Chapter 3: Equities Flashcards

You may prefer our related Brainscape-certified flashcards:
1
Q

To form a company which two forms are needed?

A

Memorandum of association and articles of association

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

What’s the memorandum of association?

A

Confirms the subscribers intention to form a company. It is signed by all initial shareholders.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

What’s the article of association?

A

Details the relationship between the company and its owners. Written rules basically. Agreed by shareholders, includes rights etc.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

What’s a private company?

A

One shareholder. Limited liability.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

What is a public limited company?

A

Minimum of 2 shareholders.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

What is an AGM

A

Annual general meeting - shareholders given opportunity to question director about strats and ops. Must be held within 6 months of the financial year end. Vote on matters such as appointment and removal of directors, and payment of the final dividend.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

What does the companies act provide shareholders with?

A

Right to attend, speak and vote at the AGM or to appoint a proxy

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

What’s an Ordinary resolution?

A

A small issue etc that requires a small vote

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

What’s a special resolution?

A

Requires at least 75% in votes

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

What’s an EGM?

A

Extraordinary general meeting - other meetings for very important issues

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

What’s an ordinary share?

A

Carry full risk and reward of investing in a company. If it does well = ordinary shareholders do well.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Who are ordinary shareholders?

A

Share in the profits of the company by receiving dividends - paid half yearly or quarterly. They ratify the proposed dividend displayed by directors.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

What happens to ordinary shareholders if company does badly?

A

They suffer. If company becomes ‘wound up’ they are paid last.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Ordinary shares can also be referred to as…?

A

… Partly paid or contributing shares - means that only part of their nominal value has been paid up.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

What are preference shares?

A

A hybrid security with elements of both debt and equity. Pref shares have seniority over ordinary shareholders in respect of earnings.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Normally preference shares:

A
  • are non voting
  • pay a fixed dividend
  • rank ahead of ordinary shares

Can be cumulative, non-cumulative and/or participating.

Can be convertible (option to convert into ordinary shares) or redeemable (have a date to redeem)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

Cumulative, non cumulative and participating

A

Cumulative - sufficient profits occur, shareholders will have arrears of dividend paid in the subsequent year.

Non - lost subsequent years

Participating - entitle holder to a basic dividend, participate in bumper profits

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

What is a dividend?

A

The return that an investor gets for providing the risk capital for a business. Paid out from profits.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

Why companies have a higher than average dividend yield:

A
  • company is mature and has healthy levels of cash, but has limited growth potential
  • company has a low share price or is expected to be unsuccessful
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

Why companies have low dividend yields:

A
  • share price is high
  • large proportion of profit is ploughed back into business
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

What is capital gains?

A

When share prices increase over time. Shares need to be sold to realise any capital gains, or they’re unrealised.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

What are rights issues?

A

A method to raise capital. Existing shareholders subscriber for new shares.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

What is right to vote?

A

Shareholders have the right to vote on matters presented to them at company meetings. Normally one share = one vote, can be done in person or use a proxy.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
24
Q

Where are shares held?

A

Stockbrokers or investment manager nominee accounts - used solely for holding shares and other investments.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
25
Q

What is market risk?

A

Risk that share prices in general might fall. Investors could face a loss of capital.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
26
Q

What is liquidity risk?

A

Risk that shares may be difficult to sell at a reasonable price or traded quickly enough in the market to prevent loss.

27
Q

Why does liquidity risk occur?

A
  • difficulty finding a counterparty to trade w
  • usually companies with not much to trade
  • spread widens (bid and offer)
28
Q

What is issuer risk?

A

Risk that issuing company collapsed and ordinary shares become worthless.

29
Q

What’s a corporate action?

A

When a company does something that affects its shareholders or bond holders

30
Q

Types of corporate actions:

A
  1. Mandatory CA: doesn’t require any intervention from shareholders
  2. Mandatory CA with options: default option that will occur if the shareholder does not intervene - up to that point shareholders are given options
  3. Voluntary CA: action that requires shareholder to make a decision
31
Q

The choices a shareholder is given following a rights issue:

A
  1. Take up the rights
  2. Sell rights to another investor
  3. Do nothing
  4. Sell sufficient rights
32
Q

What is a TERP?

A

Theoretical ex-rights price - adjusted share price

33
Q

What’s a bonus issue?

A

A corporate action when the company gives existing shareholders extra shares without their having to subscribe any further funds. Company is increasing number of shares held by each shareholder.

Also known as scrip or capitalisation issue

34
Q

Why do companies make a bonus issue?

A

Increase liquidity of the company’s shares in the market and to bring about a lower share price.

35
Q

What are dividends?

A

Mandatory corporate action. Profit that is passed to shareholders. Usually paid twice a year. Can be paid by cheque, bank account or CREST.

36
Q

Takeovers and mergers

A

Takeovers can be friendly or hostile. Predator seeks to acquire target. Predator buys more than 50% of shares of target company to gain control.

Merger is where two companies agree.

37
Q

Listing

A

When a company decides to seek listing for its shares, process is known as:
- becoming listed or quoted
- floating
- going public
- making IPO

38
Q

Primary and secondary markets

A

Primary market: marketing of new shares in a company to investors for the first time.

Secondary market: when investor sells shares on stock exchange.

39
Q

Advantages of listing

A
  1. Capital
  2. Takeovers
  3. Status
  4. Employees
40
Q

Disadvantages of listing

A
  1. Regulation
  2. Takeovers
  3. Short termism
41
Q

FCA regulator that manages listings

A

Used to be UKLA but now is FCA primary market functions.

42
Q

LSE three segments of main market

A
  1. Premium
  2. Standard Main
  3. High Growth

A listing is referred to as a full listing. This distinguishes it from cases where companies are listed on AIM (alternative investment market).

43
Q

FCA and LSE requirements for a listing on premium and standard segments:

A
  1. Must be a PLC
  2. Companies expected market cap must be at least 30m
  3. Company should have been trading for at least 3 years and 75% of its business must be supported by a historic revenue earning record
  4. At least 10% of shares should be in public hands
  5. It has sufficient working capital for next 12 months

Once listed companies are expected to fulfil rules known as the continuing obligations.

44
Q

What is AIM

A

Was established by LSE as a junior market for younger, smaller companies. Such companies apply to LSE to join AIM, whereas full listing requires application to FCA.

45
Q

Requirements for AIM

A
  1. No trading history required
  2. No min market cap required
  3. No requirement for a minimum proportion of the shares to be held by the public

Companies must appoint a nominated advisor (NOMAD) and a nominated broker. Role of NOMAD is to advise directors of their responsibilities in complying with AIM rules. Role of broker is to make a market and facilitate trading in company’s shares as well as to provide ongoing information about the company to interested parties.

46
Q

Rules for AIM and listed companies

A

Must both release price sensitive information promptly and produce financial information at the half yearly (interim) and full year (final) stage.

47
Q

American indices

A
  1. Dow jones industrial average (DJIA) - provides a narrow view of US stock market - price weighted
  2. NASDAQ composite - focuses on the shares traded on NASDAQ including tech companies - market cap
  3. S+P 500 (standard and poors) - provides wider view of US stock market - market cap
48
Q

European indices

A
  1. UK) FTSE100 - index of largest 100 companies - market cap
  2. France) CAC 40 - 40 most significant stocks among 100 largest market caps on Euronext Paris - market cap
  3. Germany) Xetra DAX - 30 major German companies trading in Frankfurt stock exchange - market cap
49
Q

Asia Pacific indices

A
  1. China) Shanghai stock exchange (SSE) - reflects overall market performance of companies listed on the SSE including stocks listed on Chinas NASDAQ style sci tech innovation board - market cap
  2. China) Shanghai shenzhen CSI 300 index - replicates the performance of the top 300 A-share stocks quoted on the Shanghai and shenzhen stock exchanges - market cap
  3. Hong Kong) Hang Seng - largest companies that trade on Hong Kong Exchange covering approx 65% of its total market cap
  4. Japan) Nikkei 225 - the 225 top rated Japanese companies listed in the first section of Tokyo stock exchange - price weighted
50
Q

Quote driven systems

A

Employ market makers to provide continuous two-way, or bid and offer, prices during the trading day in particular securities, regardless or market conditions.

Market makers make a profit, or turn, through the price spread.

Practitioners argue quote driven systems provide liquidity to the market when trading would otherwise dry up. NASDAQ and LSE’s stock exchange automated quotation (SEAQ) trading systems are two examples of quote driven systems.

51
Q

Order driven systems

A

Employs either an electronic order book, such as LSEs stock exchange trading service (SETS) or an auction process, such as that on the NYSE floor, to match buyers and sellers. Buyers and sellers are matched in strict chronological order by price and the quantity of shares traded and do not require market makers.

52
Q

Retail service providers (RSP’s)

A

Brokers providing services to retail clients utilise a trading approach known as the RSP. The systems role is to provide electronic quotation and dealing facilities for retail stockbrokers and it is a quote driven system operated by UK market makers.

A client places an order with a stockbroker, who then uses the system to connect to competing RSP firms, requesting the most competitive quote for their clients order. The broker then select the most competitive price, enabling clients to benefit from price competition and obtain best execution for the client. RSP is one highly automated systems and lots of 30 market makers may be competing for each order. a key element of the model is the price calculation system used by RSP firms. Price data is gathered electronically from different exchanges in order to build a consolidated view of the best bit an offer prices and quote competitive prices.

53
Q

Other trading systems

A
  1. SETSqx for less liquid shares that are not traded on SETS.
  2. SEAQ for fixed interest securities and AIM stocks not traded on SETSqx
  3. ORB which offers continuous two way pricing for trading in UK gilts and retail size corporate bonds
54
Q

MTFs

A

Non exchange trading venues which bring together buyers and sellers of securities.

Subscribers can post orders into the system and these will be communicated electronically via an electronic communication network (ECN) for other subscribers to view. Matched orders will then proceed to execution.

55
Q

Holding title

A

Shares can be issued in either registered or bearer form.

Holding shares in registered form involves the investors name being recorded on the share register and often the investor being issued with a share certificate to reflect their ownership.

Alternative to holding shares in registered form is to hold bearer shares. Ownership passes by transfer of the share certificate to the new owner. This adds a degree of risk to holding shares in that loss of the certificate might equal loss of the persons investment.

56
Q

Share register

A

Kept by company registrar

57
Q

Certificated settlement

A

Cumbersome and insufficient. Most markets have moved to having a single central securities depositary which holds records of ownership, with transfer of ownership taking place electronically. In UK settlement has moved to a paperless, dematerialised form of settlement through CREST.

58
Q

Clearing

A

Clearing is the process through which the obligations held by buyer and seller to a trade are defined and legally formalised. This procedure establishes what each of the counterparties expects to receive when the trade is settled. It also defines the obligations each must fulfil, in terms of delivering securities of funds, for the trade to settle successfully.

Clearing process:
1. Record key trade info
2. Formalise the legal obligation
3. Match and confirm trade details
4. Agree procedures for settling transaction
5. Calculate settlement obligations and sending out settlement instructions
6. Manage margin and making margin calls.

Trades may be cleared and settled directly between trading counterparties - known as bilateral settlement.

59
Q

Central counterparty (CCP)

A

Interposes itself between the counter parties to a trade, becoming the buyer to every seller and the seller to every buyer. Buyer and seller interact with CCP and remain anonymous, known as novation.

60
Q

Settlement

A

The process through which legal title of a security is transferred from seller to buyer in exchange for the equivalent value in cash. Ideally these two transfers should occur simultaneously known as delivery versus payment (DvP)

61
Q

CREST: Stage 1 - Trade matching

A

Buying and selling members input instructions in CREST detailing the terms of the agreed trade. CREST authenticates these instructions to check that they conform to the authentication procedures stipulated by CREST. If the input data from both members matches, CREST creates a matching transaction.

62
Q

Stage 2 - stock settlement

A

On the intended settlement date, CREST checks that the buying member has the funds, the selling member has sufficient stock in its stock account and the buyers CREST settlement bank has sufficient liquidity at the Bank of England to proceed to settlement of the transaction. If so, CREST moves the stock from the selling members account to the buying members account.

63
Q

Stage 3 - cash settlement

A

CREST also credits the cash memo account (CMA) of the selling members and debits the CMA of the buying member, which simultaneously generates a settlement Bank payment obligation of the buying members settlement bank in favour of the Bank of England. The selling members settlement bank receives the payment from the BOE fund’s immediately upon the debit of the purchase price from the buying members CMA.

64
Q

Stage 4 - Register update

A

CREST then automatically updates it’s operator register of securities to effect the transfer of shares to the buying member. Legal title to the shares passes at this point. This prompts the simultaneous generation by the CREST system of a registrar update request (RUR) requiring the issuer to amend its record of uncertified shares.