9/17/2020

7.2 Valuing Corporate Equities

 7.2 Valuing Corporate Equities

corporate equitystock, sometimes called a share. It is a share in the ownership of a joint-stock corporation. 

Ownership entitles investors to a say in how the corporation is run, usually means one vote per share in corporate elections for the board of directors, and monitor the corporation’s professional managers. 

Ownership also means that investors are residual claimants, entitling them to a proportionate share of the corporation’s net earnings (profits).


In exchange for their investment, stockholders may receive a flow of cash payments, usually made quarterly, called dividends. Unlike bond coupons, they are not fixed, it is not considered in default. 


The stock valuation method, the one-period valuation model, simply calculates the discounted present value of earnings and selling price over a one-year holding period:

P = E / ( 1 + k ) + P1 / ( 1 + k )

P = price now

E = yearly earnings or profit

k = required rate of return

P1 = expected price at year’s end


So if a company is expected to earn no profit, its share price is expected to be $75 at the end of the year, and the required rate of return on investments in its risk class is 10%, an investor would buy the stock if its market price was at or below P = 0/1.10 + 75/1.10 = $68.18. 

Another investor might also require a 10% return but think the stock will be worth $104 at the end of the year. He’d pay P = 0/1.10 + 104/1.1 = $94.55 for the stock today! 


What should be the price of a common stock paying $3.50 annually in dividends if the growth rate is zero and the discount rate is 8%?


P = 3.5 / (1+ 8%) + P / (1+8%) 

P = 43.75



If the next year’s dividend is forecast to be $5.00, the constant growth rate is 4%, and the discount rate is 16%, then the current stock price should be 42.67 (You can do it yourself)




What constant growth rate in dividends is expected for a stock valued at $37.82 if a $4.00 dividend has just been paid and the discount rate is 15%?


Suppose g = the constant growth rate

37.82 = 4 (1+ g) / (1+ 15% ) + 37.82 (1+ g) / (1+ 15%)

g = 4%

7.1 The Theory of Rational Expectations

 7.1 The Theory of Rational Expectations

The direction of price movements (up or down) is indeed random, but price levels are based on the rational expectations of a large number of market participants. 


Prices in those markets help to determine what gets made and what doesn’t, how much gets produced and how, and where and how those goods are sold.


Systematic manipulation of the market was impossible because the bulls and bears competed against each other, each tugging at the price, but ultimately in vain. 


As rational investors learned the tricks of trading, they came to expect hyperbole, false rumors, sham sales. 


In the final analysis, market fundamentals, not the whims of nefarious individuals, determined prices. 


Stock and other securities prices fluctuate due to changes in supply or demand, not because of the machinations of bulls and bears.


“The expectation of an event", creates a much deeper impression upon the exchange than the event itself.


Expectations are paramount, people invest based on what they believe the future will bring, not on what the present brings or the past has wrought, though they often look to the present and past for clues about the future. Rational expectations theory posits that investor expectations will be the best guess of the future using all available information. 


Expectations do not have to be correct to be rational; they just have to make logical sense given what is known at any particular moment. An expectation would be irrational if it did not logically follow from what is known or if it ignored available information. 


For the former reason, investors expend considerable sums on schooling, books, lectures to learn the best ways to reason correctly given certain types of information. 

Investors update their expectations, or forecasts, with great frequency, as new information becomes available, which occurs basically 24/7/365.


If everyone’s expectations are rational, then why don’t investors agree on how much assets are worth? Such differences in valuation are important because they allow trades to occur by inducing some investors to sell and others to buy. 


Investors sometimes have different sets of information available to them. Some investors may have inside information, news that is unknown outside a small circle. 


Investors think of the information they know in common differently because their utility functions differ, different holding periods, and different sensitivities to risk.


Investors use different valuation models, different theories of how to predict fundamentals most accurately and how those fundamentals determine securities prices. 


Financial crises almost always follow asset bubbles. Some investors understand the effect of some ripples more quickly and clearly than others. Investors often have a wide variety of opinions about the value of different assets. 


More mechanically, investors might have different opinions about bond valuations because they must have different views about the applicable discount or interest rate


PV=FV/(1+i)n

If this is a one-year zero coupon bond, FV = $1,000, and i = 6%, then the bond price = ($1,000/1.06) = $943.40. But if one believes i = 6.01, then the bond price = ($1,000/1.0601) = $942.51. To understand how investors can value the same stock differently, we must investigate how they value corporate equities.

Chapter 6 The Economics of Interest-Rate Spreads and Yield Curves Notes

 Chapter 6 The Economics of Interest-Rate Spreads and Yield Curves Notes


The 1930s, the Great Depression, dried up profit opportunities for businesses and hence shifted the supply curve of bonds left, further increasing bond prices and depressing yields. (If the federal government had not run budget deficits some years during the depression, the interest rate would have dropped even further.)


During World War II, the government used monetary policy to keep interest rates low. After the war, that policy came home to roost as inflation began. A higher price level puts upward pressure on the interest rate. 


Positive geopolitical events in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the end of the cold war, and the globalization, also helped to reduce interest rates by rendering the general business climate more favorable (thus pushing the demand curve for bonds to the right, bond prices upward, and yields downward). 


6.2 Interest-Rate Determinants I: The Risk Structure

Why the yields on Baa corporate bonds are always higher than the yields on Aaa corporate bonds?


Why bonds issued by the same economic entity with different maturities, have different yields, why the rank order changes over time?


Investors care mostly about three things: riskreturn, and liquidity


Bonds issued by different economic entities have very different probabilities of default.

The U.S. government has never defaulted on its bonds and is extremely unlikely to do so, and its efficient tax administration (the Internal Revenue Service [IRS]) could always meet its nominal obligations by creating money. (That might create inflation) Except for a special type of bond called TIPS, the government promise to pay a nominal value, not a real [inflation-adjusted] sum, so the government does not technically default when it pays its obligations by printing money.)


Municipalities have defaulted on their bonds in the past and could do so again in the future because, although they have the power to tax, they do not have the power to create money at will. Nevertheless, the risk of default on municipal bonds (aka munis) is often quite low.


Munis are exempt from most forms of income taxation.


Corporations are more likely to default on their bonds than governments are because they must rely on business conditions and management acumen. 


Credit-rating agencies, including Moody’s and Standard and Poor’s, assess the probability of default and assign grades to each bond, the agencies are rife with conflicts of interest, and the market usually senses problems before the agencies do.


The most liquid bond markets are usually those for Treasuries. The liquidity of corporate and municipal bonds is usually a function of the size of the issuer and the amount of bonds outstanding. 


Corporate Baa bonds have the highest yields because they have the highest default risk, and not very liquid. 


Investors do not need as high a yield to own Treasuries as they need to own corporates. 


Corporate bond ratings go all the way down to C (Moody’s) or D (Standard and Poor’s), used to be called high-yield or junk bonds but are now generally referred to as B.I.G. or below investment-grade bonds.) 


Eager for tax-exempt income lead people to purchased large quantities of municipal bonds, driving their prices up (and their yields down) since, tax considerations, the highest income brackets exceed 30 percent.


The terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington, DC, in September 2001, some claimed that people who had prior knowledge of the attacks made huge profits in the financial markets. How would that have been possible?

The most obvious way would have been to sell riskier corporate bonds and buy U.S. Treasuries on the eve of the attack in expectation of a flight to quality, the mass exchange of risky assets (and subsequent price decline) for safe ones (and subsequent price increase).


6.3 The Determinants of Interest Rates II: The Term Structure

Holding the risk structure of interest rates, default risk, liquidity, and taxes, all constant. The term structure of interest rates, the variability of returns due to differing maturities


Even bonds from the same issuer, the U.S. government, can have yields that vary according to the length of time they have to run before their principals are repaid. 


Sometimes short-term Treasuries have lower yields than long-term ones, sometimes they have about the same yield, and sometimes they have higher yields.


The yields of bonds of different maturities (but identical risk structures) tend to move in tandem, and the yield curves usually slope upward


Sometimes, the yield “curve” is actually flat—yields for bonds of different maturities are identical, or nearly so.


Sometimes, particularly when short-term rates are higher than normal, the curve inverts or slopes downward, indicating that the yield on short-term bonds is higher than that on long-term bonds. 


Theory and empirical evidence both point to the same conclusion: bonds of different maturities are partial substitutes for each other, not perfect substitutes.


Generally, investors prefer short-term bonds to long-term ones, but they reverse their preference if the interest rate goes unusually high


There is one thing that can induce investors to give up their liquidity preference, their preferred habitat of short-term bonds: the expectation of a high interest rate for a short term. 


Investors think of a long-term bond yield as the average of the yields on shorter-term obligations, so when the interest rate is high by historical norms but expected after a year or so to revert to some long-term mean, they will actually begin to prefer long-term bonds and will buy them at much higher prices (lower yields) than short-term bonds. 


in = [ (ie0 + ie1 + ie2 + ie3 + .... ie (n − 1 ) ) / n ] + ρn


in = interest rate today on a bond that matures in n years

iex = expected interest rate at time x (0, 1, 2, 3, . . . through n)

ρ = the liquidity or term premium for an n-period bond.


The yield today of a bond with 5 years to maturity, if the liquidity premium is 0.5% and the expected interest rate each year is 4, is 4.5: i5 = (4 + 4 + 4 + 4 + 4)/5 + .5 = 20/5 + .5 = 4.5, implying an upward sloping yield curve because 4 < 4.5.


Short-term and long-term bonds issued by the same economic entity did not often differ much in price. 


One possibility is that there was no liquidity premium then. Short-term bonds suffered less interest rate risk than long-term bonds, but investors often complained of extremely high levels of reinvestment risk, of their inability to cheaply reinvest the principal of bonds and mortgages when they were repaid. Lenders often urged good borrowers not to repay, to continue to service their obligations. 


Another not mutually exclusive possibility is that the long-term price level stability, the interest rate less volatile. The expectation was that the interest rate would not long stray from its long-term tendency.


The yield curve as the market’s prediction of future short-term interest rates, by extension, an economic forecasting tool. Where the curve slopes sharply upward, the market expects future short-term interest rates to rise. Where it slopes slightly upward, the market expects future short-term rates to remain the same. Where the curve is flat, rates, it is thought, will fall moderately in the future. 


Empirical research suggests that the yield curve is a good predictor of future interest rates in the very short term, the next few months, and the long term, but not in between. 


Economic forecasters use the yield curve to make predictions about inflation and the business cycle. 


A flat or inverted curve, for instance, portends lower short-term interest rates in the future, which is consistent with a recession but also with lower inflation rates. 

A curve sloped steeply upward, by contrast, portends higher future interest rates, which might be brought about by an increase in inflation rates or an economic boom.




Reference

Wright, R. E. (2009). Money and Banking. Saylor Foundation. https://open.umn.edu/opentextbooks/formats/641. 

Products That The NYSE Offering

 Introduction

The New York Stock Exchange is an American stock exchange located at 11 Wall Street, Lower Manhattan, New York City. It is by far the world's largest stock exchange by market capitalization of its listed companies. The NYSE is owned by Intercontinental Exchange, an American holding company. Previously, it was part of NYSE Euronext (NYX), which was formed by the NYSE's 2007 merger with Euronext.


The New York Stock Exchange offers increased access to the capital that companies need to continue innovating and growing, while also placing new requirements. The NYSE also works closely with the management teams at NYSE-listed companies to understand their needs and develop efficient solutions that address the needs of their growing public businesses. The NYSE even provides some investor relations services such as market intelligence, stock insights, investor profiling solutions, corporate surveillance, communication tools, and more. 


Products That The NYSE Offering


Equities

Equity (also known as stocks or shares) is basically a part of the ownership of a company. For example, if my father's food company wants to raise its capital for expansion, and innovation, he can choose to sell the shares of his company and obtain funds from the public. 


NYSE provides a well-regulated market for this kind of need. NYSE regulates and oversees the responsibilities to protect the public investors and also support the business owners to grow their business successfully. NYSE’s also provides a unique market model that deep liquidity and high-quality quotes that lower volatility and the issuers' cost of capital. 


Options

Options are financial instruments that are derivatives based on the value of underlying securities such as stocks. Let's make it easier to understand. If you have an options contract with an issuer, you can choose to sell a certain amount of shares of a particular company or to buy them. That's why it's called options. You have two options and the choice is on you. Depending on the type of contract you hold, an options contract offers the buyer the opportunity to buy or sell the underlying asset. 


Each option contract will have a specific expiration date by which the holder must exercise their option, which means they must make their choices that are bought or sold. One thing that the investors have to pay attention, is the stated price on an option is known as the strike price which means the options owners take their actions under the agreements.


Equity options give an investor the right but not the obligation to buy a call or sell a put at a set strike price prior to the contract’s expiry date. NYSE Arca’s price-time priority model that provides enhanced throughput and encourages market makers to offer the best possible price.


Index options are another way for people to want to follow the bigger market, and make it possible for investors to trade an entire market to seek either profit or protection from price movements in a stock market as a whole.


Exchange-Traded Products

Exchange-traded products (ETPs) are types of securities that track underlying securities such as an index, or other financial instruments. One of the attractive parts of ETPs is they are traded on exchanges similar to stocks meaning their prices can fluctuate from day-to-day. The difference is that the prices of ETPs are derived from the underlying investments that they track.


Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) is a very common Exchange-traded product, its fund contains a basket of investments that can include stocks and bonds. An ETF usually tracks an underlying index such as the S&P 500, the Dow, or follow an industry, commodities, or a particular currency. If these underlying index goes down, the ETF goes down as well. In contrast, If these underlying index goes up, the ETF goes up. These products trade throughout the day just as a stock would trade.


Exchange-traded notes (ETNs) also track an underlying index of securities. ETN issuers promise to pay investors the return received from the index they track at the maturity date. However, the ETNs themselves do not actually own any particular assets, the issuers even allow to use the funds to obtain any assets they want. Therefore, ETNs are similar to bonds in that investors receive the return of their original invested amount at maturity, but the ETN does not pay periodic interest payments. Also, investors who buy ETNs do not own any of the securities in the index they track. 







Reference

New York Stock Exchange. (2020, September 04). Retrieved September 05, 2020, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Stock_Exchange


The Intercontinental Exchange. (n.d.). Retrieved September 05, 2020, from https://www.nyse.com/index


Chen, J. (2020, March 31). A Look at the Types of Exchange Traded Products (ETPs). Retrieved September 06, 2020, from https://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/exchange-traded-products-etp.asp

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