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Financial Markets Chapter 12
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Savings...and saving? Saving is the absence of spending Savings Dollars that become available when people abstain from consumption This is where banks get their capital
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The financial system A network of savers, investors, and financial institutions that work together to transfer savings Assets Things with worth Certificate of Deposit Receipt showing that an investor has made an interest-bearing loan to a bank or a government or a corporate bond Economists call these receipts financial assets because they are worth something (i.e. they have value)
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Financial intermediaries Lend funds to borrowers Insurance funds, pension funds There is a circular flow of funds that exists to keep the money cycle going
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Nonbank Financial Institutions Finance company Firm that specializes in making loans directly to consumers J.G. Wentworth Loan consolidation places Life insurance Involves premiums Price paid to keep a policy Mutual fund Company that sells stock in itself to individual investors, and then invests the money it receives in stocks and bonds issued by other corporations Receive a dividend earned from the mutual fund’s investments A dividend is a check given to stockholders representing a portion of profits
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Net Asset Value (NAV) Value of the mutual fund divided by the number of shares issued by the mutual fund Pension fund Collection of funds to pay out as income to retired or disabled individuals
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Investing
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Strategies Risk versus reward Directly proportional to profit Higher risk = higher profit usually Optimum investment is usually in the middle Toleration of scenario is key It’s all about your psyche Safest are US Treasury investments Riskiest are junk bonds High-yield bonds with a great chance of defaulting
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Retirement Retirement accounts are about generating appreciating value rather than generating income 401(k) Special retirement fund Tax deferred investment plan that acts as a personal pension fund for employees You don’t pay taxes on money given to a 401(k) 80% of employers match contributions You can roll-over a 401(k) from different jobs
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Bonds...Barry Bonds (oops) Bonds Long term obligations that pay a stated rate of interest for a specified number of years Bonds have three components A Coupon Interest on the debt Maturity Life of the bond Par value Principal or total amount initially borrowed that must be repaid to the lender at maturity Current yield of the bond Annual interest divided by the purchase price Financial health or credit worthiness is the key This means that not all bonds are the same
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Bond ratings Two companies control bond ratings Standard and Poor’s Moody’s Many factors determine bond ratings Health of company Stability Profitability Trends in market
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Financial assets and their characteristics Certificate of Deposit (CD) Long term investment There is a penalty for early withdrawal Tailor a withdrawal date College tuition savings is an example Corporate bonds Larger investment Higher risk at times (equals higher profit) Usually have a B rating Municipal bonds State and local governments Finance public works Schools
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More assets Savings bonds Issued through the government Slow rate of return on investment Maturity is usually about 18 years Virtually no risk of default Treasury items Notes have 2-10 year maturity Bonds have 10-30 year maturity Safest investment Bill (T-Bill) Short-term investment Auctioned off at a discounted rate
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Individual Retirement Accounts Long-term tax-sheltered time deposits that an employee can setup as a part of a retirement plan Taxed when you withdraw money Roth IRA Taxed initially, so money withdrawn is all after taxes
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Markets for Financial Assets Capital market Money loaned for over a year Long-term CDs and Corporate or Government Bonds Money market Money is loaned for less than a year Primary markets Market where only the original issuer can repurchase or redeem financial assets Government savings bonds and IRAs Secondary markets Market in which existing financial assets can be sold to new investors
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Investing in Equities, Futures and Options Equities Stocks that represent ownership shares in a company Market efficiency There is a theory that exists that suggests that efficient markets work themselves out Efficient Market Hypothesis Argument that stocks are always priced about right and that bargains are hard to find because they are followed so closely by investors Portfolio diversification Practice of holding a large number of different stocks so that increases in some can offset decreases in others
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Organized Stock Exchanges New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Wall Street NYSE has 1400 seats or memberships Yield is the dividend divided by closing price Price to earning ratio or PE ratio is the stock’s price divided by annual earnings of each share of common stock outstanding American Stock Exchange Smaller than NYSE
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Over-the-Counter Drugs I mean Markets Over-the-counter markets Securities that are not traded on an organized exchange National Association of Security Dealers Automated Quotation (NASDAQ) 4,000 companies are traded More than AMEX and NYSE combined
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How are we doing? Dow-Jones Industrial Average Average of thirty active stocks that are the most widely held for the day Standard and Poor’s 500 Overall market performance Bull markets are strong Bear markets are mean (bad)
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Back to the Future Spot markets Market in which transactions are made immediately at the prevailing price On-the-spot Futures contract An agreement to buy or sell at a predetermined price These are bought at a futures market
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What are my options? Options are contracts that provide the right to purchase or sell commodities or financial assets at some point in the future at a price agreed upon today Call options allow you the ability to buy a share of a stock at a specified price in the future EX: If I have the right to buy a stock at $70.00 and it goes down $30.00, I can tear up the call option and purchase the stock for $30.00. If the reverse happens, I don’t have to pay more than what the call option notes. Put options allow you the right to sell a stock at a specified price in the future If I have the right to sell a stock at $50.00 and it goes down $40.00, I can force the buyer to pay the original $50.00. If the reverse happens, I would tear up the option and sell it at the higher price
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