Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
SNS College of Technology (An Autonomous Institution) Coimbatore - 35 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Department of MBA 16BA708 – Investment Management UNIT 1 – INVESTMENT SETTING 1. Define Economic Meaning of Investment A Net addition to the nation’s capital stock which consists of goods and services that are used in the production of other goods and services. 2. Define Speculation Speculation means taking up the business risk in the hope of getting short term gain. Also means a financial instrument involving high risk, in expectation of significant returns. 3. Define financial Meaning of Investment Commitment of a person’s funds to derive future income in the form of interest, dividend, premiums, pension benefits or appreciation in the value of their capital by purchasing shares, debentures, post office savings certificates, insurance policies. 4. Define marketable securities and non-marketable securities Marketable securities: A security that can be bought and sold in a secondary financial market. Non-marketable securities: Non-marketable securities are investments that cannot be transferred from one party to another through sale. 5. Define money market A segment of the financial market in which financial instruments with high liquidity and very short maturities are traded. The money market is used by participants as a means for borrowing and lending in the short term, from several days to just under a year. 6. Define Commercial paper Commercial paper is a money-market security issued (sold) by large corporations to obtain funds to meet short-term debt obligations (for example, payroll), and is backed only by an issuing bank or corporation's promise to pay the face amount on the maturity date specified on the note. 7. Define Preference shares Shares in a company which give their holders an entitlement to a fixed dividend but which do not usually carry voting rights. Return of preference share capital before the return of equity share capital at the time of winding up of the company. 8. List out the different type of bonds. Bearer Bonds Deep Discount Bonds Mortgage Bond Secured and Unsecured Bonds Perpetual and redeemable bonds Fixed interest rate bonds and floating interest rate bonds. 9. List out the differences between investment and speculation. Basis Investment Speculation Type of contract Creditor Ownership Basis of acquisition Usually purchase by outright Often-on-margin Length of commitment Comparatively long term For a short time only Source of income Earnings of enterprise Change in market price Quantity of risk Small Large Stability of income Very stable Uncertain and erratic 10. List out the different types of shares. Growth shares – Higher rate of growth in profitability Income shares – belongs to company that have stable operations and limited growth opportunities Defensive shares-unaffected by market movements Cyclical shares – business cycle affects the cyclical shares Speculative shares-lot of speculative trading involved 11. Define Debenture. A debenture is an unsecured bond issued by a company without providing any specific asset as collateral. Only well-established and creditworthy companies are able to issue debentures. 12. Define mutual funds A mutual fund is a type of investment fund that pools money from many investors to purchase securities. 13. What are Non Marketable securities? Bank Deposit Post office Deposit Insurance Policies NBFC’s Deposit Provident fund schemes 14. Write a short note on risk. • Risk means the probability of having adverse or low returns as compared to the expected returns. • Arises when there is a possibility of variation between expectations and realizations with regard to a investment. • Total Risk =Systematic Risk + Unsystematic risk • 15. List out the Objectives of SCRA. Regulation of stock exchanges. Regulation of transaction in securities. To prevent undesirable speculation in securities. 16. State the Objectives of Investment Maximisation of return Minimisation of risk Hedge against inflation Maintaining liquidity Increasing safety Saving tax 17. List out the different measures of risk. Volatility Standard deviation Probability distributions Beta 18. What do you mean by Trade-off between Expected Return and Risk? In competitive financial markets, the largest risks have the largest payoffs. In financial markets, investors are constantly on the lookout for either the same risk for a larger return, or the same return for lower risk. Investors manage risk at a cost – lower expected returns (ER). 19. What is systematic risk? What are the different types of risk that make systematic market risk? Systematic risk relates the variance of the investment to the variance of the market. Systematic risk also refers to the portion of an individual asset’s total variance attributable to the variability of the total market portfolio. The different types of risks that make the systematic risk are: Business Risk, Financial Risk, Liquidity Risk, Exchange Rate Risk and Country Risk among others. 20.a) If nominal rate of return and inflation rate are 12.4% and 5.6% respectively, what is the real rate of return? b) If real rate of return and nominal rate of return are 8.5% and 15.4% respectively, what is the inflation rate? ANS: a) Real rate of return = (1+.124)/(1+.056) – 1 = 0.0644 i.e. 6.44% b) Inflation rate = (1+.154)/(1+.085) – 1 = 0.0636 = 6.36% 21. Write a short note on Interest rate risk. The variability in a security’s return resulting from changes in the level of interest rates is referred to as interest rate risk. Interest rate risk affects bonds more directly than common stocks. As interest rate change, bond prices change in the opposite direction. 22. Define volatility Volatility is a rate at which the price of a security increases or decreases for a given set of returns. A statistical measure of the dispersion of returns for a given security or market index. Volatility can either be measured by using the standard deviation or variance between returns from that same security or market index. 23. Define beta Beta is a measure of the systematic risk of a security that cannot be avoided through diversification. Beta is a relative measure of risk – the risk of an individual stock relative to the market portfolio of all stocks. Beta measures a security’s volatility or fluctuations in price, relative to a benchmark, the market portfolio of all stocks. A beta of less than 1 means that the security will be less volatile than the market. A beta of greater than 1 indicates that the security's price will be more volatile than the market. For example, if a stock's beta is 1.2, it's theoretically 20% more volatile than the market. 24. What do you mean by hybrid security? Hybrid securities, often referred to as "hybrids" generally combine both debt and equity characteristics. The most common type of hybrid security is a convertible bond that has features of an ordinary bond but is heavily influenced by the price movements of the stock into which it is convertible. 25. Define security as per SCRA. 'Securities' include (i) shares, scripts stocks, bonds, debentures, debenture stock or other marketable securities of a like nature in or of any incorporated company or other body corporate; 26. Define Stock exchange as per SCRA ' Stock exchange' means any body of individuals, whether incorporated or not, constituted for the purpose of assisting, regulating or controlling the business of buying, selling or dealing in securities. 27. Define Demutualization Demutualization means the segregation of ownership and management from the trading rights of the members of a recognized stock exchange in accordance with a scheme approved by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). 28. Define corporatization Corporatization means the succession of a recognized stock exchange, being a body of individuals or a society registered under the Societies Registration Act, 1860 by another stock exchange, being a company incorporated for the purpose of assisting, regulating or controlling the business of buying, selling or dealing in securities carried on by such individuals or society.