ECON 001 Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Corporate Bond, Financial System, Interest Rate

30 views5 pages
12 Jun 2018
School
Department
Course
Professor
Chapter 26 Savings and Investment
I. Financial System- institutions that match those with excess funds who are willing to lend
(savers) with those who need the funds in order to invest (borrowers)
Financial system: financial markets and financial intermediaries
A. Financial Markets
Market where borrowers are able to borrow money
directly
from savers.
Borrowers can either give savers bonds or stocks for their money
1. Bond Market (Debt Finance)- promise of repayment by the issuer to the bondholder
Bonds Will Have Following Specified
1. Principal (face value): amount to be repaid
2. Maturity Date: date by which principal must be repaid
3. Interest Rate: cost to borrow funds
Bonds Will Differ in Following Characteristics
1. Maturity Date: long-term bonds vs short term bonds. Key Point: long term bonds will
pay higher interest rate than short term bonds. Short term bonds are less risky than
long term bonds.
2. Credit (Default) Risk: Corporate bonds vs US gov’t bonds. Key point: the higher the
likelihood of default, the higher the interest rate
3. Tax treatment: Tax-Exempt Bonds vs. Taxable Bonds. Key Point: Bonds that are tax
exempt will pay lower interest rate than bonds that are taxable.
Stock Market (Equity Finance)
Stock- entitles holder to a share of ownership in company
Entitled to share of profits
Key Differences between Stocks and Bonds
1. Bondholder is creditor while shareholder is an owner. In case of bankruptcy,
bondholders will be paid off first.
2. If firm becomes more profitable, shareholders will benefit more due to higher
dividend payments. Bondholders won’t have same benefits.
B. Financial Intermediaries- system where borrowers get funds indirectly (via third party)
from savers. Two types: banks and mutual funds.
Unlock document

This preview shows pages 1-2 of the document.
Unlock all 5 pages and 3 million more documents.

Already have an account? Log in
Banks
Savers give money to banks as deposits and banks give money to borrowers as loans and
borrowers give banks interest while banks give savers interest rates as well.
Mutual Fund- pool that resources from investors to purchase bonds and stocks
Savers give money to mutual funds. Mutual funds will give money to borrowers and
borrowers will give money back with bonds and stocks. Mutual funds give savers money
back with dividends and interest rates.
II. National Savings
Q: How is savings determined in economy?
Assume economy is closed (Nx=0)
In closed economy: Y= C + I + G
Step #1: Rearrange to Solve for I
Y - C - G = I (national savings (S))
Step #2: Add “0” to the left-hand side, where 0 = T - T
Y - C - T + T - G = I
(Y - C - T) = private savings
(T - G) = public savings
National Savings = private savings + public savings
Budget Surplus- T-G > 0
Budget Deficit- T - G < 0
Balanced Budget- T - G = 0
In Equilibrium: S = I
III. Model for Loanable Funds
Model explains how savings + investment are determined
A. Demand for Loanable Funds (Investment Curve)
Demand for loanable funds comes from firms who wish to borrow in order to invest
(borrowers)
Price of funds (interest rate) determines how much funds borrowers want to demand.
Interest rate = r.
If r increases cost of borrowing increase demand for funds decreases
Unlock document

This preview shows pages 1-2 of the document.
Unlock all 5 pages and 3 million more documents.

Already have an account? Log in

Document Summary

Chapter 26 savings and investment: financial system- institutions that match those with excess funds who are willing to lend (savers) with those who need the funds in order to invest (borrowers) Financial system: financial markets and financial intermediaries: financial markets. Market where borrowers are able to borrow money directly from savers. Borrowers can either give savers bonds or stocks for their money: bond market (debt finance)- promise of repayment by the issuer to the bondholder. Bonds will have following specified: principal (face value): amount to be repaid, maturity date: date by which principal must be repaid. Bonds will differ in following characteristics: maturity date: long-term bonds vs short term bonds. Key point: long term bonds will pay higher interest rate than short term bonds. Short term bonds are less risky than long term bonds: credit (default) risk: corporate bonds vs us gov"t bonds.

Get access

Grade+20% off
$8 USD/m$10 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
40 Verified Answers
Class+
$8 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
30 Verified Answers

Related Documents

Related Questions