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INTRODUCTION

CAPITAL MARKET
The capital market is the market for securities, where Companies and governments
can raise long-term funds. It is a market in which money is lent for periods longer
than a year. A nation's capital market includes such financial institutions as banks,
insurance companies, and stock
exchanges that channel long-term investment funds to commercial and industrial
borrowers. Unlike the money market, on which lending is ordinarily short term, the
capital market typically finances fixed investments like those in buildings and
machinery. Nature and Constituents: The capital market consists of number of
individuals and institutions (including the government) that canalize the supply and
demand for long term capital and claims on capital. The stock exchange, commercial
banks,co-operative banks, saving banks, development banks, insurance companies,
investment trust or companies, etc., are important constituents of the capital markets.
The capital market, like the money market, has three important Components, namely
the suppliers of loanable funds, the borrowers and the Intermediaries who deal with
the leaders on the one hand and the Borrowers on the other. The demand for capital
comes mostly from agriculture, industry, trade The government. The predominant
form of industrial organization developed Capital Market becomes a necessary
infrastructure for fast industrialization Capital market not concerned solely with the
issue of new claims on capital ,But also with dealing in existing claims.
Debt or Bond market
The bond market (also known as the debt, credit, or fixed income market) is a
financial market
where participants buy and sell debt securities, usually in the form of bonds. As of
2009, the size of the worldwide bond market (total debt outstanding) is an estimated
$82.2 trillion [1], of which the size of the outstanding U.S. bond market debt was

$31.2 trillion according to BIS (or alternatively $34.3 trillion according to


SIFMA).Nearly all of the $822 billion average daily trading volume in the U.S. bond
market takes place between broker-dealers and large institutions in a decentralized,
over-the-counter (OTC) market. However, a small number of bonds, primarily
corporate, are listed on exchanges. References to the "bond market" usually refer to
the government bond market, because of its size, liquidity, lack of credit risk and,
therefore, sensitivity to interest rates. Because of the inverse relationship between
bond valuation and interest rates, the bond market is often used to indicate changes in
interest rates or the shape of the yield curve.
Contents
1 Market structure
2 Types of bond markets
3 Bond market participants
4 Bond market size
5 Bond market volatility
6 Bond market influence
7 Bond investments
8 Bond indices
Market structure
Bond markets in most countries remain decentralized and lack common exchanges
like stock,future and commodity markets. This has occurred, in part, because no two
bond issues are exactly alike, and the variety of bond securities outstanding greatly
exceeds that of stocks. However, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is the largest
centralized bond market, representing mostly corporate bonds. The NYSE migrated
from the Automated Bond System (ABS) to the NYSE Bonds trading system in April
2007 and expects the number of traded issues to increase from 1000 to 6000.Besides
other causes, the decentralized market structure of the corporate and municipal bond
markets, as distinguished from the stock market structure, results in higher transaction

costs and less liquidity. A study performed by Profs Harris and Piwo war in 2004,
Secondary Trading Costs in the Municipal Bond Market, reached the following
conclusions: (1) "Municipal bond trades are also substantially more expensive than
similar sized equity trades. We attribute these results to the lack of price transparency
in the bond markets. Additional cross-sectional analyses show that bond trading costs
decrease with credit quality and increase with instrument complexity, time to
maturity, and time since issuance." (2) "Our results show that municipal bond trades
are significantly more expensive than equivalent sized equity trades. Effective spreads
in municipal bonds average about two percent of price for retail size trades of 20,000
dollars and about one percent for institutional trade size trades of 200,000 dollars."
Types of bond markets
The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) classifies the
broader bond market into five specific bond markets.
Corporate
Government & agency
Municipal
Mortgage backed, asset backed, and collateralized debt obligation
Funding
Bond market participants
Bond market participants are similar to participants in most financial markets and are
essentially either buyers (debt issuer) of funds or sellers (institution) of funds and
often both.
Participants include:
Institutional investors
Governments
Traders
Individuals

Because of the specificity of individual bond issues, and the lack of liquidity in many
smaller issues, the majority of outstanding bonds are held by institutions like pension
funds, banks and mutual funds. In the United States, approximately 10% of the
market is currently held by private individuals.
Bond market size
Amounts outstanding on the global bond market increased 10% in 2009 to a record
$91 trillion.Domestic bonds accounted for 70% of the total and international bonds
for the remainder. The US was the largest market with 39% of the total followed by
Japan (18%). Mortgage-backed bonds accounted for around a quarter of outstanding
bonds in the US in 2009 or some $9.2 trillion. The sub-prime portion of this market is
variously estimated at between $500bn and $1.4 trillion. Treasury bonds and
corporate bonds each accounted for a fifth of US domestic bonds. In Europe, public
sector debt is substantial in Italy (93% of GDP), Belgium (63%) and France (63%).
Concerns about the ability of some countries to continue to finance their debt came to
the forefront in late 2009. This was partly a result of large debt taken on by some
governments to reverse the economic downturn and finance bank bailouts. The
outstanding value of international bonds increased by 13% in 2009 to $27 trillion. The
$2.3 trillion issued during the year was down 4% on the 2008 total, with activity
declining in the second half of the year.
Bond market volatility
For market participants who own a bond, collect the coupon and hold it to maturity,
market volatility is irrelevant; principal and interest are received according to a predetermined schedule. But participants who buy and sell bonds before maturity are
exposed to many risks, most importantly changes in interest rates. When interest rates
increase, the value of existing bonds fall, since new issues pay a higher yield.
Likewise, when interest rates decrease, the value of existing bonds rise, since new
issues pay a lower yield. This is the fundamental concept of bond market volatility:

changes in bond prices are inverse to changes in interest rates. Fluctuating interest
rates are part of a country's monetary policy and bond market volatility is a response
to expected monetary policy and economic changes Economists' views of economic
indicators versus actual released data contribute to market volatility. A tight consensus
is generally reflected in bond prices and there is little price movement in the market
after the release of "in-line" data. If the economic release differs from the consensus
view the market usually undergoes rapid price movement as participants interpret the
data.
Uncertainty (as measured by a wide consensus) generally brings more volatility
before and after an economic release. Economic releases vary in importance and
impact depending on where the economy is in the business cycle.
Bond market influence
Bond markets determine the price in terms of yield that a borrower must pay in able
to receive funding. In one notable instance, when President Clinton attempted to
increase the US budget deficit in the 1990s, it led to such a sell-off (decreasing prices;
increasing yields) that he was forced to abandon the strategy and instead balance the
budget. I used to think that if there was reincarnation, I wanted to come back as the
president or the pope or as a .400 baseball hitter. But now I would like to come back
as the bond market. You can intimidate everybody. James Carville, political
advisor to President Clinton, Bloomberg
Bond investments
Investment companies allow individual investors the ability to participate in the bond
market through bond funds, closed-end funds and unit-investment trusts. In 2006 total
bond fund net inflows increased 97% from $30.8 billion in 2005 to $60.8 billion in
2006.Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are another alternative to trading or investing
directly in a bond issue. These securities allow individual investors the ability to
overcome large initial and incremental trading sizes.

Bond indices
Main article: Bond market index A number of bond indices exist for the purposes of
managing portfolios and measuring performance, similar to the S&P 500 or Russell
Indexes for stocks. The most common American benchmarks are the Barclays
Aggregate, Citigroup BIG and Merrill Lynch Domestic Master.Most indices are parts
of families of broader indices that can be used to measure global bond portfolios, or
may be further subdivided by maturity and/or sector for managing specialized
portfolios.

STOCK OR EQUITY MARKET


A stock market or equity market is a public market (a loose network of economic
transactions not a physical facility or discrete entity) for the trading of company stock
and derivatives at an agreed price; these are securities listed on a stock exchange as
well as those only traded privately. The size of the world stock market was estimated
at about $36.6 trillion US at the beginning of October 2008. The total world
derivatives market has been estimated at about $791 trillion fac or nominal value, 11
times the size of the entire world economy. The value of the derivatives market,
because it is stated in terms of notional values, cannot be directly compared to a stock
or a fixed income security, which traditionally refers to an actual value. Moreover, the
vast majority of derivatives 'cancel' each other out (i.e., a derivative 'bet' on an event
occurring is offset by a comparable derivative 'bet' on the event not occurring). Many
such relatively illiquid securities are valued as marked to model, rather than an actual
market price. The stocks are listed and traded on stock exchanges which are entities
of a corporation or mutual organization specialized in the business of bringing buyers
and sellers of the organizations to a listing of stocks and securities together. The
largest stock market in the United States, by market cap is the New York Stock
Exchange, NYSE, while in Canada, it is the Toronto Stock Exchange. Major
European examples of stock exchanges include the London Stock Exchange, Paris

Bourse, and the Deutsche Borse. Asian examples include the Tokyo Stock Exchange,
the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, the Shanghai Stock Exchange, and the Bombay
Stock Exchange. In Latin America, there are such exchanges as the BM&F Bovespa
and the BMV.
Contents
1 Trading
2 Market participants
3 History
4 Importance of stock market
o 4.1 Function and purpose
o 4.2 Relation of the stock market to the modern financial system
o 4.3 The stock market, individual investors, and financial risk
Trading
Participants in the stock market range from small individual stock investors to large
hedge fund traders, who can be based anywhere. Their orders usually end up with a
professional at a stock exchange, who executes the order .Some exchanges are
physical locations where transactions are carried out on a trading floor, by a method
known as open outcry. This type of auction is used in stock exchanges and commodity
exchanges where traders may enter "verbal" bids and offers simultaneously. The other
type of stock exchange is a virtual kind, composed of a network of computers where
trades are made electronically via traders. Actual trades are based on an auction
market model where a potential buyer bids a specific price for a stock and a potential
seller asks a specific price for the stock. (Buying or selling at market means you will
accept any ask price or bid price for the stock, respectively.) When the bid and ask
prices match, a sale takes place, on a first-come-first-served basis if there are multiple
bidders or askers at a given price. The purpose of a stock exchange is to facilitate the
exchange of securities between buyers and sellers, thus providing a marketplace
(virtual or real). The exchanges provide real-time trading information on the listed

securities, facilitating price discovery. The New York Stock Exchange is a physical
exchange, also referred to as a listed exchange only stocks listed with the exchange
may be traded. Orders enter by way of exchange members and flow down to a floor
broker, who goes to the floor trading post specialist for that stock to trade the order.
The specialist's job is to match buy and sell orders using open outcry. If a spread
exists, no trade immediately takes place--in this case the specialist should use his/her
own resources (money or stock) to close the difference after his/her judged time.
Once a trade has been made the details are reported on the "tape" and sent back to the
brokerage firm, which then notifies the investor who placed the order. Although there
is a significant amount of human contact in this process, computers play an important
role, especially for so-called "program trading". The NASDAQ is a virtual listed
exchange, where all of the trading is done over a computer network. The process is
similar to the New York Stock Exchange. However, buyers and sellers are
electronically matched. One or more NASDAQ market makers will always provide a
bid and ask price at which they will always purchase or sell 'their' stock. The Paris
Bourse, now part of Euronext, is an order-driven, electronic stock exchange. It was
automated in the late 1980s. Prior to the 1980s, it consisted of an open outcry
exchange. Stockbrokers met on the trading floor or the Palais Brongniart. In 1986, the
CATS trading system was introduced, and the order matching process was fully
automated. From time to time, active trading (especially in large blocks of securities)
have moved away from the 'active' exchanges. Securities firms, led by UBS AG,
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Credit Suisse Group, already steer 12 percent of U.S.
security trades away from the exchanges to their internal systems. That share probably
will increase to 18 percent by 2010 as more investment banks bypass the NYSE and
NASDAQ and pair buyers and sellers of securities themselves, according to data
compiled by Boston-based Aite Group LLC, a brokerage-industry consultant. Now
that computers have eliminated the need for trading floors like the Big Board's, the
balance of power in equity markets is shifting. By bringing more orders in-house,
where clients can move big blocks of stock anonymously, brokers pay the exchanges
less in fees and capture a bigger share of the $11 billion a year that institutional

investors pay in trading commissions as well as the surplus of the century had taken
place.
Market participants
A few decades ago, worldwide, buyers and sellers were individual investors, such as
wealthy businessmen, with long family histories (and emotional ties) to particular
corporations. Over time, markets have become more "institutionalized"; buyers and
sellers are largely institutions (e.g., pension funds, insurance companies, mutual
funds, index funds, exchange-traded funds, hedge funds, investor groups, banks and
various other financial institutions). The rise of the institutional investor has brought
with it some improvements in market operations. Thus, the government was
responsible for "fixed" (and exorbitant) fees being markedly reduced for the 'small'
investor, but only after the large institutions had managed to break the brokers' solid
front on fees. (They then went to 'negotiated' fees, but only for large institutions.
However, corporate governance (at least in the West) has been very much adversely
affected by the rise of (largely 'absentee') institutional 'owners'.

History
Established in 1875, the Bombay Stock Exchange is Asia's first stock exchange. 12th
century France the courratiers de change were concerned with managing and
regulating debts of agricultural communities on behalf of the banks. Because these
men also traded with debts, they could be called the first brokers. A common
misbelief is that in late 13th century Bruges commodity traders gathered inside the
house of a man called Van der Beurze, and in 1309 they became the "Brugse Beurse",
institutionalizing what had been, until then, an informal meeting, but actually, the
family Van der Beurze had a building in Antwerp where those gatherings occurred;
the Van der Beurze had Antwerp, as most of the merchants of that period, as their
primary place for trading. The idea quickly spread around Flanders and neighboring
counties and "Beurzen" soon opened in Ghent and Amsterdam. In the middle of the

13th century, Venetian bankers began to trade in government securities. In 1351 the
Venetian government outlawed spreading rumors intended to lower the price of
government funds. Bankers in Pisa, Verona, Genoa and Florence also began trading in
government securities during the 14th century. This was only possible because these
were independent city states not ruled by a duke but a council of influential citizens.
The Dutch later started joint stock companies, which let shareholders invest in
business ventures and get a share of their profits - or losses. In 1602, the Dutch East
India Company issued the first share on the Amsterdam Stock Exchange. It was the
first company to issue stocks and bonds. The Amsterdam Stock Exchange (or
Amsterdam Beurs) is also said to have been the first stock exchange to introduce
continuous trade in the early 17th century. The Dutch "pioneered short selling, option
trading, debt-equity swaps, merchant banking, unit trusts and other speculative
instruments, much as we know them" There are now stock markets in virtually every
developed and most developing economies, with the world's biggest markets being in
the United States, United Kingdom, Japan, India, China, Canada, Germany, France,
South Korea and the Netherlands.

IMPORTANCE OF STOCK MARKET


Function and purpose
The main trading room of the Tokyo Stock Exchange, where trading is currently
completed through computers. The stock market is one of the most important
sources for companies to raise money. This allows businesses to be publicly traded, or
raise additional capital for expansion by selling shares of ownership of the company
in a public market. The liquidity that an exchange provides affords investors the
ability to quickly and easily sell securities. This is an attractive feature of investing in

stocks, compared to other less liquid investments such as real estate. History has
shown that the price of shares and other assets is an important part of the dynamics of
economic activity, and can influence or be an indicator of social mood. An economy
where the stock market is on the rise is considered to be an up-and-coming economy.
In fact, the stock market is often considered the primary indicator of a country's
economic strength and development. Rising share prices, for instance, tend to be
associated with increased business investment and vice versa. Share prices also affect
the wealth of households and their consumption. Therefore, central banks tend to keep
an eye on the control and behavior of the stock market and, in general, on the smooth
operation of financial system functions. Financial stability is the raison d'etre of
central banks. Exchanges also act as the clearinghouse for each transaction, meaning
that they collect and deliver the shares, and guarantee payment to the seller of a
security. This eliminates the risk to an individual buyer or seller that the counterparty
could default on the transaction. The smooth functioning of all these activities
facilitates economic growth in that lower costs and enterprise risks promote the
production of goods and services as well as employment. In this way the financial
system contributes to increased prosperity. An important aspect of modern financial
markets, however, including the stock markets, is absolute discretion. For example,
American stock markets see more unrestrained acceptance of any firm than in smaller
markets. For example, Chinese firms that possess little or no perceived value to
American society profit American bankers on Wall Street, as they reap large
commissions from the placement, as well as the Chinese company which yields funds
to invest in China. However, these companies accrue
no intrinsic value to the long-term stability of the American economy, but rather only
short-term profits to American business men and the Chinese; although, when the
foreign company has a presence in the new market, this can benefit the market's
citizens. Conversely, there are very few large foreign corporations listed on the
Toronto Stock Exchange TSX, Canada's largest stock exchange. This discretion has
insulated Canada to some degree to worldwide financial conditions. In order for the
stock markets to truly facilitate economic growth via lower costs and better

employment, great attention must be given to the foreign participants being allowed
in.

Relation of the stock market to the modern financial system


The financial systems in most western countries has undergone a remarkable
transformation. One feature of this development is disintermediation. A portion of the
funds involved in saving and financing, flows directly to the financial markets instead
of being routed via the traditional bank lending and deposit operations. The general
public's heightened interest in investing in the stock market, either directly or through
mutual funds, has been an important component of this process. Statistics show that in
recent decades shares have made up an increasingly large proportion of households'
financial assets in many countries. In the 1970s, in Sweden, deposit accounts and
other very liquid assets with little risk made up almost 60 percent of households'
financial wealth, compared to less than 20 percent in the 2000s. The major part of this
adjustment in financial portfolios has gone directly to shares but a good deal now
takes the form of various kinds of institutional investment for groups of individuals,
e.g., pension funds, mutual funds, hedge funds, insurance investment of premiums,
etc. The trend towards forms of saving with a higher risk has been accentuated by
new rules for most funds and insurance, permitting a higher proportion of shares to
bonds. Similar tendencies are to be found in other industrialized countries. In all
developed economic systems, such as the European Union, the United States, Japan
and other developed nations, the trend has been the same: saving has moved away
from traditional (government insured) bank deposits to more risky securities of one
sort or another.

The stock market, individual investors, and financial risk

Riskier long-term saving requires that an individual possess the ability to manage the
associated increased risks. Stock prices fluctuate widely, in marked contrast to the
stability of (government insured) bank deposits or bonds. This is something that could
affect not only the individual investor or household, but also the economy on a large
scale. The following deals with some of the risks of the financial sector in general and
the stock market in particular. This is certainly more important now that so many
newcomers have entered the stock market, or have acquired other 'risky' investments
(such as 'investment' property, i.e., real estate and collectables).With each passing
year, the noise level in the stock market rises. Television commentators ,financial
writers, analysts, and market strategists are all overtaking each other to get investors'
attention. At the same time, individual investors, immersed in chat rooms and
message boards, are exchanging questionable and often misleading tips. Yet, despite
all this available information, investors find it increasingly difficult to profit. Stock
prices skyrocket with little reason, then plummet just as quickly, and people who have
turned to investing for their children's education and their own retirement become
frightened. Sometimes there appears to be no rhyme or reason to the market, only
folly. This is a quote from the preface to a published biography about the long-term
value-oriented stock investor Warren Buffett began his career with $100, and
$100,000 from seven limited partners consisting of Buffett's family and friends. Over
the years he has built himself a multi-billion-dollar fortune. The quote illustrates some
of what has been happening in the stock market during the end of the 20th century
and the beginning of the 21st century.
ROLE OF CAPITAL MARKET
Financial market is a market where financial instruments are exchanged or traded and
helps in determining the prices of the assets that are traded in and is also called the
price
discovery process.

1. Organizations that facilitate the trade in financial products. For e.g. Stock
exchanges
(NYSE, Nasdaq) facilitate the trade in stocks, bonds and warrants.
2. Coming together of buyer and sellers at a common platform to trade financial
products is termed as financial markets, i.e. stocks and shares are traded between
buyers and sellers in a number of ways including: the use of stock exchanges; directly
between
buyers and sellers etc.
Financial markets may be classified on the basis of
types of claims debt and equity markets
maturity money market and capital market
trade spot market and delivery market
deals in financial claims primary market and secondary market
Indian Financial Market consists of the following markets:
Capital Market/ Securities Market

o Primary capital market

o Secondary capital market


Money Market
Debt Market
Primary capital market- A market where new securities are bought and sold for the
first time
Types of issues in Primary market
Initial public offer (IPO) (in case of an unlisted company),
Follow-on public offer (FPO),
Rights offer such that securities are offered to existing shareholders,
Preferential issue/ bonus issue/ QIB placement
Composite issue, that is, mixture of a rights and public offer, or offer for sale
(offer of securities by existing shareholders to the public for subscription).
Difference between
Primary market Secondary market
Deals with new securities Market for existing securities, which are already listed
Provides additional capital to issuer companies No additional capital generated.
Provides liquidity to existing stock Leading stock exchanges:
Bombay Stock Exchange Limited
o Oldest in Asia
o Presence in 417 cities and towns in India
o Trading in equity, debt instrument and derivatives
National Stock Exchange
New York Stock Exchange NYSE)
NASDAQ
London Stock Exchange
Functions of Stock Exchanges
Liquidity and marketability of securities

Fair price determination


Source of long-tern funds
Helps in capital formation
Reflects general state of economy
Basics of Stock Market Indices:
A stock market index is the reflection of the market as a whole. It is a representative
of
the entire stock market. Movements in the index represent the average returns
obtained
by the investors. Stock market index is sensitive to the news of:
Company specific
Country specific
Thus the movement in the stock index is also the reflection of the expectation of the
future performance of the companies listed on the exchange
Capital market and money market:
Financial markets can broadly be divided into money and capital market.
Money Market: Money market is a market for debt securities that pay off in the short
termusually less than one year, for example the market for 90-days treasury bills. This
market encompasses the trading and issuance of short term non equity debt
instruments including treasury bills, commercial papers, bankers acceptance,
certificates of deposits, etc.
Capital Market: Capital market is a market for long-term debt and equity shares. In
this
market, the capital funds comprising of both equity and debt are issued and traded.
This
also includes private placement sources of debt and equity as well as organized
markets

like stock exchanges. Capital market includes financial instruments with more than
one
year maturity
CAPITAL MARKET STRUCTURE

Significance of Capital Markets


A well functioning stock market may help the development process in an economy
through the following channels:
1. Growth of savings,
2. Efficient allocation of investment resources,
3. Better utilization of the existing resources.
In market economy like India, financial market institutions provide the avenue by
which long-term savings are mobilized and channelled into investments. Confidence
of the investors in the market is imperative for the growth and development of the
market. For any stock market, the market Indices is the barometer of its performance
and reflects the prevailing sentiments of the entire economy. Stock index is created to
provide investors with the information regarding the average share price in the stock

market. The ups and downs in the index represent the movement of the equity market.
These indices need to represent the return obtained by typical portfolios in the
country.
Generally, the stock price of any company is vulnerable to three types of news:
Company specific
Industry specific
Economy specific
An all share index includes stocks from all the sectors of the economy and thus
cancels
out the stock and sector specific news and events that affect stock prices, (law of
portfolio diversification) and reflect the overall performance of the company/equity
market and the news affecting it. The most important use of an equity market index is
as a benchmark for a portfolio of stocks. All diversified portfolios, belonging either to
retail investors or mutual funds, use the common stock index as a yardstick for their
returns. Indices are useful in modern financial application of derivatives.
Capital Market Instruments some of the capital market instruments are:
Equity
Preference shares
Debenture/ Bonds
ADRs/ GDRs
Derivatives
Corporate securities
Shares
The total capital of a company may be divided into small units called shares. For
example, if the required capital of a company is US $5,00,000 and is divided into
50,000 units of US $10 each, each unit is called a share of face value US $10. A share
may be of any face value depending upon the capital required and the number of
shares into which it is divided. The holders of the shares are called share holders. The
shares can be purchased or sold only in integral multiples. Equity shares signify

ownership in a corporation and represent claim over the financial assets and earnings
of the corporation. Shareholders enjoy voting rights and the right to receive
dividends; however in case of liquidation they will receive residuals, after all the
creditors of the company are settled in full. A company may invite investors to
subscribe for the shares by the way of:
Public issue through prospectus
Tender/ book building process
Offer for sale
Placement method
Rights issue
Stocks
The word stock refers to the old English law tradition where a share in the capital of
the company was not divided into shares of fixed denomination but was issued as
one chunk. This concept is no more prevalent, but the word stock continues. The
word joint stock companies also refers to this tradition.
Debt Instruments
A contractual arrangement in which the issuer agrees to pay interest and repay the
borrowed amount after a specified period of time is a debt instrument. Certain
features
common to all debt instruments are:
Maturity the number of years over which the issuer agrees to meet the contractual
obligations is the term to maturity. Debt instruments are classified on the basis of the
time remaining to maturity
Par value the face value or principal value of the debt instrument is called the par
value.
Coupon rate agreed rate of interest that is paid periodically to the investor and is
calculated as a percentage of the face value. Some of the debt instruments may not
have an explicit coupon rate, for instance zero coupon bonds. These bonds are issued

on discount and redeemed at par. Thus the difference between the investors
investment and return is the interest earned. Coupon rates may be fixed for the term or
may be variable.
Call option option available to the issuer, specified in the trust indenture, to call
in the bonds and repay them at pre determined price before maturity. Call feature acts
like a ceiling f or payments. The issuer may call the bonds before the stated maturity
as it may recognize that the interest rates may fall below the coupon rate and
redeeming the bonds and replacing them with securities of lower coupon rates will be
economically beneficial. It is the same as the prepayment option, where the borrower
prepays before scheduled payments or slated maturity of Some bonds are issued with
call protection feature, i.e they would not be called for a specified period of time o
Similar to the call option of the issuer there is a put option for the investor, to sell the
securities back to the issuer at a predetermined price and date. The investor may do so
anticipating rise in the interest rates wherein the investor would liquidate the funds
and alternatively invest in place of higher interest
Refunding provisions in case where the issuer may not have cash to redeem the
debt instruments the issuer may issue new debt instrument and use the proceeds to
repay the securities or to exercise the call option. Debt instruments may be of various
kinds depending on the repayment:
Bullet payment instruments where the issuer agrees to repay the entire amount
at the maturity date, i.e lumpsum payment is called bullet payment
Sinking fund payment instruments where the issuer agrees to retire a specified
portion of the debt each year is called sinking fund requirement
Amortization instruments where there are scheduled principal repayments
before maturity date are called amortizing instruments
Debentures/ Bonds
The term Debenture is derived from the Latin word debere which means to owe a
debt. A debenture is an acknowledgment of debt, taken either from the public or a
particular source. A debenture may be viewed as a loan, represented as marketable

security. The word bond may be used interchangeably with debentures. Debt
instruments with maturity more than 5 years are called bonds
Yields
Most common method of calculating the yields on debt instrument is the yield to
maturity method, the formula is as under: YTM = coupon rate + prorated discount
(face value + purchase price)/2
Main differences between shares and debentures
Share money forms a part of the capital of the company. The share holders are part
proprietors of the company, whereas debentures are mere debt, and debenture holders
are just creditors.
Share holders get dividend only out of profits and in case of insufficient or no profits
they get nothing and debenture holders being creditors get guaranteed interest, as
agreed, whether the company makes profit or not.
Share holders are paid after the debenture holders are paid their due first
The dividend on shares depends upon the profit of the company but the interest on
debentures is very well fixed at the time of issue itself.
Shares are not to be paid back by the company whereas debentures have to be paid
back at the end of a fixed period.
In case the company is wound up, the share holders may lose a part or full of their
capital but he debenture holders invariably get back their investment.
Investment in shares is riskier, as it represents residual interest in the company.
Debenture, being debt, is senior.
Debentures are quite often secured, that is, a security interest is created on some
assets to back up debentures. There is no question of any security in case of shares.
Share holders have a right to attend and vote at the meetings of the share holders
whereas debenture holders have no such rights.
Quasi debt instruments

Preference shares
Preference shares are different from ordinary equity shares. Preference share holders
have the following preferential rights
(i) The right to get a fixed rate of dividend before the payment of dividend to the
equity
holders.
(ii) The right to get back their capital before the equity holders in case of winding up
of the company.
Eligibility norms for public issue: ICDR Regulations
IPO
Conditions for IPO: (all conditions listed below to be satisfied)
Net tangible assets of 3 crore in each of the preceding 3 full years, of which not
more than 50% are held in monetary assets:
Track record of distributable profits for 3 out of the immediately preceding 5 years:
Net worth of 1 crore in each of the preceding three full years;
Issue size of proposed issue + all previous issues made in the same financial year
does not exceed 5 times its pre-issue net worth as per the audited balance sheet of
the preceding financial year;
In case of change of name within the last one year, 50% of the revenue for the
preceding 1 full year earned by it from the activity indicated by the new name.
If the issuer does not satisfy any of the condition listed above, issuer may make
IPO
by satisfying the following:
1. Issue through book building
subject to allotment of 50% of net
offer to public to QIB failing
which full subscription monies to
be refunded

O
R
15% of the cost of the project to
be contributed by SCB or PFI of
which not less than 10% from
the appraisers +
allotment of 10% of the net
offer to public to QIB failing
which full subscription monies
to be refunded
2. Minimum post-issue face value
capital of the issuer is 10 crores
O
R
Issuer to provide market-making for 2
yrs from the date of listing of the
specified securities
Promoters contribution:
o Cannot be less than 20% of the post issue capital
o Maximum not defined, but in view of the required minimum public offer as
per Rule 19 (2) (b) of Securities Contracts Regulations, promoters
contribution plus any firm allotments cannot exceed 90% or 75% of the issue
size as the case may be (see below).
Minimum Public offer: By public offer is meant the securities being offered to
public by advertisement, exclusive of promoters contribution and firm allotments.
o Rule 19(2)(b) of the Securities Contracts (Regulations) Rules, 1957 requires
that the minimum public offer should be 25% of total issued securities should
be offered to public through advertisement.
o However, a lower public offer of 10% is allowed if the following conditions
are satisfied:

The minimum public offer is Rs 100 crores ,and the number of


securities being offered to public is at least 20 lakh securities.
The offer is made through mandatory book-building route, with
minimum allocation of 60% to QIBs.
Firm allotment/ reservations: Subject to the minimum public offer norms, issuers
are free to make reservations on competitive basis (as defined hereinafter) and/or firm
allotments (as defined hereinafter) to various categories of persons for the remaining
part of the issue size.
Firm allotment: This implies allotment on a firm basis in public issues by an issuing
company. Specified Categories for Firm allotment in public issues can be made to the
following:
1. Indian and Multilateral Development Financial Institutions
2. Indian Mutual Funds
3. Foreign Institutional Investors (including non resident Indians and overseas
corporate bodies)
4. Permanent / regular employees of the issuer company maximum 10 % of total
proposed issue amount
5. Scheduled Banks
6. Lead Merchant Banker- subject to a ceiling of 5 % of the proposed issue.
FPO
Promoters contribution:
o In case of FPO, the promoters should ensure participation either to the extent
of 20% of the proposed issue or their post-issue share holding must be to the
extent of 20% of the post issue capital. Requirement to bring in contribution
from promoters shall be optional for a company listed on a stock exchange for
at least 3 years and having a track record of dividend payment of 3 years
immediately preceding the year of issue.
o As for maximum promoters contribution, Rule 19 (2) (b) stated above shall
be applicable.
o Participation by promoters in excess of above shall be treated as preferential

allotment, to which preferential allotment rules will be applicable. As for


preferential allotment rules, see Notes under sec. 81.
Net Public offer:
o The minimum net public offer shall be as per Rule 19 (2) (b) see above..
Firm allotment / reservations:
o The issuer companies are free to make reservations on competitive basis (as
defined above) and/or firm allotments to various categories of persons
enumerated above, for the remaining issue size, that is, after considering
promoters contribution and public offer..
o The reservation on competitive basis may also be made for retail individual
shareholders (RIS). For meaning of the term RIS, see under categories of
investors below.
Composite Issue
Promoters contribution:
o promoters have option to contribute either 20% of the proposed issue or 20%
of post issue capital
o the right issue component to be excluded while computing the post-issue
capital
Others:
o The right issue component to be offered to the existing shareholders
o Except the above, the rules of allotment under IPO as above shall apply
Qualified Institutional Placement
Another class of issue, not being a rights issue, which calls for resolution under sec.
81
(1A).
Condition for issue The equity shares of the same class were listed on a stock exchange having
nation-wide trading terminals for a period of at least one year as on the date of
issuance of notice for issue of shares to QIBs
The issue should not violate the prescribed minimum public shareholding

requirements specified by the listing agreement.


Reservation
Minimum of 10 percent of specified securities issued shall be allotted to mutual
funds.
In case the mutual funds do not agree to take shares issued under this chapter,
such shares may be allotted to other QIBs.
However, no allotment shall be made under this chapter, either directly or
indirectly, to any QIB being a promoter or any person related to promoters.
Withdrawal of bid not permitted.- Investors shall not be allowed to withdraw their
bids
after the closure of issue.
Number of allottees. minimum number of allottees shall not be less than:
o Two, where the issue size is less than or equal to Rs. 250 crores;
o Five, where the issue size is greater than Rs. 250 crores.
No single allottee shall be allotted more than 50% of the issue size.
Restrictions. Amount raised through the proposed placement + all previous placements made in
the same financial year shall not exceed five times the net worth of the issuer as
per the audited balance sheet of the previous financial year.
Lock-in-period of one year from the date of allotment, except when sold on a
recognised stock exchange.
Investments by Non- resident Investors
Provisions about investments by non-residents, non resident Indians, overseas bodies
corporates and other foreign investors are made by the RBI in pursuance of FEMA
provisions. An overview is as follows:
Foreign investment is freely permitted in almost all sectors in India. Under Foreign
Direct
Investments (FDI) Scheme, investments can be made by non-residents in the shares /
convertible debentures of an Indian Company under two routes;

Automatic Route; and


Government Route.
Derivatives
What are derivatives? A derivative picks a risk or volatility in a financial asset,
transaction, market rate, or contingency, and creates a product the value of which will
change as per changes in the underlying risk or volatility. The idea is that someone
may
either try to safeguard against such risk (hedging), or someone may take the risk, or
may
engage in a trade on the derivative, based on the view that they want to execute. The
risk
that a derivative intends to trade is called underlying.
A derivative is a financial instrument, whose value depends on the values of basic
underlying variable. In the sense, derivatives is a financial instrument that offers
return
based on the return of some other underlying asset, i.e the return is derived from
another
instrument.
The best way will be take examples of uncertainties and the derivatives that can be
structured around the same.
Stock prices are uncertain - Lot of forwards, options or futures contracts are based
on movements in prices of individual stocks or groups of stocks.
Prices of commodities are uncertain - There are forwards, futures and options on
commodities.
Interest rates are uncertain - There are interest rate swaps and futures.
Foreign exchange rates are uncertain - There are exchange rate derivatives.
Weather is uncertain - There are weather derivatives, and so on.
Derivative products initially emerged as a hedging device against fluctuations in
commodity prices, and commodity linked derivatives remained the sole form of such

products for almost three hundred years. It was primarily used by the farmers to
protect
themselves against fluctuations in the price of their crops. From the time it was sown
to
the time it was ready for harvest, farmers would face price uncertainties. Through the
use
of simple derivative products, it was possible for the farmers to partially or fully
transfer
price risks by locking in asset prices.
From hedging devices, derivatives have grown as major trading tool. Traders may
execute their views on various underlyings by going long or short on derivatives of
different types.
Financial derivatives:
Financial derivatives are financial instruments whose prices are derived from the
prices
of other financial instruments. Although financial derivatives have existed for a
considerable period of time, they have become a major force in financial markets only
since the early 1970s. In the class of equity derivatives, futures and options on stock
indices have gained more popularity than on individual stocks, especially among
institutional investors, who are major users of index-linked derivatives.
Even small investors find these useful due to high correlation of the popular indices
with
various portfolios and ease of use.
DERIVATIVES PRODUCTS
Some significant derivatives that are of interest to us are depicted in the
accompanying
graph:
Major types of derivatives
Derivative contracts have several variants. Depending upon the market in which

they are traded, derivatives are classified as 1) exchange traded and 2) over the
counter.
The most common variants are forwards, futures, options and swaps.
Forwards:
A forward contract is a customized contract between two entities, where
settlement takes place as a specific date in the future at todays predetermined price.
Ex: On 1st June, X enters into an agreement to buy 50 bales of cotton for 1st
December at Rs.1000 per bale from Y, a cotton dealer. It is a case of a forward
contract
where X has to pay Rs.50000 on 1st December to Y and Y has to supply 50 bales of
cotton.
Options:
Options are of two types call and put. Calls give the buyer the right but not the
obligation to buy a given quantity of the underlying asset, at a given price on or
before a
given future date. Puts give the buyer the right, but not the obligation to sell a given
quantity of the underlying asset at a given price on or before a given date.
Warrants:
Options generally have maturity period of three months, majority of options that
are traded on exchanges have maximum maturity of nine months. Longer-traded
options
are called warrants and are generally traded over-the-counter.
Leaps:
The acronym LEAPS means Long-term Equity Anticipation Securities. These are
options having a maturity of up to three years.
Baskets:
Basket Options are currency-protected options and its return-profile is based on
the average performance of a pre-set basket of underlying assets. The basket can be
interest rate, equity or commodity related. A basket of options is made by purchasing

different options. The payout is therefore the addition of each individual option
payout
Swaps:
Swaps are private agreement between two parties to exchange cash flows in the
future according to a pre-arranged formula. They can be regarded as portfolio of
forward
contracts. The two commonly used Swaps are
i) Interest Rate Swaps: - A interest rate swap entails swapping only the interest
related cash flows between the parties in the same currency.
ii) Currency Swaps: - A currency swap is a foreign exchange agreement between
two parties to exchange a given amount of one currency for another and after a
specified period of time, to give back the original amount swapped.
FUTURES, FORWARDS AND OPTIONS
An option is different from futures in several ways. At practical level, the option
buyer
faces an interesting situation. He pays for the options in full at the time it is
purchased.
After this, he only has an upside. There is no possibility of the options position
generating any further losses to him. This is different from futures, where one is free
to
enter, but can generate huge losses. This characteristic makes options attractive to
many
market participants who trade occasionally, who cannot put in the time to closely
monitor
their futures position.
Buying put options is like buying insurance. To buy a put option on Nifty is to buy
insurance which reimburses the full amount to which Nifty drops below the strike
price
of the put option. This is attractive to traders, and to mutual funds creating
guaranteed

return products.
FORWARDS
A forward contract is an agreement to buy or sell an asset on a specified date for a
specified price. One of the parties to the contract assumes a long position and agrees
to
buy the underlying asset on a certain specified future date for a certain specified price.
The other party assumes a short position and agrees to sell the asset on the same date
for
the same price, other contract details like delivery date, price and quantity are
negotiated
bilaterally by the parties to the contract. The forward contracts are normally traded
outside the exchange.
The salient features of forward contracts are:
They are bilateral contracts and hence exposed to counter-party risk
Each contract is custom designed, and hence is unique in terms of contract size,
expiration date and the asset type and quality.
The contract price is generally not available in public domain
On the expiration date, the contract has to be settled by delivery of the asset, or
net settlement.
The forward markets face certain limitations such as:
Lack of centralization of trading
Illiquidity and
Counterparty risk
FUTURES
Futures contract is a standardized transaction taking place on the futures
exchange. Futures market was designed to solve the problems that exist in forward
market. A futures contract is an agreement between two parties, to buy or sell an asset
at
a certain time in the future at a certain price, but unlike forward contracts, the futures
contracts are standardized and exchange traded To facilitate liquidity in the futures

contracts, the exchange specifies certain standard quantity and quality of the
underlying
instrument that can be delivered, and a standard time for such a settlement. Futures
exchange has a division or subsidiary called a clearing house that performs the
specific
responsibilities of paying and collecting daily gains and losses as well as guaranteeing
performance of one party to other. A futures' contract can be offset prior to maturity
by
entering into an equal and opposite transaction. More than 99% of futures transactions
are
offset this way.
Yet another feature is that in a futures contract gains and losses on each partys
position
is credited or charged on a daily basis, this process is called daily settlement or
marking
to market. Any person entering into a futures contract assumes a long or short
position,
by a small amount to the clearing house called the margin money
The standardized items in a futures contract are:
Quantity of the underlying
Quality of the underlying
The date and month of delivery
The units of price quotation and minimum price change
Location of settlement
FUTURES TERMINOLOGY
1. SPOT PRICE: The price at which an asset trades in the spot market.
2. FUTURES PRICE: The price at which the futures contract trades in the futures
market.
3. CONTRACT CYCLE: The period over which a contract trades. The index futures
contracts on the NSE have one month, two months and three months expiry cycles

that expires on the last Thursday of the month. Thus a contract which is to expire
in January will expire on the last Thursday of January.
4. EXPIRY DATE: It is the date specified in the futures contract. This is the last day
on which the contract will be traded, at the end of which it will cease to exist.
5. CONTRACT SIZE: It is the quantity of asset that has to be delivered under one
contract. For instance, the contract size on NSEs futures market is 200 Nifties.
6. BASIS: In the context of financial futures, basis can be defined as the futures
price minus the spot price. There will be different basis for each delivery month,
for each contract. In a normal market, basis will be positive; this reflects that the
futures price exceeds the spot prices.
7. COST OF CARRY: The relationship between futures price and spot price can be
summarized in terms of what is known as the cost of carry. This measures the
storage cost plus the interest paid to finance the asset less the income earned on
the asset.
8. INITIAL MARGIN: The amount that must be deposited in the margin account at
the time when a futures contract is first entered into is known as initial margin.
9. MARK TO MARKET: In the futures market, at the end of each trading day, the
margin account is adjusted to reflect the investors gain or loss depending upon
the futures closing price. This is called Marking-to-market.
10. MAINTENANCE MARGIN: This is somewhat lower than the initial margin.
This is set to ensure that the balance in the margin account never becomes
negative. If the balance in the margin account falls below the maintenance
margin, the investor receives a margin call and is expected to top up the margin
account to the initial margin level before trading commences on the next day.
Stock futures contract
It is a contractual agreement to trade in stock/ shares of a company on a future date.
Some
of the basic things in a futures trade as specified by the exchange are:
Contract size
Expiration cycle

Trading hours
Last trading day
Margin requirement
Advantages of stock futures trading
Investing in futures is less costly as there is only initial margin money to be
deposited
A large array of strategies can be used to hedge and speculate, with smaller cash
outlay there is greater liquidity
Disadvantages of stock futures trading
The risk of losses is greater than the initial investment of margin money
The futures contract does not give ownership or voting rights in the equity in
which it is trading
There is greater vigilance required because futures trades are marked to market
daily
INDEX DERIVATIVES
Index derivatives are derivative contracts that has index as the underlying. The
most popular index derivatives contract is index futures and index options. NSEs
market
index - the S&P CNX Nifty are examples of exchange traded index futures.
An index is a broad-based weighted average of prices of selected constituents that
form part of the index. The rules for construction of the index are defined by the body
that creates the index. Trading in stock index futures was first introduced by the
Kansas
City Board of Trade in 1982.
Advantages of investing in stock index futures
Diversification of the risks as the investor is not investing in a particular stock
Flexibility of changing the portfolio and adjusting the exposures to particular
stock index, market or industry
OPTIONS
An option is a contract, or a provision of a contract, that gives one party (the

option holder) the right, but not the obligation, to perform a specified transaction with
another party (the option issuer or option writer) according to the specified terms. The
owner of a property might sell another party an option to purchase the property any
time
during the next three months at a specified price. For every buyer of an option there
must
be a seller. The seller is often referred to as the writer. As with futures, options are
brought into existence by being traded, if none is traded, none exists; conversely,
there is
no limit to the number of option contracts that can be in existence at any time. As with
futures, the process of closing out options positions will cause contracts to cease to
exist,
diminishing the total number.
Thus an option is the right to buy or sell a specified amount of a financial
instrument at a pre-arranged price on or before a particular date.
There are two options which can be exercised:
Call option, the right to buy is referred to as a call option.
Put option, the right to sell is referred as a put option.
OPTION TERMINOLOGY
1. INDEX OPTION: These options have the index as the underlying. Some
options are European while others are American. European style options
can be exercised only on the maturity date of the option, which is known
as the expiry date. An American style option can be exercised at any time
upto, and including, the expiry date. It is to be noted that the distinction
has nothing to do with geography. Both type of the option are traded all
over the world
2. STOCK OPTION: Stock options are options on individual stocks. A
contract gives the holder the right to buy or sell shares at the specified
price.
3. BUYER OF AN OPTION: The buyer of an option is the one who by

paying the option premium buys the right but not the obligation to exercise
the options on the seller/writer.
4. WRITER OF AN OPTION: The writer of a call/put option is the one who
receives the option premium and is thereby obliged to sell/buy the asset if
the buyer exercised on him.
5. STRIKE PRICE: The price specified in the option contract is known as the
strike price or the exercise price.
6. IN THE MONEY OPTION: An in the money option is an option that
would lead to a positive cash flow to the holder if it was exercised
immediately. A call option on the index is said to be in-the-money (ITM)
when the current index stands at a level higher than the strike price (i.e.
spot price> strike price). If the index is much higher than the strike price,
the call is said to be deep ITM. In the case of a put, the put is ITM if the
index is below the strike price.
7. AT THE MONEY OPTION: An at the money option is an option that
would lead to zero cash flow to the holder if it were exercised
immediately. An option on the index is at the money when the current
index equals the strike price(i.e. spot price = strike price).
8. OUT OF THE MONEY OPTION: An out of the money(OTM) option
is an option that would lead to a negative cash flow for the holder if it
were exercised immediately. A call option on the index is out of the
money when the current index stands at a level lower than the strike
price(i.e. spot price < strike price). If the index is much lower than the
strike price, the call is said to be deep OTM. In the case of a put, the put is
OTM if the index is above the strike price.
9. INTRINSIC VALUE OF AN OPTION: The option premium can be
broken down into two components - intrinsic value and time value. The
intrinsic value of a call is the ITM value of the option that is if the call is
OTM, its intrinsic value will be zero.
10. TIME VALUE OF AN OPTION: The time value of an option is the

difference between its premium and its intrinsic value. Usually maximum
time value exists when the option is ATM. The longer the time to
expiration, the greater is an options time value, or else equal. At
expiration, an option should have no time value.
Factors affecting value of options you would understand this while using the
valuation techniques, but the terms are introduced below:
Price value of the call option is directly proportionate to the change in the price
of the underlying. Say for example
Time as options expire in future, time has an effect on the value of the options.
Interest rates and Volatility in case where the underlying asset is a bond or
interest rate, interest rate volatility would have an impact on the option prices.
The statistical or historical volatility (SV) helps measure the past price
movements of the stock and helps in understanding the future volatility of the
stock during the life of the option
Commodity Derivatives
Commodity Derivatives are the first of the derivatives contracts that emerged to
hedge
against the risk of the value of the agricultural crops going below the cost of
production.
Chicago Board of Trade was the first organized exchange, established in 1848 to have
started trading in various commodities. Chicago Board of Trade and Chicago
Mercantile
Exchange are the largest commodities exchanges in the world
It is important to understand the attributes necessary in a commodity derivative
contract:
a) Commodity should have a high shelf life only if the commodity has storability,
durability will the carriers of the stock feel the need for hedging against the price
risks or price fluctuations involved
b) Units should be homogenous the underlying commodity as defined in the
commodity derivative contract should be the same as traded in the cash market to

facilitate actual delivery in the cash market. Thus the units of the commodity
should be homogenous
c) Wide and frequent fluctuations in the commodity prices if the price fluctuations
in the cash market are small, people would feel less incentivised to hedge or
insure against the price fluctuations and derivatives market would be of no
significance. Also if by the inherent attributes of the cash market of the
commodity, the cash market of the commodity was such that it would eliminate
the risks of volatility or price fluctuations, derivatives market would be of no
significance. Taking an oversimplified example, if an investor had purchased 100
tons of rice @ Rs. 10/ kg in the cash market and is of the view that the prices may
fall in the future, he may short a rice future at Rs. 10/ kg to hedge against the fall
in prices. Now if the prices fall to Rs. 2/ kg, the loss that the investor makes in
the cash market may be compensated by squaring of the short position thus
eliminating the risk of price fluctuations in the commodity market
Commodity derivative contracts are standardized contracts and are traded as per the
investors needs. The needs of the investor may be instrumental or convenience,
depending upon the needs, the investor would trade in a derivative product.
Instrumental
risks would relate to price risk reduction and convenience needs would relate to
flexibility in trade or efficient clearing process.
Commodity Derivatives in India
Commodity derivatives in India were established by the Cotton Trade Association in
1875, since then the market has suffered from liquidity problems and several
regulatory
dogmas. However in the recent times the commodity trade has grown significantly
and
today there are 25 derivatives exchanges in India which include four national
commodity
exchanges; National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange (NCDEX), National
MultiCommodity

Exchange of India (NCME), National Board of Trade (NBOT) and Multi


Commodity Exchange (MCX)
NCDEX
It is the largest commodity derivatives exchange in India and is the only commodity
exchange promoted by national level institutions. NCDEX was incorporated in 2003
under the Companies Act, 1956 and is regulated by the Forward Market Commission
in
respect of the futures trading in commodities. NCDEX is located in Mumbai
MCX
MCX is recognised by the government of India and is amongst the worlds top three
bullion exchanges and top four energy exchanges. MCXs headquarter is in Mumbai
and
facilitates online trading, clearing and settlement operations for the commodoties
futures
market in the country.
Over the Counter Derivatives (OTC Derivatives)
Derivatives that are privately negotiated and not traded on the stock exchange are
called
OTC Derivatives.
Interest Rate Derivatives (IRD)
In the OTC derivatives segment, interest rate derivatives (IRDs) are easily the largest
and
therefore the most significant globally. In markets with complex risk exposures and
high
volatility Interest Rate Derivatives are an effective tool for management of financial
risks. In IRDs, the parties are trying to trade in the volatility of interest rates. Interest
rates affect a whole spectrum of financial assets loans, bonds, fixed income
securities,
government treasuries, and so on. In fact, changes in interest rates have major macro
economic implications for various economic parameters exchange rates, state of the

economy, and thereby, the entire spectrum of the financial sector.


Definition of IRDs
Interest Rate Derivatives (IRD) are derivatives where the underlying risk interest
rates.
Hence, depending on the type of the transaction, parties either swap interest at a fixed
or
floating rate on a notional amount, or trade in interest rate futures, or engage in
forward
rate agreements. As in case of all derivatives, the contract is mostly settled by net
settlement, that is payment of difference amount.
Types:
The basic IRDs are simple and mostly liquid and are called vanilla products, whereas
derivatives belonging to the least liquid category are termed as exotic interest rate
derivatives. Some vanilla products are:
1) Interest Rate Swaps
2) Interest Rate Futures
3) Forward Rate Agreements
4) Interest rate caps/floors
Interest Rate Swaps These are derivatives where one party exchanges or swaps the
fixed or the floating rates of interest with the other party. The interest rates are
calculated
on the notional principal amount which is not exchanged but used to determine the
quantum of cashflow in the transaction. Interest rate swaps are typically used by
corporations to typically alter the exposure to fluctuations on interest rates by
swapping
fixed rate obligations for floating and vice-a-versa or to obtain lower rates of interest
than
otherwise available.
Interest rate swaps can be a) fixed-for-fixed rate swap, b) fixed-for-floating rate swap,
c)

floating-for-floating rate swap and so on. As the names suggest interest rates are
being
swapped, either in the same currency or different currency and there could be as many
customized variations of the swaps, as desired.
This can be further explained simply. For instance if there are two borrowers in the
market where Borrower A has borrowed at a fixed rate but wants a floating rate of
interest and Borrower B has borrowed with floating and wants a fixed rate of interest.
IN
such a scenario they can swap their existing interest rates without any further
borrowing.
This would make the transaction of the two borrowers independent of the underlying
borrowings. For instance if a company has investments with a floating rate of interest
of
4.7% and can obtain fixed interest rate of 4.5% then the company may enter into a
fixedforfloating swap and earn a profit of 20 basis points.
Forward Rate Agreements (FRAs) These are cash settled for ward contracts on
interest
rate traded among international banks active in the Eurodollar market.
These are contracts between two parties where the interest rates are to be paid/
received
on an obligation at a future date. The rate of interest, notional amount and expiry date
is
fixed at the time of entering the contract and only difference in the amount is paid/
received at the end of the period. The principal is called notional because while it
determines the amount of payment, actual exchange of principal never takes place.
For
instance if A enters an FRA with B and receives a fixed rate of interest say 6% on
principal, say P for three years and B receives floating rate on P. If at the end of
contract

period of C the LIBOR rate is 6.5% then A will make a payment of the differential
amount, (that is .5% on the principal P) to B. The settlement mechanism can be
further
explained as follows:
For instance at a notional principal of USD 1 million where the borrower buys an
FRA
for 3 months that carries an interest rate of 6% and the contract run is 6 months. At
the
settlement date the settlement rate is at 6.5%. Then the settlement amount will be
calculated in the following manner:
Settlement amount = [(Difference between settlement rate and agreed rate)*
contract run* principal amount]/[(36,000 or 36500) + (settlement rate*contract
period)]
That is, in the above problem
Settlement amount = [(6.5-6)*180*USD 1 million]/[36,000 + (6.5%* 90)
(Note: 36,000 is used for currencies where the basis of calculation is actual/360
days and 36,500 is used for currencies where the basis of calculation of interest is
actual/365 days)
Interest Rate Caps/Floors: Interest rate caps/floors are basically hedging instruments
that can give the investor both benefits of fixed rate interest and fluctuating rate
interest.
The person providing an interest rate cap is the protection seller. The seller assures the
borrower or the buyer that in case of high volatility in the interest rates, if interest rate
moves beyond the cap the borrower will be paid amount beyond the cap. In case the
market rates do not go beyond the cap limit, the seller need not pay anything to the
borrower. In such a situation as long as the interest rates are within the cap limit
borrower
enjoys the floating rates and if rates move above the cap limit he will be compensated
with the requisite amount by the protection seller and the borrower will pay fixed to
the

capped rate of interest. The same is the case when a person enters a Interest Rate
Floor
transaction.
In case of Interest Rate Cap transaction the borrower is expects the market interest
rates
to go up in the future and hedge against the movement of the market rates. Interest
Rate
Caps/Floors transactions are ideally of one, two, five or ten years and the desired level
of
protection the buyer seeks are 6%, 8% or 10%.

FACTORS
AFFECTING
CAPITAL MARKET
IN INDIA
The capital market is affected by a range of factors . Some of the factors which
influence capital
market are as follows:A)Performance of domestic companies:The performance of the companies or rather corporate earnings is one of the factors
which has direct impact or effect on capital market in a country. Weak corporate
earnings
indicate that the demand for goods and services in the economy is less due to slow
growth in
per capita income of people . Because of slow growth in demand there is slow growth
in
employment which means slow growth in demand in the near future. Thus weak
corporate

earnings indicate average or not so good prospects for the economy as a whole in the
near term.
In such a scenario the investors ( both domestic as well as foreign ) would be wary to
invest in
the capital market and thus there is bear market like situation. The opposite case of it
would be
robust corporate earnings and its positive impact on the capital market.
The corporate earnings for the April June quarter for the current fiscal has been
good.
The companies like TCS, Infosys,Maruti Suzuki, Bharti Airtel, ACC, ITC,
Wipro,HDFC,Binani
cement, IDEA, Marico Canara Bank, Piramal Health, India cements , Ultra Tech,
L&T, CocaCola, Yes Bank, Dr. Reddys Laboratories, Oriental Bank of Commerce, Ranbaxy,
Fortis, Shree
Cement ,etc have registered growth in net profit compared to the corresponding
quarter a year
ago. Thus we see companies from Infrastructure sector, Financial Services,
Pharmaceutical
sector, IT Sector, Automobile sector, etc. doing well . This across the sector growth
indicates that
the Indian economy is on the path of recovery which has been positively reflected in
the stock
market( rise in sensex & nifty) in the last two weeks. (July 13-July 24).
B) Environmental Factors :Environmental Factor in Indias context primarily means- Monsoon . In India around
60 % of
agricultural production is dependent on monsoon. Thus there is heavy dependence on
monsoon.

The major chunk of agricultural production comes from the states of Punjab , Haryana
& Uttar
Pradesh. Thus deficient or delayed monsoon in this part of the country would directly
affect the
agricultural output in the country. Apart from monsoon other natural calamities like
Floods,
tsunami, drought, earthquake, etc. also have an impact on the capital market of a
country.
The Indian Met Department (IMD) on 24th June stated that India would receive only
93 %
rainfall of Long Period Average (LPA). This piece of news directly had an impact on
Indian
capital market with BSE Sensex falling by 0.5 % on the 25th June . The major losers
were
automakers and consumer goods firms since the below normal monsoon forecast
triggered
concerns that demand in the crucial rural heartland would take a hit. This is because a
deficient monsoon could seriously squeeze rural incomes, reduce the demand for
everything
from motorbikes to soaps and worsen a slowing economy.
C) Macro Economic Numbers :The macro economic numbers also influence the capital market. It includes Index of
Industrial
Production (IIP) which is released every month, annual Inflation number indicated by
Wholesale
Price Index (WPI) which is released every week, Export Import numbers which are
declared
every month, Core Industries growth rate ( It includes Six Core infrastructure
industries Coal,

Crude oil, refining, power, cement and finished steel) which comes out every month,
etc. This
macro economic indicators indicate the state of the economy and the direction in
which the
economy is headed and therefore impacts the capital market in India.
A case in the point was declaration of core industries growth figure. The six Core
Infrastructure
Industries Coal, Crude oil, refining, finished steel, power & cement grew 6.5% in
June , the
figure came on the 23 rd of July and had a positive impact on the capital market with
the
Sensex and nifty rising by 388 points & 125 points respectively.
D) Global Cues :In this world of globalization various economies are interdependent and
interconnected. An
event in one part of the world is bound to affect other parts of the world , however the
magnitude and intensity of impact would vary.
Thus capital market in India is also affected by developments in other parts of the
world i.e.
U.S. , Europe, Japan , etc.
Global cues includes corporate earnings of MNCs, consumer confidence index in
developed
countries, jobless claims in developed countries, global growth outlook given by
various
agencies like IMF, economic growth of major economies, price of crude oil, credit
rating of
various economies given by Moodys, S & P, etc.
An obvious example at this point in time would be that of subprime crisis &
recession.

Recession started in U.S. and some parts of the Europe in early 2008 .Since then it
has impacted
all the countries of the world- developed, developing, less- developed and even
emerging
economies.
E) Political stability and government policies:For any economy to achieve and sustain growth it has to have political stability and
pro- growth
government policies. This is because when there is political stability there is stability
and
consistency in governments attitude which is communicated through various
government
policies. The vice- versa is the case when there is no political stability .So capital
market also
reacts to the nature of government, attitude of government, and various policies of the
government.
The above statement can be substantiated by the fact the when the mandate came in
UPA
governments favor ( Without the baggage of left party) on May 16 2009, the stock
markets on
Monday , 18th May had a bullish rally with Sensex closing 800 point higher over the
previous
days close. The reason was political stability. Also without the baggage of left party
government
can go ahead with reforms.
F) Growth prospectus of an economy:When the national income of the country increases and per capita income of people
increases it
is said that the economy is growing. Higher income also means higher expenditure
and higher

savings. This augurs well for the economy as higher expenditure means higher
demand and
higher savings means higher investment. Thus when an economy is growing at a good
pace
capital market of the country attracts more money from investors, both from within
and outside
the country and vice -versa. So we can say that growth prospects of an economy do
have an
impact on capital markets.
G) Investor Sentiment and risk appetite :Another factor which influences capital market is investor sentiment and their risk
appetite
.Even if the investors have the money to invest but if they are not confident about the
returns
from their investment , they may stay away from investment for some time.At the
same time if
the investors have low risk appetite , which they were having in global and Indian
capital
market some four to five months back due to global financial meltdown and
recessionary
situation in U.S. & some parts of Europe , they may stay away from investment and
wait for the right time to come.
CAPITAL MARKET
EFFICIENCY
An efficient capital market is a market where the share prices reflect new
information
accurately and in real time.
Capital market efficiency is judged by its success in incorporating and inducting
information,

generally about the basic value of securities, into the price of securities. This basic or
fundamental value of securities is the present value of the cash flows expected in the
future by
the person owning the securities.
The fluctuation in the value of stocks encourage traders to trade in a competitive
manner with the
objective of maximum profit. This results in price movements towards the current
value of the
cash flows in the future. The information is very easily available at cheap rates
because of the
presence of organized markets and various technological innovations. An efficient
capital market
incorporates information quickly and accurately into the prices of securities.
In the weak-form efficient capital market, information about the history of previous
returns and
prices are reflected fully in the security prices; the returns from stocks in this type of
market are
unpredictable.
In the semi strong-form efficient market, the public information is completely
reflected in
security prices; in this market, those traders who have non-public information access
can earn
excess profits.
In the strong-form efficient market, under no circumstances can investors earn excess
profits
because all of the information is incorporated into the security prices.
The funds that are flowing in capital markets, from savers to the firms with the aim of
financing
projects, must flow into the best and top valued projects and, therefore, informational
efficiency

is of supreme importance. Stocks must be efficiently priced, because if the securities


are priced
accurately, then those investors who do not have time for market analysis would feel
confident
about making investments in the capital market.
Eugene Fama was one of the earliest to theorize capital market efficiency, but
empirical tests of
capital market efficiency had begun even before that.
Efficient-market hypothesis
In finance, the efficient-market hypothesis (EMH) asserts that financial markets are
"informationally efficient". That is, one cannot consistently achieve returns in excess
of average
market returns on a risk-adjusted basis, given the information publicly available at the
time the
investment is made.
There are three major versions of the hypothesis: "weak", "semi-strong", and "strong".
Weak
EMH claims that prices on traded assets (e.g., stocks, bonds, or property) already
reflect all past
publicly available information. Semi-strong EMH claims both that prices reflect all
publicly
available information and that prices instantly change to reflect new public
information. Strong
EMH additionally claims that prices instantly reflect even hidden or "insider"
information. There
is evidence for and against the weak and semi-strong EMHs, while there is powerful
evidence
against strong EMH.
The validity of the hypothesis has been questioned by critics who blame the belief in
rational

markets for much of the financial crisis of 20072010. Defenders of the EMH caution
that
conflating market stability with the EMH is unwarranted; when publicly available
information is
unstable, the market can be just as unstable.
Historical background
The efficient-market hypothesis was first expressed by Louis Bachelier, a French
mathematician,
in his 1900 dissertation, "The Theory of Speculation". His work was largely ignored
until the
1950s; however beginning in the 30s scattered, independent work corroborated his
thesis. A
small number of studies indicated that US stock prices and related financial series
followed a
random walk model.[5] Research by Alfred Cowles in the 30s and 40s suggested
that
professional investors were in general unable to outperform the market.
The efficient-market hypothesis was developed by Professor Eugene Fama at the
University of
Chicago Booth School of Business as an academic concept of study through his
published Ph.D.
thesis in the early 1960s at the same school. It was widely accepted up until the
1990s, when
behavioral finance economists, who were a fringe element, became mainstream.
Empirical
analyses have consistently found problems with the efficient-market hypothesis, the
most
consistent being that stocks with low price to earnings (and similarly, low price to
cash-flow or

book value) outperform other stocks. Alternative theories have proposed that
cognitive biases
cause these inefficiencies, leading investors to purchase overpriced growth stocks
rather than
value stocks. Although the efficient-market hypothesis has become controversial
because
substantial and lasting inefficiencies are observed, Beechey et al. (2000) consider that
it remains
a worthwhile starting point.
The efficient-market hypothesis emerged as a prominent theory in the mid-1960s.
Paul
Samuelson had begun to circulate Bachelier's work among economists. In 1964
Bachelier's
dissertation along with the empirical studies mentioned above were published in an
anthology
edited by Paul Cootner. In 1965 Eugene Fama published his dissertation arguing for
the random
walk hypothesis, and Samuelson published a proof for a version of the efficientmarket
hypothesis. In 1970 Fama published a review of both the theory and the evidence for
the
hypothesis. The paper extended and refined the theory, included the definitions for
three forms of
financial market efficiency: weak, semi-strong and strong (see below).
Further to this evidence that the UK stock market is weak-form efficient, other studies
of capital
markets have pointed toward their being semi-strong-form efficient. A study by Khan
of the
grain futures market indicated semi-strong form efficiency following the release of
large trader

position information (Khan, 1986). Studies by Firth (1976, 1979, and 1980) in the
United
Kingdom have compared the share prices existing after a takeover announcement
with the bid
offer. Firth found that the share prices were fully and instantaneously adjusted to their
correct
levels, thus concluding that the UK stock market was semi-strong-form efficient.
However, the
market's ability to efficiently respond to a short term, widely publicized event such as
a takeover
announcement does not necessarily prove market efficiency related to other more long
term,
amorphous factors. David Dreman has criticized the evidence provided by this instant
"efficient"
response, pointing out that an immediate response is not necessarily efficient, and that
the longterm
performance of the stock in response to certain movements is better indications. A
study on
stocks response to dividend cuts or increases over three years found that after an
announcement
of a dividend cut, stocks underperformed the market by 15.3% for the three-year
period, while
stocks outperformed 24.8% for the three years afterward after a dividend increase
announcement.
Theoretical background
Beyond the normal utility maximizing agents, the efficient-market hypothesis requires
that
agents have rational expectations; that on average the population is correct (even if no
one

person is) and whenever new relevant information appears, the agents update their
expectations
appropriately. Note that it is not required that the agents be rational. EMH allows that
when
faced with new information, some investors may overreact and some may underreact.
All that is
required by the EMH is that investors' reactions be random and follow a normal
distribution
pattern so that the net effect on market prices cannot be reliably exploited to make an
abnormal
profit, especially when considering transaction costs (including commissions and
spreads). Thus,
any one person can be wrong about the marketindeed, everyone can bebut the
market as a
whole is always right. There are three common forms in which the efficient-market
hypothesis is
commonly statedweak-form efficiency, semi-strong-form efficiency and strongform
efficiency, each of which has different implications for how markets work.
In weak-form efficiency, future prices cannot be predicted by analyzing price from
the past.
Excess returns cannot be earned in the long run by using investment strategies based
on
historical share prices or other historical data. Technical analysis techniques will not
be able to
consistently produce excess returns, though some forms of fundamental analysis may
still
provide excess returns. Share prices exhibit no serial dependencies, meaning that
there are no

"patterns" to asset prices. This implies that future price movements are determined
entirely by
information not contained in the price series. Hence, prices must follow a random
walk. This
'soft' EMH does not require that prices remain at or near equilibrium, but only that
market
participants not be able to systematically profit from market 'inefficiencies'. However,
while
EMH predicts that all price movement (in the absence of change in fundamental
information) is
random (i.e., non-trending), many studies have shown a marked tendency for the
stock markets
to trend over time periods of weeks or longer and that, moreover, there is a positive
correlation
between degree of trending and length of time period studied (but note that over long
time
periods, the trending is sinusoidal in appearance). Various explanations for such large
and
apparently non-random price movements have been promulgated. But the best
explanation seems
to be that the distribution of stock market prices is non-Gaussian (in which case
EMH, in any of
its current forms, would not be strictly applicable).
The problem of algorithmically constructing prices which reflect all available
information has
been studied extensively in the field of computer science. For example, the
complexity of finding
the arbitrage opportunities in pair betting markets has been shown to be NP-hard.
In semi-strong-form efficiency, it is implied that share prices adjust to publicly
available new

information very rapidly and in an unbiased fashion, such that no excess returns can
be earned by
trading on that information. Semi-strong-form efficiency implies that neither
fundamental
analysis nor technical analysis techniques will be able to reliably produce excess
returns. To test
for semi-strong-form efficiency, the adjustments to previously unknown news must be
of a
reasonable size and must be instantaneous. To test for this, consistent upward or
downward
adjustments after the initial change must be looked for. If there are any such
adjustments it
would suggest that investors had interpreted the information in a biased fashion and
hence in an
inefficient manner.
In strong-form efficiency, share prices reflect all information, public and private, and
no one
can earn excess returns. If there are legal barriers to private information becoming
public, as with
insider trading laws, strong-form efficiency is impossible, except in the case where
the laws are
universally ignored. To test for strong-form efficiency, a market needs to exist where
investors
cannot consistently earn excess returns over a long period of time. Even if some
money
managers are consistently observed to beat the market, no refutation even of strongform
efficiency follows: with hundreds of thousands of fund managers worldwide, even a
normal

distribution of returns (as efficiency predicts) should be expected to produce a few


dozen "star"
performers.

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