Part 2 Flashcards
List the behavour science of investing
- Anchoring
- Refers to the fact that investors sometiimes base their perceptions on past experience or expert opinon, which they then tend amend to allow for evident differences to the current conditions
- Investors expectation on future levels of inflation will be heavily based on past actual inflations in the past
- It make take time for investors to be convinced that a long term reduction in inflation will occur
- Prospect theory
- This is the theory of how people make decisions when faced with risk and undercertaintity
- It explains why people make asymetric decisions when faced with similar possible gains and losses
- Individuals are assumed risk adverse when facing gains and risk seekers when facing losses defined in terms of a reference point
- This generates utility curves that are concave above the reference point, convex below the reference point and with a point of inflexion at the chosen reference point
- Propect theory suggests that the way in which alternatives are presented or framed can be very important
- people are more risk adverse for gains and risk taking for losses
- Myopic losses
- Less risk adverse if the gamble is muti-period
- Estimate probabilities
- Dislike of negative events
- Representative heuristic - people find more probable for events they can imagine
- Availability
- Overconfidence
- Mental accounting
- People find it hard to aggregate events
- They think individually
- Effects of options
- Primary effect
- recency
- Middle
- Dislike complexity and are more likely to deffer
- Status quo
- Regret aversion
- ambiguity
- Dislike uncertainity
- Herding
- Spurious - Where many investors make the same investment decisions based on some real piece of economic or political news.
- This occurs when investors do something without reference to the actions of another investor
- Cross sectional momentum
- Stocks performs inline with their groups
- Influenced by past performance or sentiment
- Belief perseverance
- Mood - Based anomaly
- When an investment decision is being made on some unrelated event that has no bearing on the value of the investment being purchased
Aims of regulation
Correct market inefficiencies
Protect consumers of financial products
To maintain confidence in the financial services
To reduce financial crimes
Forms of regulatory regime
Prescriptive
Freedom with publicity
Outcome based regimes
Types of regulatory regime
Unregulated
Voluntary code of conduct
Statutory
Self regulated
Factors to consider when analysing the prospects for a company
Management
Retained profits
Competition within industry
History (recent) of company
Input costs
Market growth prospects
Products
The risk of oversea investments
Custodian needed
Additional admin required
Time delays
Expenses incurred / expertise needed
Regulation poor
Political instability
Information harder to obtain (and less of it)
Language difficulties
Liquidity problems
Accounting differences
Restrictions on foreign ownership / repatriation problems
What is Basis risk
- Basis risk arise happens when the asset whose price is being hedged is not exactly the same as the assets underlying the futures contract. The price of the underlying asset does not move in the same way as the price of the asset to be hedged.
- This is Cross hedging risk
- The hedger is uncertain as to the exact date when the assets were brought or sold
- If investor needs to close the futures early or roll over, movements in the interest could mean gains or losses are made on the variaitons of interest rate
- The hedge requires the futures contract to be closed well before its expiration date
What is the optimum hedge ratio
h = P*σs/σf
What are the operational aspect of financial services that regulation seek to address
- Sales process - only sold to suitable investors i.e. those that are well informed, reasonably wealthy
- Operations and the extent of any lock in periods and notice periods
- Levels of surrender penulties are included
- Reporting to investors - both frequency of reporting and the information that must be provided with regard to fund performance, investment strategy
- Pricing - methodology must be stated
- The fees charged
- Suitability of the employees - need to have qualificiations
- The allowable legal structure
Pros of regulating the shares issues
- Ensure that the issue of shares are conducted in an orderly and fair way
- The regulation can be extended to post - issue to ensure that company acts in accordance to pre-issue promises
- Regulations can help protect investors against unscruplous dealings or claims
- Increases confidence in the market helping thfe to make share issues a success
- Regulations could lead to investors having additional knowledge
- Most countries regulate listing of shares, so this is important in the global economy
7.
Cons of regulating shares
- Will be costly to maintain and may not be appropriate for all companies all the time
- Companies may act in line with the letter of the law but not in spirit of the law
- They need to disclose sensitive information
Regulation of the issue process
Prior to issue
- Published audited accounts - governments may require companies to produce audited on a regular basis so that potential investors can assess the financial strengths and the level of risk
Share prospectus at issue
- Companies maybe required to publish share prospectus before share issuance. The following information is required
- details of the number shares and offer price - this provides investors the information on the market capitialisation of the company
- the underwriters of the issues - the investor can assess the quality of the underwriter and infer the quality of the shares on offer
- Details of share allocation
- how the money will be used by the company - will allow investors to assess the risk reward. This could be a reguatory requirement that ensures that company use the money on the stated purpose
- intended dividend policy - so that potential investors can assess the likely dividend stream. Such requirement could focus the management on achieving this return
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details of salaries of directors and senior managers and their salaries.
- This will allow investors to assess the quality of management
Post issue regulation
The following regulation could improve the market confidence of investors in the market and help with the overall issuance process
- production of audited accounts
- mangement details to be published
- requirement for share prices to be made regularly available
- Requirement for interim reports, forecasts and profit warnings
- any interest by potential takeover partners to be made available
The key principles underlying the legislation of financial services
Integrity
Company needs to act in the best interest of the customers and be transparent with the customers
Skill and care
Market practice
The design, sales and disclosure of the product should be in line with modern market practice. ln particular it should comply with any local and international standards and regulations.
Information about the customers
The bank should keep customers fully informed of events that affect their policies and deposits.
They should also obtain sufficient information about customers in order to offer a service to them.
Perhaps Bank A did not get enough information about the customers of B to determine that the debts were in fact non-performing.
Information for or to the customers
lf the product is marketed on the internet, it may be important that the company has some process to ensure that the product is suitable for them. ln particular the company needs to assess customers’ risk appetite and financial resources prior to allowing them to invest. Such information should be collected regularly to ensure that the circumwstances have not changed.
While marketed as a savings product, this product is clearly quite a volatile and risky investment. lt is important that customers are made aware of this, both through information and disclosures in the marketing literature. The fact that this product is marketed via the internet makes this even more important, as investors will not speak with any advisers prior to buying the product. lnformation on the product’s performance and ongoing risk needs to be communicated regularly, and not just at the point of sale
Conflicts of interests
Customer assets
lt is important that customer assets are protected and separated from the assets of the company itself, so they are safeguarded in the event of the company becoming bankrupt.
As the customer assets are to be ‘pooled’, it is vital that such an individual’s share of the assets can be identified and properly accounted for.
Financial resources
Companies should operate with an appropriate and adequate amount of capital resources for the risks of the business. lt seems that A did not monitor the risk appropriately, and failed to keep sufficient financial resources, because it required fresh capital following the takeover.
lf this product uses derivatives extensively, then margin requirements will be important. The company needs to be sure that it has adequate liquidity, and that it has assets that qualify as collateral with its derivative trading partners, The level of counterparty risk should be assessed relative to the capital that the company has.
internal organisation
Companies should arrange their affairs in an organised and efficient manner. Perhaps in this case A did not keep proper records of the due diligence and relied on second hand reporting from the team. Proper record keeping, audit trails and disclosure should be carried out on such internal projects.
Perhaps the compliance function of the bank should be revisited. Proper compliance should be embedded in every part of the day to day business, including due diligence reporting.
Relations with regulators
Bank A should maintain an open and cooperative relationship with the regulator at all times. By doing this, the regulator is able to determine whether mistakes were caused by fraud, mismanagement or mistakes, and penalties can be determined accordingly. Bank A should have kept the regulator up to date at all times as it carried out the due diligence and as it discovered the bad debt.
The key principles underlying the legislation of institutional investment practices
- Effective decision making
- Clear objectives
- Focus on asset allocation
- Explicit mandates
- Explicit reporting
- Activism
- Appropriate benchmarks
- Performance measurements
- Transparency
- Effective operations
The role of the credit rating agencies
- Ratings agencies apply a mix of qualitative and quantitative analysis in carrying out their assessments, and also have direct access to senior officers of the issuer.
- Having carried out their analysis, they form a view and provide an issuer rating and a bond rating (which can be higher or lower than the issuer rating, and differ from other bonds from the same issuer).
- Ratings agencies provide significant amounts of detail on their methodologies, however they do not provide detailed supporting information relating to their specific assessments.
- Historically, many bond investors have tended to place significant reliance on issuer and bond credit ratings, rather than carry out their own credit analysis independently.
- For smaller investors, this may be appropriate on the grounds of lower costs relative to buying independent research or building an internal team of credit experts. However, for larger investors these factors are less compelling and it is generally considered desirable to obtain or carry out independent research in addition to monitoring ratings.
- Provided an investor has confidence in the process applied by a ratings agency, an investor can place a certain degree of reliance on bond and issuer ratings.