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BY GROUP 2 SAURABH VOHRA TAMAL MUKHERJEE CHETNA AWASTHI NADEEM AHMED IDRIS SEVLIVALA
CONTD
Short-term investment funds include cash, bank notes, corporate notes, government bills and various safe short-term debt instruments.
These types of funds are usually used by investors who are temporarily parking funds before moving them to another investment that will provide higher returns.
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INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
INVESTMENT DEFINED
Commitment of funds for a period of time in order to derive future payments Future payments must compensate the investor for:
1. Time the funds are committed 2. Expected rate of inflation 3. Uncertainty of future payments
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Reflects the combination of risk and return available on all assets at a given time
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CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT
Tenure usually between 1 and 36 months Virtually Risk-free Fixed Interest Rate Larger Principle, Higher Interest Rate Mimics Yield Curve Specific Currency Withdrawals before maturity are subject to a penalty
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BONDS - OVERVIEW
An IOU given by a borrower (the issuer) to a lender (the investor) Issuers:
Government (Sovereign Bonds) Firms (Corporate Bonds)
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EQUITIES - OVERVIEW
Common Stock Share of ownership in a corporation
Carries voting rights (no. of votes is proportional to the no. of shares owned) Traded in the Secondary Market (Stock Market) or in the Primary Market (Initial Public Offering)
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EQUITIES - TERMS
Bid and Offer Price Volume Market Capitalization Earnings per Share (EPS) Price/Earnings Ratio (P/E) Dividend Yield Short Selling Margin Financing
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Business Trusts
E.g. First Ship Lease
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STRUCTURED PRODUCTS
Packaged investment products. Includes:
Financial Assets Financial Derivatives
DERIVATIVES OVERVIEW
Financial Instruments which value is derived from underlying stock indices, interest rates, commodity prices or currencies Provides very high leverage Complex and very risky Commonly used for Hedging purposes Possible to lose more than capital outlay Traded on Stock Exchanges and 24/5 Commodity cum Futures Exchanges
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DERIVATIVES EXAMPLES
Futures
Options
Put Options Call Options
Swaps
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FINANCIAL MARKET
A financial market is a market in which people and entities can trade financial securities, commodities, and other fungible item of value at low transaction cost and at price that reflect supply & demand.
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CONTD
Financial market facilitate: The raising of capital (in the capital markets) The transfer of risk (in the derivatives markets) Price discovery Global transactions with integration of financial markets The transfer of liquidity (in the money markets) International trade (in the currency markets)
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CONTD.
FINANCIAL FUNCTIONS: 1. Providing the borrower with funds.
2.Providing the lenders with earning assets so as to enable them to earn wealth. 3.Providing liquidity in the market so as to facilitate trading of funds.
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MONEY MARKET
As money became a commodity, the money market became a component of the financial markets for assets involved in shortterm borrowing, lending, buying and selling with original maturities of one year or less. Trading in the money markets is done over the counter, is wholesale
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CALL MONEY
Call money is a short term finance repayable on demand, with maturity period of one day to fifteen days, used for inter bank transactions. Commercial banks have to maintain a minimum cash balance known as cash reserve ratio.
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CONTD..
Call money is a method by which banks borrow from each other to be able to maintain the cash reserve ratio. The interest rate paid on call money is known as call rate. It is a highly volatile rate that varies from day-to-day and sometimes even from hour-to-hour.
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CONTD.
Government securities carry practically no risk of default and, hence, are called risk-free giltedged instruments. Government of India also issues savings instruments (Savings Bonds, National Saving Certificates (NSCs), etc.) or special securities (oil bonds, Food Corporation of India bonds, fertiliser bonds, power bonds, etc.). They are, usually not fully tradable and are, therefore, not eligible to be SLR securities.
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TYPES OF INSTRUMENTS
TREASURY BILLS :- Treasury bills or T-bills, which are money market instruments, are short term debt instruments issued by the Government of India. CASH MANAGEMENT BILLS :- Government of India, in consultation with the Reserve Bank of India, has decided to issue a new short-term instrument, known as Cash Management Bills.
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CONTD
DATED GOVT SECURITIES :- Dated Government securities are long term securities and carry a fixed or floating coupon (interest rate) which is paid on the face value, payable at fixed time periods (usually half-yearly). The tenor of dated securities can be up to 30 years.
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CONTD.
FIXED RATE BONDS These are bonds on which the coupon rate is fixed for the entire life of the bond. Most Government bonds are issued as fixed rate bonds. FLOATING RATE BONDS Floating Rate Bonds are securities which do not have a fixed coupon rate. The coupon is re-set at preannounced intervals by adding a spread over a base rate.
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ZERO COUPON BONDS Zero coupon bonds are bonds with no coupon payments. Like Treasury Bills, they are issued at a discount to the face value. CAPITAL INDEXED BONDS These are bonds, the principal of which is linked to an accepted index of inflation with a view to protecting the holder from inflation.
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CONTD.
Special Securities - In addition to Treasury Bills and dated securities issued by the Government of India under the market borrowing programme, the Government of India also issues, from time to time, special securities to entities like Oil Marketing Companies, Fertilizer Companies, the Food Corporation of India, etc. as compensation to these companies in lieu of cash subsidies.
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REPOS
A repurchase agreement, also known as a report, or sale and repurchase agreement , is the sale of securities together with an agreement for the seller to buy back the securities at a later date. The repurchase price should be greater than the original sale price, the difference effectively representing interest, sometimes called the repo rate.
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CONTD.
The party that originally buys the securities effectively acts as a lender. The original seller is effectively acting as a borrower, using their security as collateral for a secured cash loan at a fixed rate of interest. A repo is equivalent to a spot sale combined with a forward contract.
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STRUCTURE
A repo is economically similar to a secured loan, with the buyer receiving securities as collateral to protect him against default by the seller. Almost any security may be employed in a repo, though highly liquid securities are preferred as they are more easily disposed of in the event of a default.
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TYPES OF REPO
There are three types of repo maturities: overnight, term, and open repo. 1.Overnight refers to a one-day maturity transaction. 2.Term refers to a repo with a specified end date. 3.Open simply has no end date.
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CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSITS
A certificate of deposit (CD) is a time deposit, a financial product commonly offered to consumers in the United States by banks, thrift institutions, and credit unions. CDs are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) for banks and by the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) for credit unions.
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A commercial paper in India is the monetary instrument issued in the form of promissory note.
Prior to Commercial Paper in Indian money market i.e. before 1990, the corporate companies had to depend upon the crude and traditional method of borrowing working capital from the commercial banks by pledging the inventory of raw materials as Collateral security.
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CONTD.
The introduction of commercial paper as debt instrument has promoted commercial paper market as one of the components of Indian money market. In this commercial paper market, the issuers of commercial paper create supply while the subscribers to commercial paper create demand for these papers.
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CONTD
The main issuers of Commercial paper in this market are corporate and the main subscribers to the Commercial papers are the banking companies.
The face value of Commercial Paper is in the denomination of Rs. 0.5 million and multiples thereof.
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Foreign Exchange Market in India works under the central government in India and executes wide powers to control transactions in foreign exchange.
The Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 or FEMA regulates the whole foreign exchange market in India.
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The Company is subject to a variety of risks due to its foreign operations, including currency risk and credit risk.
If the currency rate rises the company operating in the foreign currency may suffer losses.
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CONTD
The Company attempts to minimize its exposure to foreign currency exchange fluctuations by the use of forward contracts on non-functional currency cash and accounts receivable balances.
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