Influences on Markets Flashcards

1
Q

State the quantity theory of money

A

M × V = P × Q

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2
Q

Explain what everything stands for the the Quantity theory of money formula

A

M = the amount of money in an economy
V = the velocity of money – the number of times money circulates the economy over a specified period
P = the average price level of goods, services and assets
Q = the volume of goods, services and assets produced/ Transacted

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3
Q

According to the quantity supply of money - what would a doubling of the money supply accomplish

A

It would not necessarily make people better off unless an increase in the volume of goods, services and assets produced accompanied it. A doubling of the money supply would likely lead to a doubling of prices - as there is the same amount to buy. Increases in prices pushing inflation levels up

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4
Q

Define a fiat currency

A

Means currency without an intrinsic value, only valuable because people believe in it.

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5
Q

Define broad money

A

Currency deposits with an agreed maturity of up to two years.

Redeemable at notice of up to three months and repurchase agreements, money market fund shares/units and debt securities up to two years.

Most inclusive method of measuring the amount of money in the economy

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6
Q

What is the current political economy

A

Most developed countries are capitalist rather than centrally planned communist countries. Capitalist economies aim to give more economic freedom to their people. This enables people to take more risk, by giving them greater access to markets and to speculate on these markets, which may result in a better allocation of capital to profitable projects

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7
Q

What is the most significant trend/monetary policy of the last decade

A

Undoubtedly the most significant policy of the recent past has been Quantitative Easing (QE). The media contain various shallow narratives on QE giving an erroneous impression of its impact. At its heart this is a form of monetary policy in which a central bank purchases securities to achieve the desired outcome

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8
Q

In QE environment what does the central bank do

A

The central bank prints new money.
It uses the money to purchase assets – mainly bonds and corporate bonds but also equities (purchases may be made indirectly by buying ETFs of the relevant assets).
This causes asset prices to rise in each of these markets – and bond yields to fall.

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9
Q

What are the ripple effects of the central banks actions in a QE environment

A

Bond investors who sold bonds will want to hold other assets in their place so they buy corporate bonds /other assets - pushing these prices up
Corporate bond investors who sold to the bond investors will typically want to hold other assets so will buy other asset ex: equity
Speculators will likely purchase bonds, corporate bond and other assets in anticipation of the increased demand for these assets and the price increases
Corporates will likely want to take advantage of the low corporate bond yields and issue more bonds. This will partially offset the price rises in the corporate bond market. In some cases, the proceeds of the bond sale may be used to buy back their shares; this will further exacerbate the price increases in the equity markets.

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10
Q

What is the impact of QE on Asset Prices

A

Assets price inflation
Central bank purchases will push up (bond) prices in those (bond ) markets
Asset prices increase in other markets too as (bond) sellers will look to buy toher assets to replace them, etc etc this continues recursively
Speculation further adds to inflation of prices

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11
Q

What is the impact of QE on Wealth and economic inequity

A

Asset owners have wealth increases
No assets no gains - will be worse off having no participation
Increase in inequality

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12
Q

What is the impact of QE on hedge funds

A

Inflation will make it harder to see what stocks are overvalued/ undervalued - the stock price of companies with weak fundamentals could increase for a sustained period of time
Investors will grow in numbers as more people have money to invest in assets
Investors become more wealthy

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13
Q

What is the impact of QE on economic growth

A

Boost Econimic Growth
-Lowering interest rates,
-Increasing asset prices

Risks
-Inflation
-Asset Bubbles
-Income Inequality

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14
Q

What is the impact of QE on interest rates

A

It lowers the interest rates on savings and loans. And that stimulates spending in the economy.
Increasing the supply of money lowers interest rates further and provides liquidity to the banking system
On most fundamental level it is because interest rate is price for money

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15
Q

What is the impact of QE on Price inflation

A

increase inflation by boosting the money supply, lowering interest rates, and encouraging spending and investment, which increases demand in the economy.

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16
Q

What is the impact of QE on wages

A

Nominal wages see small gains
Most of the increase in employment is likely to be in the service industry to service those with greater levels of wealth. These jobs are often poorly paid.
Real wage increases small due to low inflation but increased asset prices mean purchasing power of these real wages is lower

17
Q

What is the impact of QE on bank lending

A

Banks have more cash from selling bonds to central banks - cna lend more
They will only lend to those that can repay (those with greater level of assets)
Low interest rates have a detrimental impact of banks lending margins, dampens overall willingness to lend

18
Q

What are the risks arising from QE

A

Bubbles in asset markets. Disconnected from true economic value.

Income Inequality: QE typically benefits asset owners (e.g., stockholders), widening the wealth gap between those with significant investments and those without.

Impact corporate finance decisions: poor projects will get finance as they show profitability using the low interest rates

19
Q

What are the principal aims of regulation?

A

Correct market inefficiencies and to promote efficient and orderly markets.
Protect consumers of financial products.
Maintain confidence in the financial system.
Help reduce financial crime.

20
Q

What are the direct and indirect costs to regulation

A

Direct costs arise in administering the regulation; indirect costs arise from changes in behaviour, both of consumers and regulated firms, to react to the regulations.

21
Q

What is the need for regulation very prominent in the financial sector?

A

The need for regulation of financial markets is seen to be greater than the need for regulation of most other markets primarily because of the importance of confidence in the financial system and the damage that would be done by a systemic financial collapse.

22
Q

Explain Efficient Market hypothesis

A

The EMH states that an asset’s prices fully reflect some(or all) available information. Hence, stocks always trade at their fair value so it is impossible to consistently pick individual stocks that will ‘beat the market’. States that outperformance of the market is only possible by taking greater (systematic) risk, which roughly is the equivalent to saying that CAPM Holds. This is a consensus investment analysis approach not based on any judgement or instinct - purely mathematical.

23
Q

What is the SML?

A

A graphical representation of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), which shows the relationship between the expected return of a security and its systematic risk (measured by beta).

24
Q

What is the SML formula

A

E[rp]=rf+beta x (rm-rf)

E[rp] is the expected return on a portfolio of stocks.
rf is the risk-free rate of return
rm is the market return

25
Q

What are some trading characteristics that make money

A

Letting winning trades run.
Not getting caught up in a market/media frenzy.
Increased exposure to a winning trade.
Respecting stops when the trend reversed.

26
Q

Explain technical analysis

A

Technical analysis is a method for forecasting the direction of prices through the study of past market data,
primarily price and volume. Behavioural economics and quantitative analysis use many of the same tools of technical analysis. Technical analysis stands in contrast
to the fundamental analysis of security analysis, which attempts to forecast market prices using financial and economic data.Understand the patterns and trading data that match them

27
Q

What is QT

A

Form of monetary policy in which a central bank sells securities (mainly bonds).

Aim: Shrink their balance sheet and reduce the money supply in the economy

28
Q

Explain the central banks actions in QT and breifly the response to that

A

The central bank sells their assets to reduce its money reserves - this in turn is removing liquidity/money from financial markets.
In response to this asset markets prices start to go down. The bond investors who buy back the bonds from the central banks do so by selling their other assets pushing the prices to fall more.
Overall assets prices fall, bond prices fall but bond yields increase.

29
Q

What are some ripple effects of QT

A

Higher borrowing costs
Reduced market liquidity
Falling asset prices (stocks and bonds)
Stronger currency and its effects on trade

30
Q

What impact with QT have in terms of wealth?

A

Asset owners have wealth decreases
No assets: gains - will be better off having no participation
Those less well off hopefully benefit from less inflated prices

31
Q

What impact with QT have in terms of economic growth?

A

Quantitative Tightening (QT) can slow economic growth by raising interest rates, reducing liquidity, and making borrowing more expensive. It may also strengthen the currency, reducing export competitiveness, and lower asset prices, which can dampen consumer spending and investment. However, it helps reduce inflation by tightening financial conditions.

32
Q

What impact with QT have in terms of bank lending?

A

Higher interest rates have a good impact of banks lending margins, increasing overall willingness to lend
They may lend to people they previously wouldn’t have because of favourable margins
Less demand for borrowing as costs are high

33
Q

What impact with QT have in terms of wages?

A

Decreased asset prices mean purchasing power of these real wages is higher

34
Q

What impact with QT have in terms of price inflation?

A

interest rate hikes are known as the central bank’s one major tool to lower inflation, which it does by raising the cost of borrowing money to curb the demand for goods and services

35
Q

What impact with QT have in terms of interest rates?

A

Interest rates increase on savings and loans meaning short term less spending in the economy
Decreasing the supply of money highers interest further and means lack of liquidity in the banking system
Interest is the price of money- money is in low supply so it costs more

36
Q

What are the risks of QT

A

Potential to destabilize financial markets- panic due to lack of liquidity
QT likely puts upward pressure on interest rates, there is significant uncertainty about the magnitude of these effects
High-interest rates mean that future equity earnings will be discounted using very High-interest rates.
QE is also likely to impact corporate finance decisions, meaning good projects may not get finance as they don’t show profitability using the high interest rates, even though they might show profitability under normal interest rates.