1 - The characteristics, inherent risks, behaviour and correlation of asset classes. Part 2 - Equities, property and alternative investments Flashcards

1
Q

Who governs the ongoing behaviour of companies listed on the stock exchange?

A

UKLA (united kingdom listing authority)

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2
Q

What is the purpose of AIM (alternative investment market)

A

Provide wider accessibility to smaller companies who are young and developing, without the onerous requirements of the LSE
They cannot be described as listed, however the shares can be bought and sold.

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3
Q

What are the costs involved in buying and selling shares?

A

Commission
Stamp duty reserve tax
Panel on Takeovers and mergers levy

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4
Q

What is the difference between an offer price and an bid price?

A

Offer - price bought at

Bid - price sold at

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5
Q

When is SD and SDRT charged?

A

SD - charged if the transfer is effected by a stock transfer form, over £1K
SDRT - charged on paperless share transactions effected by the electronic CREST system. The rate is 0.5% for both

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6
Q

Who pays the SD and SDRT?

A

Paid by the purchaser, rounded up to the nearest £5 (SD), rounded up to the nearest 1p (SDRT)

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7
Q

When is PTM levy charged?

A

Applied to all trades of £10k or more. flat rate of £1. The panel overseas all takeovers and mergers on LSE companies

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8
Q

What are the key features of preference shares?

A

Pay a fixed rate of dividend, half yearly if there is sufficinet profit
Payment of dividends takes priority over ordinary shares (but after any interest payments on debt)
They have no voting rights
Following liquidation, rank before ordinary share capital (after creditors)
Yields are higher than bonds, due to the higher risk involved.

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9
Q

What are the different types of preference share?

A

Cummulative - if there is insufficient funds to pay one year, the shortfall can be carried forward and paid before other share classes

Non-cummulative - no arrears paid and no carry forward

Participating - pay a fixed rate of dividend and participate in profits. Also may receive an additional dividend as a proportion of ordinary share dividend declared

Redeemable - Dividends paid to the shareholder for a period of time & then repaid. Most are undated, some are redeemable on a set date

Convertible - convert into ordinary shares at a set date or terms. If ordinary shares increase in value, its likely conversion rights will be taken up.

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10
Q

What is the tax free amount for dividends across a tax year?

A

£2,000

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11
Q

What are the main risks associated with holding shares?

A

Equity capital risk - price depends on supply and demand, previous and future performace of the company, wider economic or technological change, geopolitical events, beneficiaries of fashion - i.e. tech shares

Share dividend volatility - can fluctuate based on profits of the company

Currency risk - out of country investments can fluctuabte in line with currency markets vs sterling

Liquidity risk - potential inability to realise investments when required, smaller company shares (AIM) may be more difficuly to sell. Property funds are particuarly subject to deferred periods and redemption blocks

Counterparty risk - organisation will fail, non disclosure of potential risks to company

Fund Managers and insurance companies - events leading to failure (however greatly reduced due to regulation.

Regulatory risk - inadequate regulation of markets, government influence particularly in emgering/developing economies. Investors being misled, inefficient market mechanisms leading to dealing difficulties, market manipulation

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12
Q

What three elements of diversification could help reduce risk to an investor in equities?

A

Diversifying from individual shares

Diversifying across sectors

Diversifying across international markets

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13
Q

What is the general view of the financial services press of long term performance of equities vs other main asset types?

A

They have delivered superior returns over the long term to all other asset classes.

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14
Q

What are the characteristics of Private Equity investment?

A

Provide medium to long terms funds in exchange for an equity stake and therefore rewarded ultimately by a company’s success

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15
Q

How would a private equity investor realise their asset?

A

Selling its shares back to the company
Selling to another investor, such as another private equity firm
A trade sale - sale of company shares to another company
The company acheives a stock market listing

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16
Q

What are the two types of Private Equity companies?

A

Invest directly in unlisted companies

Invest in funds that invest in unlisted companies (fund of funds)

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17
Q

What is the attraction of investing in private equity and what is the risk?

A

They are shown to grow faster than other types of companies as a result of capital and experience personel input by the private equity firm
Outperform other investments by 2%-4%

Some companies will fail, others will not grow quickly. One product firms are more vunerable and all are vunerable in an economic downturn.

As the majority of shares of those which are listed are often held in private hands, the price can be volatile.

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18
Q

Why is ‘earnings per share’ an important consideration in investment decisions?

A

All companies listed are required to publish EPS in their accounts
EPS enables an investor to see the trend in a companies profitability

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19
Q

What does the dividen yield demonstrate?

A

Allows the investor to compare the return on a share to the returns on other investments or other shares.

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20
Q

If a share price slumps, what impact could it have on the yield that could be a concern?

A

The yield may be inflated and look more attractive if a sudden drop in share price has occured.

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21
Q

What is meant by dividend cover & what is the benefit of a higher level of cover?

A

How many times the dividend could be paid out of the available earnings. Indicates the riskiness of the investment and the margin of safety the company has in paying the dividend.

The higher the figure, the more likely the company will be able to maintain the existing dividend if profits were to fall.
A high dividend cover means the company is retaining earnings for reinvestment

22
Q

If a company pays a larger dividend than it has available in profts for the year, what could be the implications?

A

It would need to draw on reserves and said to be paying an uncovered dividend
it could not go on indefinitely

23
Q

What is the P/E ratio of a share (price earnings) and how is it useful?

A

It is the relationships between the share price and the earnings per share.
Its a measure of how highly investors value the earnings of a company and can be viewed as a reflection of the markets optimism or pessimism about potential growth

24
Q

What might high and low P/E ratios suggest?

A

If a ratio was higher than the average for a sector, it would suggest shares are in great demand.
A lower ratio would suggest a company was not in favour and had poor growth prospects

25
Q

What is the NAV (net asset value) and why is it useful?

A

Tangible assets that are attributable to ordinary shareholders. Measures the amount available to shareholders if the business were to close down.

Provides a useful guide at which shares should trade for companies whose assets are generally readily realisable. Less useful for companies who are valued on earning potential, whose shares would generally trade above NAV (as investors are willing to pay something for the goodwill inherent in the business)

26
Q

In what situations would a NAV be a useful valuation figure?

A

If a takeover bid is made - shareholders could assess if assets are being given away too cheaply

If a liquidation seems a possibility, could indicate the amount shareholders could receive and help judge whether to hold onto or sell shares.

27
Q

What are the limitations of investment ratios?

A

Different accounting policies can be used in different companies, so comparing could be difficult

The management may decide to change the accounting policy over the years, so time comparisons could be misleading

Many are calculated using historical data

Trends over years which include high inflation, could produce misleading results - may show an upward trend, but they could in reality be static or declining.

28
Q

What is the free float of a stock and why might a company weighting be adjusted?

A

The proportion of shares available for trading on the stock market
The weightings of companies with less than 75% of shares available for public trading are reduced to reflect free float

29
Q

What are the main FTSE indices?

A

FTSE all share index (includes FTSE 100, 250 and small cap) 98% of the index, 600 companies

FTSE 100 - 100 biggest UK companies
FTSE 250 - The next 250 largest companies outside of the FTSE 100

FTSE 350 - combination of the 100 and 250

30
Q

What are the other FTSE indices, outside of the 350?

A

FTSE small cap - rest of the all share, that are too small to reach the 350

FTSE fledgling - too small for the all share, no liquidity requirements

FTSE AIM - young and growing companies

FTSE TMT - tech, media and telecommnications

FTSE techMark All share - innovative tech stocks

FTSE 4 Good - companies that meet globally recognised corporate soclal responsibility standards

FTSE actuaties UK conventional Gilts all stocks

FTSE sterling Corporate Bond

31
Q

What are the FTSE AIM index series?

A

FTSE AIM 50
FTSE AIM 100
FTSE AIM all share
FTSE AIM all share supersector

32
Q

What are the three main US indices?

A

The dow Jones - 30 blue chip companies
Standard and Poor Composite - 500 listed companies
The NASDAQ - small young fast growing companies such as IT and biotech

33
Q

What are some of the limitations of indices?

A

Need to understand the construction and limitations to use them effectively as a valid benchmark

Most modern indices use market capitalisation, therefore reflecting the large and small values of companies on the market.

Some older use a crude average of prices

an index only reflects changes in capital value and ignores reinvested divident income

They do not include the buying and selling, CGT and management expenses

The index assumes the investor is fully committed to the market and holds no cash.

34
Q

What are the drawbacks of property investment?

A

Lack of liquidity
Costs associated with purchase and ongoing management
Void periods without a tenant

35
Q

What are the factors to take into account when considering buying a rental property?

A

Location
Tenants
Age and condition of property
Diversification

36
Q

What were the SDLT changes for first time buyers in Nov 2017?

A

Threshold in England and NI went up to £300K, however no relief is payable if the purchase price is £500K or more

37
Q

If a second residential property is purchased worth over £40K, what is the SDLT rate?

A

3%

38
Q

Under what circumstances would a company not be charged the standard rate if 15% SDLT on a residential purchase?

A

If the property is to be used for a rental business.

39
Q

When is SDLT not charged for the leasing on land or premises?

A

If the NPV (Net present value) of rent payable does not exceed £125K for residential and £150K for commercial property

40
Q

What is the Scottish equivalent of SDLT?

A

LBTT (land and building transaction tax)

41
Q

How does the % of LBTT differ to SDLT for second homes?

A

It increased to 4% from 3% from 25th Jan 19

42
Q

If an individual lets out a room in thier main residence, what can they apply for?

A

Rent a room relief (limited to £7500 per year)

43
Q

How much is the property income allowance?

A

£1,000

44
Q

Out of the three types of commercial property market (retail, office, industrial), which has the lowest yield?

A

Retail premises

45
Q

Why is commerical property more secure than residential leases?

A

Longer leases, with maintenance and insurance costs payable by the tenant.

46
Q

What are the drawbacks of investing in commercial property?

A

Sale and purchase is slow and complex, transaction costs 5%-6%
Growth in income is slow - rent reviews generally every 5 years
Property cannot usually be divided into segments, but sold as a whole
Market is difficult to analyse - few transactions of high value and access to information is restricted
Time lag in supply and demand

47
Q

What would be considered as an alternative investment?

A

Coins
stamps
art
collectibles - wine, books, limited edition items, gold, cars
commodities in agriculture, infrastructure and alternative energy

48
Q

When considering buying a work of art of collectible, what considerations should there be in terms of the viability of the investment?

A

The difference between buying and selling prices & dealer mark up’s
State of repair
Restoration, storage and insurance
Authenticity
Changes in tastes
Number of buyers and sellers in a particular market can be small so impact on sale or buying price
Specialist knowledge

49
Q

What are the two types of commodities?

A

Hard commodities - mining products such as gold, metal, crude oil, gas
Soft commodities - typically grown such as coffee, cocoa, sugar, corn, wheat, livestock

50
Q

Why are cryptocurrencies so appealing to criminals?

A

It is anonymous so therefore is easier to launder and move money & evade tax