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Chapter 13

Chapter 13. Investing in Stocks. Learning Objectives. Invest in stocks. Read stock quotes online or in the newspaper. Classify common stock according to basic market terminology. Determine the value stocks. Understand the risks associated with investing in common stock. Introduction.

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Chapter 13

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  1. Chapter 13 Investing in Stocks

  2. Learning Objectives • Invest in stocks. • Read stock quotes online or in the newspaper. • Classify common stock according to basic market terminology. • Determine the value stocks. • Understand the risks associated with investing in common stock.

  3. Introduction • Investing on the stock market is not without risk • Investing on the stock market is all about risk and return. • Sometimes, it’s all about making a fortune.

  4. Why Consider Stocks? • When you buy common stock, you purchase a part of the company. • Returns: • Dividends - the company’s distribution of profits to stockholders. • Capital appreciation - the increase in the selling price of a share of stock.

  5. Why Consider Stocks? • Neither dividends nor capital appreciation is guaranteed with common stock. • Dividends are paid at the board’s discretion. • Capital appreciation takes place when the company does well.

  6. Why Consider Stocks? • Over time, common stocks outperform all other investments. • Stocks reduce risk through diversification. • Stocks are liquid. • Growth is determined by more than interest rates.

  7. Figure 13.1

  8. The Language of Common Stocks • Limited Liability • Claim on Income • Declaration date • Ex-dividend date • Claim on assets

  9. The Language of Common Stocks • Voting Rights • Proxy • Stock Splits • Stock repurchases

  10. The Language of Common Stocks • Book Value • Earnings Per Share = net income – preferred stock dividends number of shares of common stock outstanding

  11. The Language of Common Stocks • Dividend Yield • Market-to-Book or Price-to-Book Ratio = stock price____ book value per share

  12. Stock Indexes: Measuring the Movements in the Market • Stock Market Index—a measure of performance of a group of stocks that represent the market or a sector of the market. • Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) or Dow • Standard & Poor’s 500 (S&P 500) and other indexes

  13. Figure 13.2

  14. Market Movements • Bear market—characterized by falling prices. • Bull market—characterized by rising prices.

  15. Figure 13.3

  16. General Classificationsof Common Stock • Blue-Chip stocks • Growth stocks • Income stocks • Speculative stocks

  17. General Classificationsof Common Stock • Cyclical stocks • Defensive stocks • Large caps, mid-caps, and small caps

  18. Valuation of Common Stock • The Technical Analysis Approach • The Price/Earnings Ratio Approach • The Discounted Dividends Valuation Model

  19. Technical Analysis Approach • Focuses on demand and supply • Uses charts and computer programs to identify and project price trends. • Greed pushes money into a rising market. • Fear pulls money out of a declining market.

  20. Technical Analysis Approach • Interpretation of charts and graphs and mathematical calculations of trading patterns to spot trend or direction for stocks • Of little value—cannot identify trends before they happen • Avoid—encourages moving in and out of market instead of buying and holding.

  21. The Price/Earnings Approach • P/E ratio or earnings multiple—price per share divided by the earnings per share • Higher firm’s earnings growth rate, higher P/E ratio • Higher investor’s required rate of return, lower P/E ratio. • Fundamental analysis

  22. Figure 13.4

  23. The Discounted DividendsValuation Model • The value of any investment is the present value of the benefits or returns received from the investment. • Value of a share of common stock = present value of the infinite stream of future dividends. • Value of a common stock = dividends next year________ required rate of return – growth rate

  24. Why Stocks Fluctuate in Value • Interest Rates and Stock Valuation • Risk and Stock Valuation • Earnings (and Dividend) Growth and Stock Valuation

  25. Stock Investment Strategies • Can use more than one of these approaches at once • But be alert

  26. Dollar Cost Averaging • Purchasing a fixed dollar amount of stock at specified intervals. • Same dollar amount each period will average out the fluctuations. • Buy more shares at a lower price, fewer shares at higher prices. • Keeps you from trying to time the market.

  27. Table 13.1

  28. Buy-and-Hold Strategy • Involves buying stock and holding it for a period of years. • Avoids timing the market. • Minimizes brokerage fees, transaction costs. • Postpones capital gains taxes. • Gains taxed as long-term capital gains.

  29. Dividend ReinvestmentPlans (DRIPs) • Automatically reinvest the dividends in same firm’s stock without brokerage fees. • Use a DRIP to reinvest rather than spend your dividends. • Still pay income taxes. • Stuck reinvesting in old company instead of new.

  30. Risks Associated withCommon Stocks • Risk and return go hand in hand. • Principle 8—can eliminate risk associated with common stock by diversifying. • Only systematic risk remains. • Measure systematic risk using Beta.

  31. Figure 13.5

  32. Another look at Principle 7: Risk and Return go hand in hand • Beta—measure of how responsive a stock or portfolio is to changes in the market portfolio. • Beta benchmark for market = 1 • Beta > 1—stock moves up and down more than market • Beta <1—stock moves up and more less

  33. Figure 13.6

  34. Risks Associated withCommon Stocks • Short-term investments in stocks are very risky • Holding stocks longer reduces variability of average annual return. • Investors can afford to take on more risk as investment time horizons increase—they have more opportunities to adjust saving, consumption, and work habits.

  35. Figure 13.7

  36. Summary • Common stocks over time outperform all other investments. • Stock indexes such as the Dow and S&P 500 show health of stock market. • Common stocks can be blue-chip, growth, income, speculative, defensive, large- to small-cap stocks.

  37. Summary • A number of methods can be used to determine the value of stock—but interest rates, risk, and expected future growth determine the value of common stock. • Use one or more investment strategies such as dollar-cost average, buy-and-hold, and DRIPs. • Stocks are riskier but diversification and watching beta values can help.

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