Investment Introduction
Investment Introduction
Investors may be
institutions (insurance companies, pension
funds, corporations etc.)
or private investors (both directly via
investment contracts and more commonly
via collective investment schemes e.g.
mutual funds) .
Individuals
Overview of the subject
Investment Process consists of Two broad tasks
1. Security and Market Analysis
(Investment Analysis)
- We assess the risk and expected return attributes of entire set of
possible investment vehicles
2. The formation of optimal portfolio of assets
( Portfolio theory)
- Determination of the best risk-return opportunities available from
feasible investment portfolios
- Choice of the best portfolio from the feasible set
Overview of the course
The course is about the investment of
resources in financial securities
Investment is defined as a sacrifice made now
to obtain a return later
It is current consumption that is sacrificed
Two forms of investment can be defined
Real investment is the purchase of land,
machinery, etc
Financial investment is the purchase of a "paper"
contract
For instance
Oilibya , Libiya’s Oil gaint siging an agreement to acquire 100% of
oil gaint, Shell petroleum Ethiopia and Djibouti Ltd.
Tata Motars Ltd puts money into developing a new small car per
unit $2500
Govt decided to invest in bahirdar to promote satelite launching
centre.
DP World going to put $2 bln on Ethio-Djibouti Railway
Kombolch textile share company expansion programme
International Finance Corporation investment on MIDROC-
DERBA cement factory by providing loan
Real vs Financial Assets
Real Assets:
Productive capacity is a function of Real assets of the economy
For ex: land and Buildings, Knowledge, Machines
Physical and Human assets generate the entire spectrum of
output produced and consumed by the society
Financial Assets:
Do not directly contribute to the productive capacity of the
Economy
Contribute indirectly to the productive capacity of the Economy
These are allow to separation of ownership and Management
Real vs Financial Assets
Facilitate to transfer funds to enterprises with attractive investment
opportunities
Contribute to the wealth of individuals or firms holding them
These are claims to the income generated by real assets or claims on
income from the government
These are derived from and depend on the values of the underlying
real assets of the firm ( Bonds ,equity stocks – residual claim)
These assets are define the income or wealth among investors
When the investor prefer to invest for their future, they chose hold
financial assets
These are facilitates to procure real assets
These are the means by which individuals hold their claims on real
assets
For ex: shares, bonds, t-bills, CDs, commercial Paper etc…
Distinction between Real and
Financial Assets
Financial assets are created and destroyed in the ordinary course of
business
Real assets are destroyed only by accident or Wearing out overtime
Presentation in the Balance sheet
Gains and Losses
Some investments can be
very successful.
$10,000 invested in August
1998 in Cephalon would have
been worth $107,096 in
September 2003 (and
$180,000 in 2007)
£10,000 invested in
September 2001 in
Lastminute.com would have
been worth £134,143 in
August 2003
And Losses
Losses in value can be even
more spectacular
$10,000 invested in
September 2000 in Palm Inc.
would have been reduced to
$91 by April 2003
A holding in July 2000 of £15
million in Exeter Equity
Growth Fund would have
been worth £72,463 in August
2003 (the share price fell from
103.50 to 0.50)
Financial Investment
There are numerous components to financial
investment
Markets: where assets are bought and sold, and the
forms of trade
Securities: the kinds of securities available, their
returns and risks
Investment process: the decision about which
securities, and how much of each
Financial theory: the factors that determine the
rewards from investment (and the risks)
Markets
A market is any organized system for
connecting buyers and sellers
There are many security markets
Markets may have a physical location
The New York Stock Exchange
May exist only as computer networks
The London Stock Exchange
Markets vary in the securities that are traded
and in the way securities are traded
Characteristics of Markets
There are a number of ways to classify
markets
Primary/Secondary
Primary markets are security markets where new
issues of securities are traded
A secondary market is a market where securities
are resold
The London Stock Exchange is a secondary
market
Most activity on stock exchanges is in the
secondary market
Characteristics of Markets
Trades on the primary market raise capital for firms
Trades on the secondary market do not raise additional
capital for firms
The secondary market is still important
It gives liquidity to primary issues. New securities would have
a lower value if they could not be subsequently traded
It signifies value. Trading in assets reveals information and
provides a valuation of the assets. This helps to guide
investment decisions
Characteristics of Markets
A second way to classify markets is the times
of trading
Call/continuous
In a call market trading takes place at a specified
time intervals
Some call markets have a provision that limits
movement from the prior price. This is to prevent a
temporary order imbalance from dramatically
moving the price
In a continuous market there is trading at all times
the market is open
Characteristics of Markets
Markets can also be characterized by the
lifespan of the assets traded
Money/Capital
Money market: the market for assets with a life of
less than 1 year
Capital market: the market for assets with a life
greater than 1 year
Some assets, such as most bonds, have a
fixed lifespan
Common stock have an indefinite lifespan
Financial Markets and the
Economy
1. Consumption Timing:
How can we shift our purchasing power form high earnings periods to
low-earnings periods of life
Some individuals in an economy are earnings more than they wish to
spend Ex: HNWIs
One way is to Store our wealth in financial assets ex: stocks, bonds,
Long-term deposits, Insurance policy, pension funds, retirement benefit
schemes.
Some individuals spend more than they currently earn
ex: Retirees, students perusing higher education
We can sell financial assets to provide funds for our consumption
needs when ever in the Low earning periods
“Financial markets allow individuals to separate decisions concerning
current consumption from constraints that otherwise would be imposed
by current earnings
Financial Markets and the
Economy
2. Allocation of Risk
Capital markets allow the risk that is inherent to all investments to
borne by the investors most willing to bear that risk
Allocation of risk benefits the firm to raise capital to finance their
investments.
Investors can self select into security types with risk-return
characteristics that best suit their preference
All the above activities facilitates the process of building the economy’s
stock of real assets
3. Separation of ownership and Management:
Global markets, Large scale production, huge markets, leads to capital
requirements of firms have skyrocketed .
Owners and managers of the firm are different , this gives stability that
owner managed firm cannot achieve .
Some stock holders decide they no longer wish to hold shares in the
firm, they can sell their shares to other investors, with impact on the
management of the firm .
Investment alternatives
Financial Assets:
* Equity claims – Direct:
- common Stock
- Warrants
- Options
* Equity claims – indirect:
- Investment company shares
* Creditor Claims:
- Savings Accounts
- Money market funds
- Commercial Paper
- Treasury bills
- Bonds ( Straight and convertible to common stock)
- Preferred Stock ( Straight and convertible to common stock)
Investment alternatives
Real Assets:
Real estate - Office building, Apartments, Shopping centers,
Personal residences
Precious metals – gold and silver
Precious gems - Diamonds, rubies, Sapphires
Collectibles – Art, Antiques, Stamps, Coins, Rare
books
Others- cattle, Oil, Common metals
Key areas should consider before
investment
1. Risk and Safety of Principal
- Risk vs return , Loss of Purchasing power (Inflation)
- Age and Economic circumstances of an investor
- Gold vs Common Stock
2. Current income vs Capital appreciation
- Desire of current vs capital appreciation
3. Liquidity consideration
- Transaction costs/ commissions ( financial assets vs Real assets)
Key areas should consider before
investment
4. Short-term vs Long-term orientation
- Managing funds
- Evaluating performance
- Funds who manage for others
- Market strategies: ( traders : technical analysis – short term)
- Buy and hold approach
5. Tax factors
- High tax bracket investors – Municipal bonds, real estate
- Lower tax bracket investors- High yield stocks/bonds
- Tax exempt charities – High yield short term instruments
6. Ease of Management
- Time & effort devoted
- Stock market – daily / long- term
- Real estate – Personally owning/ Rental houses
7. Retirement and Asset planning considerations
- Individual Retirement Account
Investment Process
5 step procedure
1. Set investment policy:
- Investor objectives –stated both risk and return
- Amount his/her invest able wealth
- Tax status of investor
2. Security Analysis
- Examining no.of individual securities
- Identifying mis priced assets
A) Technical Analysis ( using charts and graphs trend observation)
B) Fundamental Analysis ( identify True value)
TV> Market value = Under priced
TV < Market value = over priced
Investment Process
3. Portfolio Construction
-identify specific assets to invest
- Determine the proportions of wealth in each asset
Three issues are concerned for
a) Selectivity/Micro forecasting :( movement of individual securities)
b) Timing / Macro forecasting :( movements of common stocks in
relation to fixed income securities)
c) Diversification :
Construction of portfolio in such a manners that risk is minimized ,
subject to certain restrictions
Investment Process
4. Portfolio Revision
- periodic repetition of first three steps
- investor may change his objectives
- current portfolio may no longer optimal
- Selling some one and buying some other
* Transaction costs are need to consider
5. Portfolio Performance Evaluation
- Determine performance of portfolio periodically
- Not only return earned , risk exposed by investor
- Appropriate measure of Risk and Return
- Fix up relevant standards
Finance Theory
Return : current income + capital gain
current income = income/ Beginning value
Capital gain = Ending value – beginning value/
Beginning
value
Risk : variance , Standard deviation
Variance : Sum of squares of the deviations of actual
return from the expected returns
Standard deviation: Square root of variance
Actual consideration of Required return
1. The real rate of return
- investors require for allowing others to use their money
- investor demand for passing up immediate consumption and
allowing others to use their savings
- real means value determined before inflation is included in the
calculation
2. Anticipated inflation factor
Risk free rate = (1+Real rate) (1+Expected inflation factor) -1
3. Risk Premium
- It is different from each investment
- T-Bills and CDs at Bank – Risk premium will be ZERO
- For common stocks risk premium carry a 5 to 8%
Required rate of return = Real rate + Expected inflation+
Risk Premium
Risk Return Characteristics
Preference
Shares Risk
Coroporate
Premium
Bonds
Government
Rf Bonds
Real Rate of Return
T.Bills
Anticipated inflation
Risk
Clients of the Financial system
House hold Sector :
House hold financial decisions are concerned with how to invest money
constantly make decisions : work, Job training , Retirement planning, Savings vs
Consumption
Financial innovation vs Household
Primary Dealers Satellite Dealers Money Market Market making in government securities
Rank Name % of
Volume
Globalization:
*American Depository Receipts,
* purchase of foreign securities which offered in local
currency
* Invest Mutual funds that invest internationally
* Buy derivatives
* Common Currencies ( Euro-22 countries)
Securitization:
* Asset Back Securities
* Pass-throughs
* CMOs – Collateral Mortgage obligations
* CARs – Collateral Automobile Receipts
Ongoing trends
Financial Engineering
creation and design of securities with custom- tailored
characteristics, often regarding exposure to various source
of risk
* Boise Cascade Corporation with association of
Goldman Sachs and other underwriters – issued hybrid
security with features of preferred stock combined with
various call and put options
Features:
preferred stock for 4 years
converted into common stock
No. of shares depends on the price of the stock in 4 years
Ongoing trends
Computer Networks :
* Internet (OLT, OLI)
* ERP ( SAP, Oracle, JD Edward)
* LAN, WAN
* Internet Investment Banking
* Online trading among investors
* On line sales of shares (Spring Street Brewing Company)
Investment industry in Ethiopia
Sectoral Distribution of Number , Capital of Approved projects in Ethiopia
Sector No.of projects Capital share %
Agriculture & forestry 369 6,043 20.58
Construction 99 561 5.52
Education 106 692 3.00
Health and social work 61 828 3.40
Hotels and restaurants 212 1,878 11.82
Manufacturing 380 5,984 21.19
Minining and Quarrying 1 1 0.06
Community services 28 725 1.56
Real estate 499 6,128 27.83
Transport,communication 19 58 1.06
Whole sale and retail 19 148 2.06
Total 1793 23,050 100.0
Source: Ethiopian Investment Agency
Summary of Federal government Finance
Particulars (million Birrs) 2007/08
Total Revenue 31,022
Tax Revenue 20,309
Non-tax revenue 4,930
grants & relief 5,783
Total Expenditure 37,784
Deficit -6762
Total financing 6762
Net external borrowings 2,287
Net domestic borrowings 4,475
Banking system: 4475
Other sources : nil
Textile and Garment sector