Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Financial System: Provide efficient allocation of saving to real investment or consumption in any modern
economy. It is through these markets that funds are offered by the lenders/savers who have excess funds
and purchased by the borrowers/spenders who need those funds.
KEY TERMS
FINANCIAL CLAIMS
Contracts related to the transfer of funds from surplus to deficit budget units.
Financial claims are also called financial assets and liabilities, securities, loans, financial
investments.
For every financial asset, there is an offsetting financial liability.
Total receivables equal total payables in the financial system.
Loans outstanding match borrowers' liabilities.
Financial markets offer opportunity for:
Financing for DSUs (primary)
Financial investing for SSUs (primary and secondary)
Providing liquidity via trading financial claims in secondary markets
Direct Financing
DSUs and SSUs negotiate and exchange money for financial claims.
DSUs issue direct financial claims; SSUs participate in direct lending.
The sale of securities by an industrial firm directly to an investor (SSU or financial institution) is a
private placement.
Brokers bring DSUs and SSUs together; dealers buy the securities from DSUs and resell to the
SSUs.
Investment bankers act as dealers in direct financial markets, purchasing securities from DSUs
and selling to original SSUs.
Intermediation Services
Denomination Divisibility -- Issue varying sized contracts of assets and liabilities.
Currency Transformation -- buying and selling financial claims denominated in various currencies.
Maturity Flexibility -- Offer contracts with varying maturities to suit both DSUs and SSUs.
Credit Risk Diversification -- Assume credit risks of DSUs and keep the risks manageable by
spreading the risk over many varied types of DSUs (loan portfolio).
Liquidity -- Provide a place to store liquidity for SSUs (deposits); a place to find (borrow) liquidity
for DSUs.
Deposit-Type Institutions -- Offer liquid, government- insured claims to SSUs, such as demand
deposits, savings deposits, time deposits, and share accounts.
Commercial Banks -- Make a variety of consumer and commercial loans (direct claim) to
DSUs.
Thrift Institutions -- Make mortgage loans (direct claim) to DSUs.
Credit Unions -- Receive share-Draft account deposits and make consumer loans.
Membership requires a common bond
Church, business employee, or labor union.
Contractual Savings Institutions -- Issue long-term claims to SSUs in the form of insurance
policies and pension fund obligations.
Life Insurance Companies -- Issue life insurance policies and purchase long-term, high-
yield direct financial securities.
Casualty Insurance Companies -- Purchase long-term, liquid, direct financial securities
from paid-in-advance premiums from insurance purchasers.
Pension Funds -- issue claims to SSUs (pension reserves) and invest financially in direct
financial securities (stocks and bonds).
Investment Funds -- Issue shares to investors and use these funds to purchase direct
financial claims.
Mutual Funds -- Offer indirect mutual fund shares to SSUs and purchase direct financial assets
(stocks and bonds).
Money Market Mutual Funds -- Offer (indirect) shares and purchase direct (commercial
paper) and indirect (bank CDs) money market financial assets. Most MMMFs offer check-
writing privileges.
* larger
* sooner to be made
* more likely to be made (less risky)
* made when they are needed most(e.g., when the holder is poor, retired, or
otherwise in need of money. This last one applies most directly to insurance
policies. More generally, a financial asset that can be sold or converted into cash
easily -- a more liquid asset -- is also more valuable).
On the flip side, financial liabilities are useful as a means of raising money and, for issuers like insurance
companies which charge premiums, as a means of income.
"Regular" financial instruments are called underlying financial instruments (or debt and equity
instruments), which are the type we've discussed so far and involve basic transfers of money or assets
from one party to another.
-- A more complicated type of financial instruments are derivative financial instruments, which are more
complicated and are based on an underlying financial instrument.
-- Quick example: Stocks are underlying financial instruments. Stock options (e.g., to buy shares of a
stock at a particular price on some future date) are derivative financial instruments.
--- TREASURY BILLS -- short-term debt issued by the federal government to help finance its
current and past deficits
--- short-term "municipal" (state and local government) debt
-- Less prominent examples include some other types of borrowed money, like repurchase
agreements (money borrowed using a Treasury bill as collateral) and eurodollars (dollars
borrowed from foreign entities).
BONDS ("long-term," defined as maturing in >= 1 year)
-- A bond is a formal debt/IOU with a maturity length of one year or more.
--- CORPORATE BONDS;
--- TREASURY BONDS, issued by the federal government to finance the national debt;
--- MUNICIPAL BONDS, issued by state and local governments to finance large, long-term
capital projects (e.g., hospitals, highways, schools).
(Bonds are also counted in another category of financial instruments, called capital-market
instruments, which also is for long-term instruments but which also includes non-interest-bearing
assets like stocks, as well as debts that are not publicly traded, like mortgage loans, consumer
loans, and business loans.)
STOCKS (same as EQUITIES) are financial instruments that make the holder a co-owner of
the company that issued them. They entitle the holder to a claim on the assets (and implicitly the
future profits) of the company. Stocks do not involve the repayment of a debt or the payment of
interest. (Some stocks pay dividends, which are shares of the company's profits, but people
typically hold stocks not for the dividends but for the hope of reselling them later at a higher
price.)
A: Whole life insurance, which is a life insurance policy that makes a big payout to
your beneficiary if you die early (insures against the risk of early death) and makes
a smaller but still sizeable "maturity" payment to you if you live to a ripe old age
(store of value -- your premiums accrue over time into a larger sum of money).
FINANCIAL MARKETS:
“Financial Markets are the places where financial instruments are bought and sold”
Financial markets are like the "central nervous system" of the economy, says Cecchetti's textbook. Stock,
bond, and other financial markets respond to a host of factors that others in the economy might easily
overlook. And their reactions are easily readable in the form of price movements -- e.g., of individual
stocks and the stock-market averages, interest rates on Treasury and corporate bonds, mortgage rates.
Financial markets are also vitally important to an economy's development, because of the role they play
in allocating resources to their most profitable and productive uses. In a well-developed financial market,
financial instruments become streamlined and standardized in their characteristics, making it a lot easier
for potential buyers to know what they're getting. When this happens, more people will want to purchase
financial assets, and firms can finance their investment more easily. This is good for household portfolios
and for the economy's long-term growth.
Financial instruments are bought and sold in both PRIMARY and SECONDARY MARKETS.
-- PRIMARY FINANCIAL MARKET: where newly issued financial assets are bought and sold (e.g.,
companies sell new stock or bonds to finance investment in new physical capital, i.e., plant and
equipment)
-- SECONDARY FINANCIAL MARKET: where previously issued financial assets are bought and
sold. The stock market is by and large a secondary financial market, with new issues accounting for less
than 1% of total shares outstanding. (Although not directly connected with new investment, having a
secondary financial market surely raises the level of investment, and hence raises the stock of physical
capital, because it makes stocks and bonds a lot more liquid, since you can resell them any time you
want.)
The initial financing of the DSU is the primary market; subsequent resale of the financial
claims of the DSU are traded in the secondary markets.
Primary markets are important from a real saving/investment perspective;
Secondary markets provide liquidity and portfolio rebalancing capacity for the investor.
Markets may be differentiated by how or where they are traded.
Organized exchanges provide a physical meeting place and communication facilities.
Securities may trade off the exchange in the over-the-counter (OTC) market. OTC markets
have no central location.
Markets may be differentiated by maturity.
High quality short-term (less than one-year) debt securities are issued and traded in the
money market.
Long-term (greater than one-year) securities are issued and traded in the capital market.
Spot and futures markets--variation in timing of delivery and payment.
Items traded in the market for immediate delivery and payment are traded in the spot market.
When delivery at a specific price(payment) is not "spot," a "futures” or “forward” market
transaction has occurred.
Futures contracts are traded on organized exchanges.
Forward contracts are traded over the counter.
Option markets trade contracts specifying price and conditional delivery of a quantity of asset
for a specific period of time.
A call option is an option to buy; a put is an option to sell.
Options are traded on major security and commodity exchanges as well as in various over-
the-counter markets.
CAPITAL MARKETS
1. Depository institutions
2. Insurance companies
-- They collect premiums (regular payments) from policy-holders, and pay compensation to policy-holders
if certain events occur (e.g., fire, theft, sickness).
-- They invest the premiums in securities and real estate, and these are their main assets.
3. Pension funds
-- They collect contributions from current workers and make payments to retired workers.
-- Like insurance companies, they invest the contributions in securities and real estate, and these are their
main assets.
4. Securities firms (provide firms and individuals with access to financial markets)
-- This category covers a wide array of financial institutions:
-- INVESTMENT BANKS: sell new securities for companies. Unlike regular banks, they don't hold
deposits, or make loans. (They hold zero assets/liabilities.) Closely related are underwriters, which not
only sell the new securities but pledge to purchase some or all of any unsold shares.
-- BROKERS: buy/sell old securities on behalf of individuals.
-- MUTUAL-FUND COMPANIES: pool the money of small savers (individuals), who buy shares in the
fund, and invest that money in stocks, bonds, and/or other assets. These are popular because they allow
small savers relatively easy and cheap access and also enable them to reduce risk by holding a
diversified portfolio.
-- Hedge funds: pool the money of a small number of wealthy individuals and institutions and invest in
various financial instruments, notably derivatives.
5. Finance companies
-- Like banks, they use people's savings to make loans to businesses and households, but instead of
holding deposits, they raise the cash to make these loans by selling bonds and commercial paper.
-- They tend to specialize in certain types of loans, e.g., automobile (GMAC) or mortgage loans.
Credit or default risk is the risk that a direct DSU issuer will not pay as agreed, thus affecting
the rate of return on a loan or security.
Interest rate risk is the risk of fluctuations in a security's price or reinvestment income caused by
changes in market interest rates.
Liquidity risk is the risk that the financial institution will be unable to generate sufficient cash
flow to meet required cash outflows.
Foreign exchange risk is the risk that foreign exchange rates will vary in the future affecting the
profit of the financial institution.
Political risk is the cost or variation in returns caused by actions of sovereign governments or
regulators.
THE VALUE OF MONEY
I. FUTURE VALUE
Q: I have $100 in my pocket right now. If I save it for the next five years, how much will I have in five
years?
A: Need more information. Am I investing this money? At interest? If so, what interest rate will I be
getting?
-- Suppose I invest the money in a bank CD at 5% interest.
---- At the end of one year I'll have my original $100 (the principal) plus 5%, or $5, interest = $105
---- At the end of two years I'll have that $105 plus 5% interest on it (.05 * $105 = $5.25) => total of
$110.25
------ (Note that the interest is larger in the second year than in the first, because I'm earning interest not
just on the $100 principal but also on my interest from the first year. This is called compounding of
interest -- earning interest on your interest and in larger and larger amounts each year.)
---- At the end of three years I'll have $110.25 + (.05 * $110.25) = $110.25 + $5.5125 = $115.7625.
-- By now a pattern may be apparent:
After 1 year the CD is worth $105, or $100 * 1.05. (In other words, the CD's value is now 105% of what it
was initially.)
After 2 years the CD is worth $100 * 1.05 * 1.05. (Its value went up 105% the first year, and the second
year, too.)
After 3 years the CD is worth $100 * 1.05 * 1.05 * 1.05 (or $100 * 1.05^3).
After 4 years the CD is worth $100 * 1.05 * 1.05 * 1.05 * 1.05 (or $100 * 1.05^4)
After 5 years the CD is worth $100 * 1.05 * 1.05 * 1.05 * 1.05 * 1.05 (or $100 * 1.05^5)
-- Note that 1.05 is (1 + the interest rate). The exponent is the same as the number of years, because
that's how many times the interest accumulates.
--> A current sum of money, invested at an interest rate of i over n years will have a FUTURE
VALUE (FV) of
Q: With compounded returns, small differences in annual returns become very large over time. Going back
to the previous example, imagine that the 50-year, $10,000 investment is in a mutual fund. Mutual fund
companies charge fees, which lower your returns a bit, but some charge higher fees than others. Compare
two different stock mutual funds. The first has fees of 1.4% per year (the industry average), which give you
an annual return of 8.6%. The second, with fees of 0.5%, has an annual return of 9.5%.
--> Exactly how much more would you have with the second fund at the end of 50 years?
A: Apply the future value formula, plugging in .086 for i in the first case and .095 in the second case:
First fund: FV = $10,000*((1.086)^50) = $618,716
Second fund: FV = $10,000*((1.095)^50) = $934,733
--> The second fund will be worth $316,056 more (or 51% more) at the end of 50 years.
A relatively simple application of future value is the Rule of 72 (or 70), which tells you how quickly an
asset will double in value. But first, let us see how Future Value leads us to two related concepts:
Present-Day Value, and Internal Rate of Return.
Present-day value, present value, and present discounted value all mean the same thing: what some
future payment or set of future payments is worth to you today, i.e., right here, right now. The essence of
this very important concept is that a dollar in the future is worth less than a dollar today, because if you
had that dollar today, you could invest it and earn interest on it and end up in the future have more than
just a dollar. (This concept is sometimes called the time value of money.)
The present-day value (PDV) of any future payment will depend on three things:
* The size of the payment positively affects its PDV -- a million dollars tomorrow is still better than $100
today.
* The higher the current interest rate, the lower the PDV of any future payment. The higher the
interest rate, the greater the value of $1 today relative to $1 in the future. If the interest rate is very high,
you would forgo a lot of interest if you said, "Sure, I'll give you $100 today, and when you give me $100
four years from me now, that'll be just as good." (It would be if the interest rate were zero, there were no
inflation, and you were very patient, but even if there's no inflation and you have infinite patience, as long
as i > 0%, then the PDV of $1 in the future is less than $1.)
* The longer you wait for the payment, the lower its PDV (the more it has to be "discounted"). As long
as you have to wait at all for the payment, it's not worth as much as having the same amount of money
right now. (The character named Wimpy in the Popeye cartoons who says "I'd gladly pay you Tuesday
for a hamburger today" is a man who understands the concept of PDV.)
The basic present-value formula should look very familiar to you, because it's just the Future Value (FV)
formula rearranged. Let FV be the amount of a future payment (i.e., its Future Value), and recall that i is
the market interest rate and n is the number of years between now and the date of the payment, and the
formula is
PDV = FV/(1+i)n
Ex.: Back again to the generous-grandparent problem. Using the Rule of 70 we estimated that an initial
investment of $7,800 today will, with a 10% compounded annual return, grow to be $1 million in 50 years.
What's the exact amount that the initial investment would have to be?
A: By definition, the PDV of a future payment is the amount you'd have to set aside today to be able to
make that payment. So we can apply the PDV formula, with FV = $1,000,000, i = .10, and n = 50:
The PDV of a stream of several future payments, to be made at different times, is equal to the sum of the
separate PDV's of each of the payments. That is, to compute the PDV of several future payments, you'll
need to apply this formula for every single payment and then add all those PDV's up.
-- Is there ever a shortcut? Yes, if the future payment amounts are all the same and are made at regular
intervals. (Coming up in the chapter 6 notes.)
The INTEREST RATE on a debt is calculated as the net annual payment on the debt, as a
percentage of the total amount of the debt.
-- Ex.: Simple loan: You borrow $1000, and must pay back $1100 a year from now.
==> Net interest payment = $1100 - $1000 = $100
Interest rate = $100/$1000 = 1/10 = 10%
Usually calculating the interest rate is not quite that simple, as the length of the loan or the asset's lifetime
is not exactly one year. But it's simple enough, as we can rearrange the basic Future Value equation to
calculate the interest rate, as long as we know the values of Future Value (FV) and Present-Day Value
(PDV).
---- (English translation: A current sum of money, $PDV, earning interest at rate i, after n years will be
worth $FV.)
Rearranging that equation to solve for i, [refer to your class notes to see all the steps], we end up with
i = { (FV/PDV)^(1/n) -1 } (*100%)
-- (The "*100%" is there because interest rates are normally expressed in percentage form. For example,
the numbers .08 and 8% are mathematically equivalent, but we would say the interest rate is 8%, not .08,
when reporting it.)
Note: The term 1+i , which appears in the FV and PDV formulas, is called the gross interest rate. The
idea here is that the 1 includes the repayment of principal. Interest compounds over time because the
amount on which interest is paid becomes larger each year -- each year the amount gets multiplied by
1+i.
An asset with a compounded annual return of X% will double in value in approximately 72/X years.
This rule is very handy because the number 72 is evenly divisible by a lot of numbers (1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9,
12, 18). As long as you remember your times tables from grade school, you can produce decent
estimates of the rate of doubling without having to use a calculator.
The Rule of 70 is a common alternative and actually gives a closer approximation than 72/X does for
small values of X (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). But since simplicity is really the goal with these rules, I suggest you use
70 for numbers that divide evenly into 70 (2, 5, 7, 10, 14) and 72 otherwise..
Note well that this rule is only an approximation, and it doesn't work for particularly large values of X
(those larger than, say, 25). For values of X larger than, say, 25, the time to double will be more than
72/X years. (For example, an asset earning 100% per year will double in value in exactly 1 year, not in
72/100 years.) But, most financial assets have long-term annual returns well under 25% anyway.
Exs.:
* Savings account, which pays 3% interest
--> value of your account will double in ~72/3 = 24 years (or, a little more precisely, about 69/3 = 23
years)
* A CD that pays an annual return of 7% a year
--> value of that CD will double in ~70/7 = 10 years
* Stocks in the late 1990s; annual return was about 24% a year
--> value of a stock portfolio doubled in ~72/24 = 3 years
Ex.: Back to the generous-grandparent problem. Now suppose your grandfather wants to set up an
investment account for you earning 10% per year and having a value of $1 million fifty years from now,
when you're 70. About how much does he need to put in the account now?
A: We'll apply the Rule of 70, since 10 divides evenly into 70 --> that account will double in value every 7
years (= 70/10). So over the next 50 years, your initial investment will double in value 7 times (since 7*7=
49, very close to 50). Working backwards, we just need to divide $1,000,000 in half 7 times (with some
rounding, since the point of the exercise is to keep the arithmetic fairly simple): 1) $500,000. 2)
$250,000. 3) $125,000. 4) $62,000. 5) $31,000. 6) $15,500. 7) $7,800.
-- So investing about $7,800 today makes you a millionaire 50 years later. (We'll solve for the exact
amount when we move on to present discounted value.)
Compounded interest has been called the most powerful force in the world. That might be exaggerated,
but the magic of compounded interest is something you should acquaint yourself with. The main way that
"the rich get richer" is through compounded interest or compounded dividends. It's also a way that many
middle-class people become rich.
-- Real-life ex.: A former psychology professor at SUNY-Oswego put all his pension fund contributions
(TIAA-CREF) into stocks, with all dividends reinvested (works much like compounded interest), and
retired a millionaire.
At many banks, where interest rates on CD's and other accounts are listed, there are often two rates
listed for each one: the regular, or nominal, interest rate (i) and the annual percentage yield (APY), which
the textbook calls the compound annual interest rate. In a better, simpler world, these two rates would
always be the same, but because of the way interest is calculated, they often are not. The annual
percentage yield (APY) is the total value of the interest payments on a financial asset as a
percentage of its original purchase price. The APY would be the exact same thing as the interest rate
if the bank paid out the interest only at the end of the year; instead, in most cases interest is
compounded (paid out) at several times during the year, e.g. monthly. Some banks have continuous
compoundingof interest, whereby your account balance earns some tiny amount of interest every second
of every day. If a bank compounds interest m times per year, then, instead of paying out i% interest at the
end of the year, it pays out (i/m)% interest m times per year.
-- Ex.: If the interest rate on your credit-card balance is 24% and that interest is compounded every
month, then, instead of being charged 24% interest on your unpaid balance at the end of the year, you'll
be charged 2% (= 24%/12) interest at the end of every month, and your total interest charges will be
much higher.
-- Ex.: If the interest rate on savings account is 5% and the bank compounds interest fourtimes per year,
then the bank pays out 1.25% interest on those accounts at the end of every third month.
-- The greater the frequency of interest payments or compounding, the larger the total interest payments
over the year. For an account holder or creditor (someone to whom money is owed), the more frequent
the compounding, the better, and continuous compounding is the best. For a debtor (someone who owes
money), the less frequent the compounding, the better, and continuous compounding is the worst.
For an asset with an interest rate of i and payments that are compounded m times per year, the annual
percentage yield (APY), or effective interest rate or compounded interest rate, is calculated as follows:
Ex.: Suppose a CD at HSBC Bank has an interest rate of 12%. Let us see how its APY varies with the
amount of compounding.
A: Absolutely! That's a 100% daily interest rate. Your daily salary would increase by leaps and bounds, to
$0.64 after the first week, $81.92 after the second week, over $10,000 after the third week, over $1 million
by the end of the fourth week, and over $1 billion after 38 days. Well before the end of the second month,
your salary would be larger than all of world GDP.
-- In this example, your salary reaches such huge heights so fast because i is very large (100%) and the
compounding is very frequent (daily, or m=365). The APY in this case is so large as to be beyond the
limits of most calculators.
If the compounding is continuous (i.e., m = infinity), then the APY is even larger. To calculate it precisely,
we would use the exponential function e (e is the inverse of the natural logarithm; it's on most scientific
calculators. The APY in this case is APY = e i - 1. Alternatively, you could just use the regular APY
formula and plug in a very large value for m, like 100,000. That will give you a very, very close
approximation of the correct answer.
NOTATION:
i = nominal interest rate (the posted interest rate)
ir = real interest rate
p = inflation rate
pe = expected inflation rate
Q: What is the real interest rate (ex ante) on a 1-year bond today that pays 6% interest, if the expected
inflation rate over the next year is 2%?
A: ire = 6% - 2% = 4%
Q: What is the ex post real interest rate on that bond if inflation turns out to be 5% over the next year?
A: ir = 6% - 5% = 1%
If inflation rises,
* borrowers (debtors) benefit (their debts become a lot easier to pay off, and less burdensome)
* lenders (creditors, savers) lose (the real value of their savings shrinks, and the real interest rates they
receive are reduced and could even become negative)
-- "Inflation is when people who have saved for a rainy day get soaked"
Looking only at nominal interest rates can be misleading. In the late 1970s, for example, nominal interest
rates were very high, yet real interest rates were actually negative, because inflation was high and
accelerating.
Two recent financial innovations, designed to protect lenders from the ravages of inflation, are (1)
variable-interest-rate mortgages, on which the interest rate, rather than being fixed (as on a regular
mortgage), is adjusted periodically as the inflation rate or other interest rates change; and (2) inflation-
indexed Treasury bonds, which guarantee the bondholder a certain positive real interest rate.