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Foundations of Finance Arthur J. Keown John D. Martin J. William Petty David F. Scott, Jr.

Foundations of Finance Arthur J. Keown John D. Martin J. William Petty David F. Scott, Jr. Chapter 2 The Financial Markets and Interest Rates. Chapter Objectives. Understanding the historical relationship between internally generated and externally generated sources of funds.

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Foundations of Finance Arthur J. Keown John D. Martin J. William Petty David F. Scott, Jr.

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  1. Foundations of FinanceArthur J. Keown John D. MartinJ. William Petty David F. Scott, Jr. Chapter 2 The Financial Markets and Interest Rates

  2. Chapter Objectives • Understanding the historical relationship between internally generated and externally generated sources of funds. • Understand the financing mix that tends to be used by the firms raising long-term capital. • Explain why the financial markets exist in a developed country. • Explain the financing process by which savings are supplied and raised by major sectors in the economy. Foundations of Finance

  3. Chapter Objectives • Describe key components of the U.S. financial market system. • Understand the role of the investment-banking business in the context of raising corporate capital. • Distinguish between privately placed securities and publicly offered securities. • Be acquainted with securities floatation costs and securities markets regulations. Foundations of Finance

  4. Chapter Objectives • Understand the rate-of-return relationships among various classes of financing vehicles that persist in the financial markets. • Be acquainted with recent interest rate levels and the fundamentals of interest rate determination. • Explain the popular theories of the term structure of interest rates. • Understand the relationships among the multinational firm, efficient financial markets, and the inter-country risk. Foundations of Finance

  5. Principles Used in this Chapter Principle 1: The Risk-Return Tradeoff - We Won’t Take on Additional Risk Unless We Expect to Be Compensated with Additional Return. Principle 6: Efficient Capital Markets - The Markets are Quick and the Prices Are Right. Principle 10: Ethical Behavior Is Doing the Right Thing, and Ethical Dilemmas Are Everywhere in Finance. Foundations of Finance

  6. Federal Funds Rate • Short-term market rate of interest • Serves as a sensitivity indicator of the direction of future changes in interest rates Foundations of Finance

  7. Objectives of the Fed • Maximum sustainable employment • Price stability Foundations of Finance

  8. Recent Interest Rate Cycles Foundations of Finance

  9. Nonfinancial Corporate Business Sources of Funds, 1981-2000 • Changes in market conditions influence the way corporate funds are raised • Example: High interest costs discourage the use of debt. Foundations of Finance

  10. Corporate Securities Offered for Cash • Nonfinancial Corporations- 3yr. Cash Weighted Average, 2001-2003 • Total Volume($M) • $1,288,515 Source:Statistical Supplement to the Federal Reserve Bulletin, Table 1.46, October 2004, A29. Foundations of Finance

  11. Debt/Equity Mix • U.S. tax system favors debt as means of raising capital • Interest expense is deductible • Dividends paid are not deductible Foundations of Finance

  12. Financial Markets • Financial markets are institutions and procedures that facilitate transactions in all types of financial claims • Financial markets exist in order to allocate the supply of savings in the economy to the demanders of those savings. Foundations of Finance

  13. Financial Markets • Real assets are tangible assets such as houses, equipment, and inventories. • Financial assets represent claims for future payments in other economic units. Foundations of Finance

  14. Financial Markets • Underwriting— the purchase of financial claims of borrowing units and reselling them at a higher price to other investors. • Secondary Markets — trading in already existing financial claims • Financial Intermediaries — major financial institutions i.e. commercial banks, savings and loans, credit unions, life insurance companies, mutual funds etc. Foundations of Finance

  15. Financial Markets • Indirect Securities–financial claims offered by financial intermediaries to economic units with excess savings • Direct Securities–financial claims purchased by financial intermediaries with proceeds from the sale of indirect securities Foundations of Finance

  16. The Financing Process Source: Flow of Funds Accounts, First Quarter 2000, Flow if Funds Section, Statistical Release Z.1 (Washington, D.C.; Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, June 9,2000). Foundations of Finance

  17. Movement of Savings • Direct Transfer of Funds • Indirect Transfer of Funds Using an Investment Banker • Indirect Transfer of Funds Using the Financial Intermediary Foundations of Finance

  18. Three Ways to Transfer Financial Capital in the Economy Three Ways to Transfer Financial Capital in the Economy Foundations of Finance

  19. Public Offerings and Private Placements • Public Offering– both individuals and institutional investors have the opportunity to purchase securities • Private Placement (direct placement)– the securities are offered and sold to a limited number of investors Foundations of Finance

  20. Primary and Secondary Markets • Primary Markets–Securities are offered for the first time to investors – a new issue of stock. Increases the total stock of financial assets outstanding in the economy. • Secondary Markets–Transactions in currently outstanding securities. All transactions after the initial purchase. Sales do not affect the total stock of financial assets that exist in the economy. Foundations of Finance

  21. Money Market and Capital Market • Money Market:all institutions and procedures that provide for transactions in short-term debt instruments • Capital Market:all institutions and procedures that provide for transactions in long-term financial instruments Foundations of Finance

  22. Organized Security Exchanges and Over-the-Counter Markets • Organized Security Exchanges—Tangible entities; physically operate space, where financial instruments are traded on the premises • National and regional exchanges • New York Stock Exchange • American Stock Exchange • Chicago Stock Exchange • Over-The-Counter Markets—All security markets except the organized exchanges • Money Market Foundations of Finance

  23. Stock Exchange Benefits • Provides a continuous market • Establishes and publicizes fair security prices • Helps businesses raise new capital Foundations of Finance

  24. Listing Requirements • Listing criteria varies from exchange to exchange. General requirements include: *Profitability *Market Value *Public Ownership Foundations of Finance

  25. Investment Banker • A financial specialist involved as an intermediary in the merchandising of securities; facilitates flow of savings from economic units that want to invest in those units that want to raise funds. Foundations of Finance

  26. Functions of an Investment Banker • Underwriting • Distributing • Advising Foundations of Finance

  27. Distribution Methods • Negotiated Purchase • Competitive Bid Purchase • Commission or Best Efforts Basis • Privileged Subscription • Direct Sales Foundations of Finance

  28. Private Placements • Advantages • Speed • Reduced Flotation Costs • Financing Flexibility • Disadvantages • Interest Costs • Restrictive Covenants • Possible Future SEC Registration Foundations of Finance

  29. Market Regulation • Securities Act of 1933 — Aims to provide potential investors with accurate, truthful disclosure about the firm and new securities being offered. • Securities Exchange Act of 1934 — Created SEC to enforce federal securities laws • Securities Acts Amendments of 1975 —Created a national market system Foundations of Finance

  30. Securities Exchange Act of 1934 • Major security exchanges must register with the SEC • Insider trading is regulated • Prohibits manipulative trading • SEC control over proxy procedures • Gives Board of Governors of Federal Reserve System responsibility for setting margin requirements Foundations of Finance

  31. Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 • Congress passed in July 2002 the Public Accounting and Reform and Investor Protection Act • The Act contains 11 titles which tighten significantly the latitude given corporate advisors who have access to or influence company decisions. Foundations of Finance

  32. Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002Key Elements • Public Company Accounting Oversight Board • Auditor Independence • Corporate Responsibility • Enhanced Financial Decisions • Analysts Conflicts of Interest • Commission Resources and Authority • Studies and Reports • Corporate and Criminal Fraud Accountability • White-Collar Crime Penalty Enhancements • Corporate Tax Returns • Corporate Fraud and Accountability Foundations of Finance

  33. Rates of Return in Financial Markets • Opportunity Cost— Rate of return on next best investment alternative to the investor • Standard Deviation— Dispersion or variability around the mean, or average of the rate of return in the financial markets • Maturity Premium— Additional return required by investors in long-term securities to compensate them for greater risk of price fluctuations on those securities caused by interest rate changes Foundations of Finance

  34. Rates of Return in Financial Markets • Liquidity Premium— Additional return required by investors in securities that cannot be quickly converted into cash at a reasonably predictable price. • Real Return— Return earned above the rate of increase in the general price level for goods and services in the economy (the inflation rate) • Real Rate of Interest— Rate of increase in actual purchasing power—after adjusting for inflation Foundations of Finance

  35. Term Structure of Interest Rates • The relationship between a debt security’s rate of return and the length of time until the debt matures. • Also called “Yield to Maturity” Foundations of Finance

  36. Term Structure of Interest Rates Explained by: • Unbiased Expectations Theory • Liquidity Preference Theory • Market Segmentation Theory Foundations of Finance

  37. Unbiased Expectations Theory • Term Structure is determined by an Investor’s expectations about future interest rates. Foundations of Finance

  38. Liquidity Preference Theory • Investors require maturity premiums to compensate them for buying securities that expose them to the risks of fluctuating interest rates Foundations of Finance

  39. Market Segmentation Theory • Legal restrictions and personal preferences limit choices for investors to certain ranges of maturities Foundations of Finance

  40. Financial Markets and Intercountry Risk • Financial System Risk • Political System Risk • Exchange Rate Risk Foundations of Finance

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