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Chapter 14 & 15

Chapter 14 & 15. Capital Markets and Investment Underwriting. Agenda for today. By issuing financial instruments such as corporate bonds, common stock and preferred shares, a company may raise capital from the public. Today’s agenda focus on

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Chapter 14 & 15

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  1. Chapter 14 & 15 Capital Markets and Investment Underwriting

  2. Agenda for today • By issuing financial instruments such as corporate bonds, common stock and preferred shares, a company may raise capital from the public. • Today’s agenda focus on • where and howto issue those financial instruments

  3. Basic Knowledge • To issue financial instruments, we need to know about the followings: • 1. Financial System • 2. Market Efficiency • 3. Underwriting

  4. 1. Financial System • Conceptually, a financial system consists of • Providers of Capital - mainly households • Users of Capital - governments & businesses • The providers and users of capital are linked together byfinancial intermediaries such as commercial banks, trust companies, mutual funds, pension funds, insurance companies, etc

  5. Role of Financial Intermediaries • Match supply and demand of Capital • Provide related services • Bank services - deposits, loans, currency exchange, international transfer of fund, etc • Trust company services - common stock transfer agent, handling dividend payments, managing clients’ assets, acting for bondholders, etc

  6. Financial Market • A financial market is where the exchange between capital users and providers takes place. It may be classified into • Money market - short-term capital with maturity less than a year, e.g. T-bills, commercial papers, bankers’ acceptances • Capital market - long-term capital with maturity greater than a year, e.g. bonds, common stocks, preferred shares

  7. Where is the Financial Market? • Wall Street in the States or Bay Street in Canada where the financial intermediaries gather • Organized Exchanges - NYSE or TSX which facilitate the trading of various securities through a competitive auction mechanism • Over The Counter Markets - OTC which is a network of brokers and dealers (big players)linked electronically for the trading of mainly bonds and money market securities (10 times the vol of OEs)

  8. Organized Exchanges • TSX - about 100 registered brokers transact orders on behalf of buyers and sellers, 147 years old with 1600 listed equities, 3% of world capital • NYSE - largest stock exchange in the world, 208 years old with more than 3114 equity issuers

  9. OTC Markets • Canadian Dealing Network • NASDAQ -the National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System

  10. Is the market efficient enough? • With so many participants in the financial system, we will ask if the market is efficient enough to deal with them • By that, we mean the supply is able to meet the demand or vice versa and the price is a fair market price (i.e. no undue cost for capital users and no consistent abnormal returns for capital providers)

  11. 2. Market Efficiency • Markets are efficient when • 1. Many buyers and sellers • 2. Numerous, frequent and low-cost trades • 3. Security analysis is widespread • 4. Prices adjust rapidly to new information • 5. There is a continuous market in prices • 6. Market can absorb large trade of securities quickly and without price destabilization

  12. Market Efficiency Hypothesis • Weak form - current market prices reflect all the information contained in past transactions (historic information), no abnormal return derived from “chartists” • Semi-strong form - security prices adjust rapidly and fully to reflect all publicly available information including historic, current and future information, no abnormal return derived from outsiders (the general public)

  13. Market Efficiency Hypothesis cont’ • Strong form - share prices reflect any relevant information including both public and private information, no abnormal return can be derived from insiders

  14. Empirical Support • Weak form: little evidence to reject his hypothesis, i.e. little evidence that there are gains to trading using decision rules based on historic trading information • Semi-strong form: there is evidence that prices adjust fully and rapidly to new public information • Strong form: difficult to construct a test

  15. What is the conclusion? • No definite conclusion has been made • A good topic for your Ph.D. thesis • Anyway, it seems that the markets are efficient in the semi-strong form

  16. Underwriting • Now you know where to go to raise capital for your company and believe that the market is efficient enough • The second question is: how to raise capital • To answer this question, we need to know the underwriting mechanism

  17. Investment Bankers • The financial intermediary between corporations and investors in general is the Investment Bankers • Examples: JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs • Investment Bankers bring the two parties (capital users and providers) together by channeling money from one to the other

  18. Functions of Investment Bankers • Underwriter function: - buying the security from the large corporate issuers and reselling it to the public (Firm Commitment or Bought Deal) • Selling security on commission basis (Best Effort - act as the agent of the issuers – small or new firms) • Function being carried out by syndicate of investment bankers

  19. Functions of Inv. Bankers cont’ • Market maker function: • To create an available market by buying and selling the security • To initiate trading of a new security • To inform the investors the issuance of a new security through market trading

  20. Functions of Inv. Bankers cont’ • Advisor function: • advice on securities issues, mergers and acquisitions, leveraged buyouts, corporate restructuring, etc • Broker function: - transact orders on behalf of buyers and sellers,

  21. The Underwriting Process • Let’s focus on one specific area of raising capital – through IPO • Initial public offering refers to the sale of common shares to the public by the issuing firm for the first time • We say the issuing firm is ‘going public’

  22. Advantages of going public • Greater availability of funds • Prestige • Higher liquidity for shareholders (buy and sell in the secondary market) • Established price of public issues aids a shareholder’s estate planning • Enables a firm to engage in merger activities more readily

  23. Disadvantages of going public • Company information must be made public • Accumulating and disclosing information is expensive • Short-term pressure from security analysts • Embarrassment from public failure • High cost of going public (e.g. underwriting spread and flotation costs)

  24. Underwriting Spread • Spread represents the compensation for those participating in the distribution of IPO • Spread = Public price – Issue offer price • It is shared among the participants • Spread on common stocks is greater than spread on bonds

  25. Summary • In this class, we focus on where and howto issue financial instruments • Where to go: - Financial system consists of capital users, providers and financial intermediaries • Markets seem to be efficient • How to issue: • Investment bankers and Underwriting process

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