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Financial Markets, Institutions & Derivative Instruments. ECO 473 – Money & Banking – Dr. D. Foster. Economic Functions of Financial Markets. Match savers and investors Savers want to wealth Investors want to create wealth Spread/share risk . Successful strategy - diversification
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Financial Markets, Institutions & Derivative Instruments ECO 473 – Money & Banking – Dr. D. Foster
Economic Functions of Financial Markets • Match saversand 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
Financial Markets - Why & Who • banks • credit unions • S&Ls • thrifts • savings banks • Why - Intermediation • Who . . . • pension funds • Insurance companies • mutual funds • mortgage brokers • investment bankers • finance companies
Financial Markets - New & Used • New - Primary Markets • stocks (IPO), bonds, mortgages, other. • Used - Secondary Markets • exchange of ownership. • Where: NYSE,NASDAQ,OTC . . .
Financial Markets - Short & Long • Short - Money Markets • A financial instrument that matures w/in one year. • Used to facilitate liquidity demands. • Need funds soon. • Have excess cash. • Fed’l funds • Repurchase agreements • Bankers’ acceptances • Euro$ funds • 3 mo. & 6 mo. T-Bills • Commercial paper • Bank CDs
Financial Markets - Short & Long • Long - Capital Markets • Maturities of more than one year. • Used for capital purchases (investment). • Less liquid & more risk than MM. • Other U.S. & Munis • Mortgages • Comm./Con. loans • Corporate stock • Corporate bonds • U.S. Treasury bonds
Federal Financing Bank Banks for Cooperatives Federal Intermediate Credit Banks Federal Land Banks Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA, or “Fannie Mae”) Government Players • General National Mortgage Association • (GNMA, or “Ginnie Mae”) • Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLBs) • Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation • (FHLMC, or “Freddie Mac”)
Sell diversification to individual savers. Government regulations limit risks. 8,000 mutual funds in the United States. Financial Institutions Mutual Funds Hedge Funds • Raise money from wealthy people/institutions • Largely unregulated • Use leverage which magnifies gains/losses. • Trade in derivative instruments.
A brokerbuys and sells securities for others May be “full service” or “discount.” Adealerbuys and sells for itself, making a market in these securities. Brokers and Dealers Investment Banks • Underwrites and advises companies on mergers and acquisitions. • Investment banks buy and sell securities and derivatives.
The End of Investment Banks? • 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.
Case - Google IPO • Google structured IPO as a “Dutch” auction. • Google saved on investment bank services. • Presumption is Google earned more $$. • Had touted a price of $135 earlier. • Ended up with a price of $85. • Earned $1.67 billion on sale. • Conclusion: Investment underwriters are not biased!
Case - Google IPO After After After After 8/2012 trading Aug. 20, trading Aug. 20, trading IPO, IPO, IPO, IPO, At peak, traded at At peak, traded at At peak, traded at At peak, traded at at about $460 at about $542 at about $460 traded traded traded traded almost $715 almost $715 almost $715 almost $715 at $106 at $106 at $106 at $106 4/2014; stock split: As of 10/9/2014GOOG $562– GOOGL $572
Derivative Financial Instruments • Forward contracts • Future contracts • Options • Swaps Derivatives in . . . • Interest rates • Currency • Stock • Commodities • Weather
“Purpose” of a Derivative • Hedging/Insuring against adverse changes … You have $10 million in U.S. Treasuries,nominal yield is 5% and maturity date is 2022.But, you only want to hold them until 2019. Risk – If interest rates rise, the price will fall. Hedge – execute a forward contract, promising to sell bonds in 2019 at a price yielding 5.1%.
“Purpose” of a Derivative • 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.
Forward vs. Future Contract • 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.
“Purpose” of a Derivative • 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 • 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.
Derivatives as speculative • 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!!
Case: Barings Bank - 1762 to 1995 • 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.
The Credit Swap Derivative • 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 • First one in 1995 (J.P. Morgan) • By 2008, $45 trillion in value. • As speculation – buy & sell to manage risk. • You don’t need to own bond! • Done OTC. • Party-to-party transaction. • Settlement/liquidity issues. • Build a virtual bond portfolio. • Insider trading issue . . .
Financial Markets, Institutions & Derivative Instruments ECO 473 – Money & Banking – Dr. D. Foster