Finance Final Exam (Ch 7, 8, 12, 13 Concepts)
Call Provision
- An agreement giving the corporation the option to repurchase a bond at a specified price (almost always larger than face value) prior to maturity - This is great for corporations - Bad for investors
Bond Debt Rating
- Based on how likely the firm is to default and protection creditors have in the event of default - Therefore, bonds with lower ratings should have higher yields
Repayment arrangments
- Bonds can be repaid: At maturity or In part or in entirety before maturity -Firm makes annual payments to the trustee, who then uses funds to retire portion of the debt
Interest Rate Risk for Long Term Bonds
- Change in price due to changes in interest rates - Prices will change because interest rates will change the rate at which we discount cash flows - Long term bonds have more price risk than short term bonds - Low coupon rate bonds have more price risk than high coupon rate bonds
Investors' protection against call provision
- Corporate bonds typically callable - Call premium: Difference between call price and stated value (par value) - Deferred call provision: Wait a certain number of years to call it back
As general proposition, the market risk premium should be
- Greater than zero - Increase with the risk aversion of the investors in that market - Increase with the riskiness of the average risk investment
Protective Covenants
- Part of the indenture limiting certain actions that might be taken during the terms of the loan - Usually to protect investors
Interest Rate Risk for Short Term Bonds
- Reinvestment Rate Risk - Uncertainty concerning rates at which cash flows can be reinvested - Short-Term bonds have more reinvestment rate risk than long term bonds - High coupon rate bonds have more reinvestment rate risk than long term bonds
Limitations of CAPM
- The model makes unrealistic assumptions - The parameters of the model cannot be estimated precisely - The market index used can be wrong - The firm may have changed during the estimation period - The model does not work well - A Lot of firms don't meet the green line - Relationship between betas and returns is weak
Treasury Yield Curve
- Used to gauge the term structure of interest rates - 3 key features: Default free, taxable, highly liquid -Based on coupon bond yields - The yield curve tends to be sharply increasing as the economy comes out of a recession and interest rates are expected to rise
What does CAPM Utilize?
-TVM of money -The reward for bearing systematic risk (market risk premium) -Amount of systematic risk
What 2 conditions are needed for a company grow?
1. It must not pay out all of its earnings as dividends all the time 2. Must invest in good projects
Based on the period 1926-2019, the actual real return on large-company stocks has been around:
9%
Designated Market Maker
A member who acts as a dealer in a limited number of securities on the floor of the NYSE
Current Yield
Annual Coupon / Bond Price
Which one of the following is the price at which a dealer will sell a bond?
Asked Price
What does Bond Indenture Include?
Basic terms Total amount issued Collateral Repayment arrangements Call provisions Protective covenants
Security (Collateral)
Collateral - Assets that are pledged as security for payment of debt (commonly used to asset pledges on a debt).
When Value = Principal,
Coupon Rate = Yield
Amount paid to bondholder each year
Coupon payment
YTM
Current Yield + Capital Gains Yield
Is Current Yield > or < YTM for discount bonds?
Current yield < YTM
Is Current Yield > or < YTM for premium bonds?
Current yield > YTM
Treasury Securities
Federal government debt
Relationship b/t geometric average and arithmetic average
Geometric average is less than arithmetic average when the stock has a loss, otherwise they are the same
Market Risk Premium
How much money we require the market to pay us to take on risk in that market
Market Equilibrium
In equilibrium, all assets and portfolios must have the same reward to risk ratio, and they all must equal the reward to risk ratio for the market (All assets will eventually fall on the green line).
Terms of a Bond
Includes Registered form (Ownership terms) and Bearer form
Is YTM for short or long term investors?
Long Term Investors
Which one of the following statements is correct based on the period 1926-2019?
Long-term government bonds had more volatile annual returns than did the long-term corporate bonds.
Municipal Securities
Lower yield because you don't have to pay taxes
Specified Date on which principal is repaid
Maturity Date
Which one of the following correctly describes the dividend yield?
Next year's annual dividend divided by today's stock price
Seniority
Preference in position over other lenders
If you expect interest rates to increase, should you worry about price or reinvestment risk?
Price Risk
Which one of the following rates represents the change, if any, in your purchasing power as a result of owning a bond?
Real Rate
If you expect interest rates to decrease, should you worry about price or reinvestment risk?
Reinvestment Risk
Slope of Market Risk Premium
Reward to Risk Ratio [E(Ra) - Rt] /Beta
Is current yield for short or long term investors?
Short Term investors
Theoretically, what are totally efficient stock markets?
Stock markets that have 0 NPVs for all stock investments.
According to the Dividend model, what is the price of the stock in dividend terms?
The PV of all expected future dividends
Which one of the following is the most likely reason why a stock price might not react at all on the day that new information related to the stock's issuer is released? Assume the market is semistrong form efficient.
The information was expected.
Bonds are generally a safer investment than stocks
True
Weak efficiency offers the greatest profit potential to an outstanding professional stock analyst.
True
Rate required in the market on a bond
YTM
Real Yield for Corporate Bond
Yield (Tax bracket - 1 )