Global Cap
what is the best strategy for a small investor?
"buy and hold"
4 examples of agents pursuing personal benefits/power
1) effort: managers work until their marginal cost of working is equal to their marginal gain (and not the cost and gain of the principle) 2) empire building: managers may increase the size of the company to gain prestige rather than increase share holder value 3) fringe benefits: manager may use company funds to pay for expenses (corporate jets) that are payed for by the owners, but may not be necessary. 4) short-termism: if managers pay is tied to stock prices, manager may have an incentive to positively affect stock prices in the short-term at the cost of long-term profits. key issue: managers (Agents) know more about their activities than owners (principals)
three stages of financial crisis:
1) initiation. credit boom and bust. increase in uncertainty. asset prices are declined. 2)banking crisis: economic activity is declined. 3)debt deflation:declined price level and economic activity.
3 solutions to help solve principal-agent problem
1) monitoring (costly state verification): audit firm, check what manager is doing. free rider problem- if monitoring is paid for by some stockholders. 2) govt regulation to increase info. standard accounting principles, laws against hiding and stealing profits. doesn't fully solve problem (detection is difficult) 3) financial intermediation: indirect financing reduces free-rider problem.ex: venture capital firms. pool funds to invest in new businesses. receive equity and usually become part of the board of directors to closely monitor firms activities. 4) debt contract rather than equity: monitoring is too expensive to conduct on ongoing basis. debt holders have lower monitoring cost: only check activities when company is in bad shape and there is a risk that debt cannot be repaid. explains why debt more important than equity.
tools to help solve moral hazard in debt contracts (2 solutions)
1) net worth and collateral. borrower has skin in the game. incentive compatible. 2)monitoring and enforcement of restrictive covenants: discourage undesirable behavior, keep collateral valuable, provide info. covenants needs to be monitored (free rider problem) bank loans rather than marketable debts (bonds)
life cycle phases of financial crisis
1)displacement: catalyst of crisis can be new tech or financial innovation that leads to expectations of increases profits and economic growth. 2) boom: usually characterized by low volatility, abundant market liquidity, credit expansion, cheap funding, increase in investment. asset prices rise, exceeding actual improvements. 3)euphoria: investors trade overvalued asset in frenzy. prices increase explosively. investors are suspicious of bubble, but confident they can sell their asset to a greater fool at a higher price in future. high trading volume and increasing volatility. 4)profit taking: sophisticated investors convinced the market is in a bubble. start taking their profits, worried bubble will burst. theres enough demand from dumber investors. prices start to fall rapidly. 5) panic: investors dump asset. prices spiral down. since run up was financed with credit (leverage), then a deleveraging dynamic kicks in. causes amplification and spillover effects. high selling volume and high price volatility. 6) depressed values: contagion and spillover effects depress asset prices. market prices are below fundamental values. lending standards tighten, creditors are more risk-averse.markets are illiquid (assets traded infrequently with low volume, high transaction costs) 7)recovery: sophisticated investors more convinced asset is a good deal. price is below its fundamental value. they find opportunities to fund arbitrage strategies. arbitrageurs provide liquidity to markets and prices increases again.
yield curves and the markets expectations of future short-term interest rates according to the liquidity premium (preferred habitat) theory. 1)future short-term IRs expected to rise leads to what yield curve? 2)future short term IRs expected to stay same leads to what yield curve? 3)future short term IRs expected to stay same 4)future short term IRs expected to fall sharply
1)steeply rising yield curve 2)mildly upward sloping 3)flat 4)downward sloping
term structure of interest rates. theory of the term structure of IR must explain following facts: 1) IR on bonds of different maturities move together/apart over time. 2)when short term IR are low, yield curves are more/less likely to have which slope? and when they are high, yield curves more likely to have which slope? yield curves are almost always which slope?
1)together 2)more likely to have upward slop. when high, more likely to slope down and be inverted. 3)upward.
three theories explain term structure of IRs. show number 1 and 3 on graph.
1-expectations: straight yield line 3- liquiditiy premium/preferred habitat- upward sloping
1.Stocks are / are not the most important sources of external financing for businesses. 2. Issuing marketable debt and equity securities is /is not the primary way in which businesses finance their operations. 3. Indirect finance is many times more important than direct finance 4. Financial intermediaries, particularly banks, are / are not the most important source of external funds used to finance businesses. 5. The financial system is / is not among the most heavily regulated sectors of the economy. 6. Only what have easy access to securities markets to finance their activities. 7. what is a prevalent feature of debt contracts for both households and businesses. 8. Debt contracts are / are not extremely complicated legal documents that place substantial restrictive covenants on borrowers.
1. are not 2.is not 3.is 4.are 5. is 6. large, well-established corporations 7. collateral 8.are
cash reserve requirements in USA
10% of net transaction accounts must be held in cash. transaction accounts (demand deposits) minus net interbank position.
capital requirements: from Basel 1 to Basel 3
1988 Basel I accord: • designed by regulators and central banks all over the globe under the coordination of the Bank of International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland - harmonized requirements • minimum capital requirements that must be met by commercial banks to guard against credit risk • focus on loan book and book value of assets 1996 amendment: • market risk (i.e., risk stemming from changes in market prices, e.g., interest rates, equities, FX, commodities...) • focus on trading book (i.e., banks' proprietary trading positions in financial instruments) 2004 Basel II accord • 3 pillars: minimum requirements, supervisory review, transparency • Standardised and Internal ratings based Now Basel III • Liquidity risk • Trading book: counterparty credit risk
responds to a business cycle expansion. (bonds)
1: business cycle expansion shifts bond supply curve rightward. 2: shifts bond demand curve rightward, but less than supply curve. 3: price of bonds falls and equilibrium IR rises. whether IR rises or falls depends on which curve shifts more.
response to an increase in default risk on corporate bonds
1: increase in default risk shifts demand for corporate bonds left. 2: and shifts demand for treasury bonds right. 3: which raises price of treasury bonds and lowers price of corporate bonds, therefore lowers IR on treasury bonds and raises rate on corporate bonds. thereby increasing spread btwn IR IR on corporate and treasury bonds.
explain subprime mortgage crisis
2007: massive downgrades of mortgage-backed securities by rating agencies
troubled asset relief program
2008-2009. US congress passed TARP after political quarrels. purchases of troubled mortgage assets. forced recapitalization of banks. central banks engaged in unprecedented interventions. coordinated reduction in IRs. swap agreements btwn central banks to provide liquidity in other currencies. addtnl govt actions: regulators ban short selling in financial institutions in many countries. european govts guarantee all savings deposits to calm markets and avoid bank runs. in US, FDIC bank deposit insurance increased from 100k to 250k.
AIG
2008. only one day after bankruptcy of lehman brothers, AIG, a large international insurance company, faced a serious liquidity shortage. AIG was very active in the credit derivative business: enormous sales of credit default swaps were made without putting up initial collateral, setting aside capital reserves, or hedging the exposure. rating agencies warned of potential downgrades to AIGs credit rating, which would increase collateral requirements. stock price fell by more than 90%. through derivative business AIG was very interconnected with the whole financial system. bailout: FED lends billions in exchange for 80% equity stake of AIG.
lehman brothers
2008: barely survived in march 2008 and heavily relied on PDCF. did not issue new equity to strength capital base. stock price declined, worries continued. CEO blames short sellers. funding problems: another urn on short term debt, brokerage, derivatives, counter parties. talks about investment from kore development bank fail. stock plunged. fidelity reduced its tri-party repo lending to lehman a lot. JPM as repo clearing bank demands more collateral. emergency meeting at the FED NY over weekend- CEOs of all major banks present. deals with barclays and BOA didnt materialize bc they didnt want to take over lehman without govt guarantees. FED and govt officially decide not to offer guarantee. spetember 2008: lehman declared bankruptcy. same weekend: merrill lynch is sold to BOA.
derivative contracts are transacted how?
90% OTC. ex: transacted directly btwn two contracting parties without interposing of an exchange or intermediary.
tier 1 capital ratio =
= common stock + retained earnings
banks expected loss on a loan (EL)=
= exposure at default x probability of default x loss given default. credit analysis typically predicts default within a specific period of time, 12 months is typical
financing requirement=
= financing gap + liquid assets.
tier 2 capital=
= less than tier 1. subordinated debentures. tier 2 cannot be larger than tier 1.
EUR/USD exchange rate=
=#USD / 1 EUR first currency (euro) in currency pair is called base currency. second currency is called quote currency (USD)
current liabilities=
=AP + accruals + NP
financing gap=
=average volume of loans - average deposits.
domestic currency: USD quotation standard: EUR/USD domestic currency appreciates=
=base currency (EUR) depreciates
curren assets=
=cash + AR + inventories
when bond is priced at FV, YTM=
=coupon rate
working capital=
=current assets - current liabilities
leverage=
=equity multiplier = assets / equity capital
return on assets=
=net profit after taxes / assets net profit after taxes per dollar of assets
return on equity=
=net profit after taxes / equity capital. net profit after taxes per dollar of equity capital ROE= ROA x EM
EBIT=
=revenues + COGS
net liquidity position=
=sources of liquidity - uses of liquidity. sources: total cash type assets, max borrowed funds limit, excess cash reserves. uses: funds borrowed, federal reserve borrowing. measures currently available liquidity to then bank. can be computed at different maturities.
leverage=
=total assets/equity capital the ratio of a companies loan capital (debt) to the value of its ordinary shares (equity)
repricing gap formula GAPi= cumulative repricing gap formula CGAP=
=volume of risk sensitive assets - volume of risk sensitive liabilities. =volume of risk sensitive assets - volume of risk sensitive libalilites
11. Which of the following stock price indexes is a price-weighted index? a. Dow Jones Industrial Average b. Standard & Poor's 500 Index c. Nasdaq d. Wilshire 5000
A
11. Which of the following stock price indexes is a price-weighted index? A. Dow Jones Industrial Average B. Standard & Poor's 500 Index C. Nasdaq D. Wilshire 5000
A
19. If each company that made up the Dow Jones Industrial Average increased the number of their shares outstanding by 10%, but the share prices did not change, the value of the index would: a. not change. b. increase by 10%. c. increase, but by less than 10%. d. decrease since there are more shares outstanding.
A
19. If each company that made up the Dow Jones Industrial Average increased the number of their shares outstanding by 10%, but the share prices did not change, the value of the index would: A. Not change B. Increase by 10% C. Increase, but by less than 10% D. Decrease since there are more shares outstanding
A
21. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index: a. gives more weight to large companies than small companies. b. actually includes more than 500 of the largest corporations in the U.S. c. is a price-weighted index. d. assigns equal weight to all the prices of all the stocks in the index.
A
22. Considering the S&P 500 Index, if each company's stock price increased by 10%: a. the weights in the index would remain the same. b. the companies with the most shares outstanding would have even greater weight after the increase. c. the companies with fewer shares would gain more weight at the expense of the companies with greater shares. d. the weights in the index would change to reflect the percentage changes in the prices of the various stocks.
A
22. Considering the S&P 500 Index, if each company's stock price increased by 10%: A. The weights in the index would remain the same B. The companies with the most shares outstanding would have even greater weight after the increase C. The companies with fewer shares would gain more weight at the expense of the companies with greater shares D. The weights in the index would change to reflect the percentage changes in the prices of the various stocks
A
24. The Nasdaq Composite Index is: a. a value-weighted index. b. a price-weighted index. c. made up of over 5000 companies traded on the NYSE. d. made of mainly older firms and is heavily weighted by manufacturing.
A
24. The Nasdaq Composite Index: A. Is a value-weighted index B. Is a price-weighted index C. Is made up of over 5000 companies traded on the NYSE D. Is made of mainly older firms and is heavily weighted by manufacturing
A
32. You start with a portfolio valued at $500. Over the next twelve months it loses 40%; the following year it has a gain of 30%. At the end of two years your portfolio is worth: a. $390. b. $450. c. $300. d. $410.
A
32. You start with a portfolio valued at $500. Over the next twelve months it loses 40%; the following year it has a gain of 30%. At the end of two years your portfolio is worth: A. $390 B. $450 C. $300 D. $410
A
34. You have a portfolio valued at $10,000. Over the next twelve months it loses 50% of its value. What return does the portfolio need to earn over the following twelve months to be restored to its original value? a. 100% b. 50% c. 200% d. 25%
A
34. You have a portfolio valued at $10,000. Over the next twelve months it loses 50% of its value. What return does the portfolio need to earn over the following twelve months to be restored to its original value? A. 100% B. 50% C. 200% D. 25%
A
35. The dividend-discount model of stock valuation: a. is an application of the net present value formula. b. takes the net present value of expected dividends and add it to the future sale price of the stock. c. takes the net present value of the expected future price of the stock and adds the annual dividend. d. takes the annual dividend, adds it to the expected future selling price and divides by the number of years to get the current price.
A
35. The dividend-discount model of stock valuation: A. Is an application of the net present value formula B. Takes the net present value of expected dividends and add it to the future sale price of the stock C. Takes the net present value of the expected future price of the stock and adds the annual dividend D. Takes the annual dividend, adds it to the expected future selling price and divides by the number of years to get the current price
A
4. Professor Jeremy Siegel, of the University of Pennsylvania, conducted research that showed that: a. over the long run, stocks have been less risky than bonds. b. over the long run, bonds have been less risky than stocks. c. over the long run, bonds frequently outperform stocks. d. investors should only own stocks for short periods of time to maximize returns.
A
4. The fact that common stockholders are residual claimants means A. The stockholders have a claim against the revenue that remains after everyone else is paid B. The stockholders receive their dividends before any other residuals are paid C. The stockholders are paid any past due dividends before other claims are paid D. The stockholders are paid before the bondholders but after any taxes are paid
A
43. The dividend-discount model predicts that stock prices: a. should be high when dividends are high. b. will be high when interest rates are high. c. will be higher when the growth rate of dividends is low. d. should be high when dividends are low.
A
43. The dividend-discount model predicts that stock prices: A. Should be high when dividends are high B. Will be high when interest rates are high C. Will be higher when the growth rate of dividends is low D. Should be high when dividends are low
A
5. The Nasdaq Composite Index: a. is made of of mainly newer, smaller firms. b. is a price-weighted index. c. is made up of over 5000 companies traded on the NYSE. d. is made of mainly older firms and is heavily weighted by manufacturing.
A
55. Which of the following will cause an increase in the current price of a stock? a. A decrease in the risk-free return b. A decrease in the current dividend c. A decrease in the dividend growth rate d. Both an increase in the risk-free return or an increase in the current dividend
A
56. Which of the following will cause an increase in the current price of a stock? A. A decrease in the risk-free return B. A decrease in the current dividend C. A decrease in the dividend growth rate D. Both an increase in the risk-free return or an increase in the current dividend
A
57. Suppose there is a reduction of the return provided on U.S. Treasury bonds. We should expect the current price of stocks to: a. increase since the risk-free return is now lower. b. decrease since U.S. Treasury bonds are safer. c. increase since the risk premium on the stocks will increase. d. stay the same; there is no effect on stock prices from this reduction.
A
58. Suppose there is a reduction of the return provided on U.S. Treasury bonds. We should expect the current price of stocks to: A. Increase since the risk-free return is now lower. B. Decrease since U.S. Treasury bonds are safer. C. Increase since the risk premium on the stocks will increase. D. Stay the same; there is no effect on stock prices from this reduction.
A
59. The theory of efficient markets implies: a. stock prices should be highly unpredictable. b. the price at which stocks currently trade only reflect past information. c. expectations do not play a role in stock prices because this isn't real information. d. the chartists are in fact correct that there are patterns in stock prices.
A
61. The theory of efficient markets implies: A. Stock prices should be highly unpredictable. B. The price at which stocks currently trade only reflect past information. C. Expectations do not play a role in stock prices because this isn't real information. D. The chartists are in fact correct that there are patterns in stock prices.
A
73. Professor Jeremy Siegel, of the University of Pennsylvania, conducted research that showed that: A. Over the long run, stocks are less risky than bonds. B. Over the long run, bonds are less risky than stocks. C. Over the long run, bonds frequently outperform stocks. D. Investors should only own stocks for short periods of time to maximize returns.
A
76. Management fees for mutual funds are: A. Different across funds and can significantly impact the return to an investor. B. Fixed by regulation. C. Fixed by regulation but can vary by the size of the fund. D. Usually a percentage of the return achieved by fund managers.
A
8. Which of the following is not a feature of common stock? A. Stockholders receive regular fixed payments on their shares B. Stockholders have limited liability C. Stock holders are residual claimants D. Stockholders have voting rights
A
8. Which of the following is not a feature of common stock? a. Stockholders receive regular fixed payments on their shares. b. Stockholders have limited liability. c. Stock holders are residual claimants. d. Stockholders have voting rights.
A
81. Stock market bubbles can lead to all of the following except: A. An efficient allocation of resources. B. Stock market crashes. C. Patterns of volatile returns from the stock market. D. Gaps between actual stock prices and those warranted by the fundamentals.
A
85. The stock market bubble of the late 1990's and early 2000: A. Saw Internet and computer technology companies over-invest. B. Saw an efficient allocation of resources toward the high-growth computer/Internet sector. C. Was a good example of the theory of efficient markets. D. Was an example that not all bubbles burst.
A
9. What do bondholders and stockholders have in common? a. Both are claimants. b. Both have voting rights. c. Both are shareholders in the company. d. Both receive fixed payments on their securities each year.
A
9. What do bondholders and stockholders have in common? A. Both are claimants B. Both have voting rights C. Both are shareholders in the company D. Both receive fixed payments on their securities each year
A
market liquidity
A market is liquid if a trader can sell an asset quickly, at low cost, without affecting the price > If market liquidity is low it is difficult to raise money by selling an asset (instead of borrowing against it)
Some economists think that central banks should try to prick bubbles in the stock market before they get out of hand and cause later damage when they burst. How can monetary policy be used to prick a market bubble? Explain using the Gordon growth model
A stock market bubble can occur if market participants either believe that dividends will have rapid growth or if they substantially lower the required return on their equity investments. > Both lower the denominator in the Gordon model and thereby cause stock prices to climb. By raising interest rates the central bank can cause the required rate of return on equity to rise, thereby keeping stock prices from climbing as much. Also raising interest rates may help slow the expected growth rate of the economy and hence of dividends, thus keeping stock prices from climbing Challenge: Very difficult to identify bubble
Some economists think that central banks should try to prick bubbles in the stock market before they get out of hand and cause later damage when they burst. How can monetary policy be used to prick a market bubble? Explain using the Gordon growth model.
A stock market bubble can occur if market participants either believe that dividends will have rapid growth or if they substantially lower the required return on their equity investments. > Both lower the denominator in the Gordon model and thereby cause stock prices to climb. By raising interest rates the central bank can cause the required rate of return on equity to rise, thereby keeping stock prices from climbing as much. Also raising interest rates may help slow the expected growth rate of the economy and hence of dividends, thus keeping stock prices from climbing Challenge: Very difficult to identify bubble
65. Assume we have a stock currently worth $50. We also assume the interest rate is zero, and we can buy options for this stock with a strike price of $50. If the stock can rise or fall by $10 with equal probability over the option period, and the option cannot be exercised until the expiration date, what is the time value of the option? A. $5 B. $10 C. $50 D. $40
A. $5
32. If a futures contract for U.S. Treasury bonds decreases by "17" in the financial page listings, the price of the contract decreased by: A. $531.25. B. $170.00. C. $340.00. D. $1700.00.
A. $531.25.
33. A price of a futures contract for U.S. Treasury bonds listed as "111-15" is measured in: A. 32nds. B. 12ths. C. 4ths. D. dollars; it stands for $111.15 but a dash is used instead of a period.
A. 32nds.
9. The key difference between a forward and a futures contract is: A. a forward contract is customized where a futures contract is not. B. a forward contract is bought and sold on organized exchanges. C. only the forward contracts have settlement dates. D. the amount of time involved.
A. a forward contract is customized where a futures contract is not.
6. The short position in a futures contract is the party that will: A. deliver a commodity or financial instrument to the buyer at a future date. B. suffer the loss. C. accept the risk. D. benefit from increases in price of the underlying asset.
A. deliver a commodity or financial instrument to the buyer at a future date.
45. There's a call option written for 100 shares of GM stock for $85.00 a share, prior to the third Friday of October 2017: The option writer: A. has the requirement to sell 100 shares of GM for $85 a share on or before the third Friday of October 2017 if the option holder wants to exercise the option. B. has the option to sell 100 shares of GM for $85 a share on or before the third Friday of October 2017. C. can cancel the option before the third Friday of October 2017. D. does not have to post margin while the option holder does.
A. has the requirement to sell 100 shares of GM for $85 a share on or before the third Friday of October 2017 if the option holder wants to exercise the option.
57. An investor who purchases a call option is: A. highly leveraged for a gain but is limited in losses. B. limited in his or her gain but is highly leveraged in losses. C. highly leveraged for both gains and losses. D. limited in both gains and losses.
A. highly leveraged for a gain but is limited in losses.
11. The process of marking to market: A. is done by the clearing corporation to reduce risk in futures contracts. B. involves the margin accounts of only the buyers of future contracts. C. involves the margin accounts of only the sellers of future contracts. D. usually requires margin accounts to be adjusted weekly by the clearing corporation.
A. is done by the clearing corporation to reduce risk in futures contracts.
26. Sue sells a futures contract for U.S. Treasury bonds and on the settlement date the interest rate on U.S. Treasury bonds is lower than Sue expected. Sue will have: A. lost money on her short position. B. gained money on her long position. C. gained money on her short position. D. lost money on her long position.
A. lost money on her short position.
72. If the price of an underlying asset has a standard deviation of zero: A. options for this asset would likely not exist. B. option for this asset would be highly valued. C. the intrinsic value of options for this asset would equal the asset's price. D. options for this asset would have a time value of the option equal to the price of the asset.
A. options for this asset would likely not exist.
35. An individual who neither uses nor produces a commodity but sells a futures contract for the asset is: A. speculating that the price of the commodity is going to fall. B. speculating that the price of the commodity is going to increase. C. hedging trying to transfer risk. D. using arbitrage to earn profits without taking a risk.
A. speculating that the price of the commodity is going to fall.
83. Considering interest-rate swaps, the swap rate is: A. the benchmark rate plus a premium. B. the rate being offered on U.S. Treasury securities of similar maturities. C. another name for the swap spread. D. a measure of overall risk in the economy.
A. the benchmark rate plus a premium.
14. There is a futures contract for the purchase of 1000 bushels of corn at $3.00 per bushel. At the end of the day when the market price of corn falls to $2.50: A. the buyer (long position) needs to transfer $500 to the seller (short position). B. the seller (long position) needs to transfer $500 to the buyer (short position). C. nothing happens since marked to market adjustments only occur if the market price rises above the contract price. D. nothing happened since no funds are transferred until the settlement date.
A. the buyer (long position) needs to transfer $500 to the seller (short position).
74. Considering a call option, if the price of the underlying asset decreases: A. the intrinsic value of the option decreases if it is above zero. B. the intrinsic value of the option increases if it is above zero. C. the strike price decreases. D. the value of the option increases.
A. the intrinsic value of the option decreases if it is above zero.
77. We have a stock selling for $90.00. There is a put option for this stock with a strike price of $85 and an option price of $1.20: A. the intrinsic value of this option is $0.00 and the time value of the option is $1.20. B. the intrinsic value of this option is $90.00 and the time value of the option is $1.20. C. the intrinsic value of this option is -$5.00 and the time value of the option is $1.20. D. you cannot determine the intrinsic value or time value of the option since the strike price is less than the underlying asset price.
A. the intrinsic value of this option is $0.00 and the time value of the option is $1.20.
61. As an option approaches its expiration date, the value of the option approaches: A. the intrinsic value. B. the price of the underlying asset. C. zero. D. infinity.
A. the intrinsic value.
38. The option writer is: A. the seller of an option. B. the buyer of an option. C. the underlying asset of the option. D. the individual who obtains the rights.
A. the seller of an option.
49. A put option described as out of the money would find: A. the strike price is below the market price of the stock. B. the market price of the stock and the strike price are equal. C. the market price of the stock is below the strike price. D. the option has expired.
A. the strike price is below the market price of the stock.
what is asset securitization?
After origination loans of similar characteristics are pooled Pool of loans are sold to an off-balance sheet subsidiary Off-balance sheet subsidiary creates securities which are backed by the cash flows of the loan portfolio Securities are sold to investors
in the aftermath of the global economic crisis that started in 2008, US govt budget deficit increased dramatically, yet IRs on US treasury debt fell sharply and stayed low for quite some time. does this make sense?
All else equal, a larger deficit implies that interest rates should rise. The large federal deficits require the Treasury to issue more bonds; thus the supply of bonds increases. The supply curve shifts to the right and the equilibrium interest rate rises. The effects of the economic crisis lead to significantly lower wealth and income, which depressed Treasury bond demand, but also decreased corporate bond supply by even more because investment opportunities collapsed. > The larger leftward shift in the bond supply curve than the rightward shift in the bond demand curve would then result in a rise in bond prices and a fall in interest rates. In addition, due to the severity of the global crisis, U.S. Treasury debt became a safe haven investment, reducing relative risk and increasing liquidity for U.S. treasury debt. This significantly raised U.S. treasury bond demand, leading to higher bond prices and significantly lower yields. In other words, the decrease in investment opportunities and risk factors significantly offset the wealth effect on demand and the deficit effect on supply.
OTC derivative
Approximately 90% of derivatives contracts are transacted over-the-counter (OTC), i.e., transacted directly between two contracting parties without the interposing of an exchange or other intermediary According to BIS (2015), at the end of June 2015, the notional amount of the over-the-counter derivatives market was USD 533 trillion, i.e., around 7 times the world GDP! Exposes traders to counterparty risk Financial system more interconnected All standardized OTC derivative contracts should be traded on exchanges or electronic trading platforms, where appropriate, and cleared through central counterparties by end-2012 at the latest. OTC derivative contracts should be reported to trade repositories. Non-centrally cleared contracts should be subject to higher capital requirements. We ask the FSB and its relevant members to assess regularly implementation and whether it is sufficient to improve transparency in the derivatives markets, mitigate systemic risk, and protect against market abuse."
1. When stock prices reflect fundamental values: a. all investors will have positive returns. b. the allocation of resources will be more efficient. c. all companies will have an easier task of obtaining financing for investment projects. d. the overall level of the stock market should move higher.
B
10. Which of the following statements is most correct? a. Managers, directors, and stockholders almost always share the same interest. b. Managers' and directors' interests often conflict with stockholders' interest. c. Managers and stockholders have the same interests, but this usually conflicts with the interests of directors. d. Directors and stockholders have the same interests, but this usually conflicts with the interests of managers.
B
10. Which of the following statements is most correct? A. Managers, directors, and stockholders almost always share the same interest B. Managers' and directors' interests often conflict with stockholders' interest C. Managers and stockholders have the same interests, but this usually conflicts with the interests of directors D. Directors and stockholders have the same interests, but this usually conflicts with the interests of managers
B
14. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is a: a. simple average. b. price-weighted index. c. value-weighted index. d. total-value index.
B
14. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is: A. A simple average B. A price-weighted index C. A value-weighted index D. A total-value index
B
2. The fact that returns from the stock market are less volatile over long-periods of time suggests that: a. investors are more risk averse over the long run. b. stock markets are efficient. c. people get comfortable with the stocks they own. d. stock market bubbles have become more common.
B
2. Two characteristics that make owning stock attractive are: A. Unlimited liability and first claim on assets B. Share prices are relatively inexpensive and are transferable C. Each share represents a large percentage of ownership and dividends are fixed D. Dividends are paid before any other distributions are made and stocks are transferable
B
21. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index: A. Gives more weight to large companies than small companies B. Actually includes more than 500 of the largest corporations in the U.S C. Is a price-weighted index D. Assigns equal weight to all the prices of all the stocks in the index
B
26. The most broadly based stock index in use is the: a. Nasdaq Composite Index. b. Wilshire 5000. c. Dow Jones Industrial Average. d. Standard and Poor's 500 Index.
B
26. The most broadly based stock index in use is: A. The Nasdaq Composite Index B. The Wilshire 5000 C. The Dow Jones Industrial Average D. The Standard and Poor's 500 Index
B
30. The dividends that stockholders receive are: a. fixed by contract and paid annually. b. distributions from profits. c. paid before all other obligations of the company are met. d. always equal to the average amount of interest paid to a bond holder, adjusting for the value of the holdings.
B
30. The dividends that stockholders receive: A. Are fixed by contract and paid annually B. Are distributions from profits C. Are paid before all other obligations of the company are met D. Are always equal to the average amount of interest paid to a bond holder, adjusting for the value of the holdings
B
37. A stock has a current annual dividend of $6.00 per year and it is expected to grow by 3% (0.03) a year. It is expected that two years from now the stock will sell for $90.00 a share. If the interest rate is 5% (0.05), the dividend discount model predicts the stock's current price should be: A. $94.90 B. $93.12 C. $101.30 D. $94.30
B
37. A stock has a current annual dividend of $6.00 per year and it is expected to grow by 3% (0.03) a year. It is expected that two years from now the stock will sell for $90.00 a share. If the interest rate is 5% (0.05), the dividend-discount model predicts the stock's current price should be: a. $94.90 b. $93.29 c. $101.30 d. $94.30
B
38. A stock currently does not pay an annual dividend. An investor expects this policy to remain in force. She believes, however, the stock of this company will sell for $110.00 per share four years from now. If she has an interest (discount) rate of 7% (0.07), the dividend discount model predicts the current price of this stock should be: A. You cannot apply the model to this example since it requires a dividend be offered B. $82.00 C. $83.92 D. $86.35
B
48. Without the stockholders' limited liability, the risk from the use of leverage would: a. be significantly less. b. be significantly greater. c. still be the same. d. be irrelevant.
B
48. Without the stockholders' limited liability, the risk from the use of leverage: A. Would be significantly less B. Would be significantly greater C. Would still be the same D. Would be irrelevant; limited liability eliminates the risk from leverage
B
58. The impact from rapid dividend growth on a stock's current price will be: a. negative, since the company is paying out profits to stockholders. b. positive since rapid dividend growth causes stockholders to expect higher future dividends. c. zero; only current dividends are used to determine the current price of a stock. d. positive, but only if the corporation does not have any debt.
B
59. The impact from rapid dividend growth on a stock's current price will be: A. Negative, since the company is paying out profits to stockholders. B. Positive since rapid dividend growth causes stockholders to expect higher future dividends. C. Zero; only current dividends are used to determine the current price of a stock. D. Positive, but only if the corporation does not have any debt.
B
60. The theory of efficient markets assumes that: A. Prices of bonds, but not stocks, reflect all available information. B. The prices of all financial instruments reflect all available information. C. Stock prices are relatively rigid because it takes a while for information to efficiently move through the market. D. The best approach to determining stock prices is to follow the chartists.
B
60. The theory of efficient markets means a. professional fund managers should be able to consistently beat the market average. b. a professional fund manager should really not expect to beat the market average consistently. c. a professional fund manager who beats the market average one year should be expected to beat the market average the next year. d. a professional fund manager who beats the market average one year should be expected to not beat the market average the next year.
B
62. The notion that stock prices reflect all current available information: a. makes the risk of holding stocks greater. b. indicates that mutual fund managers will not, on average, outperform market averages. c. says stock prices should be more rigid than they are. d. makes it easier to predict the movements in the price of a stock.
B
62. The theory of efficient markets means A. Professional fund managers should be able to consistently beat the market average. B. A professional fund manager should really not expect to beat the market average consistently. C. A professional fund manager who beats the market average one year should expected to beat the market average the next year. D. A professional fund manager who beats the market average one year should be expected to not beat the market average the next year.
B
64. According to the theory of efficient markets, mutual fund managers may be expected to earn above-average returns if they: a. take on less risk. b. have access to illegal, private information. c. participate in efficient markets. d. have learned from investing in the same stocks repeatedly.
B
64. The notion that stock prices reflect all current available information: A. Makes the risk of holding stocks greater. B. Indicates that mutual fund managers will not, on average, outperform market averages. C. Says stock prices should be more rigid than they are. D. Makes it easier to predict the movements in the price of a stock.
B
65. People who claim to have the ability to accurately predict the future prices of stocks: A. Are strong advocates of the theory of efficient markets. B. Should be looked at cynically, unless they have information not available to others. C. Are unusually lucky, and should be listened to intently. D. Are always psychologists.
B
66. Consider a game that involves the tossing of a fair coin. The winner is the individual who calls the outcome correctly, the loser obviously called the wrong outcome. The theory of efficient markets would say: A. Part of the key information is to know the outcomes of the previous tosses. B. The key information to know are the probabilities of the outcomes and the expected payoff. C. Part of the key information is to know the skill of the person you are playing against. D. Outcomes of events that require luck cannot be evaluated.
B
69. According to the theory of efficient markets, mutual fund managers may be expected to earn above-average returns if they: A. Take on less risk. B. Have access to illegal, private information. C. Participate in efficient markets. D. Have learned from investing in the same stocks repeatedly.
B
7. Professor Jeremy Siegel, of the University of Pennsylvania, did research showing that: a. owning stocks over the long run produces returns below the risk-free return. b. if an investor owns stocks for a very short time the risk is greater than if the stocks are held for a long time. c. the return on the S&P 500 for a 25-year period often produces returns below zero. d. bonds really are less risky to hold over the long term.
B
70. Under what circumstances are stocks less risky than bonds? A. When stockholders have limited liability. B. When investors buy stocks and hold them for long periods of time. C. When investors actively buy and sell stocks in response to new information. D. When the economy goes into a period of economic recession.
B
72. Professor Jeremy Siegel, of the University of Pennsylvania, did research showing that: A. Owning stocks over the long run produces returns below the risk-free return. B. If an investor owns stocks for a very short time the risk is greater than if the stocks are held for a long time. C. The return on the S&P 500 for a 25-year period often produces returns below zero. D. Bonds really are less risky to hold over the long term.
B
78. When stock prices reflect fundamental values: A. All investors will have positive returns. B. The allocation of resources will be more efficient. C. All companies will have an easier task of obtaining financing for investment projects. D. The overall level of the stock market should move higher.
B
79. The fact that returns from the stock market are less volatile over long-periods of time suggests that: A. Investors are more risk averse over the long run. B. Stock markets are efficient. C. People get comfortable with the stocks they own. D. Stock market bubbles have become more common.
B
80. Stock market bubbles are: A. The increase in a stock's price resulting from reported higher profits by a firm. B. Persistent and expanding gaps between stocks' actual prices and the prices warranted by the fundamentals. C. Synonymous to stock market crashes. D. Those periods of time when the overall level of the stock market is rising at a slow rate reflecting market fundamentals.
B
86. Stock market bubbles impact consumers by: A. Encouraging greater consumption of luxury goods and greater saving. B. Encouraging greater consumption of luxury goods and less saving. C. Encouraging more work and delaying retirement. D. Resulting in less investment in home ownership and more into stocks.
B
87. Some good did come from the Internet bubble of the late 1990s. One good thing was that: A. People learned they should not invest in dotcom companies. B. Start-up companies found they could bypass venture capitalists and raise funds directly from the capital markets. C. Stock market bubbles do not have to result in an inefficient allocation of resources. D. The theory of efficient markets doesn't always hold and consistently better-than-market returns are achievable.
B
51. The main difference between European and American options is: A. holders of European options have more options than holders of American options. B. American option holders have more options than European option holders. C. European option holders can exercise the option prior to expiration. D. European options cannot be resold.
B. American option holders have more options than European option holders.
78. For a given call option price, which of the following statements is correct? A. The closer the strike price is to the current price of the underlying asset, the smaller the time value of the option. B. The closer the strike price is to the current price of the underlying asset, the larger the time value of the option. C. As the strike price approaches the price of the underlying asset, the time value of the option approaches zero. D. As the strike price approaches the price of the underlying asset, the intrinsic value of the option increases and the time value of the option decreases.
B. The closer the strike price is to the current price of the underlying asset, the larger the time value of the option.
56. Comparing an option to a futures contract it would be correct to say: A. the risk involved in each is equal. B. a futures contract carries more risk than the option contract. C. an option contract carries more risk than the futures contract. D. neither involves risk; they are tools to eliminate risk.
B. a futures contract carries more risk than the option contract.
10. The clearing corporation's main role in the futures market is to: A. set the market price of the contract. B. act as the counterparty to both sides of the transaction, thereby guaranteeing payment. C. provide the underlying assets so the contracts can be created. D. all of the above.
B. act as the counterparty to both sides of the transaction, thereby guaranteeing payment.
80. Interest-rate swaps are: A. exchanges of equity securities for debt securities. B. agreements between two parties to exchange periodic interest-rate payments over some future period. C. agreements involving swapping of option contracts. D. agreements that allow both parties to convert floating interest rates to fixed interest rates.
B. agreements between two parties to exchange periodic interest-rate payments over some future period.
40. A call option is: A. any option written more than sixty days into the future. B. an option giving the holder the right to buy a given quantity of an asset at a specific price on or before a specified date. C. an option giving the seller the right to sell a given quantity of an asset at a specific price on or before a specified date. D. an option where all rights are granted to the seller of the option.
B. an option giving the holder the right to buy a given quantity of an asset at a specific price on or before a specified date.
75. Considering a put option, an increase in the strike price: A. causes the intrinsic value of the option to decrease if it is above zero. B. causes the intrinsic value of the option to increase if it is above zero. C. causes the value of the option to decrease. D. makes the option worthless.
B. causes the intrinsic value of the option to increase if it is above zero.
5. Forward contracts are: A. an agreement between more than two parties. B. contracts usually involving the exchange of a commodity or financial instrument. C. always standardized. D. easily resold.
B. contracts usually involving the exchange of a commodity or financial instrument.
12. Marking to market is a process that: A. involves a transfer of risk. B. ensures that the buyers and sellers receive what the contract promises. C. always requires the sellers of contracts to transfer funds to the buyers of contracts. D. buyers and sellers can request for an additional fee when the contract is created.
B. ensures that the buyers and sellers receive what the contract promises.
15. A U.S. Treasury bond dealer with a large portfolio who sells a futures contract for U.S. Treasury bonds is: A. taking on additional risk in hopes of getting a larger return. B. ensuring the sales price of the bond through hedging. C. not likely to find a buyer for this transaction. D. should see the value of the futures contract increase as bond prices rise.
B. ensuring the sales price of the bond through hedging.
25. Tom buys a futures contract for U.S. Treasury bonds and on the settlement date the interest rate on U.S. Treasury bonds is lower than Tom expected. Tom will have: A. lost money on his long position. B. gained money on his long position. C. lost money on his short position. D. gained money on his short position.
B. gained money on his long position.
42. With a call option, the option holder: A. has the right to sell the asset. B. has the right to buy the asset. C. can buy or sell, it is their option. D. can buy the asset but only after the date specified.
B. has the right to buy the asset.
20. Speculators differ from hedgers in the sense that: A. speculators do not like risk. B. hedgers seek to transfer risk. C. speculators seek to transfer risk. D. speculators are hedgers, there isn't any difference.
B. hedgers seek to transfer risk.
71. The time value of the option should: A. decrease the longer the time to expiration. B. increase the longer the time to expiration. C. not change with time to expiration. D. approach infinity at expiration.
B. increase the longer the time to expiration.
22. Futures markets and derivatives contribute to economic growth by: A. decreasing speculation. B. increasing the risk-taking capacity of the economy. C. deterring the transfer of risk. D. forcing people to accept the risk their decisions create.
B. increasing the risk-taking capacity of the economy.
60. The intrinsic value of an option: A. is the amount the investor believes the option will be worth on the expiration date. B. is the amount the option is worth if it is exercised immediately. C. is equal to price of the underlying asset. D. cannot be determined without knowing the future price of the underlying asset.
B. is the amount the option is worth if it is exercised immediately.
27. Tom buys a futures contract for U.S. Treasury bonds and on the settlement date the interest rate on U.S. Treasury bonds is higher than Tom expected. Tom will have: A. gained money on his short position. B. lost money on his long position. C. gained money on his long position. D. lost money on his short position.
B. lost money on his long position.
8. With a futures contract: A. payment is made when the contract is created. B. no payment is made until the settlement date. C. the short position agrees to purchase the underlying asset. D. the risk is eliminated for both parties.
B. no payment is made until the settlement date.
54. The seller of a put option is transferring the risk: A. of a price decrease of the stock to the buyer of the option. B. of a price increase of the stock to the buyer of the option. C. this statement is incorrect since options do not transfer risk. D. this statement is incorrect since only sellers of call options are transferring risk.
B. of a price increase of the stock to the buyer of the option.
86. The primary risk in swaps is that: A. interest rates will not change. B. one of the parties will default. C. they are highly liquid and the market price will change. D. high U.S. government deficits will limit the availability of swaps.
B. one of the parties will default.
36. An individual who neither uses nor produces a commodity but buys a futures contract for the asset is: A. speculating that the price of the commodity is going to fall. B. speculating that the price of the commodity is going to increase. C. is using arbitrage to earn profits without taking a risk. D. is hedging and transferring risk.
B. speculating that the price of the commodity is going to increase.
34. The user of a commodity who is trying to insure against the price of the commodity rising would: A. take the short position in a futures contract. B. take the long position in a futures contract. C. be better off speculating on price movements and earning higher profits. D. want to hedge by selling a futures contract.
B. take the long position in a futures contract.
29. If market participants believe next year's corn crop is likely to be unusually large: A. the current spot market price of corn is likely to be below the futures price of corn. B. the current spot market price of corn is likely to be above the futures price of corn. C. it would be impossible to find someone to take the short position in a futures contract. D. it will be impossible to find someone to take the long position in a futures contract.
B. the current spot market price of corn is likely to be above the futures price of corn.
84. Considering interest-rate swaps, the swap spread is: A. another name for the swap rate. B. the difference between the benchmark rate and the swap rate. C. the benchmark rate plus the swap rate. D. a measure of the time value of the swap.
B. the difference between the benchmark rate and the swap rate.
13. There is a futures contract for the purchase of 100 bushels of wheat at $2.50 per bushel. At the end of the day when the market price of wheat increases to $3.00 per bushel: A. the buyer (long position) needs to transfer $50 to the seller (short position). B. the seller (short position) needs to transfer $50 to the buyer (long position). C. nothing happens since with a futures contract all payments are made at the settlement date. D. nothing happens since marked to market adjustments only take place when the market price falls below the contract price.
B. the seller (short position) needs to transfer $50 to the buyer (long position).
47. A put option that is described as in the money would find: A. the market price of the stock above the strike price. B. the strike price is above the market price of the stock. C. the market and strike prices are the same. D. the option has been exercised.
B. the strike price is above the market price of the stock.
1. Derivatives are financial instruments that: A. present high levels of risk and should only be used by the wealthy. B. when used correctly can actually lower risk. C. should only be used by people seeking high returns from low risk. D. represent the outright purchase of a bond.
B. when used correctly can actually lower risk.
reserves
Bank reserves are a commercial banks' holdings of deposits in accounts with a central bank (for instance the European Central Bank or the applicable branch bank of the Federal Reserve System, in the latter case including federal funds), plus currency that is physically held in the bank's vault ("vault cash")
basel 2 shortcomings
Basel II > Attempt to deal with many risks modern banks face Quite complex; lost much of the intuitive, common-sense appeal of Basel I Still silent about key issues, e.g., threshold and form of supervisory intervention > May not focus adequately on what regulators should do when banks do not comply with capital requirements Liquidity risk? Concerns that capital requirements under Basel II are likely to be procyclical
if bonds demanded > bonds supplied, there is excess of which, and price and IR will fall or rise?
Bd>Bs= excess demand. so price will rise and IR will fall
major modern banks- financial industry before the 90s vs now
Before the 90's, the financial industry was pretty regulated. Most regular banks were local businesses and prohibited from speculating with depositors' savings. Investment banks were relatively small private partnerships. In this traditional model, the partners put up the money and thus had the incentive to watch that money very carefully. Then, consolidation and investment banks went public, i.e., quoted at the main stock exchanges. Banks were then able to raise money from the public as new stockholders' capital. Separation between management and ownership: Managers are not the earlier partners anymore who stay in the bank for their entire life. ... and global!
macroprudential vs microprudential supervision
Before the global financial crisis, the regulatory authorities engaged in microprudential supervision, which is focused on the safety and soundness of individual financial institutions. The global financial crisis has made it clear that there is a need for macroprudential supervision, which focuses on the safety and soundness of the financial system in the aggregate.
1. A share of common stock represents: A. A claim from a lender against a borrower B. A share in the company's debts C. A share of ownership of the company D. An unlimited liability to the owner of the stock
C
12. An index number is valuable because: a. the level of every index number itself provides critical information. b. it is more stable than the data it reflects. c. it provides a meaningful measurement scale to calculate percentage changes. d. it does not require any calculations to compute percentage changes.
C
12. An index number is valuable because: A. It provides useful information to the viewer B. It is more stable than the data it reflects C. It provides a meaningful measurement scale to calculate percentage changes D. It does not require any calculations to compute percentage changes
C
13. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is: a. an index made up of the stock prices of the 100 largest corporations in the U.S. b.an index that measures the value of purchasing 100 shares in each of the corporations that make up the index. c. the average price of stock in 30 of the largest companies in the U.S. d. the broadest measure of stock market performance.
C
13. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is: A. An index made up of the stock prices of the 100 largest corporations in the U.S B. An index that measures the value of purchasing 100 shares in each of the corporations that make up the index C. The average price of stock in 30 of the largest companies in the U.S. D. The broadest measure of stock market performance
C
16. If the Dow Jones Industrial Average is currently at 10,000 and the price of one stock included in the index increases by $10, the Dow Jones Industrial Average will: A. Not change; it is a value-weighted index B. Increase by the size of the Dow Jones divisor C. Increase by (10/Dow Jones divisor)/10,000 D. Increase by 0.1%
C
17. If the Dow Jones Industrial Average is at 10,205 and it is up 4% from the previous day, what was the index at the close of the market the previous day? a. 10,201.0 b. 9,805.0 c. 9,812.5 d. 9800. 0
C
17. If the Dow Jones Industrial Average is at 10,205 and it is up 4% from the previous day, what was the index at the close of the market the previous day? A. 10,201.0 B. 9,805.0 C. 9,812.5 D. 9800.0
C
25. The Nasdaq Composite Index is: a. made up of over 50,000 firms traded on the Over-the-Counter market. b. a price-weighted index. c. made up of mainly newer firms, and heavily influenced by technology and internet companies. d. the most broadly based index in use.
C
25. The Nasdaq Composite Index: A. Is made up of over 50,000 firms traded on the Over-the-Counter market B. Is a price-weighted index C. Is made up of mainly newer firms, and heavily influenced by technology and Internet companies D. Is the most broadly based index in use
C
29. People differ on the method by which stock should be valued. Some people are chartists, others behavioralists. The basic difference between these groups is: a. chartists rely on astrological charts to predict stock values, behavioralists rely on psychology. b. behavioralists are finance based, chartists study charts of investor psychology. c. chartists study charts of stock prices; behavioralists focus on investor psychology and behavior. d. chartists and behavioralists are the same in their approach; essentially there aren't any differences.
C
29. People differ on the method by which stock should be valued. Some people are chartists, others behavioralists. The basic difference between these groups is: A. Chartists rely on astrological charts to predict stock values, behavioralists rely on psychology B. Behavioralists are finance based, chartists study charts of investor psychology C. Chartists study charts of stock prices; behavioralists focus on investor psychology and behavior D. Chartists and behavioralists are the same in their approach; essentially there aren't any differences
C
3. Which of the following could cause a stock market bubble? a. Changes in the real interest rate b. Better enforcement of insider trading laws c. Investor euphoria d. Changes in dividends
C
31. You start with a $1,000 portfolio; it loses 50% over the next year, the following year it gains 50% in value. At the end of two years your portfolio is worth: a. $1,000. b. $500. c. $750. d. $950.
C
31. You start with a $1000 portfolio; it loses 50% over the next year, the following year it gains 50% in value. At the end of two years your portfolio is worth: A. $1000 B. $500 C. $750 D. $950
C
33. You have a portfolio valued at $1,000. Over the next twelve months it loses 75% of its value. What return does the portfolio need to earn over the following twelve months to restore the portfolio to its original value? a. 75% b. 200% c. 300% d. 25%
C
33. You have a portfolio valued at $1000. Over the next twelve months it loses 75% of its value. What return does the portfolio need to earn over the following twelve months to restore the portfolio to its original value? A. 75% B. 200% C. 300%
C
36. A stock has an annual dividend of $10.00 and it is expected not to grow. It is believed the stock will sell for $100 one year from now, and an investor has a discount (interest) rate of 6% (0.06). The dividend discount model predicts the stock's current price should be: a. $94.67 b. $116.00 c. $103.77 d. $106.60
C
36. A stock has an annual dividend of $10.00 and it is expected not to grow. It is believed the stock will sell for $100 one year from now, and an investor has a discount (interest) rate of 6% (0.06). The dividend discount model predicts the stock's current price should be: A. $94.67 B. $116.00 C. $103.77 D. $106.60
C
38. A stock currently does not pay an annual dividend. An investor expects this policy to remain in force. She believes, however, the stock of this company will sell for $110.00 per share four years from now. If she has an interest (discount) rate of 7% (0.07), the dividend discount model predicts the current price of this stock should be: a. you cannot apply the model to this example since it requires a dividend be offered. b. $82.00 c. $83.92 d. $86.35
C
39. Next year, the price of a stock is expected to be $2,200 and the stock will pay a $55 dividend. The interest rate is 10%. Based on the dividend-discount model, what is the current price of this stock? a. $1,980 b. $2,000 c. $2,050 d. $2,035
C
39. Next year, the price of a stock is expected to be $2200 and the stock will pay a $55 dividend. The interest rate is 10%. Based on the dividend-discount model, what is the current price of this stock? A. $1980 B. $2000 C. $2050 D. $2035
C
41. A company currently pays a dividend of $4.00 per share. It expects the growth rate of the dividend to be 3% (0.03) annually. If the interest rate is 6% (0.06) what does the dividend- discount model predict the current price of the stock should be? a. $103.33 b. it doesn't, you need an expected future selling price to use the model. c. $ 137.33 d. $66.67
C
41. A company currently pays a dividend of $4.00 per share. It expects the growth rate of the dividend to be 3% (0.03) annually. If the interest rate is 6% (0.06) what does the dividend-discount model predict the current price of the stock should be? A. $103.33 B. It doesn't, you need an expected future selling price to use the model C. $137.33 D. $66.67
C
44. Suppose that the current dividend for a stock is Dtoday, the expected dividend growth rate is r, and the interest rate is i. If we ignore risk, which of the following represents the dividend- discount model formula for the fundamental price of a stock? a. Dtoday / (i + g) b. (i + g) / Dtoday c. Dtoday (1 + g) / (i - g) d. Dtoday / (i - g)
C
44. Suppose that the current dividend for a stock is Dtoday, the expected dividend growth rate is r, and the interest rate is i. If we ignore risk, which of the following represents the dividend-discount model formula for the fundamental price of a stock? A. Dtoday / (i+g) B. (i+g) / Dtoday C. Dtoday (1+g) / (i-g) D. Dtoday / (i-g)
C
46. As the corporation uses more debt financing, which of the following holds true for the stockholders? a. The expected return to the stockholders decreases and the standard deviation of that return decreases. b. The expected return to the stockholders increases and the standard deviation of the return decreases. c. The expected return to the stockholders increases and the standard deviation of the return increases. d. The expected return to the stockholders decreases and the standard deviation of the return increases.
C
46. As the corporation uses more debt financing, which of the following holds true for the stockholders? A. The expected return to the stockholders decreases and the standard deviation of that return decreases B. The expected return to the stockholders increases and the standard deviation of the return decreases C. The expected return to the stockholders increases and the standard deviation of the return increases D. The expected return to the stockholders decreases and the standard deviation of the return increases
C
49. Consider the effect of business cycles on bondholders versus stockholders. We expect that business cycles will affect: a. bondholders and stockholders about the same. b. bondholders more since the amount they receive depends on profits. c. stockholders more since they are residual claimants. d. bondholders more since they do not have any claim to property.
C
49. Consider the effect of business cycles on bondholders versus stockholders. We expect that business cycles will affect: A. Bondholders and stockholders about the same B. Bondholders more since the amount they receive depends on profits C. Stockholders more since they are residual claimants D. Bondholders more since they do not have any claim to property
C
52. All other things equal, a decrease in the equity risk premium leads to a(n): a. increase in the required return on stock. b. decrease in the present value of stock. c. increase in the price of equity shares. d. decrease in dividend growth.
C
52. All other things equal, a decrease in the equity risk premium leads to a(n): A. Increase in the required return on stock. B. Decrease in the present value of stock. C. Increase in the price of equity shares. D. Decrease in dividend growth
C
53. The basic dividend-discount model is a bit of an oversimplification for valuing stocks because it: a. ignores expected dividend growth. b. ignores the value of future dividends. c. ignores the risk involved in holding stocks. d. cannot handle stocks that do not pay dividends.
C
53. The basic dividend-discount model is a bit of an oversimplification for valuing stocks because: A. It ignores expected dividend growth. B. It ignores the value of future dividends. C. It ignores the risk involved in holding stocks. D. It cannot handle stocks that do not pay dividends.
C
56. If a company reports that it is going to have a difficult time meeting its debt obligations, you would expect the Ptoday: a. to fall since the risk-free return will rise. b. to rise since the Dtoday will likely fall. c. to fall since the risk premium will likely rise. d. to remain about the same until the Dtoday actually changes.
C
57. If a company reports that it is going to have a difficult time meeting its debt obligations, you would expect the Ptoday: A. To fall since the risk-free return will rise. B. To rise since the Dtoday will likely fall. C. To fall since the risk premium will likely rise. D. To remain about the same until the Dtoday actually changes.
C
6. Stocks appear to present risk, yet many people have substantial parts of their wealth invested in them. This behavior could be explained by: a. people are irrational in their investment behavior, only focusing on positive outcomes. b. people are not very risk-averse and do not require a risk premium for stocks. c. investing in stocks over the long run is not as risky as short-term holdings of stocks d. people are not efficient users of information.
C
6. The concept of limited liability says a stockholder of a corporation: A. Is liable for the corporation's liabilities, but nothing more B. Cannot receive dividends that exceed his/her investment C. Cannot lose more than his/her investment D. Is only responsible for any taxes that the corporation may owe but not its other debts
C
61. The theory of efficient markets: a. rules out high returns due to chance. b. says insider information makes markets less efficient. c. allows for higher than average returns if the investor takes higher than average risk. d. assumes people have equal luck.
C
63. According to the theory of efficient markets: a. investors use rules of thumb to make choices about which stocks to buy and sell. b. investors are able to use forecasts based on the dividend-discount model to generate above- average returns. c. a portfolio manager who charges no commission should not, on average, outperform an individual investor with access to the same funds. d. the stock price should remain constant.
C
63. The theory of efficient markets: A. Rules out high returns due to chance. B. Says insider information makes markets less efficient. C. Allows for higher than average returns if the investor takes higher than average risk. D. Assumes people have equal luck.
C
67. In the first calendar quarter a company reports that it expects profits to rise in the fourth quarter. The theory of efficient markets says we should expect the price of the company's stock to: A. Rise in the fourth quarter when the higher profits are actually seen. B. Fall immediately as stockholders will be disappointed about having to wait until the fourth quarter for higher profits. C. Rise immediately on the expectation of higher profits in the future. D. Rise around the third quarter since this information will take time to disseminate
C
68. According to the theory of efficient markets: A. Investors use rules of thumb to make choices about which stocks to buy and sell. B. Investors are able to use forecasts based on the dividend-discount model to generate above-average returns. C. A money market manager who charges no commission should not, on average, outperform an individual investor with access to the same funds. D. The stock price should remain constant.
C
71. Stocks appear to present risk, yet many people have substantial parts of their wealth invested in them. This behavior could be explained by: A. People are irrational in their investment behavior, only focusing on positive outcomes. B. People are not very risk-averse and do not require a risk premium for stocks. C. Investing in stocks over the long run is not as risky as short-term holdings. D. People are not efficient users of information
C
74. Mutual funds are characterized by the fact that the all: A. Have the same management fee set by regulation. B. Require the same minimum investment of $10,000. C. Provide some degree of diversification. D. Provide the same degree of liquidity.
C
82. Which of the following could cause a stock market bubble? A. Changes in the real interest rate B. Changes in the risk premium C. Investor euphoria D. Changes in dividends
C
63. Assume we have a stock currently worth $100. We also assume the interest rate is zero, and we can buy options for this stock with a strike price of $100. If the stock can rise or fall by $20 with equal probability over the option period, and the option cannot be exercised until the expiration date, what is the time value of the option? A. $20 B. $0 C. $10 D. $100
C. $10
31. If a futures contract for U.S. Treasury bonds increases by "12" in the financial page listings, the value of the contract increased by: A. $120.00. B. $1200.00. C. $375.00. D. $240.00.
C. $375.00.
67. An option's value will never be less than zero because: A. the intrinsic value is always less than zero. B. the option seller is required to make up any shortfall faced by the option buyer. C. an option holder will never make an additional payment to exercise the option. D. the time value of the option is always less than zero.
C. an option holder will never make an additional payment to exercise the option.
7. The long position in a futures contract is the party that will: A. benefit from decreases in the price of the underlying asset. B. agree to make delivery of a commodity or financial instrument at a future date. C. benefit from increases in the price of the underlying asset. D. accept the greater share of the risk.
C. benefit from increases in the price of the underlying asset.
39. The right to buy a given quantity of an underlying asset at a predetermined price on or before a specific date is called a(n): A. put option. B. option writer. C. call option. D. arbitrage contract.
C. call option.
43. With a put option, the option holder: A. has the right to buy the asset. B. can buy or sell the asset, it is their option. C. has the right to sell the asset. D. can buy the asset but only on the date specified.
C. has the right to sell the asset.
52. One key difference between options contracts and futures contracts is: A. in a futures contract, one part has more rights than the other. B. with an options contract both parties have equal rights. C. in an options contract, the rights belong to one party. D. in a futures contract all rights are held by just one party.
C. in an options contract, the rights belong to one party.
66. As the volatility of the stock price increases, the time value of the option: A. decreases. B. is zero. C. increases. D. doesn't change.
C. increases.
68. The intrinsic value of a call option: A. is the difference between the option price and the interest rate. B. must be less than or equal to zero. C. is the greater of zero or the difference between the price of the underlying asset and the strike price. D. will be negative if the time value of the option is negative.
C. is the greater of zero or the difference between the price of the underlying asset and the strike price.
70. At expiration, the time value of an option: A. is equal to the intrinsic value. B. is greater than the intrinsic value. C. is zero. D. is less than the intrinsic value.
C. is zero.
28. Sue buys a futures contract for U.S. Treasury bonds and on the settlement date the interest rate on U.S. Treasury bonds is higher than Sue expected. Sue will have: A. gained money on her short position. B. gained money on her long position. C. lost money on her long position. D. lost money on her short position.
C. lost money on her long position.
81. A key use of interest-rate swaps is to: A. eliminate risk for both parties involved in the transaction. B. earn the fees for constructing the swaps. C. provide a hedge against interest-rate risk. D. manage government revenues.
C. provide a hedge against interest-rate risk.
37. The option holder is: A. the seller of an option. B. another name for the clearinghouse used in futures contracts. C. the buyer of an option. D. always a spectator.
C. the buyer of an option.
23. On the settlement date of a futures contract: A. the future's price is always above the price of the underlying asset. B. the future's price is always below the price of the underlying asset. C. the future's price is equal to the price of the underlying asset. D. the future's price may be above or below the price of the underlying asset but not equal to it.
C. the future's price is equal to the price of the underlying asset.
59. The two parts that make up an option's price are: A. extrinsic value and the time value of the option. B. the commission and the time value of the option. C. the intrinsic value and the time value of the option. D. the price of the underlying asset and the time value of the option.
C. the intrinsic value and the time value of the option.
76. If we have a stock selling for $95.00 and a call option for this stock has a strike price of $82.00 and an option price of $13.60: A. the intrinsic value of the option is $0.60 and the time value of the option is $13.00. B. the intrinsic value is $82.00 and the time value of the option is $13.60. C. the intrinsic value of the option is $13.00 and the time value of the option is $0.60. D. the intrinsic value is $0 since the option is out of the money.
C. the intrinsic value of the option is $13.00 and the time value of the option is $0.60.
46. With a call option that is described as in the money: A. the market price of the stock is below the strike price. B. the market price of the stock equals the strike price. C. the market price of the stock is above the strike price. D. the option has been exercised.
C. the market price of the stock is above the strike price.
41. The strike price of an option is: A. the market price at the time the option is written. B. the market price at the time the option is exercised. C. the price at which the option holder has the right to buy or sell. D. always above the market price.
C. the price at which the option holder has the right to buy or sell.
73. Considering a put option; if the price of the underlying asset increases: A. the value of the put option also increases. B. the intrinsic value of the option increases. C. the value of the option decreases. D. the time value of the option decreases.
C. the value of the option decreases.
2. The value of a derivative is determined by: A. the Federal Reserve. B. SEC regulation. C. the value of the underlying asset. D. the risk-free rate.
C. the value of the underlying asset.
58. Options are popular because of all of the following EXCEPT: A. stock prices are volatile. B. they offer a tool to transfer risk. C. they present a tool to limit losses but also limit gains. D. they offer opportunities for high leverage.
C. they present a tool to limit losses but also limit gains.
3. In a derivative transaction: A. the dollar amount of the transaction increases as the contract date approaches. B. the risk is less than if actually purchasing the underlying asset. C. what one person gains is what the other person loses. D. there is always a futures contract.
C. what one person gains is what the other person loses.
16. A pension fund manager who plans on purchasing bonds in the future: A. wants to insure against the price of bonds falling. B. can offset the risk of bond prices rising by selling a futures contract. C. will take the long position in a futures contract. D. will take the short position in a futures contract.
C. will take the long position in a futures contract.
18. A wheat farmer who must purchase his inputs now but will sell his wheat at a market price at a future date: A. faces a market risk that cannot be offset. B. is a good example of what the chapter refers to as a speculator. C. would hedge by taking the short position in a wheat futures contract. D. would hedge by taking the long position in a wheat futures contract.
C. would hedge by taking the short position in a wheat futures contract.
Describe who issues each of the following money market instruments: b) Certificates of deposit
Certificates of deposit (CDs) are issued (supplied) by banks and sold to depositors bank pays annual interest of given amount and at maturity pays back to the depositor the original purchase price plus the total annual interest earned. Often negotiable, meaning they can be traded, can be resold in a secondary market liquidity Covered by deposit insurance Fixed termtypically pays higher rate than savings accounts
financial supervision: chartering, examinations, disclosure requirements
Chartering (screening of proposals to open new fin. institutions) > Prevent adverse selection that risk-loving individuals want to create highly speculative businesses Examinations (scheduled and unscheduled) > Monitor capital requirements and restrictions on asset holding > Capital adequacy > Asset quality > Management > Earnings > Liquidity > Sensitivity to market risk Disclosure requirements > Requirements to adhere to standard accounting principles and to disclose wide range of information
consumer protection
Consumers may not have enough information to protect themselves (e.g., from bad borrowing decisions) Regulation to provide standardized and clear information (e.g., annual percentage rate and total charges for loans) Laws to protect customers from ill-advised investments
t or f: According to the bank lending channel an easing of monetary policy is more likely to affect investment by small firms than that of large corporates.
Correct. Small firms are more dependent on bank financing because they are not able to obtain market financing Hence, according to the bank lending channel they are more affected by an easing of monetary policy compared to larger firms
If banks have perfect access to capital market funding, then the bank lending channel should be weak
Correct. The bank-lending channel suggests that interest rate conditions affect the access of banks to loanable funds, especially to bank deposits. If banks have perfect access to capital market funding, they should be able to replace any decrease in customer deposits (on non-interest bearing or low interest bearing accounts) when interest rates rise.
EBA stress test 2014
Credibility? • Differences to 2011 stress test • Asset quality review (AQR) conducted beforehand • Focused on a wider range of risks, including credit risk, market risk, sovereign risk, securitization and cost of funding. Examples: • Market risk shock applied to all fair value accounted positions • Market and credit risk shock applied on counterparty exposure • Credit concentration risk shocked in trading book • Pass rates: 8% in baseline and 5.5% Common Equity Tier 1 capital in adverse scenario compared with just 5% in adverse scenario in 2011. Results of the 2014 stress test: • Aggregate capital shortfall for the 123 banks participating is €24.6 billion • 24 banks failed the test • 10 of them have taken measures to bolster their balance sheets in the meantime • Italian banks most affected: The worst affected was Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, which had a capital shortfall of €2.1bn (£1.65bn, $2.6bn) What hasn't been changed (and is frequently criticized) > Capital measure based on risk-weighted assets > Potentially better to use leverage ratios, i.e., use unweighted total assets in denominator > Before and during the 2007-09 crisis, risk-based capital measures were indicating that the largest US and EU banks were well-capitalized; by contrast, leverage ratios were indicating that these banks had thin capital cushions > Total capital shortfall of €24.6bn is tiny when compared with the €22tn of assets held by the banks included in the process > Tests did not include the vast litigation costs still facing the banks
cycles in regulation
Crisis leads to more regulation > Bankers, politicians, regulators strongly aware of potential risks/problems > Financial industry has less funds/power for lobbying Periods without crises > People forget about potential issues > Lobbying for relaxed regulation > "This-time-it's-different" mentality
15. The Dow Jones Industrial Average: a. gives equal weight to a change in the price of the stock of any company in the index. b. reflects that a 10% increase in a share of stock selling for $30 will have the same effect on the index as a 10% increase in the price of a stock selling for $60. c. is a value-weighted index. d. gives greater weight to shares with higher prices.
D
15. The Dow Jones Industrial Average: A. Gives equal weight to a change in the price of the stock of any company in the index B. Reflects that a 10% increase in a share of stock selling for $30 will have the same affect on the index as a 10% increase in the price of a stock selling for $60 C. Is a value-weighted index D. Gives greater weight to shares with higher prices
D
16. If the Dow Jones Industrial Average is currently at 10,000 and the price of one stock included in the index increases by $10, the Dow Jones Industrial Average will: a. not change; it is a value-weighted index. b. increase by 10.0%. c. increase by 1.0%. d. increase by 0.1%.
D
18. The stocks that make up the Dow Jones Industrial Average: a. are dominated by the automobile industry. b. are the same ones that were originally used to construct the index. c. are not a broad measure of the market since they do not include any technology companies. d. have changed as the structure of the economy has changed.
D
18. The stocks that make up the Dow Jones Industrial Average: A. Are dominated by the automobile industry B. Are the same ones that were originally used to construct the index C. Are not a broad measure of the market since they do not include any technology companies D. Have changed as the structure of the economy has changed
D
20. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index differs from the Dow Jones Industrial Index because: a. it takes into account the stock prices of 500 of the largest firms, which is less than the DJIA. b. it is a price-weighted index, where the DJIA is a value-weighted index. c. larger firms are less important in the S&P 500 than in the DJIA. d. it takes into account the prices of more stocks and it uses a different weighting scheme.
D
20. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index differs from the Dow Jones Industrial Index because: A. It takes into account the stock prices of 500 of the largest firms, which is less than the DJIA B. It is a price-weighted index, where the DJIA is a value-weighted index C. Larger firms are less important in the S&P 500 than in the DJIA D. It takes into account the prices of more stocks and it uses a different weighting scheme
D
23. Which of the following statements is not true? a. A value-weighted index is a better index to use to reflect changes in the economy's overall wealth. b. A price-weighted index is a better index to use to reflect the average change in the price of a typical share of stock. c. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is a price-weighted index. d. The S&P 500 is a price-weighted index.
D
23. Which of the following statements is not true? A. A value-weighted index is a better index to use to reflect changes in the economy's overall wealth B. A price-weighted index is a better index to use to reflect the average change in the price of a typical share of stock C. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is a price-weighted index D. The S & P 500 is a price-weighted index
D
27. When studying world stock indexes, we observe that: a. the S&P 500 is largest in terms of index value. b. most of the world's indexes are price-weighted. c. the indexes are very comparable. d. the indexes are comparable but only in percentage terms.
D
27. When studying world stock indexes, we observe that: A. The S&P 500 is largest in terms of index value B. Most of the world's indexes are price-weighted C. The indexes are very comparable D. The indexes are comparable but only in percentage terms
D
28. When comparing stock indexes around the world we: a. find that a given percentage change across all indexes has the same value. b. observe that they always move together. c. can see that the numeric change in indices allows investors to make easy comparisons of value. d. can examine their respective movements if we look at them as percentage changes.
D
28. When comparing stock indexes around the world we: A. Find that a given percentage change across all indexes has the same value B. Observe that they tend to move together C. Can see that the numeric change in indices allows investors to make easy comparisons of value D. We can examine their respective movements if we look at them in percentage terms
D
3. Voting rights in a corporation are held by: A. The board of directors B. The preferred stockholders C. The corporate bondholders D. The common stockholders
D
40. The price of a stock is currently $750 and the stock will pay a $43 dividend. The interest rate is 7.5%. Based on the dividend-discount model, what is the expected price of this stock for next year? a. $651.17 b. $657.67 c. $691.17 d. $763.25
D
40. The price of a stock is currently $750 and the stock will pay a $43 dividend. The interest rate is 7.5%. Based on the dividend-discount model, what is the expected price of this stock for next year? A. $651.17 B. $657.67 C. $691.17 D. $763.25
D
42. A company currently pays an annual dividend of $6.50 per share. It expects the growth rate of the dividend will be 2.5% (0.025) annually. If the interest (discount) rate is 5% (0.05) what does the dividend-discount model predict the current price of the stock should be? a. It doesn't, you need an expected future price to use the model b. $257.50 c. $130.00 d. $266.50
D
42. A company currently pays an annual dividend of $6.50 per share. It expects the growth rate of the dividend will be 2.5% (0.025) annually. If the interest (discount) rate is 5% (0.05) what does the dividend-discount model predict the current price of the stock should be? A. It doesn't, you need an expected future price to use the model B. $257.50 C. $130.00 D. $266.50
D
45. A share of stock resembles a consol in all of the following ways except that the: a. share of stock does not have a maturity date. b. annual dividend the stock pays resembles the coupon on a consol. c. prices of both can be computed using a variation of the net present value formula. d. are both residual claims.
D
45. A share of stock resembles a consol in all of the following ways except that: A. The share of stock does not have a maturity date B. The annual dividend the stock pays resembles the coupon on a consol C. The prices of both can be computed using a variation of the net present value formula D. They are both residual claims
D
47. The fact that many corporations use debt financing as well as equity financing creates all of the following except: a. the opportunity for a greater expected return for the stockholders. b. greater risk for the stockholders. c. leverage for the stockholders. d. consistently lower debt-to-equity ratios.
D
47. The fact that many corporations use debt financing as well as equity financing creates all of the following except: A. The opportunity for a greater expected return for the stockholders B. Greater risk for the stockholders C. Leverage for the stockholders D. Consistently lower debt-to-equity ratios
D
5. If a public corporation goes bankrupt and does not have enough assets to pay off all creditors: A. The stockholders are personally liable for the balance B. The fact that stockholders are residual claimants means they may have to pay in additional capital to cover the obligations C. The stockholders receive any dividends due before the other creditors are paid D. The stockholders cannot lose more than their investment
D
50. In the event of bankruptcy, stockholders: a. are paid before bondholders. b. receive at least their initial investment due to limited liability. c. could lose more than their initial investment. d. are the last to be paid and could end up losing what they have invested.
D
50. In the event of bankruptcy, stockholders: A. Are paid before bondholders. B. Receive at least their initial investment due to limited liability. C. Could lose more than their initial investment. D. Are the last to be paid and could end up losing what they have invested.
D
51. As a company issues more debt: a. its leverage decreases. b. the share of financing from equity increases. c. the expected return to equity holders falls. d. risk increases
D
51. As a company issues more debt: A. Its leverage decreases. B. The share of financing from equity increases. C. The expected return to equity holders falls. D. Risk increases.
D
54. The required stock return an investor seeks can best be represented by which of the following? a. Risk Premium - Risk-free Return b. Risk-free Return × Risk Premium c. (Risk-free Return + Risk Premium)/(1 + i) d. Risk-free Return + Risk Premium
D
54. The required stock return an investor seeks can best be represented by which of the following? A. Risk Premium - Risk-free Return B. Risk-free Return x Risk Premium C. (Risk-free Return + Risk Premium)/(1 + i) D. Risk-free Return + Risk Premium
D
55. Which of the following will cause a reduction in the current price of a stock? A. A decrease in the current dividend B. An increase in the risk-free return C. A decrease in the growth rate of the dividend D. Both a decrease in the current dividend and an increase in the risk-free return
D
7. Which of the following statements is most correct? A. Stockholders have limited liability and have no control over corporate leadership B. Stockholders can dislodge the managers of the corporation but not the board of directors C. Stockholders have unlimited liability and can dislodge members of the board of directors D. Stockholders can dislodge members of the board and have limited liability
D
75. Management fees for mutual funds are: A. Fixed by regulation. B. Fixed by regulation and can vary by the size of the fund. C. Usually a percentage of the gains the fund achieves. D. Usually a percentage of the funds under management.
D
77. Index funds are often preferred to mutual funds because: A. They offer greater diversification. B. They are managed better. C. They have greater liquidity. D. On average they have lower management fees.
D
83. Why are stock market bubbles costly for the economy? A. They imply that the actual stock price is equal to the fundamental value of the stock. B. They hurt consumers more than corporations. C. They lead to a reduction in real investment in both the short-term and long-term. D. They lead to a misallocation of resources in both the short-term and long-term.
D
84. Companies whose stocks increase the most during a stock market bubble will: A. Have a difficult time raising investment capital. B. Tend to under-invest. C. Usually rebound faster once the bubble bursts. D. Find it difficult to put their capital to profitable use after the bubble bursts.
D
53. Which of the following statements is true? A. Call options can be sold prior to expiration but put options cannot. B. Put options can be sold prior to expiration but call options cannot. C. No option can be sold prior to expiration. D. Both American and European options can be sold prior to expiration.
D. Both American and European options can be sold prior to expiration.
17. A baker of bread has a long-term fixed-price contract to supply bread. Which of the following would NOT reduce her risk? A. Taking the long position in wheat futures contract B. Hedging this risk in the wheat futures market C. Finding a wheat farmer who will take the short position in a wheat futures contract D. Finding a wheat farmer who will take the long position in a wheat futures contract
D. Finding a wheat farmer who will take the long position in a wheat futures contract
64. Assume we have a stock currently worth $100. We also assume the interest rate is zero, and we can buy options for this stock with a strike price of $100. If the stock can rise or fall by $5 with equal probability over the option period, and the option cannot be exercised until the expiration date, what is the time value of the option? A. $10 B. $5 C. $0 D. None of the answers is correct.
D. None of the answers is correct.
79. Which of the following would tend to decrease the size of the time value of the option? A. The price volatility of the underlying asset is high. B. The time to expiration of the contract is far away. C. The underlying price of the asset approaches the strike price. D. The time to expiration of the options contract is near.
D. The time to expiration of the options contract is near.
19. Users of commodities are: A. usually not participants in futures contracts. B. speculators preferring to get the large returns which result from large risk. C. likely to take the short position in a futures contract. D. buyers of futures.
D. buyers of futures.
69. At expiration, the value of an option: A. is greater than the intrinsic value. B. is less than the intrinsic value. C. is equal to the time value of the option. D. is equal to the intrinsic value.
D. is equal to the intrinsic value.
82. The principal in an interest rate swap is: A. always transferred from the originator to the counterparty of the swap. B. is usually held by a clearinghouse to guarantee payment. C. usually borrowed from a third party. D. is not borrowed, lent, or exchanged. It just serves as the basis for the calculation of cash flows.
D. is not borrowed, lent, or exchanged. It just serves as the basis for the calculation of cash flows.
44. There's a call option written for 100 shares of GM stock for $85.00 a share, prior to the third Friday of October 2017: The option writer: A. has the option but not the requirement of selling 100 shares of GM for $85.00. B. will sell 100 shares of GM for $85.00 on the third Friday of October 2017. C. has the option to back out of this contract prior to the third Friday of October 2017. D. is required to post margin.
D. is required to post margin.
87. Standardization of derivative contracts: A. results in increased risk for the parties involved. B. makes them more difficult to understand and therefore leads to increased misuse. C. makes the premiums involved with these contracts increase. D. leads to greater liquidity and lower risk.
D. leads to greater liquidity and lower risk.
85. One key difference between swaps and option contracts is: A. swaps are derivative agreements and options are not. B. swaps do not involve any risk and options do. C. options transfer risk, swaps create risk. D. options trade on organized exchanges and swaps do not.
D. options trade on organized exchanges and swaps do not.
21. One argument why farmers in poor countries remain poor is: A. they know very little about farming techniques needed for the crop they are growing. B. they are poor assessors of the risks they face. C. risk taking is a deterrent to growth. D. poor farmers in many countries lack access to commodity futures markets.
D. poor farmers in many countries lack access to commodity futures markets.
30. An arbitrageur is someone who: A. always takes the long position in a futures contract. B. always takes the short position in a futures contract. C. seeks the high returns that come from the high risk inherent in futures markets. D. simultaneously buys and sells financial instruments to benefit from temporary price differences.
D. simultaneously buys and sells financial instruments to benefit from temporary price differences.
62. The time value of the option can best be defined as (excluding its intrinsic value): A. the commission earned by a broker. B. the fee earned for the potential benefits from buying the option. C. the service fee charged by the SEC for regulating the option market. D. the fee paid for the potential benefits from buying an option.
D. the fee paid for the potential benefits from buying an option.
48. A call option described as at the money would find: A. the market price of the stock is above the strike price. B. the market price of the stock is below the strike price. C. the option has been exercised. D. the market price of the stock equals the strike price.
D. the market price of the stock equals the strike price.
24. As the time of settlement gets closer: A. the price of the futures contract will diverge from the price of the underlying asset. B. the price of the futures contract will always be above the price of the underlying asset. C. the price of the underlying asset and the future's price will show no correlation at all. D. the price of the futures contract will move in lockstep with the price of the underlying asset.
D. the price of the futures contract will move in lockstep with the price of the underlying asset.
55. Someone who purchases a call option is really buying insurance to protect against: A. the stock not being available when they want to purchase it. B. the price of the stock falling. C. a seller not being able to deliver the stock. D. the price of the stock rising.
D. the price of the stock rising.
50. A call option described as out of the money would find: A. the market price of the stock is above the strike price. B. the option has been exercised. C. the option has expired. D. the strike price is above the market price of the stock.
D. the strike price is above the market price of the stock.
4. The purpose of derivatives is to: A. increase the risk so the return is larger. B. eliminate risk for both parties in the transaction. C. postpone the risk for both parties in the transaction. D. transfer the risk from one person to another.
D. transfer the risk from one person to another.
research question: did securitization diminish the incentives of banks to screen borrowers in the US mortgage market?
Data: > more than 1 mio. securitized sub-prime mortgages 2001-2006 > Loan amount, duration, Loan-to-Value ratio (LTV) > Credit score (FICO) of borrower, documentation Exploit the "rule of thumb" that loans with a FICO score of below 620 are less likely to be securitized → compare performance of loans just above 620 with those just below!
Many policymakers in developing countries have proposed the implementation of a system of deposit insurance similar to the system that exists in the United States. Explain why this might create more problems than solutions in the financial system of a developing country.
Developed and developing countries have quite different financial systems. Usually not a good idea to "copy and paste" regulatory frameworks that ensure the soundness of a financial system from one country to the other Deposit insurance needs to be credible Incorporating a system of deposit insurance will likely result in an increase in deposits at financial intermediaries. > However, without proper regulations (i.e., prudential regulation and supervision) to limit the moral hazard problems associated with a system of deposit insurance, banks will probably accept more risks than they would otherwise do. This is obviously not a desired consequence. > The increase in moral hazard problems will probably offset the benefit derived from avoiding bank runs (the most immediate effect of a system of deposit insurance).
precautionary hoarding
Due to runs on shadow banking system > Off-balance sheet vehicles (SPVs/SIVs) likely to draw on credit lines from sponsoring banks > Banks' uncertainty about funding need and supply skyrocketed > Also: uncertainty about funding situation of other banks Precautionary hoarding of liquidity > Breakdown of unsecured interbank market > Higher haircuts in U.S. secured interbank market > Larger use of repos with safe collateral in Europe rather than unsecured loans
Why might banks be reluctant to issue new equity to strengthen its capital base during financial crises?
During crises, investors typically require a high return to be incentivized to buy new shares > Costly Issuing new shares comes at the cost of existing shareholders > During crises they have already had negative return and issuing more equity would dilute their holdings Reaction to crises: force banks to have increase capital once it becomes low > Contingent convertible (Coco) bonds > The idea is to have some debt in the capital structure of banks that converts into equity when a bank faces financial distress
In 2008, as a financial crisis began to unfold in the United States, the FDIC raised the limit on insured losses to bank depositors from $100,000 per account to $250,000 per account. How would this help stabilize the financial system?
During the financial panic, regulators were concerned that depositors worried their banks would fail, and that depositors (especially with accounts over $100,000) would pull money from banks, leaving cash-starved banks with even less cash to satisfy customer demands and day-to-day operations. This could create a contagious bank panic in which otherwise healthy banks would fail. Raising the insurance limit would reassure depositors that their money was safe in banks and prevent a bank panic, helping to stabilize the financial system. Similar measures, e.g., in Germany Important: Deposit insurance needs to be credible
EUR/USD exchange rate: currency pair: EUR/USD appreciation of base currency: E^
E(USD/EUR)= #USD/1EUR first currency in pair is called base currency (EUR) second currency is called quote currency (USD) base currency rises in value relative to quoted currency. get more foreign currency for 1 EUR
is there more interbank lending in Europe or America?
Europe
assessment of risk management
Evaluating soundness of management processes for controlling risk Trading Activities Manual of 1994 for risk management rating based on: > Quality of oversight provided > Adequacy of policies and limits for all risky activities > Quality of the risk measurement and monitoring systems > Adequacy of internal controls Example: Interest-rate risk limits: > Internal policies and procedures > Internal management and monitoring
hedging credit risk with swaps
Exchange regular payments with another financial intermediary The net value of cash-flows to the swap buyer increases when credit risk increases > hedge against losses due to on-balance sheet credit losses Total return swap > outgoing payments by the swap buyer fall when credit risk increases Pure credit swap (Credit default swap) > incoming payments to swap buyer rise when credit event happens
pass-through mortgage backed securities in the US
FHA / GNMA (Ginnie Mae) / FHA > FHA provides credit risk insurance on 'standardized' mortgages > banks securitize FHA conform mortgages > GNMA sponsors (guarantees payment on) mortgage backed securities FNMA (Fannie Mae) > buys and securitizes mortgages > < 80% LTV, Loan limit > (Goverment supported SPV) FHLMC (Freddie Mac) > Fannie Mae for savings institutions
How does risk sharing benefit both financial intermediaries and private investors?
Financial intermediaries benefit by carrying risk at relatively low transaction costs. Since higher risk assets on average earn a higher return, financial intermediaries can earn a profit on a diversified portfolio of risky assets. Individual investors benefit by earning returns on a pooled collection of assets issued by financial intermediaries at lower risk. The financial intermediary lowers risk to individual investors through the pooling of assets Risk sharing benefits financial intermediaries because they are able to earn a spread between the returns they earn on risky assets and they returns they pay on the less-risky assets they sell. Investors benefit because they are able to invest in a better diversified portfolio then would otherwise be available.
stress-tests
Forward looking analysis > Stress tests assess the vulnerability of the financial system by examining its behavior under counterfactual conditions (scenarios) Important role in systemic risk monitoring > Codified in new regulation and international standards such as Basel III Regulators ask individual firms to estimate what would happen to them in a given scenario > Scenarios consist of various variables such as changes in GDP, stock prices, interest rates, etc. > Banks estimate what would happen to their balance sheet in each scenario. Success of stress-tests depends on the chosen scenarios Types of scenarios > Drawn from historical crisis periods (e.g. a stock price decline as on Black Monday, October 19, 1987) > Hypothesized based on expert opinion or statistical techniques Scenarios should be > Plausible > Severe > Suggestive of risk-reducing action Frequently: Tension between plausibility and severity > Outlandish scenarios have the most painful ramifications > Goal: choose severe, but plausible scenarios
Go to the St. Louis Federal Reserve FRED database and find data on the three-month treasury bill rate (TB3MS), the three-month AA nonfinancial commercial paper rate (CPN3M), the 30-year treasury bond rate (GS30), the 30-year conventional mortgage rate (MORTGAGE30US), and the NBER recession indicators (USREC). a) b) c) d) In general, how do these interest rates behave during recessions and during expansionary periods? In general, how do the three-month rates compare to the 30-year rates? How do the treasury rates compare to the respective commercial paper and mortgage rates? For the most recent available month of data, take the average of each of the three-month rates and compare it to the average of the three-month rates from January 2000. How do the averages compare? For the most recent available month of data, take the average of each of the 30-year rates and compare it to the average of the 30-year rates from January 2000. How do the averages compare?
Generally speaking, the interest rates fall during recessions (shaded periods), and rise during expansionary periods. Term structure tends to be upward sloping>30-year rates > 3 month rates. Treasury rates lower than CP/mortgage rates>Risk premium is positive.
capital requirements
Government-imposed capital requirements are another way of minimizing moral hazard at financial institutions There are two forms: 1. Based on the leverage ratio (capital /total assets) > a lower leverage ratio, especially one below 3%, triggers increased regulatory restrictions on the bank. 2. Risk-based capital requirements > Basel Accords > Amount of capital requirements depends on risk Prompt corrective actions necessary if capital too low. Capital (for each euro of risk hold at least X cents of capital) Beneficial for at least two reasons: 1. ex ante: bankers have less of an incentive to engage in "excessive" risk taking, so that actual risk taking is more in line with what is in the interest of all stakeholders (skin in the game effect) 2. ex post: banks have additional liquidity reserves, which mitigates insolvency and bank failure risk (buffer effect)
government-sponsored enterprises
Here we focus on GSEs that facilitated home ownership in the U.S., i.e., Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac > Private-sector companies, publicly traded, profit-making companies with implicit government backing and a public mission to support the mortgage market > Bought U.S. mortgages and securitized a large fraction in the form of MBS, financed by selling "agency debt" > Highly leveraged: owning and guaranteeing $5.3 trillion of mortgages with capital of less than 2%. • But you can include any institution that enjoys government support and guarantees • Risk mispricing
risk involved in global investment banking
High leverage > A small drop in asset value leads to a larger drop in capital Maturity imbalance > Long-term assets financed by short-term liabilities Liquidity imbalance > Illiquid assets financed by rolling-over short-term (liquid) funding Risk imbalance > Example: Duration mismatch between assets and liabilities Currency imbalance > Example: USD loans funded with EUR deposits
various new regulations following 2007-2009 financial crisis
Higher and stricter capital requirements Maximum leverage ratio Liquidity regulation Additional regulation for large, systemically important banks Living wills: orderly liquidation of failed banks Restrictions on trading activity Central clearing of derivatives Stronger consumer protection New agencies to strengthen supervision and oversight
Why might the efficient market hypothesis be less likely to hold when fundamentals suggest stocks should be at a lower level?
How could an investor profit from overpriced stocks: > Sell the stock short Behavioral finance suggests that market participants are less likely to engage in short sales, because people are more averse to downside risk than upside risk > Short sellers can incur nearly unlimited losses > Little short selling occurs in practice. > Short selling is sometimes seen as taboo, since it is viewed as profiting off the losses of others.
invest banks _____ securities:
IB underwrites securities: they guarantee a price for a corps securities and then sells them to the public
adverse selection with... IPOs, issuing bonds, securities trading
IPOs: companies want to issue shares, investor do not know quality. same structure as market for used cars. issuing bonds: IR reflects probability of default (PD). manager know PD of firm, investors don't. same structure as market for used cars. securities trading: buyer values the security less than the seller: seller doesn't sell at P. buyer values the security more than seller: seller sells at P, but security might be worth less if sellers knows more.
expectations theory. ex: current rate of 1 year bond is 6%. you expect IR to be 8% next year. the the expected return buying 2 one year bonds averages what percentage? IR on a two-year bond must be ____% for you to be willing to purchase it.
IR on a long term bond will equal an average of the short term IR's that people expect to occur over the life of the long-term bond. buyers of bonds don't prefer bonds of one maturity over another, they will not hold any quantity of a bond if its expected return is less than that of another bond with a different maturity. bond holders consider bonds with different maturities to be perfect substitutes. 6+8/2=7%. 7%
changes in value of a security formula
IR risk: percent change in P = -DUR x (change in i / (1+i))
hedging IR risk
IR swaps: exhange interest payments. buying a swap turns variable rate liabilities into fixed rate liabilities to match fixed rate assets. increases duration of liabilities. example: savings banks, small commercial banks (variable rate liabilities: deposits, fixed rate assets (mortgages)
in the current environment with interest basically at zero, would you rather hold high or low duration bonds?
IRs unlikely to decrease even further. if IRs go up, prices of previously issued bonds decline. the larger the duration, the stronger the drop in value. thus, if you expect IRs to rise, you would prefer low duration over high duration bonds.
ETFs (passive investments in stock indices) have grown strongly in recent years. Explain how this growth may be related to the efficient market hypothesis?
If investors believe in EFH, it is optimal to passively invest in market index rather than pick stocks Only very few mutual funds outperform the market and a significant share actually underperforms after cost better to invest in market using ETFs Potential issue: > If everybody just invests in market will markets become less efficient? > Stock picking investors help to eliminate over/underpricing
assuming the expectations theory is correct for term structure, calculate the IRs in the term structure for maturities of 1 to 5 years, and plot the resulting yield curves for the following paths of 1 year interest rates over the next 5 years a) 5%,6%,7,6,5 b)5,4,3,4,5 how would your yield curves change if people preferred shorter term bonds over longer term bonds?
If people preferred shorter-term bonds over longer-term bonds , the upward- and then downward-sloping yield curve in (a) would tend to be even more upward sloping because long-term bonds would then have a positive risk premium. The downward- and then upward-sloping yield curve in (b) also would tend to be more upward sloping because of the positive risk premium for long-term bonds
What could GBI do to immunize the bank against interest rate risk?
Immunization requires the bank to have a leverage adjusted duration gap of 0 > GBI could reduce the duration of its assets to 0.5 (=0.55 x 200/220) by using more fed funds and floating rate loans > Or GBI could use a combination of reducing asset duration and increasing liability duration in such a manner that DGAP is 0.
"too big to fail"
Increased moral hazard problems for big financial institutions, whose failure would lead to major disruption > Regulators reluctant to let institution fail Government (implicitly) provides guarantees of repayment to large uninsured creditors of the largest financial institutions even when they are not entitled to this guarantee. > Not only depositors, but also larger creditors have no incentive to monitor > Funding cost of banks do not reflect true risk
Describe who issues each of the following money market instruments: e) interbank deposits
Interbank deposits are loans from one bank to another (mostly overnight) Unsecured OTC Used to balance liquidity needs to > allow for depositor withdrawals > trade with customers > satisfy reserve requirements Used to gauge conditions in financial markets > High interest rates in interbank market relative to treasury bills indicates market stress (high credit risk)
Why are financial intermediaries willing to engage in information collection activities when investors in financial instruments may be unwilling to do so?
Investors in financial instruments who engage in information collection face a free-rider problem > Other investors may be able to benefit from their information without paying for it. > Individual investors therefore have inadequate incentives to devote resources to gather information about borrowers who issue securities. Financial intermediaries avoid the free-rider problem because they make private loans to borrowers rather than buy the securities borrowers have issued. > Able to reap all the benefits from the information they collect, their information collection activities will be more profitable. > Greater incentive to invest in information collection
If a bank is falling short of meeting its capital requirements by $1 million, what three things can it do to rectify the situation?
It can raise $1 million of capital by issuing new stock. 2. It can cut its dividend payments by $1 million, thereby increasing its retained earnings by $1 million. 3. It can deleverage, i.e., decrease the amount of its assets so that the amount of its capital relative to its assets increases, thereby meeting the capital requirements
restrictions on competition
Justified as increased competition can also increase moral hazard incentives to take on more risk. Branching restrictions (eliminated in 1994) Glass-Steagall Act (repealed in 1999) > Rationale: avoid potential conflicts of interest > Commercial banks were prohibited from engaging in securities activities (investment banking & asset management) Disadvantages: Higher consumer charges (lack of competition) Decreased efficiency (no economies of scale and scope) Concentrated assets: banks can't diversify their income
basel 3
Key issues in need of reform after financial crisis Too high leverage No liquidity framework Poor risk management Interconnectedness Too big to fail Too low quality and quantity of capital Tougher conditions for capital and asset classification > Tier 1 capital >= 6% × risk weighted assets Leverage ratio > Tier 1 capital / bank's assets (on and off BS) >= 3% Liquidity buffers > Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR): > Require banks to have sufficient high-quality assets to withstand 30-day stressed funding scenario specified by supervisors > Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR) > Longer-term structural ratio designed to address liquidity mismatches > Incentivize banks to use stable funding Mitigate procyclicality of Basel II / reduce systemic risk > Capital Conservation Buffer (CCB) > GSIB (global systemically important banks) charge Systemically important banks need special regulation > Indicators of systemic importance: cross-countries activity, size, interconnectedness, complexity > 28 global systemically important banks (BIS) > Additional elements: recovery and resolution plans, higher capital requirements, more intense supervision Domestic systemically important banks Bail-in capital
financial consolidation and govt safety net
Larger and more complex financial organizations challenge regulation: > Increased "too big to fail" problem > Extends safety net to new activities, increasing incentives for risk taking in these areas (as has occurred during the global financial crisis Example: banks suffering losses due guarantees provided for SIVs
money market funds september 2008
MMFs are important suppliers of liquidity for the banking system. reserve primary fund, one of the largest MMFs, breaks the buck (a share is worth less than $1 due to investments in lehmans commercial paper). investors don't consider MMFs as very low risk investments anymore causing a run of MMFs. (investors in MMFs always keep the right to redeem $1 per share. if assets of a MMF lose value to .95, but the fund promises to pay $1, there is an incentive to run).US treasury steps in and guarantees MMFs with $80 billion
bear sterns
March 2008 > Proprietary trading, brokerage and derivatives dealer funded with 30:1 leverage and mostly short-term debt > BS experienced severe trouble as a result of its poor equity base relative to its leverage and huge exposure of its assets to the housing market > BS strongly relied on short term funding: liability side indicates that BS was rolling over more than $75 billion of repo contracts on mortgage-backed securities each day > Rumors about deteriorated liquidity, rating downgrade, ... > FED announcement of Term Securities Lending facility interpreted as sign that an investment bank is in trouble (BS is smallest & weakest) > Repo lenders, hedge fund customers, and derivatives counterparties became increasingly reluctant to do business with BS. BS was unable to secure funding on the repo market- within a few days they busted. March 16, 2008 > JP Morgan Chase agrees to buy BS with Federal Reserve Assistance for $10 per share (BS traded at more than $150 less than a year before) > FED agreed to purchase $30 billion of BS assets to get them off BS's books through a new entity called Maiden Lane LLC (JPM contributes $1 billion) FED creates Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF) > Investment banks can turn to FED for overnight funding > Easing of liquidity problems at remaining investment banks
trade off between safety and returns to equity holders:
More capital benefits the owners of a bank by making their investment safe More capital is costly to owners of a bank because the higher the bank capital, the lower the return on equity Choice depends on the state of the economy and levels of confidence Banks are required to hold capital
Can a person with rational expectations expect the price of a share of Google to rise by 10% in the next month?
No, if the person has no better information than the rest of the market. An expected price rise of 10% over the next month implies over a 100% annual return on Google stock, which certainly exceeds its equilibrium return. This would mean that there is an unexploited profit opportunity in the market, which would have been eliminated in an efficient market. The only time that the person's expectations could be rational is if the person had information unavailable to the market that allowed him or her to beat the market.
Can you think of any financial innovation in the past ten years that has affected you personally? Has it made you better off or worse off? Why?
Online/mobile banking; PayPal; ETFs; Bitcoins; Robo-advisors. generally, financial innovations since 1960s generally viewed as more positive than negative (ATMs, credit cards, money market funds, ETFs, TIPS)
issues with altman discriminant model?
Only discriminates between 'good' and 'bad' borrowers Relative importance of firm characteristics for predicting default may vary over time > weights are unlikely to be stable over time Ignores 'soft' information on credit relationship, business outlook, industry outlook Back-testing the model is difficult > data on corporate loan performance
gordon growth model
P0= D0(1+g)/(Ke-g) = D1/(Ke-g) D0=most recent dividend paid g=expected constant growth rate in dividends Ke=required return on an investment in equity dividends are assumed to continue growing at a constant rate forever. the growth rate is assumed to be less than the required return on equity. used to determine intrinsic value of a stock based on a future series of dividends that grow at a constant rate in perpetuity.
gordon growth model
P0= D0(1+g)/(r-g) = D1 / r-g dividends are assumed to continue growing at a constant rate forever. the growth rate is assumed to be less than the required return on equity. used to determine intrinsic value of a stock based on a future series of dividends that grow at a constant rate in perpetuity.
one period stock valuation model: simple loan PV: coupon bond PV:
P0= Div1 / (1+Rr)^n + P1 / (1=Rr) (dividend + sales price) P0= CF / (1+i)^n = Coupon / (1+i)^n + F / (1+i)^n
one-period stock valuation model
P0=(Div1/(1+Ke)) + (P1 / (1+Ke)) Po=current price of the stock div1=div paid at end of year 1 Ke=required return on investment in equity P1=sale price of stock at end of first period
what is the YTM on a simple loan for 1 million that requires repayment of 2 million in five years time?
PV of 2 payment five years from now is 2/(1+i)^5 = 1 million. so, 1=2/(1+i)^5, so i=14.9%
present value and future value formulas
PV: FV/(1+i)^T FV: PV(1+i)^T
expected return equation
Re= (Pe(t+1) - Pt +C) / Pt. at the beginning of the period, we know Pt and C. P(t+1) is unknown and we must form an expectation of it. expectations of future prices are equal to optimal forecasts using all currently available info, so Pe(t+1) = Pof(t+1) -> Re = Rof. supply and demand analysis states Re will equal the equilibrium return R*. so Rof=R*
challenges to regulation
Regulators continually face new challenges in a dynamically changing financial system Devil is in the details: Regulatory policy can have large consequences Cost of regulation: > Implementation/monitoring cost > Influence and lobbying cost (social waste) > Market distortions (Any intervention will create it's own inefficiency/externality) > Too little risk taking Regulator itself is an interested party and exposed to political pressures (example: risk weights)
Describe who issues each of the following money market instruments: d)Repurchase agreement (repo)
Repos are a form of collateralized loan issued primarily by banks. Mostly very short-term (less than 1 month maturity) Lenders are other banks or institutional investors such as money market funds Collateral: an asset that the lender receives as security if the borrower does not pay back the loan
excess. reserves. Suppose a bank's required reserves are 10%. If a bank has ample excess reserves, a deposit outflow does not necessitate changes in other parts of its balance sheet shortfall:
Reserves are a legal requirement and the shortfall must be eliminated, e.g., by borrowing in the interbank market Excess reserves are insurance against the costs associated with deposit outflows.
mmf in europe and US
Securitization issuance was smaller in volume in the euro area than in the United States before the crisis (around 5% and 12% of GDP respectively) and remains less developed Assets under management by MMFs amounted to €1.83 trillion and €1.1 trillion in the United States and in the euro area respectively by the second quarter of 2011
What are the advantages and disadvantages of quantitative easing as an alternative to conventional monetary policy when short-term interest rates are at the zero lower bound?
Since short-term interest rates cannot be lowered below the zero bound in this environment, conventional monetary policy would be ineffective Main advantage of quantitative easing is that purchases of intermediate and longer term securities could reduce longer-term interest rates, increase the money supply further, and lead to expansion One disadvantage of quantitative easing is that it may not actually have the effect of increasing economic activity through greater loans and monetary expansion: If credit and financial markets are significantly damaged, banks may simply hold the extra liquidity as excess reserves, which would not lead to greater loans and monetary expansion
EBA stress test and example of stress-test failure.
Stress test exercises have been conducted by regulators in recent years Example: European Banking Authority (EBA) EU-wide stress test in 2011 > Objective: Assess the resilience of a large sample of banks in the EU against an adverse but plausible scenario > Scenario > Deterioration from the baseline forecast in the main macroeconomic variables such as GDP, unemployment and house prices > The scenario includes a sovereign stress, with some losses to sovereign and bank exposures > Changes in interest rates and sovereign spreads also affect the cost of funding for banks in stress > Results > EBA's 2011 stress test exercise shows that 8 out of 90 banks fall below the Tier 1 capital threshold of 5% over a two-year time horizon, with an overall shortfall of EUR2.5bn. > In addition, 16 banks display a Tier 1 capital ratio between 5% and 6%. as of 2011 dexia is very healthy. but in 2011 they suffered the biggest loss in history. only after 6 month after stress test, dexia went bust.
The bank you own has the following balance sheet: assets: reserves (75 million) and loans (525 million). liabilities: deposits (500 million) and bank capital (100 million) If the bank suffers a deposit outflow of $50 million with a required reserve ratio on deposits of 10%, what actions should you take?
The $50 million deposit outflow means that reserves fall by $50 million to $25 million. Since required reserves are $45 million (10% of the $450 million of deposits), your bank needs to acquire $20 million of reserves. You could obtain these reserves by either calling in or selling off $20 million of loans, borrowing $20 million in discount loans from the Fed, borrowing $20 million from other banks or corporations, selling $20 million of securities, or some combination of all of these
SBS avoidance of existing regulations
The SBS is "bank-like" without being subject to the same regulatory constraints as banks that have access to an official liquidity backstop and deposit insurance • The SBS operates without internalizing the true cost of its risks and thus gains a funding advantage relative to banks where regulation aims to achieve such an internalization mispricing of risk
Suppose you are the manager of a bank whose $100 billion of assets have an average duration of four years and whose $90 billion of liabilities have an average duration of six years. Conduct a duration analysis for the bank, and show what will happen to the net worth of the bank if interest rates rise by 2 percentage points. What actions could you take to reduce the bank's interest-rate risk?
The assets fall in value by $8 million (= $100 million × -2% × 4 years) Liabilities fall in value by $10.8 million (= $90 million × -2% × 6 years) Because the liabilities fall in value more than the assets do, the net worth of the bank rises by $2.8 million. The interest-rate risk can be reduced by shortening the maturity of the liabilities to a duration of four years or lengthening the maturity of the assets to a duration of six years. Alternatively, you could engage in an interest-rate swap, in which you swap the interest earned on your assets with the interest on another bank's assets that have a duration of six years.
lender of last resort. capital adequacy. liquidity requirements branching restrictions. activity restrictions
The banking industry faces much more: > Lender-of-last-resort (LLS): a countries central bank that offers loans to banks that are experiencing difficulty depository insurance and other types of guarantees > Capital adequacy: banks need to hold capital to support their activity > Liquidity requirements: banks need to hold enough liquid assets and have sufficient stable funding > Traditionally (typically in the US, by now largely abolished): > Branching restrictions: where can banks locate their branches? > Activity restrictions: what types of activities are permissible banking activities? e.g., are commercial banks allowed to engage in securities underwriting and insurance?
interpret this yield curve: . -- . --- .----------- . . .----------------------
The flat yield curve at shorter maturities suggests that short-term interest rates are expected to fall moderately in the near future • The steep upward slope of the yield curve at longer maturities indicates that interest rates further into the future are expected to rise. • Because interest rates and expected inflation move together, the yield curve suggests that the market expects inflation to fall moderately in the near future but to rise later on.
Suppose you are the manager of a bank that has $15 million of fixed-rate assets, $30 million of rate-sensitive assets, $25 million of fixed-rate liabilities, and $20 million of rate-sensitive liabilities. Conduct a gap analysis for the bank, and show what will happen to bank profits if interest rates rise by 5 percentage points. What actions could you take to reduce the bank's interest-rate risk?
The gap is $10 million ($30 million of rate-sensitive assets minus $20 million of ratesensitive liabilities) The change in bank profits from the interest rate rise is $0.5 million (5% × $10 million) The interest-rate risk can be reduced by increasing rate-sensitive liabilities to $30 million or by reducing rate-sensitive assets to $20 million. Alternatively, you could engage in an interest-rate swap in which you swap the interest on $10 million of rate-sensitive assets for the interest on another bank's $10 million of fixed-rate assets
during 2008, the difference in yield (the yield spread) between three month AA rated financial commercial paper and three month AA rated non financial commercial paper steadily increased from its usual level of close to zero, spiking to over a full percentage point at its peak in october 2008. what explains this sudden increase?
The global financial crisis hit financial companies very suddenly and very hard, creating much uncertainty about the soundness of the financial system, and doubt about the soundness of even the most healthy banks and financial companies. Spread could be due to illiquidity and/or credit risk > Sharp decrease in demand for financial commercial paper relative to the seemingly safer nonfinancial commercial paper. > Spike in the yield spread between the two could also reflect greater risk of financial company investments that is not (yet) mirrored in ratings. Bond spreads are used as indicator for riskiness of bonds (as they may react quicker to news than ratings)
The household liquidity channel suggests that banks are more likely to lend to households when an easing of monetary policy drives house prices up
The household liquidity channel does not operate through the channel of bank lending, but is driven by household behavior If asset prices rise as a result of an easing of monetary policy, households financial asset holdings increase in value and the risk to fall into financial distress decreases As a result, households are more willing to consume durable goods and housing
The wealth channel of monetary policy suggests that - after a monetary policy easing - households will spend more on consumption because they can get cheaper consumer loans from banks.
The increase in consumption according to the wealth channel is not trigger by cheaper consumer loans According to the wealth channel, households will consume more due to additional wealth Increasing wealth caused by the monetary policy easing rises life time resources of households In order to smoothen consumption household will consume a share of their increase in wealth
A significant number of European banks held large amounts of assets as mortgage- backed securities* derived from the U.S. housing market, which crashed after 2006. How does this demonstrate both a benefit and a cost to the internationalization of financial markets?
The international trade of mortgage-backed securities is generally beneficial European banks that held the mortgages could earn a return on those holdings, while providing needed capital to U.S. financial markets to support borrowing for new home construction and other productive uses In this sense, both European banks and U.S. borrowers should have benefitted. However, with the sharp decline in the U.S. housing market, default rates on mortgages rose sharply, and the value of the mortgage-backed securities held by European banks fell sharply. Even though the financial crisis began primarily in the United States as a housing downturn, it significantly affected European markets; Europe would have been much less affected without such internationalization of financial markets.
shortcomings of 1988 approach
The risk classes are crude, inviting for exploitation (e.g. mortgages require half of the capital of business loans) Risk classes do not properly reflect actual credit risk exposure Does not reward diversification within portfolios > No recognition of the covariance of returns that affect diversification and portfolio risk It assumes that banking risk is the same across countries and time Capital ratios are expressed in book-value and they fail to adjust for changes in market values
interpret the yield curve ; ; ; --- ; ---- --- ; --- --- ;-- ;---------------------------------
The steep upward-sloping yield curve at shorter maturities suggests that short-term interest rates are expected to rise moderately in the near future because the initial, steep upward slope indicates that the average of expected short-term interest rates in the near future are above the current short-term interest rate. • The downward slope for longer maturities indicates that short-term interest rates are eventually expected to fall sharply. With a positive risk premium on long-term bonds, as in the preferred habitat theory, a downward slope of the yield curve occurs only if the average of expected short-term interest rates is declining, which occurs only if short-term interest rates are expected to fall far into the future. • Since interest rates and expected inflation move together, the yield curve suggests that the market expects inflation to rise moderately in the near future but fall later on
If the public expects a corporation to lose $5 per share this quarter and it actually loses $4, which is still the largest loss in the history of the company, what does the efficient market hypothesis predict will happen to the price of the stock when the $4 loss is announced?
The stock price will rise. Even though the company is suffering a loss, the price of the stock reflects an even larger expected loss. When the loss is less than expected, efficient markets theory then indicates that the stock price will rise. The unexpected component $5-$4 = +$1 is what matters for stock prices
Capital Tiers
Tier 1 "core" capital: describes core capital adequacy of bank. RE+CS+PS includes equity capital and disclosed reserves. tier 1 is money the bank has stored to keep it functioning through all the risky transactions it performs (like trading, investing, lending). core capital includes disposed reserves (Aka retained earnings) and common stock. Tier 2 "supplementary capital": includes hybrid capital instruments, loan-loss and revaluation reserves as well as undisclosed reserves. this capital is supplementary funding (not as reliable as first tier) tier 2 is less secure than tier 1. also less reliable bc its more difficult to accurately calculate and composed of assets that are more difficult to liquidate. long term debt is tier 2. tier 2 capital must be less than or equal to tier 1. Tier 3 Capital: tertiary capital held by banks to meet part of their market risks, includes greater variety of debt than tier 1 and 2 capitals. tier 3 capital is used to support market risk, commodities risk, and foreign currency risk.
Describe who issues each of the following money market instruments: a) Treasury bills
Treasury bills are short-term debt instruments issued by the (United States) government to cover immediate spending obligations, i.e. finance deficit spending. Issued for terms of 4, 13, 26, and 52 weeks Most liquid money market security > Very actively traded Very safe security Held by banks, households, corporations, other intermediaries In NL: Dutch State Treasury Agency issues Dutch Treasury Certificates
what are the two main sources of cash flows for an equity investor? How reliably can these cash flows be estimated? Compare the problem of estimating stock cash flows to the problem of estimating bond cash flows. Which security would you predict to be more volatile?
Two cash flows from stock: > periodic dividends > future sales price. Both cash flows from stock difficult to estimate > Dividends are frequently changed when a firm's earnings either rise or fall > Future sales price depends on the dividends that will be paid at some date even further in the future Bond cash flows also consist of two parts, periodic interest payments and a final maturity payment. > Established in writing at the time the bonds are issued and cannot be changed without the firm defaulting and being subject to bankruptcy Stock prices tend to be more volatile, because their cash flows change more
what are the two main sources of cash flows for an equity investor? how reliably can these cash flows be estimated? compare the problem of estimating stock cash flows to the problem of estimating bond cash flows. which security would you predict to be more volatile?
Two cash flows from stock: > periodic dividends > future sales price. Both cash flows from stock difficult to estimate > Dividends are frequently changed when a firm's earnings either rise or fall > Future sales price depends on the dividends that will be paid at some date even further in the future Bond cash flows also consist of two parts, periodic interest payments and a final maturity payment. > Established in writing at the time the bonds are issued and cannot be changed without the firm defaulting and being subject to bankruptcy Stock prices tend to be more volatile, because their cash flows change more
bailouts in europe
UBS gets a bailout. british gov helps scotland bank. french govt helps their banks. dutch govt bails out ING
what spillover into interbank market event happened in september 2007?
UK bank northern rock unable to finance its operations through interbank market. depositors don't trust the bank anymore and doubt that their money is safe. bailed out by bank of england. bank run: depositors withdrew their savings as quickly as possible.
northern rock
UK bank unable to finance operations through interbank market. Depositors don't trust bank anymore. Bailed out by Bank of England. Bank run.- first movers advantage.
eurodollars
USD deposited in banks outside the US
Short-term interbank interest rates (e.g., the federal funds rate in the United States) never decrease below the interest rate paid on reserves." Is this statement true, false, or uncertain? Explain your answer
Uncertain In theory, the market for reserves model indicates that once the fed funds rate reaches the interest rate on reserves, it would never go below this rate since banks could then earn a risk-free interest rate paid directly from the Fed, rather than loaning excess reserves in the more risky fed funds market at an equivalent or lower rate However, in practice, the fed funds rate can (and has) been below the interest rate paid on reserves. This is because nonbank financial institutions, which cannot earn interest on reserves, participate in the federal funds market and provide a significant amount of funding to the market. The extent to which nonbank financial companies participate in the fed funds market may mean that the gap when the fed funds rate is below the interest rate on reserves may not be arbitraged away.
Describe who issues each of the following money market instruments: c) Commercial paper
Unsecured short-term debt instrument Corporations and large banks issue commercial paper as a method of short- term funding in debt markets Only the largest and most creditworthy corporations Interest rate reflects issuer's level of risk
A bank has the following balance sheet (in $millions). assets: cash (9), loans (95), securities (26). total: 130. liabilities and equity: deposits (75), borrowed funds (40), equity (15). total: 130. The bank's securities portfolio includes $16 million in T-bills and $10 million in GNMA securities. The bank has a $20 million line of credit to borrow in the repo market and $5 million in excess cash reserves (above reserve requirements) with the Fed. The bank currently has borrowed $22 million in the interbank market and $18 million from the Fed discount window to meet seasonal demands. a) What is the bank's total available liquidity (sources of liquidity)?What is the bank's current total use of liquidity? c) What is the net liquidity of the bank? d) Calculate the financing gap. e) What is the financing requirement? f) The bank expects a net deposit drain of $20 million. Show the bank's balance sheet if (i) the bank borrows in the interbank market to offset this expected drain (ii) the bank uses its holdings of liquid securities to meet the expected drain
What is the bank's total available liquidity (sources of liquidity)? The bank's available resources for liquidity purposes are $16m + $10m + $5m +$20m +$18 + $22 = $91m. b) What is the bank's current total use of liquidity? The bank's current use of liquidity is $22m + $18m = $40m. c) What is the net liquidity of the bank? The bank's net liquidity is $91 million - $40 million = $51m d) Calculate the financing gap. Financing gap = average loans - average deposits = $95 million - $75 million = $20m. e) What is the financing requirement? Financing requirement = financing gap + liquid assets = $20 million + $35 million = $55m. Solutions to Additional Questions Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam 28 Financial Markets and Institutions Jan Wrampelmeyer f) The bank expects a net deposit drain of $20 million. Show the bank's balance sheet if (i) the bank borrows in the interbank market to offset this expected drain (ii) the bank uses its holdings of liquid securities to meet the expected drain Solutions to Additional Questions Assets Liabilities and Equity Cash 9 Deposits 55 Loans 95 Borrowed funds 60 Securities 26 Equity 15 Total 130 Total 130 Assets Liabilities and Equity Cash 5 Deposits 55 Loans 95 Borrowed funds 40 Securities 10 Equity 15 Total 110 Total 110
When the dollar is worth more in relation to currencies of other countries, are you more likely to buy American-made or foreign-made jeans? Are U.S. companies that manufacture jeans happier when the dollar is strong or when it is weak? What about an American company that is in the business of importing jeans into the United States?
When the dollar increases in value, foreign goods become less expensive relative to American goods More likely to buy Italian-made jeans than American-made jeans. The resulting drop in demand for American-made jeans because of the strong dollar hurts American jeans manufacturers. On the other hand, the American company that imports jeans into the United States now finds that the demand for its product has risen, so it is better off when the dollar is strong.
security
a financial instrument. a claim on the issuers future income or assets.
hyman minskys theory of financial instability
a narrative approach- P is the market value of an asset, pi is its fundamental value. a bubble emerges when the market price departs form the fundamental value (p/pi is persistently too high). the life cycle of a financial crisis gets through seven phases. stages: displacement, boom, euphoria, profit-talking, panic, depressed value, recovery
nominal anchor
a nominal variable, such as the IR or the money supply, which ties down the price level to achieve price stability
the taylor rule
a reduced form approximation of the responsiveness of the nominal interest rate, as set by the central banks, to changes in inflation, output, or other economic conditions. uses real IR and inflation gap. nominal IR should increase more than the increase in inflation. and nominal IR should decrease more than the decrease in inflation.
off balance sheet activities
actives that don't go on the balance sheet: loan sales (secondary loan participation) generation of fee income (guarantees, credit lines) creating SIVs (structured investment vehicles) which can potentially expose banks to risk, as it happened in the global financial crisis
Think of an example where you had to deal with the adverse selection problem
adverse selection: undesired results occur when buyers and sellers have access to different/imperfect/asymmetric information. Buying insurance, purchasing services at lowest cost asymmetric info
how do exchange rates affect inflation?
aggregate demand effects: exchange rate appreciation reduces next exports. exchange rate depreciation increases net exports. shift in aggregate demand impacts on inflation. exchange rate pass through effect:exchange rat appreciation implies lower prices of imports. exchange rate depreciation implies higher prices of imports. a countries monetary policy can't be conducted without taking international considerations into account.
conventional monetary policy aims to influence what? unconventional monetary policy aim to what?
aims to influence short term IRs in the interbank market (open market ops, discount lending, required reserves, and the IR on reserves are tools used to influence money market rates). aims to ease monetary conditions in times when markets are frozen and/or IRs have hit the zero bound (liquidity to financial intermediaries, asset purchases to ease conditions in specific credit markets, negative IRs on reserves)
perpetuity bond
aka consol coupon bond. a bond with no maturity date that does not repay principal but pays fixed coupon payments forever.
loan principal
amount of funds the lender provides to the borrower
efficient-market hypothesis (EMH)
an asset's prices fully reflects all available info. it is impossible to "beat the market" bc stock market efficiency causes existing share prices to always incorporate and reflect all relevant info. stocks always trade at their fair value, so it is impossible to outperform the overall market through expert stock selection when stocks cannot be purchased at an undervalue or inflated price
a _____ is the price of domestic assets in terms of foreign assets.
an exchange rate.
sterilized interventions. the effect of the foreign exchange intervention on money supply is offset by what?
an open market operation if foreign assets are sold, domestic assets are bought. if foreign assets are bought, domestic assets are sold. no change in the money supply and domestic interest rates.
if the interest paid by the central bank on reserves exceeds the interbank rate, banks would demand what?
an unlimited volume of reserves in the interbank market
agency theory example.
analyses how asymmetric info problems affect economic behavior. conflicts btwn people with different interest in the same assets. ex: shareholders and managers of companies.
most economists today believe that there are / are not arbitrage opportunities in financial markets. is this a strong or weak EMH?
are not. Weak EMH. the simultaneous buying and selling of securities, currency, or commodities in different markets or in derivative forms in order to take advantage of differing prices for the same asset
unconventional monetary policy. the central bank wants to ease monetary conditions in a financial crisis where: the central banks needs to use instruments which don't target short term money market IRs...
asset and credit markets have frozen up. nominal short term IRs hit the zero-bound / lower bound. they can't lower short term IRs much further. even if they could, changes in short term rates may not be transmitted to credit markets, investment, and spending.
how securitization works:
asset originator to issuing agent (like a SPV), to capital market investors (senior tranches, mezzanine tranches, junior tranche) transfer of assets from originator to the issuing vehicle. SPV issues debt securities (Asset backed) to investors.
how is banking conducted? how do banks earn the highest profits?
asset transformation
the returns to domestic and foreign assets should be identical if....
assets are identical in terms of liquidity and return risk.there are no restrictions on international capital flows.
required reserves depend on what?
bank deposits volume
what is the most common source of external funds for non financial businesses?
bank loans
plays major role in changeling funds to borrowers with productive investment opportunities. important for the economy to run smoothly and efficiently.
banks
required reserves depend on a banks what? excess reserves mitigate what risk?
banks deposit volume: and therefor on the banks intermediation activities. mitigate liquidity risk- the opportunity cost of holding excess reserves is the interest rate a bank could earn by lending these funds to other banks.
appreciation of base currency:
base currency rises in value relative to quoted currency. get more foreign currency for 1 EUR depreciation: opposite
the basel accords
basel 1-1988. minimum capital requirements that must be met by commercial banks to guard against risk. the capital adequacy risk (risk that a financial institution will be hurt by an unexpected loss), categorized assets of financial institutions into five categories. sets minimum capital requirements of 8% or less with goal of minimizing credit risk. focus on banking book (loans). uses cooke ratio: regulatory capital must be >= 8%*RWAs shortcomings: doesn't reward diversification within portfolio. capital ratios are in book value- fail to adjust for changes in market values. basel 2 2004: focuses on 3 pillars: 1)min capital requirements, 2)supervisory review of institutions capital adequacy and internal assessment process, encourages better risk management. 3)transparency and market discipline: effective use of disclosure as lever to strengthen market discipline and encourage sound banking practices including supervisory review. bank monitoring, high disclosure standards. shortcomings: no form of supervisory intervention, no focus on liquidity risk, requirements are pro cyclical. basel 3: included liquidity ratios and stress tests.continuation of 3 pillars, along with addtnl requirements/safeguards, including requiring banks to have minimum amount of common equity and minimum liquidity ration. addtnl requirements for banks that are "too big to fail". to be classified as well-capitalized, firm must have tier 1 capital ratio of 6% or greater. Liquidity regulation (LCR-require banks to have sufficient high quality assets to withstand 30 day stressed funding scenario, NSFR-longer term structural ratio designed to address liquidity mismatches.), stricter capital requirements, capital surcharge for SIFIs, countercyclical capital buffers focuses on liquidity risk. GSIB:systematically important banks need special regulation.
basel 2
basel 2 reform: address shortcomings of capital adequacy regulation. introduced 3 pillars: 1)minimum capital requirement: link capital requirements to a broader range of risk. more accurate and complicated. 2)supervisory review of capital adequacy: ensure that bank have adequate capital to support all risk. better risk management. supervisors evaluate how well banks are assessing their capital needs. 3) market discipline: monitoring banks by pro investors and financial analysts as complement of bank supervision. high disclosure standards.
doubts about EMH have led to emergence of this new field. definition. how does it explain financial data (using what 3 things?)
behavioral finance: study of the influence of psychology on the behavior of financial practitioners and the subsequent effect on markets. it helps explain why and how markets might be inefficient. it explains financial data using loss aversion, herding, and overconfidence.
contractual vs behavioral maturity. core deposits vs noncore deposits.
behavioral maturity:? core deposits: primary deposits. made by individuals. they are retail, liquid deposits. noncore:
the "market" for reserves takes place between whom?
between banks. short term interbank lending (secured or unsecured) the price for interbank funds is determined by the interaction between banks. central banks sets conditions under which banks interact in the market for reserves (and thus influences interest rate)
eurobond
bond denominated in a currency other than that of the country in which it is sold. ex: ABN AMARO sells bond in the Netherlands, denominated in USD.
segmented markets theory
bonds of different maturities are not subsituttues. the interest rate for each bond with a different maturity is determined by the demand for and supply of that bond. investors have preferences for bonds of one maturity over anything (to match maturity with desired holding period). if investors generally prefer bonds with shorter maturities that have less IR risk, then this explains why yield curves usually slope upward. theory can't explain facts 1 and 2 bc markets are completely segmented
direct finance
borrowers borrow directly from lenders in financial markets by selling financial instruments which are claims on the borrowers future income or assets. no use of a financial intermediary. borrower issuing securities directly on the market.
indirect finance
borrowers borrow indirectly from lenders via financial intermediaries by issuing financial instruments which are claims on the borrowers future income or assets
borrowers/lenders have incentives to take on project that are riskier than the borrowers/lenders would like. example for excess risk taking incentive: Company borrows €1m from investors at r=0% to invest in one of two investment projects Project 1: > Receive 2 with probability 0.5 profit in good state 1 > Receive 1 with probability 0.5 profit in bad state 0 > Expected profit for company: €0.5m > Investors get repaid in both states Project 2: > Receive 3 with probability 0.5 profit in good state 2 > Receive 0 with probability 0.5 profit in bad state 0 (bankruptcy) > Expected profit for company : €1m > Investors do only get paid in good state (and lose everything in bad state)
borrowers. lenders. Managers of company have incentive to take excess risk, which may prevent the company from paying back the loan.
purchasing power parity vs interest parity
both based on no-arbitrge conditions in international trade and investment. international investment flows are typically much faster than international trade flows. interest parity is likely to explain exchange rates better in the short term. PPP provides a long-run anchor.
economies of scale:
bundling investors funds to reduce average costs.
how can the bursting of an asset-price bubble in a stock market help trigger a financial crisis?
bursting of bubble makes borrowers less credit-worthy and causes a contraction in lending and spending. asset-price bubble bursts->asset prices realign with funametal economic values->decline in net worth. businesses have less skin in the game and so have incentives to take on more risk at the lender's expense, increasing the moral hazard problem. lower net worth means there is less collateral and so adverse selection increases. the asset price bust can also lead to a deterioration in financial institution balance sheets, which causes them to deleverage, further contributing to the decline in lending and economic activity.
interventions in the foreign exchange market:
buying and selling of foreign assets by the central bank. a central banks sale of foreign assets leads to a decline in its international reserves and the monetary base. a central banks purchase of foreign assets leads to an increase in its international reserves and the monetary base.
exchange rates are determined by what?
by flows in international trade and international investment.
FICO score
calculated from a lot of different credit date in your credit report. this data can be grouped into 5 categories. the percentages in the chart reflect how important each of the categories is to determining your FICO score (payment history, amounts owed, length of credit history, new credit, typed of credit used)
5 C's
capacity: ability to repay. profitability, liquidity. conditions: market conditions and firm-specific conditions. real-estate market, job security. character:willingness to repay. repayment behavior. credit history. FICO score. capital: leverage to repay. downpayment. leverage of the firm. collateral: market value of pledge able collateral. house value or other pledged assets.
buyers of debt instruments are suppliers or owners to a firm?
capital suppliers.
liquid asset management. liability management.
cash reserve management (regulatory requirements). buffer reserve management (banks hold securities portfolios to manage liquidity risk and interest rate risk). trade off between return and liquidity. managing withdrawal risk and access to liquidity sources. recent phenomenon due to rise of money center banks. expansion of overnight loan markets and new financial instruments (such as negotiable CDs). checkable deposits have decreased in importance as source of bank funds.
lack of short selling is caused by what and may be explained by what?
causing over priced stocks. explained by loss aversion.
open market operations
central bank buys or sells securities to affect the quantity of reserves and monetary base
central bank and interbank market
central bank has open market ops, required reserves, discount loan rate and interest on reserves. the market between banks is called interbank market.
who are the players involved in the monetary system? types of monetary policy?
central banks, banks, and depositors
the most important players in financial markets
central banks- affect IRs, amount of credit, and money supply. direct impact on financial markets and the overall economy.
interest rate stay same or changes over time?
change
what is the potential change in net interest income in a time period
change in R is the average IR change affecting assets and liabilities. change in NII = RSA x (change in R - RSL ) x change in R = CGAP x change in R
immunization
change in equity is 0. requires bank to close the leveraged duration gap.
a coupon bond has a maturity of 5 years and a duration of 4. how does the price of the bond change, if interest rates decrease from 6% to 3%?
change in price / price = -DUR x change in i / (1+i) price changes by -4 x (0.03-0.06)/1.03=11.7%. the bond price increases by 11.7%
long urn exchange rate developments will reflect:
changes in relative price levels btwn two countries (inflation), productivity, preferences for domestic v foreign goods, changes in trade barriers
costs of too low inflation
changes in relative prices can't be implemented without cutting the nominal price of some goods. downward rigidity of some nominal prices (Wages). misallocation of labor.
debt securities and example. advantage and disadvantage
claim on a future cash flow of a person/firm. agreement to pay money at a given time. example: bond (debt security that promises to make payments periodically for a specified period of time) advantage: debt instrument is a contractual promise to pay with legal rights to enforce repayment. disadvantage: return/profit is fixed or limited
what is a prevalent feature of debt contracts for both households and businesses?
collateral
to what extent does the accuracy of credit ratings depend on the inclusion of financial and non financial factors?
combined use leads to a significantly more accurate default prediction than the single use of financial or nonfinacial factors alone.
provide transactional, savings, and money market accounts and accepts time deposits
commercial banks
provide transactional, savings, and money market accounts and accepts time deposits
commercial banks More specifically: Processing of payments and issuing bank drafts and bank checks. Accepting money on term deposit Lending money by overdraft, installment loan, or other means. Providing documentary and standby letter of credit, guarantees, and other forms of off balance sheet exposures. Safekeeping of documents and other items. Sales, distribution or brokerage of insurance, unit trusts and similar financial products. Cash management and treasury.
various types of financial institutions:
commercial banks, brokers/dealers, insurance companies, mutual funds. all interconnected
represents a share of ownership in a corporation. finite or infinite life/maturity date. advantage and disadvantage
common stock, a type of equity. buyers of common stock are owners of the firm. no finite life or maturity date. advantage: potential high income since return isn't fixed or limited disadvantage: debt payments must be made before equity payments can be made.
Tier 1 Capital Ratio
compares a banks equity capital to its total risk-weighted assets RWA. signifies how well a bank can withstand financial distress before it becomes insolvent (unable to pay debts owed). RWAs are all assets held by bank that are weighted by credit risk. comparison btwn banking firms core equity capital and its total RWAs. grads firms capital adequacy as well-capitalized, adequately capitalized, undercapitalized, or critically undercapitalized. to be well capitalized according to basel 3, firm must have tier 1 capital ratio of 6% or greater and must not pay any dividends that would affect its capital. central banks develop weighting scale for different asset classes (cash and govt securities have zero risk, vs mortgage loan which carries more risk). so cash would receive weighting of 0% when calculating its risk-weighted assets while mortgage loans would be assigned maybe 50% weighting.
valuation model
compares firms value to that of its competitors to determine firms financial worth
Big Mac Index
compares prices of Big Macs worldwide: burgers are undervalued and overvalued in some countries
signaling channel
consensus forecasts deviate strongly from actual real development.
gordon growth model 2 assumptions?
constant dividend growth. growth rate is smaller than required return.
gordon growth model key assumption? what happens when IRs increase and demand for the companies products decreases?
constant dividend growth. lower demand-> lower profits and lower dividends, so g decreases and P0 decreases. higher IRs> bonds more attractive, less demand for stocks, higher required return, Ke increases and P0 decreases
economies of scale
cost advantage that arises with increased output of a product.
liquidity management and role of reserves. borrowing: securities sale: federal reserve: reduce loans:
cost incurred is the IR paid on the borrowed funds. no problem, as long as interbank market is liquid and other banks are willing to lend. alternative source of immediate liquidity: sell securities. the cost of selling securities is the brokerage and other transaction costs. need market liquidity- in crisis it may be difficult or costly to sell. borrowing from the fed also incurs interest payments based on the discount rate (more expensive than interbank market). stigma: bad signal to the market. reduction of loans is the most costly way of acquiring reserves. calling in loans antagonizes customers. other banks may only agree to purchase loans at a substantial discount.
interest rate
cost of borrowing or the price paid for the rental of funds
menu costs
cost to a firm resulting from changing its prices. Cost to a firm resulting from changing its prices > Firms have to change their prices more often > Misallocation of resources because it becomes difficult to assess relative prices (Firms change prices at different frequencies and price rise can be due to change in relative price or simply due to inflation)
banking industry trends before the crisis
credit boom. low interest rate environment. transformation of the banking system (traditional banking model became less profitable, from "originate and hold" to originate and distribute". rise in securitization: after origination loans of similar characteristics are pools. pool of loans are sold to an off balance sheet subsidiary (SPV or SIV). these create securities which are backed by the cash flows of the loan portfolio. securities sold to investors. shortening of the funding maturity structure (increasing maturity mismatch between assets and liabilities. (SIVs finance long term assets like mortgages with short term paper (ABCP). investment banks increasingly fund their balance sheets with short term repurchase agreements (repos), requiring them to roll over a large part of their funding on a daily basis.
risk rating agency definition and their criticism
credit rating agency is a company that assigns credit ratings for issuers of certain types of debt obligations as well as the debt instruments themselves (standard and poors, moodys, fitch) Credit rating agencies do not downgrade companies promptly enough > CRSs have too close relationships with company management and ownership > The lowering of a credit score by a CRA can create a vicious cycle and self-fulfilling prophecy > Oligopolies > Made huge errors of judgment in rating structured products; severe consequences for funding, e.g. under Basel II an AAA rated securitization requires capital allocation of only 0.6%, a BBB requires 4.8%, a BB requires 34%, whilst a BB(-) securitization requires a 52% allocation
who provides info on default risk?
credit-rating agencies (moodys, standard and poors, fitch)
comparison with previous crises
crisis similar to previous crisis also during the panic phase. panic phase with strong deleveraging dynamic with amplification and spillover effects. panics in the banking system including runs on financial institutions. crisis followed an ordinary pattern. but there are also some unique features... global scale, runs on shadow banking system rather than classic bank runs, role of rating agencies in conjunction with new types of securities (MBs, CDOS), coordinated central bank reactions including unconventional tools
current yield formula for bonds. when is the current yield a good approximation of the YTM?
current yield = coupon payment / current price. current yield will be good approximation to YTM whenever the bond price is very close to par or when maturity of the bond is long (more than 10 yrs). this is bc cash flows farther in the future have such small present discounted values that the value of a long term coupon bond is close to a perpetuity with a same coupon rate.
what do you think are the main operational risks bank face today?
cyber risk and data security (threat from cyber attacks, data theft, losses, negative impact on reputation, actions from regulators). regulation (various new regulations following the financial crisis - fines due to non-compliance, restructuring of operations) outsourcing (FIs outsource activities - banks must ensure adequate controls and oversight (client data confidentiality or risk fines) other operational risks: geopolitical risk, conduct risk, organizational change, IT failure, anti money laundering, fraud, physical attack
maturity date. loan term
date the loan must be repaid. time elapsed from initiation to maturity date.
debt and equity markets
debt market: generally larger in total dollars due to greater number of participants. equity market: smaller bc only applicable participants are businesses
equity/debt markets are in general larger in total dollar than equity/debt markets, due to what?
debt markets > equity markets. due to greater number of participant classes (households, businesses, govt, foreigners) and size of individual participants ( businesses and govt)
example of types of security: nature of securities traded: form of organization: maturity of instruments: place where instruments issued:
debt markets, equity markets' primary/secondary markets exchanges/ OTC (secondary money market, capital markets domestic / international markets
basic financial instruments:
debt securities
bond
debt security that promises to make payments periodically for a specified period of time
financial innovation and decline of traditional banking- cost advantages of acquiring funds? income advantages on uses of funds? banks responses:
decline due to globalization, competition, and financial innovation. Decline in cost advantages in acquiring funds (liabilities) Rising inflation (in 70s) led to rise in interest rates and disintermediation Low-cost source of funds, checkable deposits, declined in importance Decline in income advantages on uses of funds (assets) Information technology has decreased need for banks to finance short-term credit needs or to issue loans Information technology has lowered transaction costs for other financial institutions, increasing competition Rise of alternatives to loans (junk bonds, commercial paper) Lower net interest margin Banks' Responses Expand into new and riskier areas of lending > Commercial real estate loans > Corporate takeovers and leveraged buyouts Pursue off-balance-sheet activities > Non-interest income > Concerns about risk Profitability sustained (until 2008)
credit risk. how to manage it? example?
default credit risk. manage exposure in 3 ways: 1)reduce (regulation) 2)manage(diversify portfolio) 3)hedge(buy credit insurance) also manage through long term customer relationships, loan commitments, collateral, credit rationing. model: altman discriminant model. uses z scores. only discriminates good and bad borrowers. no in between, and difficult to back test the model.
bonds with the same maturity have different interest rates due to what 3 things:
default risk, liquidity, tax considerations
default risk and credit analysis
default risk: risk that a borrower is unable or unwilling to fulfill the terms promised under the loan contract (late payments and non payments of promised cash flows) objective of credit analysis is to estimate the probability that the borrower will not repay (at origination, during life time of a loan)
increasing the reserve requirement causes supply/demand curve to shift left/right. causing what to happen to federal funds rate?
demand shifts right. fed funds rate rises.
government safety net. bank panics and need for what?
deposit insurance avoid bank failures and contagion effects. overcome reluctance to put funds in the banking system. other form of govt safety net: lending from central bank to troubled institutions (lender of last resort). bailouts (troubled institutions receive capital injections). moral hazard: depositors do not impose discipline of marketplace. financial instutitons have an incentive to take on greater risk. adverse selection: depositors have little reason to monitor financial institutions. risk lovers find financial industry attractive. manager: heads I win, tails the taxpayer loses.
banks are largely funded by what?
deposits
banks are largely funded by what? commercial banks vs community banks/savings banks / credit unions
deposits. commercial: broad variety of financial services and client base, typically shareholder owned. community banks: narrow range of financial services and specific client base, often mutual or state ownership.
altman discriminant model
developed for publicly traded manufacturing firms in the US. output of a credit-strenth test that gauges a publicly traded manufacturing companies likelihood of bankruptcy. altman z score is based on five financial ratios calculated from data found on companies annual 10K report. high default risk: Z<1.81 (don't lend to these firms) above 2.99: low default risk
what is bank capital?
difference between banks assets and liabilities. represents net worth of bank (its value to investors). it is the margin to which creditors are covered if bank liquidates its assets assets include cash, govt securities, and interest earning loans (mortgages and interbank loans) liabilities include loan-loss reserves and debt.
haircut
difference between market value of an asset used as a loan collateral and the amount of the loan. amount of haircut reflects lender's perceived risk of loss from the asset falling in value or being sold in a fire sale.
why reduct credit exposure? why remove credit risk from balance sheet? why hedge?
diversification, but fear of adverse selection and moral hazard. basis risk if hedging instrument only partially correlated with underlying loans. sale might be difficult due to relationship with borrower, implicit commitments not to sell.
uncovered interest parity condition=
domestic interest rate = =foreign interest rate minus expected appreciation of the domestic currency. limits to interest parity: exchange rate volatility, risk aversion. liquidity, transaction costs.
risk premiums on corporate bonds are usually anti cyclical; that is, they decease during business cycle expansions and increase during recessions. why?
during business booms, fewer corps go bankrupt and there is less default risk on corp bonds, which lowers their risk premium. conversely, during recessions default risk on corp bonds increases and their risk premium increases. the risk premium on corporate bonds is thus anti cyclical, rising during recessions and falling during booms
unconventional monetary policy aims to do what?
ease monetary conditions in times when markets are frozen and/or IRs have hit the zero bound. through use of liquidity in financial intermediaries, asset purchases, negative IRs on reserves
funding liquidity
ease with which expert investors and arbitrageurs (dealers, hedge funds, investment banks) can obtain funding from financiers
residual claim on the assets of a firm. example:
equity ex: common stock
financial intermediaries
established to source both loanable funds and loan opportunities. an institution, such as a bank, building society, or unit-trust company, that holds funds from lenders in order to make loans to borrowers.
what helps mitigate liquidity risk?
excess reserves
physical floor or electronic limit order book where agents meet
exchanges (NYSE, AMEX, CBOT, NYMEX, Euronext
theories that explain facts about the yield curve
expectations theory, segmented markets, liquidity premium
theory of rational expectations
expectations will be identical to optimal forecasts using all available info. Xe=Xof (expectation=optimal forecast). even though a rational expectation equals the optimal forecast using all available info, a prediction based on it may not always be perfectly accurate. people do not make the same mistake systematically. economic agents that don't act rationally will be pushed out of the market bc its costly.
three theories explain the three facts of term structure of interest rates: expectations theory, segmented markets theory, liquidity premium theory
expectations: explains first two facts but not third segmented: explains third but not first two liquidity premium: combines two theories to explain all three facts.
shifts in supply of bonds: expected profitability of investment opportunities. expected inflation. government budget.
expected profitability: in expansion, supply shift right. expected inflation: increased expected inflation shifts supply curve right. govt budget: increased budget deficits shift supply right.
liquidity premium theory
explanation for a difference between two types of financial securities that have the same qualities except liquidity.
relationship between ROA and ROE
expressed by the equity multiplier: amount of assets per dollar of equity capital. EM= assets / equity capital EM=leverage!
a rise in interest rates is associated with an increase/decrease in bond prices, resulting in a capital gain/loss if time to maturity is longer than the holding period
fall, capital loss
business cycle and interest rates. do IR rise or fall during recession?
fall.
with excess supply of reserves, the federal funds rate falls/rises with excess demand for reserves, the federal funds rate falls/rises
falls. rises.
t or d: maturity of a bond gives all needed info about price volatility.
false, coupon payments through time, and other cash flows before maturity, like amortization. exception: zero-coupon bonds
t or f: recommendations from investment advisors can help us outperform the market.
false. these are called "hot tips". they are probably info already contained in the price of the stock. stock prices respond to announcements only when the info is new and unexpected. a "buy and hold" strategy is the most sensible strategy for the small investor.
t or f: anyone can access securities markets to finance their activities.
false: only large, well established corporations
primary dealer credit facility
fed creates PDCF. investment banks can turn to FED for overnight funding. easing of liquidity problems at remaining investment banks.
define security and example
financial instrument. claim on issuers future income or assets. example: debt security (bond)
why do not all transactions directly in financial markets?
financial intermediaries better equipped to deal with asymmetric info problems (screening/monitoring), lower transaction costs (economies of scale), customization of specific needs, not available in markets, reduce the exposure of investors to risk (risk sharing / asset transformation , diversification)
institutions that borrow funds from people who have saved and in turn make loans to other people. example
financial intermediaries. example: banks. accept deposits and make loans.
what is a macro prudential policy?
financial stability of the system as a whole.
debt instruments have a finite/infinite life or maturity date
finite (short term is less than one year, long term is greater than or equal to one year)
Basel 1
focus: banking book (loans). cooke ratio: regulatory capital=8% x risk weighted assets (sum of assets). regulatory capital: core capital (common stock, RE), supplementary capital (long term debt, bonds)
eurocurrencies
foreign currencies deposited in banks outside the home country. eurodollars: USD deposited in banks outside the US
three types of mortgage backed securities (MBS)
from greatest to least risk and return: senior secured, mezzanine, unsecured (prime)
what makes up the value of a stock?
future cash flows (dividend payments and sales prices)
recession
global economic decline following financial crisis "great recession" unemployment rate in US reached 10% in october 2009.
goal of federal reserve
goal of max employment, stable prices, and moderate long term IRs
goal of SNB
goal of swiss national bank is to ensure price stability.
asset management: three goals and four tools
goals: seek highest possible returns on loans and securities. reduce risk. have adequate liquidity. tools: find borrowers who will pay high IRs and have low possibility of defaulting. purchase securities with high returns and low risk. lower risk by diversifying. balance need for liquidity against increased returns from less liquid assets.
on aggregate, the leverage built up within the shadow banking system increases/decreaes in good time and increases/deceraess in bad times
good times it increases. bad times it sharply decrease. Its (hidden) procyclicality amplifies the procyclicality of the traditional banking system
higher duration means greater/less bond price sensitivity to interest rate changes
greater
capital structure of banks
highly leveraged and have demand deposits as liabilities. public confidence matters. they have diffuse debt holders. they are large creditors. bank assets are opaque (bank risk taking can be unnoticed and fast changing). they are systematically important and benefit from the safety net (deposit insurance, LoLR, TBTF)
SBS instruments are typically what? asset securitization:
highly liquid and short term, just like bank deposits. this can create modern bank runs. enables maturity and liquidity transformations pool loans with similar characteristics together, and sell to off-balance sheet subsidiary like SPV or SIV. These subsidiaries create securities which are backed by cash flows of the loan portfolio. securities are sold to investors. SPV:special purpose vehicle: when assets mature, the subsidiary ends. limited maturity. SIV: structured investment vehicle: when assets mature, they are replaced with new assets. unlimited maturity.
domestic currency is currency used in ______ country of investor. domestic currency is / is not necessarily equal to base currency in quotation standards.
home country of investor. not necessarily.
what does interest rate duration tell us
how the price of a bond or fixed-income instrument changes as interest rates change %change in Price = -DUR x (change in I / 1+i)
Shortfalls of bank capital led to slower credit growth:
huge losses for banks from their holdings of securities backed by residential mortgages. losses reduced bank capital Banks could not raise much capital on a weak economy, and had to tighten their lending standards and reduce lending. Recent regulation requieres banks to hold more capital (e.g., countercyclical capital buffers)
how does a rise in IR affect bank, according to repricing gap?
if a bank has more rate-sensitive liabilities than assets, the company will reduce bank profit.
the law of one price:
if identical goods are produced/sold in two countries the price of these goods should be the same in both countries. no arbitrage condition, otherwise goods would only be produced/sold in 1 country. this holds if transportation costs and trade barriers are low.
liquidity risk management
importnat to understand risk of different funding sources. liquidity risk across different funding sources is related. hold prudential level of liquid assets. resilient funding structure accounting for accessibility.
worsened conditions
in 2008 credit conditions further worsened dramatically.banks continue to incur heavy losses on loan portfolios. washington mutual seized by authorities and sold to JPM. wachovia sold to wells fargo. bailouts in europe. coordinated central bank actions. additional govt actions.
brokers vs dealers
in a secondary market. brokers match buyers and sellers. dealers link buyers and sellers by buying and selling securities at stated prices.
how do interest rates affect exchange rates?
increase in domestic interest rate leads to an appreciation of the domestic currency. but increase in nominal interest rate may not be ceteris parabus. if nominal rate increase is due to expected inflation, it will lead to expected future depreciation (PPP)
determinants of asset demand
increase in wealth, increase in expected return relative to other assets, decrease in risk relative to other assets, incraese in liquidity relative to other assets
factors that shift demand curve for bonds
increase in wealth, shift right increase in expected IR, shift left . due to lower expected return for long-term bonds. increase in expected inflation, shift left increase in riskiness of bonds relative to other asset, shift left increase in liquidity of bonds, shift right
the net value of cash flows to the swap buyer increases/decreases when credit risk increases
increases hedge against losses due to on balance sheet credit losses
LIBOR-OIS
indicator for stress in interbank market
Over the past few decades, policy makers throughout the world have become increasingly aware of the social and economic costs of _____________ and more concerned with maintaining a ______________________ as a goal of economic policy.
inflation. stable price level
credit analysis: residential mortgages
info: capacity (debt service ratio), conditions (job security, local real estate market), character (repayment behavior), capital (downpayment), collateral (house value). aggregation: credit scoring (discriminant model) implications of the credit analysis (credit limit, acceptance/rejection, limited impact on pricing)
continuous compounding
interest is continuously compounding
compounding interest for multiple periods
interest is reinvested to earn interest on interest at given interval
the risk incurred by FI when the maturities (duration) of their assets and liabilities are mismatched. three types:
interest rate risk. 1)refinancing risk (refinance at higher IRs)-risk to net interest income. 2_reinvestment risk ( reinvest funds at lower IRs) 3)market value risk (PV of assets and liabilities)
yield to maturity
interest rate that equates the PV of cash flow payments received from a debt instrument with its value today. this is the best value of the interest rate.
central banks target what in the interbank market?
interest rates
interest rates and expected inflation correlation
interest rates and expected inflation tend to comove
in the short run, exchange rates are largely influenced by what? in the long run, exchange rate developments are influenced by what?
international investment flows- interest parity condition suggests that exchange rates adapt to changes in domestic/foreign IRs an expected future exchange rates. international trade- purch power theory suggests that exchange rates adapt to domestic/foreign price levels, chagnes in preferences for traded goods and productivity changes.
big mac index
invented by the Economist.. are currencies at their correct level according to PPP? compares prices of big macs worldwide. most big macs are over or undervalued.
price and YTM are related how? YTM is greater than the coupon rate when bond price is above or below par value?
inverse below
prominent conflict of interest problems in financial markets (4). what are their services? simultaneously serve to which client groups?
investment banking. (investment research and underwriting). security issuing firms and security buying investors. accounting firms. (audit, consulting). acctg firms may skew judgment during audit to win consulting business. credit rating agencies. issuers pay rating agencies to have securities rates (investors fear that ratings are biased (better ratings) to gain more business. many securities that lost value during financial crisis were designed to just barely receive top rating. mortgage origination. mortgage originator frequently sells mortgages. less incentive to adequately check credit quality.
Assist individuals, corporations and governments in raising capital- how
investment banks- by underwriting and/or acting as the client's agent in the issuance of securities. Assist companies involved in mergers and acquisitions (M&A). Market making, trading of derivatives, fixed income instruments, foreign exchange, commodities, and equity securities on behalf of its customers or on its own (i.e. proprietary trading).
are international investment or trade flows faster? exchange rates are determined by what?
investment flows flows in international trade and investment
banking industry trends before the crisis cont.
investors (via MMFs for example): demand safe alternatives to insured deposits, want to be able to withdraw funds at short notice. supply of ABS and demand for alternative to insured deposits led to strong growth of shadow banking system. developments led to complexity, cheap credit, and fall in lending standards.
preferred habitat theory
investors have a preference for bonds of one maturity over another. they will be willing to buy bonds of different maturities only if they earn a somewhat higher expected return. investors are likely to prefer short-term bonds over long-term bonds.
why was there a decline of traditional banking?
it costs more to attain funds (liabilities) due to rising inflation and IRs. you don't profit as much from using funds (assets) due to IT lowering trisection costs for other institutions (increased competition) Due to this, banks expand into new and riskier areas of lending, pursuing off balance sheet activities (SBS). SBS enables maturity and liquidity transformation
costs of high inflation
it creates uncertainty and leads to lower economic growth. high inflation compromises the three functions of money (medium of exchange, storage, unit of account). menu costs: cost to a firm resulting from changing its prices. firms have to change their prices more often. misallocation of resources bc it becomes difficult to assess relative prices. shoe leather costs (households and firms hold less money and need to go to the bank more often)/ increases distortionary effects of taxes (ex: tax on nominal capital gains; gain may be much smaller in real terms)
market fundamentals. weak or strong EMH?
items that have a direct impact on future income streams of the securities. some financial economists believe all prices are always correct and reflect market fundamental, and so financial markets are efficient (strong EMH)
the subprime mortgage crisis
january-july 2007- increase in subprime mortgage defaults. compared with other loan types, subprime adjustable-rate loans were substantially higher. massive downgrades of mortgage-backed securities by rating agencies. uncertainty about rating reliability and valuation of structured products (ABCP market dries up, SIVs unable to roll over ABCP funding). banks have to provide liquidity to SIVs. spillover into interbank markets- indication for elevated counterpart risk and illiquidity in the money market. central banks step in: provide liquidity and lower IRs.
herding
large numbers of people acting in same way at same time. behavioral finance.
what are equity markets smaller than debt markets?
largely due to fact that the only applicable participants are businesses. true even in markets such as US, which have the worlds largest stock market
secondary credit facility?
lender of last resort-lending to bansk with severe liquidity problems. different from primary credit facility (lending facility for healthy banks)
simple loan. example
lender provides funds to borrower that must be repaid at maturity alone with additional payment for the interest. interest rate = yield to maturity. example: commercial loans to businesses
discount bond and example
lender provides funds to borrower that must be repaid at maturity along with additional payments for the interest. ex: UK treasury bills
fixed payment loan. example
lender provides funds to borrower that must be repaid by making the same payment every period, consisting of part of the principle and interest. example: consumer loans, mortgages
shadow banking
lending and other financial activities conducted by unregulated institutions or under unregulated conditions
discount lending. primary credit facility
lending facility for healthy banks. rate set for primary credit facility influences interbank rate. collateralized with securities. should be distinguished from secondary credit facility / lender of last resort : lending to banks with severe liquidity problems. a penalty rate follows.
how does securitization imply a decomposition of lending?. rationale for securitization: limits of securitization:
lending process goes to origination, servicing, funding, and risk processing. risk management (credit risk, IR risk and liquidity risk), focus on brokerage activities (origination, credit assessment, servicing, lower capital requirements). private info: originator knows more about the underlying assets than investors. moral hazard: originator may put less effort into credit assessment and monitoring. solutions: standardization, originator holds junior tranche of ABS, performance contingent servicing contracts)
liquidity provision in the US: provide liquidity to banks and nonbank intermediaries. term auction credit facility (TAF): primary dealer credit facility: asset backed commercial paper money market mutual fund liquidity facility (AMLF):
lending to banks through competitive auctions. repo loans to primary dealers, through direct lending to investment banks. lend to investment banks so that they can buy ABCP from mutual funds.
insured banks have... less/more capital less/more reserves rely less/more on deposits
less capital. less reserves. rely more on deposits
liabilities. assets. which uses of funds and which is sources of funds? what is capital?
liabilities are sources, assets are uses of funds. capital is owners equity.
regulation to precent excessive risk taking
limit moral hazard incentives prevent banks from taking excessive risks (restrictions on asset holdings, capital requirements, licensing and examination, assessment of risk management, disclosure requirements, consumer protection). restrictions on asset holdings: promote diversification, prohibit holdings of certain risky securities (imposing max loan to value ratios for mortgages)
this identifies the amount of unencumbered, high quality liquid assets an institution holds that can be used to offset the net cash outflows it would encounter under an acute short-term stress scenario specified by supervisors.
liquidity coverage ratio LCR stock of high quality liquid assets/ net cash outflows over a 30 day time period >= 100%
relationship between liquidity premium (preferred habitat) and expectations theory on graph
liquidity premium IR will slowly increase as YTM increases. expectations theory yield curve is flat horizontal as YTM increases
unconventional monetary policy tools
liquidity provision to banks or other financial institutions. asset purchase programs. negative IRs on excess reserves. forward guidance.
main risks involved in banking
liquidity risk credit risk interest rate risk
what are the major risks involved with banking?
liquidity risk, interest rate risk, credit risk, capital adequacy management
relative ease with which an asset can be converted into cash
liquidity.
GSIB
list of systematically important banks
primary source of profits for banks?
loans
libor-ois and alternative method
london interbank offer rate. rate at which banks indicate they are willing to lend to other banks for a specified term of the loan. the term overnight indexed swap (OIS) rate is rate on a derivative contract on the overnight rate. LIBOR-OIS spread > Commonly used indicator for stress in the interbank market > Spread between interest rates for transactions with different risks > LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate): Estimation of average interest rate that large banks need to pay to borrow from other banks in unsecured interbank market Rate for unsecured loans that involve counterparty risk > OIS (overnight index swap): Swap rate only interest payments are exchanged at end of contract less credit risk than LIBOR > Higher LIBOR-OIS spread means higher counterparty risk and illiquidity in the unsecured money market Alternative measure: TED spread > Difference between the three-month USD LIBOR and the three-month T-bill interest rate
managing credit risk
long term customer relationships, loan commitments, collateral and compensating balances, credit rationing
the lack of short selling (causing over-priced stocks) may be explained by what? the large trading volume may be explained by what? stock market bubbles may be explained by what?
loss aversion. investor overconfidence. overconfidence, herding, and social contagion.
what kind of inflation is the primary goal of monetary policy for all central banks?
low and stable inflation
the more distant a bond's maturity, the higher/lower the rate of return that occurs as result of increase in IR
lower
the more distant a bond's maturity, the lower/higher the rate of return that occurs as a result of an increase in the interest rate
lower
at lower prices, interest rates are lower/higher, and the quantity demanded of bonds is lower/higher. what type of relationship is this? same question with supply instead of demand:
lower P = higher IR = Qd of bonds is higher. inverse relationship. demand is downward sloping. lower P = higher IR = Qs of bonds is lower. positive relationship. supply curve is upward sloping.
what happens to price of bonds when interest rates increase and demand for companies products decrease?
lower demand: lower profits and lower dividends. so g decreases leading to decrease in P0. higher IRs: bonds more attractive. less demand for stocks. higher required return. so R increases leading to decrease in P0
why not do all transactions directly in financial markets?
lower transaction costs (time and money spent in carrying out financial transactions). economies of scale. liquidity services (banks provide depositors with checking accounts that enable them to pay their bills easily). depositors can earn interest on checking/saving accounts and yet still convert them into goods/services whenever necessary. customization of specific needs not available in markets. reduce exposure of investors to risk. risk sharing- FIs create/sell assets with small risk (deposits to consumers) to buy/issue assets with greater risk (loans). this process is referred to as asset transformation. diversification financial intermediaries better equipped to deal with asymmetric info problems (adverse selection and moral hazard). asymmetric info and agency theory (one party has more info than another)
at lower prices, quantity supplied of bonds is higher or lower
lower- a positive relationship. supply curve is upward sloping.
increase in expected rate of inflation- how does this shift demand for bonds
lowers expected real return for bonds, causing shift left
assets and liabilties
make up equity. assets: deposits, cash liabilities: reserves
limits to the purchasing power theory:
many goods aren't tradable (services, not movable products, high transportation costs). tradable goods may be subject to tariffs and quotas. not all goods in the consumer basket are identical.
demand for securitization from institutions
many institutions demand or are required to hold a certain fraction of AAA rated securities (insurance companies, pension funds, mutual funds). typically no repo haircut on AAA rated assets.
money markets: maturity of securities traded. made of what? examples. how popular?
maturity of securities traded is less than one year. short-term debt. ex: bills, notes, commercial paper. more widely traded -> more liquid. participants use market to earn interest on surplus funds that are available temporarily.
capital markets. maturity of securities? examples
maturity of securities traded is one year of greater. ex: long term bonds, equity
barras, scaillet, and wermers 2010 - empirical evidence
measure performance of mutual funds controlling for the role of luck. find that only .6% are skilled
repricing model
measures the risk to the net interest income of a financial institutions. changes in interest rate levels and spreads. earnings effects arising from IR changes are the key source of risk to future earnings for most depository institutions.
duration model
measures the risk to the net worth of a financial institution arising from changes to the level and term structure of interest rates. IR changes affect the PV of all future cash flows from assets and liabilities. the current economic value of an institution is given by the difference between the PV of assets and liabilities.
short term deposit like funding in the SBS can create what?
modern bank runs- a withdrawal of run-able deposit like instruments such as short-dates ABCP, short term repos and money fund investments could undermine the wider financial system
three main strategies for central banks to achieve goal of long term price stability
monetary targeting, inflation targeting, implicit nominal anchor
a financial intermediary that manages funds on behalf of investors who wish to invest in low risk securities while being able to withdraw funds at short notice.
money market funds main task is to maintain the value of the principal of its assets. alternative to savings accounts. typically investment in short term securities like treasuries, commercial papers, and CDs. normally, they earn a slightly higher return than bank deposits. provide financing to shadow banks via repos or ABCP.
money markets and capital markets
money market: maturity of security traded is less than one year. short term debt. ex: bills, notes, commercial paper. more widely traded, meaning also more liquid. capital market: maturity of securities traded is one year or greater. example: long term bonds, equity
migration analysis
monitor changes in external or internal credit ratings of pools of loans (rating class, industry/geographical area) cut lending to segments which are experiencing stronger than average rating declines
moral hazard
monitoring after transaction. ensure borrower will not engage in activities that will prevent them to repay loan
principal-agent problem.
moral hazard in equity contracts. separation of ownership and control of the firm principal: stockholder is owner but has less info. agent: manager makes decisions and has more info. managers may pursue personal benefits and power rather than the profitability of the firm.
what is an exchange rate? when a countries currency appreciates, the countries goods become less/more expensive to foreigners and foreign good in that country become less/more expensive to domestic economic agents.
more expensive to foreigners. foreign goods are less expensive. this can have a large impact on economy.
how independent is the ECB?
most independent in the world. members of exec board have long terms-8 years. determines own budget. less goal independent. charter can't be changed by legislation. prohibited from granting loans to national public sector entities. international trend toward greater independence but skeptics remain.
why would a government choose to issue a perpetuity, which requires payments forever, instead of a terminal loan, such as a fixed-payment loan, discount bond, or coupon bond? example: assuming a 5% IR over 10 years, on a $1000 loan..
near-term costs to maintaining a given size loan are much smaller for a perpetuity than for a similar fixed payment loan, discount, or coupon bond. ex: a perpetuity costs 50 per year (over 500 in payments over 10 years). for a fixed payment loan, this would be 129.5 per year (or 1295 in payments over same 10 year period). for a discount loan, this loan would require a lump sum payment of 1628.89 in 10 years. for a coupon bond, assuming same 50 coupon payment as perpetuity implies a 1000 face value. thus, for the coupon bond, the total payments at the end of 10 years will be 1500.
measures amount of longer-term, stable sources of funding employed by an institution relative to the liquidity profiles of the assets funded and potential for contingent calls on funding liquidity arising from off-balance sheet commitments and obligations.
net stable funding ratio available amount of stable funding / required amt stable funding > 100%
OTC
network of dealers ready to buy and sell securities. very competitive. ex: foreign exchange market.
compounding simple interest
no interest on interest
why liquidity matters in normal times: however, abnormal deposit drains may occur due to:
no major unexpected deposit outflows. no major unexpected exercise of loan commitments. wholesale markets available to borrow funds. solvency concerns. failure of related institutions (contagion). sudden changes in investor preferences regarding holding of nonbank financial assets.
do investment banks take deposits?
no- From 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act) until 1999 (Gramm-Leach- Bliley Act), the United States maintained a separation between investment banking and commercial banks. • Other industrialized countries, including G8 countries, have historically not maintained such a separation
are stocks the most important sources of external financing for businesses? is issuing marketable debt and equity securities the primary way in which businesses finance their operations?
no- financial intermediaries, particularly banks, are most important external funding source used to finance businesses. and no
should central banks be independent?
no: principal agent problem is bad with politicians. undemocratic. pro independence: political pressure would impart an inflationary bias to monetary policy. political business cycle. could be used to facilitate financing of large govt budget deficits. too important to leave to politicians- the principal agent problem is worse for politicians. independent central bank can pursue policies that are politically unpopular yet in the public interest. against independence: undemocratic, unaccountable, difficult to coordinate fiscal and monetary policy, has not used its independence successful
nominal vs real interest rates (two types of real interest rates. which is better indicator of the incentives to borrow and lend?
nominal: makes no allowance for inflation real: adjusted for changes in price level so it more accurately reflects the cost of borrowing ex ante real: adjusted for expected changes in the price level ex post real: adjusted for actual changes in price level. real IR better indicator.
regulation in banking
nonfinancial industries face many types of regulation (antitrust, workplace security, trade restrictions, consumer protection). banking industry faces much more: lender of last resort (LLS), capital adequacy, liquidity requirements, branching restrictions, activity restrictions
example of deposit withdrawals
northern rock in 2007.
chart analysis
not based on theory. chartists look for patterns in stock prices to estimate whether stock prices are over or undervalued.
objective of credit analysis vs portfolio risk management
objective of credit analysis is to evaluate the default risk on an individual loan (decision on whether to lend or not, credit limit, pricing terms of the loan) objective of credit portfolio management is to manage the aggregate exposure of the banks net worth to default risk (concentration/diversification of the loan portfolio, goes beyond credit analysis to asses the interrelations between default risk across loans)
central banks can influence the interbank rate in the market for reserves with 4 tools:
open market operations, interest rates charged on discount loans, interest rate paid/charged on excess reserves, required reserves
defined by risk of losses as a consequence from failure of internal processes, people, systems or from external events > Includes all legal risks as well as fines from supervision authorities or settlements > Excludes strategic or reputational risks
operational risk (theft, fraud, unauthorized trading, client data confidentiality, regulatory reporting)
when a countrys currency appreciates, it makes its goods abroad more or less expensive and foreign goods in its own currency more or less cheap?
our goods abroad are expensive and foreign goods are cheaper
total return swap. pur credit swap
outgoing payments by the swap buyer fall when credit risk increases. aka credit default swap: incoming payments to swap buyer rise when credit event happens.
dynamic market operations
outright sale/purchase of short term securities like T-bills. OTC with primary dealers. auction system (price=short term yield is endogenous)
network of dealers ready to buy and sell securities. example
over the counter OTC. used to be significantly less transparent than exchanges. nowadays, very competitive, linked by computers and prices of difft dealers are readily available. ex: foreign exchange market, where funds are converted from one currency to another
weaknesses of the repricing model
overaggregation. cash flows from off balance sheet positions. run offs of deposits or loans with prepayment options. ignores market value effects.
rate of return
payments to the owner plus the change in value expressed as a fraction of the purchase price.
coupon bond and example
pays the owner a fixed-interest payment (coupon) every year until maturity, when the final amount (par/face value) is repaid/ example: corporate bonds
loss aversion
peoples tendency to prefer avoiding losses to acquiring equivalent gains. behavioral finance.
interest rate
percentage of principal that must be paid as interest to the lender on an annual basis.
functions of financial markets?
perform essential function of channeling funds from economic players that have saved surplus funds to those that have a shortage of funds. promotes economic efficiency by producing an efficient allocation of capital, which increases production, directly improve well-being of consumers b allowing them to time purchases better. well functioning financial markets are key factors in producing high economic growth.
yield curve. upward sloping, flat, inverted
plot of the yield on bonds with differing terms to maturity but the same risk, liquidity and tax considerations. upward sloping: long term rates are above short term rates. flat: short and long term rates are same. inverted: long term rates are below short term rates.
change in the supply of foreign vs domestic assets to the public. this may affect relative IRs.
portfolio balance effect
risk premium is always positive or negative?
positive- the probability of future negative events is larger than probability of positive events -> a positive risk premium must be paid
what is the current value of a share of stock?
price in the secondary market
goals of monetary policy
price stability. full employment, economic growth, stability of financial markets, IR stability, exchange rate stability
central banks have moved towards ______ as their main goal. however, central banks differ in their definition of __________________. this provides guidance on how a central bank should change the nominal interest rate in response to changes in inflation and real economic conditions.
price stability. relevant policy instruments, intermediate targets, monetary policy goals. the taylor rule.
what happens to prices of bonds when the interest rate changes
prices change. prices and returns for long term bonds change more than those for shorter term bonds. there is no interest-rate risk for any bond whose time to maturity matches the holding period
new security issues sold to initial buyers
primary market. increases the funds of the firm issuing them. not very well known to public as it is done through investment banks. investment banks underwrite securities: the IB guarantees a price for a corporations securities and then sells them to the public
goals of monetary policy: ECB
primary objective of European System of Central Banks is to maintain price stability. monetary policy: process by which the monetary authority of a country, like the central bank or currency board, controls the supply of money, often targeting an inflation rate or interest rate to ensure price stability and general trust in the currency
primary vs secondary market
primary: new security issues sold to initial borrowers. done through investment banks- they underwrite securities. IB guarantees a price for a corporations securities and then sells them to the public secondary: securities previously issued are bought and sold. NYSE. importance: provides liquidity and sets prices. brokers match buyers and sellers. dealers link buyers and sellers by buying and selling securities at stated prices.
how to help solve adverse selection problems
private production and sale of info. example: rating agencies (S&P, moodys, fitch): collect info and sell to clients. less likely that seller knows more than buyer of a security. free-rider problem: investor A buys info from rating agency and then buys stock Z. Investor B knows that A bought info and observes that A buys Z. B uses this to deduce that info about Z was positive and also buys Z. govt regulation to increase info. disclosure requirements: companies need to disclose relevant info immediately. (ex: Volkswagen denies investor claims of slow emissions disclosure) intermediaries (used car dealers- reputation and guarantees) financial intermediation reduces asymmetric info collateral- lender receives collateral that covers losses in case the borrower defaults. mitigates effect of asymmetric info. its a prevalent feature of debt contracts for both households and businesses. equity capital (net worth) can perform similar role. debt holders have seniority in case of default. firms with a lot of equity have more resources and thus receive loans more easily. generally, more info is available on large firms.
pro and con of having high excess reserves:
pro: deposit outflows can be easily satisfied. con: expensive (opportunity cost)
pro EMH and contra EMH
pro: only very few investors consistently outperform the market. same is true for investment funds. chartists do not beat the market on average. contra: speculative bubbles? NASDAQ stocks in the 1990s, subprime bubble 2007. however, bubbles can be rational -> can be profitable to buy if you believe you can sell at an even higher price later. excess volatility: stocks are more volatile than realized dividends.
default risk
probability that the issuer of the bond is unable or unwilling to make interest payments or pay off the value. US treasury bonds are considered default free (govt can raise taxes)
asset transformation
process of risk sharing, where FIs create/sell assets with small risk (deposits to consumers) to buy/issue assets with greater risk (loans). in a sense, risky assets are turned into safer assets for investors.
ROE=
profits/earnings = ROA*EM
define interest rate
proportion of a loan that is charged as interest to the borrower, typically expressed as an annual percentage of the loan outstanding.
interset on excess reserves
provides a floor to the interbank rate- as conventional monetary policy tool it helps the central bank keep IRs within their target range. hardly used as an active policy tool in normal times. but IRs on reserves can be an effective tool of monetary policy when nominal rates hit the zero bound. central bank can implement negative IRs. and IRs on reserves can be an important tool of monetary policy when exiting a financial crisis. increasing IRs on reserves allows CB to raise IRs despite a huge excess reserve volume.
what are the disadvantages of using loans to financial institutions to prevent bank panics?
providing loans to financial institution creates a moral hazard problem. if firms know that they will have access to federal loans, they are more likely to take on risk, knowing that the fed will bail them out if a panic should occur. as a result, banks that deserve to go out of business bc of poor management may survive bc of fed liquidity provision to prevent panics. this might lead to an inefficient banking system with many poorly run banks.
three main reasons for imposition of required reserves?
prudential(wise), monetary control, liquidity management
three main reasons for the imposition of required reserves:
prudential, monetary control, liquidity management
inflation targeting
public announcement of medium term numerical target for inflation. institutional commitment to price stability as the primary, long run goal of monetary policy and a commitment to achieve the inflation goal. info-inclusive approach in which many variables are used in making decisions. increased transparency of the strategy. increased accountability of the central bank. advantages: doesn't rely on one variable to achieve target. easily understood. reduces potential of falling in time-inconsistency trap. stresses transparency and accountability. disadvantages: delayed signaling (monetary aggregates react immediately, whereas inflation reacts with a delay to monetary policy). too much rigidity. potential for increases output fluctuations. low economic growth during disinflation.
Theory discussing long term exchange rates:
purchasing power parity. exchange rates will reflect changes in price levels in two countries
hierarchal mandate
put goal of price stability first. as long as its achieved, other goals can be pursued.
credit easing
quantitative: focus of policy is quantity of reserves. composition of assets on central bank balance sheet is incidental. credit: conceputally different. central banks aim at shifting the composition of the balance sheet from risk free (treasury) to risky assets (MBS). supports markets for risky securities. FED policies consistent with both CE and QE.
efficient market hypothesis
rational expectations in financial markets. eugene fama nobel laureate 2013. current price of a security reflects all available info. there are no arbitrage opportunities. investors who outperform the market, either took a higher risk or were lucky.
the rate at which domestic goods can be exchanged for foreign goods
real exchange rate. price of domestic goods relative to foreign goods denominated in domestic currency. purchasing power theory suggests that the real exchange rate is 1.
regulation of the financial system. how to increase the info available to investors:
reduce adverse selection and moral hazard problems. reduce insider trading.
why are financial intermediaries important?
reduce exposure to risk (risk sharing, asset transformation, diversification). lower transaction costs (economies of scale, developing expertise). reduce asymmetric info (adverse selection and moral hazard)
credit risk management: three tactics
reduce exposure: selection, screening and monitoring, enforcement manage exposure: diversification hedge exposure: credit insurance / guarantees, credit default swaps
deleveraging
reducing the level of one's debt by rapidly selling one's assets.
open market operations
refers to buying and selling govt securities in the open market in order to expand/contract the amount of money in the banning system, facilitated by the fed reserve. selling and buying govt securities sets the money supply. to increase the money supply, it will buy securities.
defensive operations
repurchase agreement REPO with banks with eligible collateral. short term secured loan. auction system (price=money market interest rte is endogenous)
repo
repurchase agreement- repossess an item when a buyer defaults on payments. short term borrowing for dealers in govt securities.for the party selling the security, and agreeing to repurchase it in the future, it is a repo.
banks hold what type of reserves? the central bank supplies reserves through what two things?
required reserves and demand excess reserves. open market operations and lending to banks.
regulation of the financial system. how to ensure the soundness of financial intermediaries:
restrictions on entry (chartering process). disclosure of info. restrictions on assets and activities (control holding of risky assets) deposit insureance (Avoid bank runs)
types of liabilities
retail funding: demand deposits / checking accounts. savings accounts. term deposits. wholesale funding: medium term notes. wholesale certificates of deposits. commercial paper. unsecured interbank funds. secured interbank funds (repos). bonds.
if a bank has more rate-sensitive liabilities than assets, a rise in IRs will reduce/increase bank profits and a decline in IRs will reduce/increase bank profits.
rise-reduce. decline-raise
liquidity risk. liability side and asset side.
risk that a drain of liquidity will impose economic loss on the bank. liability side liquidity risk: withdrawal of customer deposit.s withdrawal of wholesale funds (lenders stop rolling over funding in interbank market). customer deposits play a crucial role. banks need to model the share of core deposits. stable source of funding and depends on contract type and customer structure. asset side: draw down of loan commitments. change in value of (liquid) assets. change in liquidity of status of assets.
repricing gap
risk-sensitive assets - risk-sensitive liabilities
a large part of the crisis was about what in the financial system
runs aka panics. Run before others run - first mover advantage > Incentive to be first to withdraw funds from troubled bank Runs on financial institutions > On commercial banks > Classic bank run by demand depositors > On investment banks > Clients (e.g. hedge funds) pull out funds from their prime brokers > Counterparties not rolling over short-term financing > On hedge funds > Prime broker requires higher margins > Redemptions by investors > On SIVs > Rollover stop by money market investors
first mover advantage
runs before other runs: incentive to be first to withdraw funds from troubled bank
credit score: at what point is it automatically approved and not approved
score>190 is auto approved. score <120 auto not approved.
adverse selection
screening before the transaction: try to avoid selecting the risky borrower by gathering info about them
after origination a bank sells a loan to another bank or investor.
secondary loan market (individual loan, part of a syndicated loan, pool of loans)
over the counter securities are part of what market?
secondary market
securities previously issued are bought and sold. example. importance.
secondary market. ex: NYSE, AMEX, LSE, Borsa Italiana, Tokyo Stock Exchange, Euronext. importance: providing liquidity, setting prices. brokers match buyers and sellers. dealers link buyers and sellers by buying and selling securities at stated prices.
for US commercial banks, what are securities? loans? are these assets, liabilities, or capital? what are some liabilities?
securities:income earning assets. loans: primary source of profits. in europe, more interbank lending. different banks specialize in different types of loans. loans are an asset. liabilities: deposits, borrowings
three goals of asset management: four tools:
seek the highest possible returns on loans and securities. reduce risk. have adequate liquidity. find borrowers who will pay high IRs and have low possibility of defaulting. purchase securities with high returns and low risks. lower risk by diversifying. balance need for liquidity against increased returns from less liquid assets.
asset transformation and example: savings deposits provide the funds to make loans.
sell liability with one set of characteristics (liquidity, risk, size, return). buy assets with different set of characteristics. ex: entails maturity transformation. deposits can be withdrawn at short notice. loans are longer term. possible, bc normally not all depositors withdraw at the same time. banks hold reserves to allow for some deposit outflows.
remedy for these conflicts of interest
separate different functions (drawback: reduce economies of scale and scope) regulation (sarbanes oxley act, global legal settlement, rules of conduct of credit rating agencies.
how the market sets stock prices: who set the price?
set by the buyer willing to pay the highest price. buyer who can take best advantage of the asset. in valuation model: required return will be lower. the lower the discount rate, the higher the stock price an investor is willing to pay. superior info about an asset can increase its value by reducing its perceived risk. info is important for individuals to value each asset. when new info is released about a firm, expectations and prices change. market participants constantly receive info and revise their expectations, so stock prices change frequently.
why did "small" mortgage losses in the US cause a global financial crisis with significant effects on the real economy?
several hundred billion mortgage losses. loss of US stock market wealth was 8 trillion. amplifying mechanisms needed.
"Credit intermediation involving entities and activities outside the regular banking system are regulators concerned about this system?. does it have any risk?
shadow banking- increased importance of entities and activities structured outside the regular banking system that perform bank-like functions yes- size, systematic risk, regulatory arbitrage, interconnection, complexity, opaqueness, pro-cyclicality systematic risk- funds can be raised from suppliers (households, corporates, financial institutions) through short term or callable deposit like liabilities. these funds are then transformed into assets such as mortgages, loans, and other longer term or less liquid assets. typically includes build up of leverage.
major disruptions in financial markets that are characters by ______ in asset prices and the failures of many financial/nonfinancial firms
sharp declines in asset prices. financial crises,
response to an increase in the foreign interest rate shifts suppply/demand left/right.
shifts demand left, leading to a fall in the exchange rate.
response to an increase in the domestic interest rate shifts supply/demand left/right
shifts demand right, leading to a rise in the exchange rate.
response to an increase in the expected future exchange rate shifts demand/supply left/right
shifts demand right, leading to rise in current exchange rate
a purchase of dollars decreases the monetary base and the money supply, raising domestic interest rates and shifting sypply/demand curve left/right
shifts demand right. leading to a rise in the exchange rate.
lowering the discount rate shifts the supply/demand curve right/left. and does this raise or lower the federal funds rate?
shifts supply curve down (horizontal line). this doe snot lower the fed funds rate.
cost of time and effort (more specifically the opportunity cost of time and energy) that people spend trying to counter-act the effects of inflation, such as holding less cash, editing the menu card of an restaurant and having to make additional trips to the bank
shoe leather costs
preferred habitat theory says that investors are likely to prefer long/short term bonds over longer/shorter term bonds
short over long term. Investors have a preference for bonds of one maturity over another. They will be willing to buy bonds of different maturities only if they earn a somewhat higher expected return.
conventional monetary policy aims to influence what, using what?
short term IRs in interbank market, using open market operations, discount lending, required reserves, and IR on reserves
instruments in SBS shadow banking are typically what?
short term and highly liquid, but the risk profile investors is usually different (no deposit insurance, not explicit official sector backstop, not subject to the same prudential standards and supervision).
why should price stability be the primary long-run goal
short term deviations form price stability possible under dual mandate. but expansionary policy may have long term effects on inflation. (time inconsistency problem). central bankers favor hierarchical mandate.
today, most central banks define what as their policy target?
short term interest rates
interventions signal what central banks wants to happen to future exchange rate
signaling effect
four types of credit market instruments
simple loan, fixed payment loan, coupon bond, discount bond
four types of credit market instruments:
simple loan: lender provides funds to borrower that must be repaid at maturity along with addtnl interest pmts. ex: commercial loans to businesses. fixed payment loan: lender provides funds to borrower that must be repaid by making the same payment every period, consisting of part of the principle and interest. ex: consumer loans, mortgages. coupon bond: pays owner fixed interest payment (coupon) every year until maturity, when final amount aka FV is repaid. perpetuity coupon bonds: no maturity date. ex: corporate bonds discount bond: lender provides funds to borrower that must be repaid at maturity along with addtnl pmt for the interest.
foreign bonds
sold in a foreign country and denominated in that countries currency. ex: ABN AMARO sells bond in the US denominated in USD.
evidence of credit crunch
some savings banks are affected by subprime crisis directly through holdings in landesbanken with large exposure to subprime crisis. other savings banks are not affected. data set includes loan applications, internal credit ratings, and loans approved. test S and D effects for affected and non affected banks. affected banks accepted less loan applications. main results: affected banks reduce lending relative to non affective banks after 2007. demand for credits remains similar. this supports the hypothesis that the reduction in lending is due to suppy side. true for both consumer loans and mortgage loans.
off-balance sheet subsidiary with limited maturity
special purpose vehicles (SPV) bank sells loans to SPV (bank receives cash). SPV creates asset backed securities (ABS) -sells to investors, underlying assets belong to investors, all cash flows from loans are passed through to investors. SPV ceases to exist when underlying assets mature.
spot vs forward transactions in exchange markets
spot exchange transaction: immediate exchange of cash/bank deposits denominated in different currencies. forward exchange transaction: agreement to exchange bank deposits of different currencies at a specified future date. typically conducted to hedge exchange rate risk.
spot exchange transaction vs forward exchange transaction
spot: immediate exchange of cash / bank deposits denominated in different currencies. forward: agreement to exchange bank deposits of different currencies at a specified future date. typically conducted to hedge exchange rate risk.
default risk premium
spread btwn interest rates on bonds with default risk and the interest rates on same maturity treasury bonds.
three stages of financial crisis
stage 1: credit boom and bust: mismanagement of financial liberalization/innovation leading to asset price boom and bust. increase in uncertainty. deterioration in financial institutions balance sheets. adverse selection and moral hazard problems worsen. stage 2: banking crisis- economic activity declines, stage 3: debt deflation- unanticipated decline in price level.
big 3 risk rating agencies. criticism?
standard&poor. moody. fitch. criticism: they don't downgrade companies promomtly enough, too close relationships with company management and ownership. Lowering of a credit score creates a vicious cycle and self-fulfilling prophecy.
real effects of the financial crisis
stock market declined rapidly during crisis. (loss of US stock market wealth between october 2007-oct 2008 was 8 trillion. effects on real sector of the economy were global in nature. financial crisis led to widespread loss of confidence and concerns about solvency and liquidity to counter parties. reduction in demand for loans. banks started to hoard cash and stop lending. reduction in lending is mostly a supply effect.
off-balance sheet subsidiary with unlimited maturity
structured investment vehicles (SIV) Bank sells loans to SIV > bank receives cash SIV issues asset-backed bonds / commercial paper > sells bonds to investors > investors receive payments on bonds > underlying assets belong to SIV Maturing assets are replaced by others
impact of reduced loan supply- what effect did the reduced bank loan supply have on the activities of none-financial firms?
study in 39 countries asking about the cost and availability of credit and the effects on the firms decisions and actions. authors group firms in constrained and unconstrained and compare behavior during crisis. reduction in credit supply had significant impacts on credit-constrained firms.
liquidity spirals
sudden evaporation of liquidity through interaction of funding liquidity and market liquidity. funding liquidity: ease with which expert investors and arbitrageurs (dealers, hedge funds, investment banks) can obtain funding from financiers market liquidity: A market is liquid if a trader can sell an asset quickly, at low cost, without affecting the price > If market liquidity is low it is difficult to raise money by selling an asset (instead of borrowing against it)
an open market purchase shifts supply/demand curve right/left and this causes the federal funds rate to rise/fall.
supply curve right. causing fed funds rate to fall. but the fed funds rate can't fall below the interest rate paid on reserves.
an open market purchase shifts supply/demand curve left/right. this causes the federal funds rate to fall/rise.
supply right. fall. but federal funds rate cannot fall below the IR paid on reserves.
monetary targeting
target growth rate of money in the economy. used by a number of countries in the 1970s. advantages: monetary aggregates react quickly to monetary policy, immediate signal to the market about monetary policy stance, inflation expectations are updated quickly. disadvantage: unreliable relation between monetary aggregates and price stability.
what provides guidance on how a central bank should change the nominal IR in response to changes in inflation and real economic conditions?
taylor rule
duration
tells us how price of bond or fixed-income instrument changes as IR change. %change in Price = -DUR x (change in i / (1+i))
purchasing power theory
the exchange rate between two currencies will adjust to reflect changes in the general price levels in the two countries
implicit nominal anchor
the federal reserve conducts monetary policy without using an explicit nominal anchor such as inflation target. there is no explicit nominal anchor in the form of an overriding concern for the fed. forward looking behavior and periodic "preemptive strikes". the goal is to prevent inflation from getting started. advantages: uses many sources of info. demonstrated success. forward looking behavior and stress on price stability also help to discourage overly expansionary monetary policy, thereby ameliorating the time inconsistency problem disadvantages: lack of accountability. inconsistent with democratic principles. lack of transparency; strong dependence on the preferences, skills, and trustworthiness of the individuals in charge of the central bank.
discount rate
the minimum interest rate set by the US fed reserve for lending to other banks
unsterilized interventions and the exchange rate. foreign asset sales/purcahses lead to a change in ...... sale of foreign assets= increase/decrease in intl reserves ... purchase of foreign assets=
the money supply and domestic interest rates. sale = decrease in international reserves. domestic interest rate rises and exchange rate appreciates. purhcase: increase in intl reserves. domestic interest rate falls and the exchange rate depreciates.
credit risk analysis and the 5 Cs
the probability that the borrower will repay depends on ability and willingness to repay: capacity ( assessment of ability to repay), conditions (assessment of market / client specific conditions), character(assessment of willingness to repay), capital (assessment of leverage), collateral (Assessment of market value of pledgeable collateral)
credit risk two types
the risk that promised cash flows from loans and fixed income securities may not be paid in full. loan level risk: risk that a particular borrower will partially default. portfolio level risk: risk that a share of the due payments on a loan portfolio will not be repaid
advantage of financial intermediaries?
they allow small savers and borrowers to benefit from the existence of financial markets
what are buyers of debt instruments to the firm?
they are suppliers of capital, not owners of the firm
if a bank has a shortfall under their legal reserve requirement, what do they do?
they can borrow from the interbank market, sell securities, borrow from Fed (but this is a bad signal to the market), reduce loans (costly)
a customer defualts on loan: loss of $5 million.
this means the customer didnt pay back their loan to the bank. so the banks loan asset decreases by 5 million and dank capital decreases by 5 million. if its a high capital bank, then this is okay because they still have a positive number of bank capital. but if its a low capital bank, then the loss of 5 might bring them to the negatives.
why might bonds with identical risk, liquidity, and tax characteristics have different interest rates?
time remaining to maturity is different
capital adequacy management: three functions of capital?
to fund activities of the financial intermediary absorb unanticipated losses in order to prevent insolvency (bank failure) protect uninsured creditors, deposit insurance fund, and taxpayers, in the case of insolvency. the amount of capital affects return for the owners (equity holders) of the bank
central banks engage in international financial transactions to influence what?
to influence exchange rates
what are the main components and function of financial system?
to transfer resources from savers/lenders to consumers/borrowers
how does the central bank achieve its goals?
tools of central bank (open market operations, discount policy, reserve requirements, interest on reserves, forward guidance) -> policy instruments (reserve aggregates, interest rates) -> intermediate targets (monetary aggregates, interest rates) -> goals (price stability, high employment, economic growth, financial market stability, IR stability, for exchange market stability)
bank balance sheet. total assets=
total liabilities + capital
sources of foreign exchange transactions: international trade. international investment.
trade: converting export revenues earned in foreign currency to domestic currency. buying foreign currency to pay for imports. investment: buying foreign currency to pay for foreign denominated assets. converting proceeds from sale of foreign assets to domestic currency in order to buy domestic assets.
dual mandate
two coequal objectives: price stability and employment.
covered interest rate parity:
two investment strategies. return of the two strategies should be the same (arbitrage relation). covered interest parity (CIP) condition. violations to CIP: CIP frequently assumed to always hold. nevertheless, deviations may aries and frequently have since global financial crises. potential explanations: limits to arbitrage trading and strong hedging demand affect forward rates.
strategy of the ECB
two pillar approach: organizing evaluating and cross-checking the info relevant for assessing the risks to price stability is based on two analytical perspectives, referred to as the two pillars: economic analysis and monetary analysis. they form the basis for the governing councils overall assessment of the risks to price stability and its monetary policy decisions.
examples direct finance
usually done by borrowers that sell securities and/or shares to raise money and circumvent the high interest rate of financial intermediary(banks
generalized dividend valuation model
value of stock today is PV of all future cash flows. P0= (D1/(1+Ke)^1) + (D2/(1+ke)^2) + .... + Dn / (1+Ke)^n) + Pn / (1+Ke)^n). the price of the stock is determined only by the PV of the future dividend stream. problem: we don't know future dividend stream with certainty (need to build expectations)
supply of non borrowed reserves: open market operations volume? changing the amount of reserves supplied affects what?
volume of open market ops is fixed by the central bank. affects IRs.
cost of unstable inflation
wealth and distribution: unexpected inflation compromises the storage function of money (hedging cost). inflation reallocates wealth from creditors to debtors (fixed rate mortgages, fixed income securities (bonds)). inflation redistributes wealth from households with financial assets to those with real assets (value of real assets (houses) increases relative to financial assets (cash).
determinants of asset demand: wealth, expected return, risk, liquidity. increase of these and their shifts in demand for bonds left or right?
wealth: total resources owned by the individual, including all assets.. ^wealth= shift in demand right expected return: return expected over the next period on one asset relative to alternative assets. higher expected IR in future lower expected return for long term bonds, so shifts left. risk: degree of uncertainty associated with the return on one asset relative to alternative assets. increase in riskiness causes shift left. liquidity: ease and speed with which an asset can be turned into cash relative to alternative assets. increase = demand shift right.
credit analysis varies strongly by loan type
what info is collected (assessing the "capacity" and "conditions" for a mortgage requires different info than for a business loan. how the info is aggregated (qualitative (Expert) models, quantitative (Credit scoring) models, hybrid models: quantitative and qualitative) implications of the analysis (Acceptance/rejection, pricing of loans, credit limit)
if mortgage rates rise fro 5% to 10% and the expected rate of increase in housing prices rises from 2% to 9%, are people more or less likely to buy houses?
what matters for the decision is the real cost of financing the house. people are more likely to buy houses bc the real IR when purchasing a house has fallen from 3% (5-2) to 1% (10-9). the real cost of financing the house this us lower, even though nominal mortgage rates have risen.
check deposit
when a bank receives additional deposits, it gains an equal amount of reserves; when it loses deposits, it loses an equal amount of reserves.
coupon bond and yield to maturity. do they equal each other? how are they related?
when coupon bond is priced at its face value, YTM equals coupon rate. price of coupon bond and YTM are negatively related. YTM is greater than the coupon rate when the bond price is below its face value.
wholesale deposits vs retail deposits
wholesale:Wholesale funding is a "catch-all" term, but mainly refers to: federal funds, foreign deposits and brokered deposits. Some also include borrowings in the public debt market retail: a sum of money held in a bank on behalf of an individual
rate sensitivity
will an asset or liability be repriced within a specific time frame? basic gap analysis (rate sensitive vs fixed rate) maturity bucket approach (specific time frames of days)
if the interbank rate would exceed the discount rate, banks would....
would borrow from the central bank and supply an unlimited volume of these reserves to the interbank market
are the show banking system and regular banking system connected?
yes, highly interconnected. Banks > are frequently part of the shadow banking chain > provide (explicit or implicit) support to the shadow banking entities to enable maturity/liquidity transformation (and thus facilitating shadow banking activities) > invest in financial products issued by shadow banking entities alongside other suppliers of funds > and SBS are also often exposed to common concentrations of risks
if interest rates decline, would you rather be holding long-term or short-term bonds? which type of bond has the greater interest-rate risk?
you'd rather be holding long term bonds bc their price would increase more than the price of the short term bonds, giving them a higher return. longer-term bonds are most susceptible to higher price fluctuations than shorter-term bonds, and hence have greater interest-rate risk. note: interest rates of newly issued bonds fluctuate stronger for short term bonds compared with long term bonds.