A Project Report On: Factor-Analysis
A Project Report On: Factor-Analysis
FACT
Preface
The study aims to understand the impact of factors which influence the
investors decision.
The survey is conducted over the investors and it is verified that what are the
factors that depends on each other. Thus, the research will also help serve the project
purpose.
INVESTMENT
TYPES OF INVESTMENT
SHARES
DEBENTURES
MUTUAL FUNDS
BONDS AND SECURITIES
ULIP
SHARES
When you buy shares of the company you become the owners
of that company. Your fortune rise or fall with that company.
Shares entitle the shareholder to share in the earnings of the
firm as and when they
2. Issued capital -
3. Subscribed capital -
4. Called-up capital -
For e.g. If the face value of a share is Rs. 10/- but the
company requires only Rs. 2/- at present, it may call only Rs.
2/- now and the balance Rs.8/- at a later date. Rs. 2/- is the
called up share capital and Rs. 8/- is the uncalled share capital.
5. Paid-up capital –
7. Buy-back of shares-
Types of shares:
Shares in the company may be similar i.e. they may carry the
same rights and liabilities and confer on their holders the same
rights, liabilities and duties.
1. EQUITY SHARES
2. PREFERENCE SHARES
Equity shares
PREFERENCE SHARE
1. Cumulative or Non-cumulative.
CUMULATIVE:
NON-CUMULATIVE:
REDEEMABLE:
NON-REDEEMABLE:
Sweat Equity
DEFERRED SHARES
DEBENTURE
TYPES OF DEBENTURES
Convertible debentures
Non-convertible debentures
CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURE
Bonds that can be converted into equity shares of the issuing
com any after a predetermined period of time. It is a special
feature that a corporate bond may carry.
These are simply regular debentures which cannot be converted into equity shares of the
liable company. They are debentures without the convertibility feature attached to them.
As a result, they usually carry higher interest rates than their convertible counterparts.
(a) Secured
(b) Unsecured
Non convertible:
Partly convertible:
Fully convertible:
Optionally convertible:
Secured:
Unsecured:
MUTUAL FUNDS
Professional Management
Diversification
Convenient Administration
Return Potential
Low Costs
Liquidity
Transparency
Flexibility
Choice of schemes
Tax benefits
Well regulated
Sale Price
It is the price you pay when you invest in a scheme, also called
Offer Price. It may include a sales load.
Repurchase Price
Redemption Price
Sales Load
1987 marked the entry of non- UTI, public sector mutual funds
set up by public sector banks and Life Insurance Corporation of
India (LIC) and General Insurance Corporation of India (GIC).
SBI Mutual Fund was the first non- UTI Mutual Fund
established in June 1987 followed by Canbank Mutual Fund
(Dec 87), Punjab National Bank Mutual Fund (Aug 89), Indian
Bank Mutual Fund (Nov 89), Bank of India (Jun 90), Bank of
Baroda Mutual Fund (Oct 92). LIC established its mutual fund
in June 1989 while GIC had set up its mutual fund in December
1990.
Indirectly through:
- Gold exchange-traded funds, certificates, accounts, spread
betting, derivatives or shares.
Tax benefits
The premiums paid for ULIPs are eligible for tax rebates under
section 80 which allows a maximum of Rs. 1,00,000 premiums
paid for taxable income below Rs 8,50,000 and Proceeds from
ULIPs are tax-free under section 10(10D) unlike those from a
mutual fund which attract short term capital gains tax.
Key features
BONDS
1. Bond ratings
2. Discount bond
3. Coupon Bonds
1. ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES
2. CONVERTIBLE BOND
3. HIGH YIELD/JUNKBOND
4. CORPORATE BONDS
5. INFLATION-LINKED BOND
7. MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITY
Zero coupon or strip bonds are fixed income securities that are
created from the cash flows that make up a normal bond. A
zero coupon bond is a corporate bond that makes no periodic
interest payments, but is sold at a deep discount from face
value
(2).Product management:-
(d).Product differentiation
(3).Operations research:-
(4).Others:-
Advantages
Objectives:
Collect measurements
↓
Obtain the correlation matrix
↓
Select the number of factors for inclusion
↓
Extract your initial set of factors
↓
Rotate your factors to a final solution
↓
Interpret factor structure
↓
Construct factor scores for further analysis
Collect measurements:
Collect measurements
In this we need to measure the variables on the same
experimental units.
ANALYSIS
SCORES
The factor scores dialog box can be accessed by clicking SCORES in the
main dialog box. This option allows you to save factor scores for each
subject in the data editor. SPSS creates a new column for each factor
extracted and then places the factor scores for each subject within that
column.these scores can then be used for further analysis.
General steps to factor analysis
Step 5: Interpretation
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Where:
1 = strongly disagree
2 = strongly agree
QUESTIONNAIRE
1) Age group
(a) 18-24 (b) 25-30 (c) 30-35 (d) 36-40 (e) 41& above
2) Income slab
(a) Upto 3 lakh (b) Rs 3- 6 lakh (c) Rs 6-8lakh (d)Rs 8lakh & above
QUESTIONS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1. How much you consider time factor before investing.
10. How do you rate the past track record of the company.
11.How much will you rate the organization in which you are
investing on the basis of CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
12. How much your decision is affected by recession.
15. How much do you rate the influence of the family on your
investment decision
16. How much do you rate the influence of published
information on your investment decision
17. How much do you rate the influence of intuition on your
investment decision
18 How much do you rate the influence of broker on your
investment decision
19. How do you rate risk factor for investing
28. No one can make profit in stock market except those who are
lucky.
29. How much your decision is affected by portfolio manager...
Parameter rating…
1=strongly disagree
7=strongly agree
Example 1: Example 1:
Oil Painting Oil Painting
Example 2: Example 2:
Latte Latte
Example 3: Example 3:
Freshman Freshman
Class Class
PRIMARY DATA
METHODS
questionnaires
interviews
observation
case-studies
diaries
critical incidents
Questionnaires
ADVANTAGES
Relatively cheap.
No interviewer bias.
Disadvantages:
Design problems.
Factor Analysis
Communalities
Initial Extraction
VAR00001 1.000 .563
VAR00002 1.000 .682
VAR00003 1.000 .693
VAR00004 1.000 .656
VAR00005 1.000 .624
VAR00006 1.000 .585
VAR00007 1.000 .503
VAR00008 1.000 .659
VAR00009 1.000 .731
VAR00010 1.000 .599
VAR00011 1.000 .635
VAR00012 1.000 .631
VAR00013 1.000 .595
VAR00014 1.000 .774
VAR00015 1.000 .831
VAR00016 1.000 .538
VAR00017 1.000 .710
VAR00018 1.000 .590
VAR00019 1.000 .561
VAR00020 1.000 .607
VAR00021 1.000 .587
VAR00022 1.000 .663
VAR00023 1.000 .590
VAR00024 1.000 .754
VAR00025 1.000 .699
VAR00026 1.000 .732
VAR00027 1.000 .692
VAR00028 1.000 .694
VAR00029 1.000 .704
VAR00030 1.000 .541
Extraction Method: Principal Component Analysis.
Initial Eigenvalues Extraction Sums of Squared Loadings Rotation Sums of Squared Loadings
Component Total % of Variance Cumulative % Total % of Variance Cumulative % Total % of Variance Cumulative %
1 6.551 Component 21.836 6.551 21.836 21.836 3.122 10.408 10.408
2 2.887 9.625 31.461 2.887 9.625 31.461 2.760 9.199 19.607
3 2.084 6.946 38.406 2.084 6.946 38.406 2.538 8.460 28.066
4 1.639 5.464 43.870 1.639 5.464 43.870 2.535 8.452 36.518
5 1.566 5.219 49.090 1.566 5.219 49.090 1.855 6.183 42.701
6 1.383 4.610 53.700 1.383 4.610 53.700 1.827 6.091 48.792
7 1.236 4.121 57.821 1.236 4.121 57.821 1.823 6.078 54.869
8 1.071 3.569 61.389 1.071 3.569 61.389 1.664 5.547 60.417
9 1.007 3.358 64.747 3.358 64.747 1.299 4.330 64.747
10 .926 3.088 67.835
11 .783 2.610 70.445
12 .757 2.523 72.968
13 .700 2.334 75.302
14 .684 2.280 77.582
15 .672 2.241 79.822
16 .636 2.120 81.942
17 .578 1.927 83.869
18 .524 1.746 85.615
19 .514 1.712 87.327
20 .451 1.502 88.830
21 .444 1.481 90.311
22 .438 1.461 91.772
23 .407 1.358 93.129
24 .374 1.248 94.377
25 .322 1.074 95.451
26 .316 1.052 96.503
27 .303 1.010 97.512
28 .269 .896 98.408
29 .253 .842 99.250
30 .225 .750 100.000
Extraction Method: Principal Component Analysis.
Component 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1 .547 .468 .344 .391 .094 .296 .273 .178 .090
2 -.265 .312 -.634 .554 .292 -.085 -.111 .133 .050
3 -.100 -.436 .166 .063 .549 .463 -.203 .377 -.262
4 -.592 .318 .311 -.138 .344 -.036 .520 -.168 -.124
5 .262 -.063 -.023 -.119 .597 -.035 -.157 -.575 .446
6 .360 -.208 -.272 -.225 .293 -.469 .506 .361 -.101
7 -.027 -.549 -.075 .511 -.170 .155 .489 -.373 .002
8 -.264 -.162 .130 .002 -.079 .009 .110 .423 .830
9 .038 .132 -.509 -.437 -.089 .667 .265 -.028 .082
Extraction Method: Principal Component Analysis. Rotation Method: Varimax with Kaiser Normalization.
1.0
VAR00003
VAR00002
VAR00001 VAR00005
VAR00006
0.5
VAR00014 VAR00004
VAR00012 VAR00009
0.0 VAR00015 VAR00010
VAR00011
VAR00017
m
C
-0.5
t2
e
n
p
o
-1.0
-1.0
-1.0 -0.5
-0.5 0.0 0.0
0.5 0.5
Comp 1.0 1.0 3
onent onent
1 Comp
SOME TERMINOLOGIES RELATED TO FACTOR ANALYSIS
EIGEN VALUE, j
It is the sum of squares of the factor loadings of all variables
on a factor.
j= Σ L²ij
THE SUM OF THE EIGEN VALUES OF ALL FACTORS (IF NO
FACTOR IS DROPPED) IS EQUAL TO THE SUM OF ALL THE
COMMUNALITIES OF ALL VARIABLES.
VARIMAX ROTATION
It is often used in surveys to see how grouping of questions
measure A typical factor analysis suggests answers to four
major questions:
4.
1. Sum of eigenvalues = p
if the input matrix was a correlation matrix
CONCLUSION:-
1=6.551
2=2.887
3=2.084
4=1.639
5=1.566
6=1.383
7=1.236
8=1.071
9=1.007
Now from these factors we choosed only those factors which have
more than 3 varibles,i.e. factor 1,2 and 4.On the basis of the
characteristics of the variable we named them as company
performance,security and economic factor.Now the objective of the
study to find out factors which influence the individual’s decision
when they invest in the market.