Key terms Flashcards
What is a fixed exchange rate regime?
- where the value of a currency is pegged relative to the value of another currency- this second currency is called an anchor currency
What is a floating exchange rate regime?
- where the value of a currency is determined by the S and D forces on other currencies, therefore fluctuates against it
- left to its own devices
What is a managed float regime (dirty float)?
- attempt to influence ER by buying and selling currencies
What is a bond?
- a security paying the investor fixed regular payments. These regular payments are known as coupons. The borrower (the bond issuer) then repays the full or par value at a final date referred to as the “maturity” or “redemption” date.
Define bond yields.
The yield (or ‘yield to maturity’) of a bond is the rate of return to the investor from the bond’s coupon payments.
Real vs nominal interest rates?
A real interest rate is an interest rate that has been adjusted to remove the effects of inflation to reflect the real cost of funds to the borrower and the real yield to the lender or to an investor.
A nominal interest rate refers to the interest rate before taking inflation into account.
Define Equity.
An equity is a share in the ownership of a company, entitling the owner to payment of dividends and also to the right to vote at annual general meetings.
Define credit spread
A credit spread reflects the difference in yield between a treasury and corporate bond of the same maturity.
What are interchange fees?
transaction fees that the merchant’s bank account must pay whenever a customer uses a credit/debit card to make a purchase from their store
What is a Four party Payment system?
- four‐party system because alongside the payer (Cardholder) and payee (merchant) there are also two others institutions involved, the issuer that provides the card and the merchant acquirer who engages with the retailer
- the acquirer takes the consumer details and payment details and contacts the card issuer if the card is valid and funds are available, the issuer checks card details and if it is being used by the correct person and authorises payment.
- The link between the two are card schemes that facilitate the transaction
What is a Bank settlement?
- A transfer of assets between two bank entities so the balance sheet remains unchanged. Settlement is almost always through a transfer of deposits (central bank reserves) held by commercial banks at the central bank.
What is a network good or service?
- give one eg of how utility increases
- one eg of how cost reduces
- and one of both
A network good or service is one that is of greater value to consumers, the larger the number consuming or using that good or service. OR has a reduced cost per unit as more people use it.
Prime eg- the internet and sites like etsy, need to reach critical mass to be able to be used
or
Financial network eg: money, based off the willingness to use as a medium of exchange
House hold utilities: the more households in an area the cheaper electricity bills will be for the area as the cost is shared
Payment schemes
Define payment scheme
- a set of rules agreed upon by PSPs to execute transactions with a specific payment instrument
What is a 2-sided payment platform?
- where both payer and payee are part of the same platform but have different needs, incentives, and reasons for using the product.
- outcomes can be effected by different pricing, for example the merchant may reduce prices to increase access for buyers
What is a peer-to-peer (P2P) payment?
Provide example, think about how the app works during exam.
Platforms allowing 1 person to send or receive payments instantly electronically- normally an app.
EG: Revolut, Monzo
Define critical mass.
- the amount of participants a payment scheme needs in order to cover its costs.
Define Primary and Secondary security markets.
eg for both
- Primary: the opportunity to buy securities when they are first issued, usually from the issuer, done in huge trades, prices set by the bank.
EG: IPOs - Secondary: any purchase of securities after the initial offering, price is set by demand and supply of the market.
EG: NYSE
Define book building.
- The process where an underwriter determines the price that a IPO will be delivered
- arriving at a price involves recording investor demand for shares
What is an underwriter?
- in investment banking this is where a bank raises capital for a client (corporation or government) from investors in the form of equity or debt securities
Broker meaning?
- anyone executing a buy or sell order on behalf of their client - not themselves.
- their duty is to achieve the best price, ie buy low and sell high
Outline high-frequency trading.
- rapidly buying or selling small amounts of equities to identify patterns in market price movements, price inconsistencies on different platforms and trading traditions.
Explain what a limit order book is.
- a record of outstanding limit orders maintained by a security specialist.
- a limit order is an order to buy or sell a security at a specific price
- therefore, if the price is not met then a limit order book forms
Define market order
- buying or selling a security as quickly as possible at its current market price
Difference between market and limit order
market = as quickly as possible at current price
‘based on market’
Limit = sets the maximum and minimum limits you are willing to buy or sell
‘based on limit’
Define algorithmic trading.
- using computers to break up large market orders reallocate them to different venues or introduce them into the market carefully and gradually as to not impact price too drastically
Define dark pools
provide eg
- asset exchanges where orders are not displayed to other participants of the market.
- this anonymity prevents the order from majorly effecting price
eg: if an investment bank is going to sell 1,000,000 shares of a company, the stock price would most likely plummet. Ordering in a dark pool limits the effect on price.
Dealer quote markets definition. provide eg
- buyers and sellers do not trade directly with eachother, instead they buy and sell off a dealer who post prices they are willing to buy or sell a security at.
- eg : the NASDAQ
Define Interdealer brokers
- allows dealers to trade anonymously with one another, avoiding large impact on market prices
What is a derivative?
What derivatives are there?
- a contract between two parties which derives its value/ price from an underlying asset
- examples the underlying asset can be a stock, commodity and currencies
- futures, forwards, swaps and options are all derivatives
Define swaps
give an example
- contracts to exchange one set of future payments with another different set of payments
- credit default swaps, a buyer of a bond may buy cds from an insurance company for a premium to mitigate loss incase the bond issuer defaults, shifting risk to the insurer
- or interest rate swaps,
a less established company with a worse credit rating receives a lone with a variable interest rate of 6%, where an established company with a good credit rating has a fixed rate of 5%. They may swap as the established company will receive a lower variable IR and the less established receives 5% instead of 6%.
Define futures and forwards.
- contracts to buy or sell an asset at a certain price by a certain date
Define proprietary trading
- when a financial institution, brokerage firm, investment bank or other liquidity source uses a their own capital to conduct self-promoting financial activities