Secondary Markets Flashcards

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1
Q

what is the role of trading venues?

A

facilitate the purchase and sale of listed instruments

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2
Q

what does stock exchange membership allow?

A

enables banks and stockbrokers to be involved in secondary markets, provide liquidity to existing

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3
Q

what is the role of brokers?

A

arrange deals for their clients as well as potentially giving advice to their clients as to securities investments

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4
Q

what is the role of dealers?

A

actually buy/sell securities, dealer could buy/sell from the client which is described as dealing in principle as the dealer takes a principle position

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5
Q

what are ATSs?

A

alternative trading systems, internalise their customers trades by executing them against other customers trades or the firms own inventory

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5
Q

what is dark pool trading?

A

trading system where stocks are traded without the order price being displayed until after the trade is complete- commonly described as dark liquidity

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5
Q

what do markets-makers provide?

A

provide liquidity that might be lacking on an order-driven system.

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6
Q

what is over-the-counter trading?

A

buying and selling securities outside of an official stock exchange

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6
Q

what are order-driven systems?

A

investors indicate how many securities they want to buy/sell and at what price, the system then brings together the buyers and sellers

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7
Q

what are private transactions?

A

funding round of securities which are sold without an IPO usually to small number of chosen private investors. exemption from SEC via regulation D. commonly used by growing businesses in their early stages via various stages of equity funding

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8
Q

what are quote-driven systems?

A

market makers agree to buy and sell at least a set minimum number of shares at quoted prices- this sets the offer/bid price

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9
Q

what do hybrid systems do and what is an example?

A

combine both order and quote driven systems e.g., SETSqx

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10
Q

how do market makers make a profit?

A

hope to on average buy at the big and sell at the offer

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11
Q

what is the role of an agent?

A

arrange and make deals on behalf of other parties- charge commission on these deals

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12
Q

what is an inter-dealer broker?

A

exchange member firms that have registered with the exchange to act as an agent between dealers

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13
Q

what does the term ‘systematic internaliser’ mean

A

when an investment firm on an organised, frequent, systematic and substantial bases deals on its own account when executing client orders instead of placing the orders elsewhere

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14
Q

what is algorithmic trading?

A

relies on computer systems to buy shares when predefined market conditions are met.

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15
Q

what are the benefits of algorithmic trading?

A
  • removes the emotion of trading
  • preservation of discipline
  • speed, accuracy and reduced costs
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16
Q

what is the key to algorithmic trading?

A

reducing the level of latency (time taken to interact with the market)- could give the trader the ability to act on market information more quickly than others

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17
Q

what is prime brokerage?

A

term given to a collection of services provided by investment banks to their hedge fund clients

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18
Q

what services are included in prime brokerage?

A
  • securities lending and borrowing
  • leveraged trade execution
  • cash management
  • core settlement
  • custody
  • rehypothecation (assets become the property of the prime broker and they’re used for the benefit of the client)
  • access to OTC markets
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19
Q

how are orders given priority in the order book?

A

orders are given priority first by price then by time

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20
Q

how is the opening price established

A

using an auction process- uncrossing algorithm where orders that overlap are executed at a single price that maximises the number of shares traded. once this is complete, automatic execution commences

21
Q

what are interruptions in the automatic execution of trades resultant from?

A

when the price of a trade is more than the price tolerance level away from the previous trade price, allows investors to react to large price changes

22
Q

how can one interact with the order book?

A

only those with membership to the exchange can interact with the order book

23
Q

what rights can the exchange reserve?

A

right to prohibit any transaction from being dealt on the exchange- members will have to seek permission to then affect a transaction if a security is suspended

24
Q

what are limit orders?

A

orders that have a price limit and a time limit- can be partially filled- the only orders that are displayed in the order book

25
Q

what are iceberg orders?

A

enables a market participant with a large order to partially hide the size of their order from the market and reduce the market impact the large order might have

26
Q

what are market orders?

A

do not specify price and are immediately executed at the best available price- submitted to the order book to deal in a specified number of shares

27
Q

what are execute and eliminate orders?

A

will execute as much of the trade as possible and cancel the rest- has a specified price and won’t execute a price worse than that

28
Q

what are fill-or-kill orders?

A

normally have a specified price, either entire order will be immediately filled at a price at least as good as that specified or the entire order will be killed

29
Q

what are all-or-none orders?

A

same as fill-or-kill except that if the order cannot be executed immediately, the order will be cancelled until the end of the trading day when the market closes

30
Q

what are the uses of a CCP?

A
  • reduced counterparty risk
  • providing total anonymity
  • reduced administration
  • netting of transactions
  • improved prices
31
Q

what are additional costs that may be levied on investors?

A
  • brokers commission
  • account fees
  • exchange fees, regulatory fees, clearing fees, tax/duties
32
Q

what are stock market indices?

A

method of measuring the performance of a section of the stock market which is segmented to represent a particular group- used as benchmarks to measure performance of portfolios and to provide the general public with an easy overview of the state of equities

33
Q

how is the S&P 500 weighted?

A

by free-float market capitalisation

34
Q

how is the FTSE 100 weighted?

A

measured by market cap.

35
Q

what does the national index represent?

A

the performance of the stock market of a given nation and reflects investor sentiment on the state of the economy

36
Q

what does the price return measure?

A

measures the price performance

37
Q

what does the total return measure?

A

measures the performance of both price return and dividend reinvestment

38
Q

what does net total return measure?

A

accounts for dividend reinvestment after the deduction of a withholding tax

39
Q

what does free-float measure?

A

estimates the proportion of shares that are not held by the owners and not burdened with sales restrictions

40
Q

what does a free-float factor represent?

A

proportion of shares that is free-floated as a percentage of issued shares and is then typically rounded to the nearest multiple of 5%

41
Q

who are the major participants that facilitate the government bond markets?

A
  • government issuing agency
  • primary dealers
  • broker-dealers
  • inter-dealer brokers
42
Q

what is a GEMM and what do they do?

A

gilt-edged market makers, vetted by the DMO, become a primary dealer and provide two-way quotes to customers and other member firms of the LSE

43
Q

what are the privileges of GEMM status?

A
  • exclusive rights to competitively bid directly with the CMO
  • exclusive facility to trade as a counterparty of the DMO
  • exclusive access to the services of Gilt inter-dealer brokers
44
Q

what is the role of broker-dealers in the GILT market?

A

non-GEMM LSE member firms that are able to buy or sell gilts as principal or as an agent

45
Q

what is the role of GILT inter-dealer brokers?

A

arrange deals between market makers anonymously, not allowed to take principal positions, has to be a separate company and not a division of a broker-dealer

46
Q

how does the price of a corporate bond come about?

A

based on the equivalent government bond, less a discount to represent the risk that the corporation might default

47
Q

what is the primary function and role of market makers in corporate bonds?

A

provide liquidity to the market place and act as a facilitator or agent in trades between principalsha

48
Q

what is a decentralised market structure?

A

enables investors to buy/sell without a centralised location- traders/investors deal directly with each other not through a central exchange

49
Q

what are the 3 ways dealer-to-dealer trading can occur?

A
  • direct telephone contact
  • indirectly through IDB, voice broking the deal
  • via an electronic market
50
Q

how has trading changed with technology?

A

electronic trading has become much more important, particularly for more liquid government bondsh

51
Q

what characteristics that can affect a bond issue?

A
  • issuers current credit rating
  • structure and seniority of the particular issue
  • priority in the event of default by the issuer
52
Q

what market factors can influence an issue?

A
  • liquidity
  • method of trading
  • ability to borrow
53
Q
A