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Chapter Title: The Investment Environment

The document discusses the investment environment and provides an overview of topics such as real versus financial assets, the risk-return tradeoff, efficient markets, different types of financial assets and markets, and the 2008 financial crisis. It examines the causes leading up to the crisis and changes in the housing market.

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Peter Lee
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views34 pages

Chapter Title: The Investment Environment

The document discusses the investment environment and provides an overview of topics such as real versus financial assets, the risk-return tradeoff, efficient markets, different types of financial assets and markets, and the 2008 financial crisis. It examines the causes leading up to the crisis and changes in the housing market.

Uploaded by

Peter Lee
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 34

• Chapter 1

Chapter Title
The
Investment
Environment

Slides Prepared
INVESTMENTS by Cagdas
| BODIE, Tahaoglu,
KANE, MARCUS, Concordia
SWITZER, University
BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-1


Chapter Overview
• Real Assets versus Financial Assets
• Risk-return trade-off and efficient pricing
• Financial crisis 2008
– Financial system  “Real” economy
– Systemic risk

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-2


Real Assets Versus Financial Assets

Real Assets Financial Assets

• Have productive capacity • Claims on real assets


• Do not contribute directly to productive
capacity
• Examples: Land, buildings,
machines, intellectual property • Examples: Stocks, bonds

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-3


Financial Assets
• Financial Assets: Claims on Real Assets
– Fixed-Income Securities: Promises a fixed
stream of income or a stream of income
determined by a specified formula; debt
– Equity: Represents ownership share in a
corporation; Common stock
– Derivatives: Provide payoffs that are
determined by the prices of other assets

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-4


Other Types of Investment
• Investment in currency
• Commodity futures
– Corporations invest in the commodity futures to
hedge the risk

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-5


Financial Markets and the
Economy (1 of 4)
• The Informational Role
• Consumption Timing
• Allocation of Risk

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-6


Financial Markets and the
Economy (2 of 4)
• Separation of Ownership and Management
– Agency Problems

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-7


Financial Markets and the
Economy (3 of 4)
• Mechanisms to mitigate Agency Problems:
– Tie managers' income to the success of the firm
– Monitoring from the board of directors
– Monitoring by large investors and security
analysts
– Takeover threat

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-8


Financial Markets and the
Economy (4 of 4)
• Corporate Governance and Corporate Ethics
– Accounting Scandals
 Enron, Nortel Networks, Parmalat
– Auditors: Watchdogs
– Analyst Scandals
 Arthur Andersen
– Sarbanes-Oxley Act
 Tighten the rules of corporate governance

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-9


The Investment Process (1 of 2)
• Portfolio: Collection of investment assets
• Asset allocation
– Choice among broad asset classes
• Security selection
– Choice of securities within each asset class

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-10


The Investment Process (2 of 2)
• “Top-down” approach
– Asset allocation followed by security analysis
• “Bottom-up” approach
– Investment based solely on the price-
attractiveness

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-11


Markets Are Competitive (1 of 3)
Risk-Return Trade-Off
• Higher-risk assets are priced to offer higher
expected returns than lower-risk assets
• Risk and expected return are positively
correlated

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-12


Markets Are Competitive (2 of 3)
Efficient Markets
• Efficient markets: prices quickly adjust to all
relevant information
• There should be neither underpriced nor
overpriced securities

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-13


Markets Are Competitive (3 of 3)
• Passive Management
– Holding a highly diversified portfolio
– No attempt to find undervalued securities
– No attempt to time the market
• Active Management
– Finding mispriced securities
– Timing the market

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-14


The Players (1 of 2)
• Firms – net borrowers
• Households – net savers
• Governments – can be both borrowers and
savers

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-15


The Players (2 of 2)
• Financial Intermediaries: Pool and invest
funds
– Investment Companies
– Banks
– Insurance companies
– Credit unions

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-16


Universal Bank Activities

Investment Banking Commercial Banking

• Underwrite new securities issues • Take deposits and make loans

• Sell newly issued securities to


public in the primary market

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-17


Financial Crisis of 2008 (1 of 3)
• Antecedents of the Crisis:
– “The Great Moderation”
– Historic boom in housing market

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-18


Financial Crisis of 2008 (2 of 3)
“The Great Moderation”

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-19


Financial Crisis of 2008 (3 of 3)
Historic boom in U.S. housing market

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-20


Antecedents of the Crisis

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-21


Changes in Housing Finance
(1 of 3)
Old Way New Way

• Local thrift institution made • Securitization: Fannie Mae and Freddie


mortgage loans to Mac bought mortgage loans and bundled
homeowners them into large pools
• Mortgage-backed securities are tradable
• Thrift possessed a portfolio
claims against the underlying mortgage
of long-term mortgage loans
pool
• Thrift’s main liability:
Deposits
• “Originate to hold” • “Originate to distribute”

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-22


Changes in Housing Finance
(2 of 3)
• Securitization
• Inclusion of nonconforming “subprime” loans
• Low/No-documentation loans
• Rising loan-to-value ratio
• Adjustable-Rate Mortgages

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-23


Changes in Housing Finance
(3 of 3)

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-24


Mortgage Derivatives
• Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs)
– Mortgage pool divided into tranches to
concentrate default risk:
 Senior tranches
 Junior tranches
– Ratings significantly underestimated risk

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-25


Why Was Credit Risk
Underestimated?
• Default probabilities were misestimated
• Geographic diversification did not reduce risk
sufficiently
• Agency problems with rating agencies

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-26


Credit Default Swap (CDS)
• A CDS is an insurance contract against
borrower default
– Investors bought sub-prime loans and CDSs
– Some big swap issuers did not have enough
capital to back their CDSs
– This lack of capital resulted in the failure of
CDO insurance

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-27


Rise of Systemic Risk (1 of 3)
• Systemic Risk:
– One default triggers further defaults
– Waves of selling  downward spiral as asset
prices drop
– Potential contagion

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-28


Rise of Systemic Risk (2 of 3)
• Banks mismatched maturity/liquidity of their
assets and liabilities:
– Liabilities were short and liquid
– Assets were long and illiquid
– Constant need to refinance
• Banks: highly leveraged  no margin of
safety

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-29


Rise of Systemic Risk (3 of 3)
• Investors relied too much on credit
enhancement through structured products
• CDS traded mostly over-the-counter
– No posted margin requirements
– Little transparency
• Opaque linkages between instruments and
institutions

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-30


The Shoe Drops (1 of 2)
• 2004: Interest rates began rising
• 2006: Home prices peaked
• 2007: Housing defaults and losses on
mortgage-backed securities surged

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-31


The Shoe Drops (2 of 2)
• 2008: Troubled firms include Bear Stearns,
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Merrill Lynch,
Lehman Brothers, and AIG
– Money market breaks down
– Credit markets freeze up
– Federal bailout to stabilize financial system

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-32


The Dodd-Frank Reform Act

Mechanisms to mitigate systemic risk


– Stricter rules for bank capital, liquidity, and risk
management practices
– Increased transparency, especially in
derivatives markets
– Office of Credit Ratings within the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) to oversee
the credit rating agencies

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-33


The Canadian Experience
of the Financial Crisis

Less severe in Canada due to:


• the characteristics of the banking industry:
– “universal” banks benefit from the stable
funding provided by bank deposits
• conservative mortgage lending practices:
– limited Subprime mortgage lending
– mandatory default insurance for mortgages
with less than 20% equity

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS, SWITZER, BOYKO, PANASIAN, STAPLETON

© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 1-34

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