If firm goes bust, the seller owes you for the bond (difference). The Credit Swap Derivative
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First one in 1995 (J.P. Morgan) By 2008, $45 trillion in value. By 2008, $45 trillion in value. As speculation – buy & sell to manage risk. As speculation – buy & sell to manage risk. You don’t need to own bond! You don’t need to own bond! Done OTC. Done OTC. Party-to-party transaction. Party-to-party transaction. Settlement/liquidity issues. Settlement/liquidity issues. Build a virtual bond portfolio. Build a virtual bond portfolio. Insider trading issue... Insider trading issue... The Credit Swap Derivative
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Financial Markets, Institutions & Derivative Instruments ECO 473 – Money & Banking – Dr. D. Foster
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