Chapter Two: Asset Classes and Financial Instruments

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The key takeaways are that the chapter discusses asset classes and financial instruments, including how to build an investment portfolio through asset allocation and security selection. It also introduces various money market instruments, capital markets, and derivative markets.

Some of the main types of money market securities discussed include Treasury bills, certificates of deposit, commercial paper, bankers' acceptances, eurodollars, repurchase agreements, federal funds, and brokers' calls.

The main differences between options and futures contracts are that options provide the right but not obligation to buy or sell, require purchasing a premium, and are only exercised when profitable. Futures contracts oblige delivery, have long and short positions that must buy or sell at the futures price, and are entered into without cost.

Chapter Two

Asset Classes and


Financial Instruments

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©2021 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom.
No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter Overview
• Building an investment portfolio
• Asset allocation involves making decisions about how much
money to allocate to broad classes of assets
• Security selection occurs when the investor selects specific
assets from within each class
• Financial markets
• Money markets are made up of short-term, marketable,
liquid, low-risk debt securities
• Capital markets include longer term and riskier securities
• Divided into four segments – longer term bond markets, equity
markets, and the derivative markets for options and futures
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Money Market Securities
(1 of 3)

• Treasury Bills (i.e., T-bills)


• Simplest form of borrowing wherein the government raises money
by selling bills to the public
• Ask price is the price you would have to pay to buy a T-bill from a
securities dealer
• Bid price is the slightly lower price you would receive if you wanted to sell
a bill to a dealer
• Bid-ask spread is the difference in these prices, which is the dealer’s
source of profit
• Certificates of Deposit (CD)
• Bank pays interest and principal to the depositor only at maturity
• Time deposit cannot be withdrawn on demand

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Money Market Securities
(2 of 3)

• Commercial paper
• Short-tern unsecured debt notes, often issued by
large, well-known companies and backed by a bank
line of credit
• Bankers’ acceptance
• An order to a bank by a customer to pay a sum of
money at a future date
• Eurodollars
• Dollar-denominated deposits at foreign banks or
foreign branches of American banks
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Money Market Securities
(3 of 3)

• Repurchase agreements
• Short-term, often over-night, sales of securities with
an agreement to repurchase them at a slightly higher
price
• Federal funds
• Funds in a bank’s reserve account at the Federal
Reserve Bank
• Brokers’ calls
• Investors may buy stocks on margin and brokers, in
turn, may borrow the funds from a bank
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The Money Market

LIBOR Yields on Money Market Instruments


• LIBOR is the premier short- • Most money market
term interest rate quoted in securities are low risk, but
the European money not risk-free
market • Money market funds are
• Based on surveys of rates mutual funds that invest in
reported by participating money market instruments
banks rather than actual – Government funds hold
transactions short-term U.S. Treasury or
agency securities
• Regulators have proposed
– Prime funds also hold other
phasing out LIBOR by 2021 money market instruments
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Spread between federal funds rate
and Treasury bill rates

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The Bond Market
• Bond market is composed of longer term
borrowing or debt instruments than those
that trade in the money market
• Treasury notes and bonds
• Corporate bonds
• Municipal bonds
• Mortgage securities
• Federal agency debt

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Debt Instruments
(1 of 5)
• Treasury notes and treasury bonds
• U.S. government borrows funds in large part by
selling T-notes and T-bonds
• Notes – maturities range up to 10 years
• Bonds – maturities range from 10 to 30 years
• Inflation-protected treasury bonds
• Many countries’ governments issue bonds linked to an
index of the cost of living in order to provide their
citizens with an effective way to hedge inflation risk
• In the U.S., inflation-protected T-bonds are called TIPS

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Debt Instruments
(2 of 5)
• Federal agency debt
• Agencies formed to channel credit to a particular
sector that Congress believes might not receive
adequate credit through private sources
• E.g., FHLB, FNMA, GNMA, FHLMC
• International bonds
• International capital market centered in London
• Eurobond is a bond denominated in a currency other than
that of the country in which it is issued
• Yankee bond is a dollar-denominated bond sold in the U.S.
by a non-U.S. issuer
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Debt Instruments
(3 of 5)
• Municipal Bonds
• Tax-exempt bonds issued by state and local
governments
• General obligation – backed by general taxing power of
issuer
• Revenue – backed by proceeds from the project or
agency they are issued to finance
• Typically issued by airports, hospitals, etc.
• Industrial development – revenue bond issued to
finance commercial enterprises
• Vary widely in maturity
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Tax-Exempt Debt
Outstanding

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Municipal Bond Yields
Taxable vs. Tax-Exempt Bonds
• Compare after-tax returns on each bond
• Let t = investor’s combined tax bracket
• Let rtaxable = before-tax return on the taxable bond
• Let rtaxable(1-t) = after-tax rate
• Let rmuni = municipal bond rate

• rtaxable(1-t) > rmuni


• Taxable bond gives a higher return; otherwise, the
municipal bond is preferred
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Tax-Exempt Yield Table

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Debt Instruments
(4 of 5)
• Corporate bonds
• Means by which private firms borrow money directly from
the public
• Secured bonds
• Unsecured bonds (i.e., debentures)
• Subordinated debentures
• Similar to Treasury issued securities in that they usually pay
semiannual coupons and return face value to bondholder at
maturity
• Larger default risk than Treasury issued securities
• May come with options attached
• Callable or convertible options
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Debt Instruments
(5 of 5)
• Mortgage- and asset-backed securities
• Ownership claim in a pool of mortgages or an
obligation that is secured by such a pool
• Conforming mortgages
• Loans must satisfy certain underwriting guidelines
before they may be purchased by Fannie Mae or
Freddie Mac
• Subprime mortgages
• Riskier loans made to financially weaker borrowers

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Mortgage-Backed Securities
Outstanding

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Equity Securities:
Common Stock
• Represent ownership shares in a corporation
• Each share entitles owner to one vote
• Corporation controlled by board of directors elected
by shareholders
• Residual claim
• Stockholders are last in line of all who have a claim on
the assets and income of the corporation
• Limited liability
• Most shareholders can lose in the event of failure of the
corporation is their original investment
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Equity Securities:
Stock Market Listings
• Dividend yield
• Annual dividend payment expressed as a percent of the
stock price

• Capital gains
• Amount by which the sale price of a security exceeds the
purchase price

• Price-earnings ratio
• Ratio of a stock’s price to its earnings per share
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Equity Securities:
Preferred Stock
• Preferred stock has features similar to both equity
and debt
• Like a bond, promises to pay a fixed amount of income
each year
• Does not convey voting power regarding the
management of the firm
• Contractual obligation to pay interest, but not dividends
• Preferred stock payments are treated as dividends
rather than interest, so they are not a tax-deductible
expense for the firm

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Equity Securities:
Depository Receipts
• American Depository Receipts (ADRs)
• Certificates traded in U.S. markets that represent
ownership in shares of a foreign company
• Each ADR may correspond to ownership of a
fraction of a foreign share, one share, or several
shares of the foreign corporation

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Stock Market Indexes
• Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
• Includes 30 large blue-chip corporations
• Computed since 1896
• Price-weighted average
• Standard & Poor’s 500 (S&P 500)
• Improvement over DJIA in two ways
1. More broadly based index of 500 firms
2. Market-value-weighted Index

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Other Indexes
• U.S. market-value indexes
• NYSE, NASDAQ, Wilshire 5000, CRSP

• Equally weighted indexes


• Do not correspond to buy-and-hold strategies

• Foreign and international stock market indexes


• Nikkei, FTSE, DAZ, Hang Seng, TSX

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U.S. Fixed-Income Market ($b)

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Derivative Markets
• Derivative asset is a claim whose value is
directly dependent on or is contingent o the
value of some underlying assets
• Options
• Futures

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Derivatives Markets:
Options
• Call option
• Gives holder the right to purchase an asset for a
specified price, called the exercise or strike price,
on or before a specified expiration date
• Put option
• Gives holder the right to sell an asset for a
specified exercise price on or before a specified
expiration date

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Derivatives Markets:
Futures Contract
• Futures contract
• Calls for delivery of an asset (or cash value) at a
specified delivery or maturity date for an agreed-
upon price, called the futures price, to be paid at
contract maturity
• Long position held by the trader who commits to
purchasing the asset on the delivery date
• Short position held by trader who commits to delivering
the asset at contract maturity

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Comparison

Options Futures Contract


• Right, but not obligation, • Obliged to make or take
to buy or sell delivery
• Option is exercised only • Long (short) position
when it is profitable must buy (sell) at the
• Options must be futures price
purchased • Futures contracts are
– The premium is the price of entered into without cost
the option itself

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