Chapter 2 & 6: FIN 350
publicly owned corporation
A corporation that is owned by a relatively large number of individuals who are not actively involved in the firm's management.
Financial services corporation
A firm that offers a wide range of financial services, including investment banking, brokerage operations, insurance, and commercial banking.
Over-the-counter (OTC) market
A large collection of brokers and dealers, connected electronically by telephones and computers, that provides for trading in unlisted securities.
Inflation premium
IP
Scenario: There is an increase in the perceived marketability of a company's bonds, so the liquidity premium decreases
Impact on yield: decreases Cost of borrowing money from bond markets is... less expensive
This is the premium added to the real risk-free rate to compensate for a decrease in purchasing power over time.
Inflation Premium
Short-term rates are greater than long-term rates
Inverted yield curve
Liquidity risk premium
LP
maturity risk premium
MRP
Money Market Funds
Mutual funds that invest in short-term, low-risk securities and allow investors to write checks against their accounts
Upward sloping is a ______ yield curve
Normal
The yield curve exhibits an upward-sloping path
Normal yield curve
The use of ______-term financing over _____-term financing for a long-term project will increase the risk of the firm
Short;long
If inflation is expected to decrease in the future and the real rate is expected to remain steady, then the Treasury yield curve is downward sloping (Assume MRP=0)
TRUE
The yield on a bond with a longer maturity will be higher than the yield on a bond with a shorter maturity
TRUE
Capital Markets
The financial markets for stocks and for intermediate- or long-term debt (one year or longer).
Money Markets
The financial markets in which funds are borrowed or loaned for short periods (less than one year)
Spot Markets
The markets in which assets are bought or sold for "on-the-spot" delivery
Futures Markets
The markets in which participants agree today to buy or sell an asset at some future date.
During recessions, short-term interest rates decline more sharply than long-term interest rates
True
The Federal Reserve Board has a significant influence over the level of economic activity, inflation, interest rates in the US
True
The yield curve for a BBB-rated corporate bond is expected to be above the U.S. Treasury bond yield curve
True
When the Fed increases the money supply, short-term interest rates tend to decline
True
Yield curves of highly liquid assets will be lower than yield curves of relatively illiquid assets
True
Dealer markets
include all facilities that are needed to conduct security transactions not conducted on the physical location exchanges
This is the premium added to the equilibrium interest rate on a security that cannot be bought or sold quickly enough to prevent or minimize loss
liquidity risk premium
Primary Markets
markets in which corporations raise capital by issuing new securities
Secondary Markets
markets in which securities and other financial assets are traded among investors after they have been issued by corporations
Public markets
markets in which standardized contracts are traded on organized exchanges
Private Markets
markets in which transactions are worked out directly between two parties
this is the premium that reflects the risk associated with changes in interest rates for a long-term security
maturity risk premium
This is the rate for a risk-less security that is exposed to changes in inflation
nominal risk-free rate
Mutual Funds
organizations that pool investor funds to purchase financial instruments and thus reduce risks through diversification
Multiply coupon interest rate by ____ ________ to get dollar payment of interest
par value
Nominal Risk Free Rate
r(little RF)
real risk-free rate
r*
represents the "real" risk-free rate of interest like a T-bill rate, if there was no inflation.
r*
it changes over time, depending on the expected rate of return on productive assets exchanged among market participants and people's time preferences for consumption
real risk-free rate
coupon interest rate
stated interest rate (generally fixed) paid by issuer
Par Value
the amount that is repaid when a bond matures
Commercial bank
the traditional department store of finance serving a variety of savers and borrowers
Issue date
when the bond was issued
Maturity date
years until the bond must be repaid
Default risk premium
DRP
This is the premium added as a compensation for the risk that an investor will not get paid in full
Default risk premium
Actions that lower short-term interest rates will always lower long-term interest rates
False
All else equal, the yield on new bonds issued by a leveraged firm will be less than the yield on the new bonds issued by an unleveraged firm
False
The yield curve exhibits a zero slope
Flat yield curve
Physical location exchanges
Formal organizations having tangible physical locations that conduct auction markets in designated ("listed") securities.
Short-term and long-term (for example, 1-year and 30-year) rates are significantly less than intermediate-term (for example, 10-year) rates.
Humped Yield Curve
Closely held corporation
a corporation that is owned by a few individuals who are typically associated with the firm's management
Investment Bank
an organization that underwrites and distributes new investment securities and helps businesses obtain financing
Derivatives
any financial asset whose value is derived from the value of some other "underlying" asset