Financial Instruments, Financial Markets, and Financial Institutions
Financial Instruments, Financial Markets, and Financial Institutions
Financial Instruments, Financial Markets, and Financial Institutions
Introduction
The international financial system exists to facilitate the design, sale, and exchange of a broad set of contracts with a very specific set of characteristics. We obtain financial resources through this system:
Directly from markets, and Indirectly through institutions.
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Introduction
Indirect Finance: An institution stands between lender and borrower.
We get a loan from a bank or finance company to buy a car.
Direct Finance: Borrowers sell securities directly to lenders in the financial markets.
Direct finance provides financing for governments and corporations.
Asset: Something of value that you own. Liability: Something you owe.
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Introduction
Financial development is linked to economic growth. The role of the financial system is to facilitate production, employment, and consumption. Resources are funneled through the system so resources flow to their most efficient uses.
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Introduction
We will survey the financial system in three steps: 1. Financial instruments or securities
Stocks, bonds, loans and insurance. What is their role in our economy? New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq. Where investors trade financial instruments. What they are and what they do.
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2. Financial Markets
3. Financial institutions
Financial Instruments
Financial Instruments: The written legal obligation of one party to transfer something of value, usually money, to another party at some future date, under certain conditions.
The enforceability of the obligation is important. Financial instruments obligate one party (person, company, or government) to transfer something to another party. Financial instruments specify payment will be made at some future date. Financial instruments specify certain conditions under which a payment will be made.
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The paradox of leverage reinforces the destabilizing liquidity spiral from Chapter 2. Both spirals feed the cycle of falling prices and widespread deleveraging that was the hallmark of the financial crisis of 2007-2009.
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2. Timing of payment: 3. Likelihood payment is made: 4. Conditions under with payment is made:
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4.
Stocks The holder owns a small piece of the firm and entitled to part of its profits. Firms sell stocks to raise money. Primarily used as a stores of wealth.
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These offer an opportunity to store value and trade risk in almost any way one would like.
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The biggest risk we all face is becoming disabled and losing our earning capacity.
Insuring against this should be one of our highest priorities. More likely than our house burning down.
It is important to assess to make sure you have enough insurance. One risk better transferred to someone else.
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Financial Markets
Financial markets are places where financial instruments are bought and sold. These markets are the economys central nervous system. These markets enable both firms and individuals to find financing for their activities. These markets promote economic efficiency:
They ensure resources are available to those who put them to their best use. They keep transactions costs low.
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2. Information:
3. Risk sharing:
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Trading is what makes financial markets work. Placing an order in a stock market has the following characteristics:
The stock you wish to trade. Whether you wish to buy or sell. The size of the order - number of shares. The price you would like to trade.
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For a well known stock, the NYSE is another place from which to order.
Liquidity is supplemented by designated market makers (DMMs). The person on the floor charged with making a market. To make the market work, they often buy and sell on their own account.
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This article highlights large swings in financial markets during the financial crisis from 20072009. Before the crisis, professional investors made their own institutions and the overall financial system vulnerable by taking on too much risk. When the crisis hit, they faced a shortfall of liquidity. Liquidity swings caused many financial markets to plunge and rebound together.
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Liquid, interbank loans are the marginal source of funds for many banks, with their cost guiding other lending rates. The financial crisis of 2007-2009 strained interbank lending.
Anxious banks preferred to hold their liquid assets in case their own needs arose. They also were concerned about the safety of their trading partners.
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The rising cost and reduced availability of interbank loans created a vicious circle of:
increased caution, greater demand for liquid assets, reduced willingness to lend, and higher loan rates.
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Financial Institutions
Firms that provide access to the financial markets, both
to savers who wish to purchase financial instruments directly and to borrowers who want to issue them.
Healthy financial institutions open the flow of resources, increasing the systems efficiency.
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Financial intermediation and leverage in the US have shifted away from traditional banks and toward other financial institutions less subject to government regulations.
Brokerages, insurers, hedge funds, etc.
The rise of highly leveraged shadow banks, combined with government relaxation of rules for traditional banks, permitted a rise of leverage in the financial system as a whole.
This made the financial system more vulnerable to shocks.
Rapid growth in some financial instruments made it easier to conceal leverage and risktaking.
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The crisis has encouraged the government to scrutinize any financial institution that could, by risk taking, pose a threat to the financial system.
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Most people need to borrow to buy a house. Mortgage payment will be your biggest monthly expense so shop around. Many offers are from mortgage brokers - firms that have access to pools of funds earmarked for use as mortgages. Who offers your mortgage is not important get the best rate you can.
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