Contemporary Economics Chapter 10
dividends
after tax profit paid to shareholders or reinvested in the corporation
conglomereate merger
a combination of firms in different industries
collateral
banks typically require a borrower to put this up to reduce risk (ex. house for a home mortgage)
market for loans
brings together borrowers (the demanders of loans) and savers (the suppliers of loans) to determine the market interest rate
tax treatment
differences in this affects the interest rate, people are more willing to lend money to state and local gov.
corporation
distinct from its shareholder, they may own property, earn a profit, borrown, and sue or be sued
secondary markets for securities
enhances the liquidity of securities
demand for loans
firms borrow to help fund production and investment, downward slope, negative relationship b/t interest rate and the quantity of loans demanded
duration of loan
interest is generally higher when the duration of the loan is longer
securities
stocks and bonds, SEC (federal body that regulates securities markets), NYSE is the largest security
credit
the ability to borrow now based on a promise to repay in the future
initial public offering IPO
the initial sale of corporate stock to the public
prime rate
the interest rate that banks charge their best customers and most trust worthy business borrowers
equilibrium interest rate
the only interest rate at which the quantity of loans demanded equals the quantity of loans supplied
reducing risk
through diversification
to default on a loan
to not pay loans back
supply of loans
when households give up present consumption in return for interest and interest becomes the reward for not consuming now, positive relationship b/t quantity of loans supplied & interest, slopes upward
financial intermediaries
where savers can indirectly provide funds to borrowers, farmers can get "seed money" to survive winters
first merger wave
1887-1904; horizontal, economies of scale and lower transportation costs extended the geographical size of markets, introduced antitrust laws
second merger wave
1916-1929; stock market boom of 1920's, vertical mergers became more common
third merger wave
1948-1969; conglomerate mergers lost the efficiency gains from special lization and comparative advantage
fourth merger wave
1982-Present; one third: hostile takeovers
production depends on
saving because production of both consumer and capital goods takes time
banks
serve as financial intermediaries, savers need a place for their $ and borrowers need credit, desirable durations for both borrowers and savers
running multinationals
MNC are usually headquartered in the country of origin, (most in the US)
consumption and time
consumers usually value present consumption more than future consumptions
franchise
contract between a parent company and another business or individual
bond
coporations issue these for long term borrowing, their promise to pay back the holder a fixed sum of money on a designated maturity date
multinational corporations (MNC)
corporation that operates globally, AKA transnation, international or global corporations
1920
corporations accounted for most employment and output in the US economy
cost of adminstration
costs of executing the loan agreement, monitoring the loan and collecting payments, decrease as the size of the loan increases
problems of MNCs
countries w/ different business regulations/ tax laws, and fluctuating exchange rates
retained
reinvested profit/divdends, helps the company grow
mutual fund
issues stock to individual investors and uses the proceeds to buy a portfolio of securities
capital increases
labor productivity
banks specialize in
loans, therefore savers are better off dealing w/ banks over making loans directly to borrowers
reducing production costs
makes US firms more efficient and lowers the prices of US goods
line of credit
many businesses negotiate these with a bank, an arragnement with a bank through which a business can quickly borrow cash as needed
profitable firms can grow faster
more profit can be reinvested into the firm owners are willing to invest more of their own money in the firms banks are more willing to lend to them
institutional investors
more than half the trading volume on major exchanges is done by these (banks, insurance companies, and mutual funds)
horizontal mergers
occur when one firm combines with another firm making the same product
vertical mergers
one firm combines with another from which it had purchased inputs or to which it had sold output
time
plays an imporatant role in production and consumption
interest rate
price of borrowing, annual interest expressed as a percentage of the amount borrowed or saved
modern economy
producers don't rely exclusively on their own savings, they can borrow funds from other savers
corporate profit and growths
profitable corporations are more able to grow and it is easier for them to borrow from banks or sell bonds
securites markets
promote the survival of the fittest by supplying financial capital to those firms that seem able to make the most profitable use of those funds
mergers
quickest path to growth
impatience and uncertainty
reasons why people value present consumption more than future consumption