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Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-1 Chapter 3 How Securities How Securities are Traded are Traded

Chapter 3

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Chapter 3. How Securities are Traded. Chapter Summary. Objective: To explain the institutional details and mechanics of investing in securities. How firms issue securities Organization of secondary markets Trading and execution Margin trading Costs and regulation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-1Slide 3-1

Chapter 3

How Securities How Securities are Tradedare Traded

Page 2: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-2Slide 3-2

Chapter Summary

Objective: To explain the institutional details and mechanics of investing in securities.

How firms issue securities Organization of secondary markets Trading and execution Margin trading Costs and regulation

Page 3: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-3Slide 3-3

Primary vs. Secondary Security Sales

Primary New issue Key factor: issuer receives the proceeds from

the sale

Secondary Existing owner sells to another party Issuing firm doesn’t receive proceeds and is

not directly involved

Page 4: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-4Slide 3-4

Investment Banking Arrangements

Underwritten vs. “Best Efforts” Underwritten: firm commitment on proceeds

to the issuing firm Best Efforts: no firm commitment

Negotiated vs. Competitive Bid Negotiated: issuing firm negotiates terms

with investment banker Competitive bid: issuer structures the

offering and secures bids

Page 5: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-5Slide 3-5

Public Offerings

Public offerings: registered with the OSC (Ontario - SEC in USA) and sale is made to the investing public Red herring Prompt offering prospectus

Initial Public Offerings (IPOs) Evidence of underpricing Performance

Page 6: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-6Slide 3-6

Private Placements

Private placement: sale to a limited number of sophisticated investors not requiring the protection of registration

Dominated by institutions Very active market for debt securities Not active for stock offerings

Page 7: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-7Slide 3-7

Summary Reminder

Objective: To explain the institutional details and mechanics of investing in securities.

How firms issue securities Organization of secondary markets Trading and execution Margin trading Costs and regulation

Page 8: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-8Slide 3-8

Types of Markets

Direct search markets Brokered markets

Block transactions

Dealer marketsOTC market

Auction marketsMajor exchanges

Page 9: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-9Slide 3-9

Organization of Secondary Markets

Organized exchanges OTC market Third market Fourth market

Page 10: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-10Slide 3-10

Organized Exchanges

Auction markets with centralized order flow

Dealership function: can be competitive or assigned by the exchange (specialists or registered traders)

Securities: stock, futures contracts, options, and to a lesser extent, bonds

Examples: TSE, ME, VSE, NYSE, AMEX, Regionals, CBOE

Page 11: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-11Slide 3-11

OTC Market

Dealer market without centralized order flow

NASDAQ: largest organized stock market for OTC trading; information system for individuals, brokers and dealers

Levels of interaction: users, market-makers Securities: stocks, bonds and derivatives

Most secondary bonds transactions

Page 12: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-12Slide 3-12

Third Market

Trading of listed securities away from the exchange

Institutional market: to facilitate trades of larger blocks of securities

Involves services of dealers and brokers

Page 13: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-13Slide 3-13

Fourth Market

Institutions trading directly with institutions

No middleman involved in the transaction

Organized information and trading systems INSTINET POSIT

ECN development

Page 14: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-14Slide 3-14

International Market Structures

London Stock Exchange Dealer market similar to NASDAQ Stock Exchange Automated Quotation Greater Anonymity

Tokyo Stock Exchange No market making service Sartori provides bookkeeping service Feature a floor and electronic trading

Global market alliances

Page 15: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-15Slide 3-15

Summary Reminder

Objective: To explain the institutional details and mechanics of investing in securities.

How firms issue securities Organization of secondary markets Trading and execution Margin trading Costs and regulation

Page 16: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-16Slide 3-16

The execution of trades

Registered trader (market-maker) functions

Maintaining a “book” Maintain a “fair and orderly market” Execute “stabilizing” trades

Registered traders possess valuable inside information about the future direction of the market

Page 17: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-17Slide 3-17

Types of Orders

Instructions to the brokers on how to complete the order

Market Limit Stop loss

Page 18: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-18Slide 3-18

Summary Reminder

Objective: To explain the institutional details and mechanics of investing in securities.

How firms issue securities Organization of secondary markets Trading and execution Margin trading Costs and regulation

Page 19: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-19Slide 3-19

Using only a portion of the proceeds for an investment

Borrow remaining component Margin arrangements differ for stocks

and futures

Margin Trading

Page 20: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-20Slide 3-20

Greatest margin Currently 30% Set by the securities commissions

Minimum margin Minimum level the equity margin can be(called “maintenance” in USA)

Margin call Call for more equity funds

Stock Margin Trading

Page 21: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-21Slide 3-21

X Corp $7050% Initial Margin30% Minimum Margin1000 Shares PurchasedInitial PositionStock $70,000 Borrowed $35,000 Equity $35,000

Margin Trading - Initial Conditions

Page 22: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-22Slide 3-22

Margin Trading - Minimum Margin

Stock price falls to $60 per share

New PositionStock $60,000 Borrowed $35,000 Equity $25,000

Margin% = $25,000/$60,000 = 41.67%

Page 23: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-23Slide 3-23

Margin Trading - Margin Call

How far can the stock price fall before a margin call?

Therefore, P = $50

Note: 1,000xP – Amount Borrowed = Equity

%30P000,1

000,35$P000,1

Page 24: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-24Slide 3-24

Leveraging effect of margin purchases

You buy 200 shares of XYZ at $100, expecting a 30% appreciation of the stock in one year:

Initial margin: 50% Financed by a 9% loan for one year Expected net return: 51%

A 30% drop in the price, though, brings a negative rate of return of -69%.

Page 25: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-25Slide 3-25

Short Sales

Purpose: to profit from a decline in the price of a stock or security

Mechanics Borrow stock through a dealer Sell it and deposit proceeds and margin

in an account Close out the position: buy the stock and

return it to the owner

Page 26: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-26Slide 3-26

Short Sale - Initial Conditions

Z Corp 100 Shares50% Initial Margin30% Minimum Margin$100 Initial Price

Sale Proceeds $10,000Margin & Equity $ 5,000Stock Owed $10,000

Page 27: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-27Slide 3-27

Short Sale - Minimum Margin

Stock Price Rises to $110

Sale Proceeds $10,000Initial Margin $ 5,000Stock Owed $11,000Net Equity $ 4,000Margin % (4,000/11,000) = 36%

Page 28: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-28Slide 3-28

Short Sale - Margin Call

How much can the stock price rise before a margin call?

So, P = $115.38

Note: $15,000 = Initial margin + sale proceeds

%30P100

P100000,15$

Page 29: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-29Slide 3-29

Summary Reminder

Objective: To explain the institutional details and mechanics of investing in securities.

How firms issue securities Organization of secondary markets Trading and execution Margin trading Costs and regulation

Page 30: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-30Slide 3-30

Costs of Trading

Commission: fee paid to broker for making the transaction Full service broker Discount broker

Spread: cost of trading with dealer Bid: price dealer will buy from you Ask: price dealer will sell to you Spread: ask - bid

Execution: better price obtained

Page 31: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-31Slide 3-31

Internet Trading

On-line brokers (discount or full-service) ECNs – electronic communication

networks Pre- and post-market trading (lack of

integration, thin trading)

Page 32: Chapter 3

Bodie Kane Marcus Perrakis Ryan INVESTMENTS, Fourth Canadian Edition

Copyright © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 Slide 3-32Slide 3-32

Regulation of Securities Markets

Government Regulation Self-Regulation in the Industry Circuit Breakers Insider Trading