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Notes on International Financial Market Prof. C P Ravindranathan.

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Presentation on theme: "Notes on International Financial Market Prof. C P Ravindranathan."— Presentation transcript:

1 Notes on International Financial Market Prof. C P Ravindranathan

2 I. Two money market instruments: 1. Certificate of Deposit: Issued by a bank to indicate ownership of a large deposit (over $10,000) often by a company. A negotiable instrument, it can be bought and sold between the time it is issued and the time it is redeemed. 2. Commercial Paper: Short term debt instruments issued by important companies and banks, maturity 5 to 365 days, as large as $10,000 or as large as $1 million. In Euro currency market it is known as Euro Commercial Paper. II. Some important Indian companies which have used ADRs/GDRs: ICICI and HDFC have floated ADRs in the US while SBI, UTI and Kotak Mahindra have raised funds through GDRs

3 III. Why cross listing (listing of shares of common stock on two or more stock exchanges) 1. Improve the liquidity of existing shares and provided a liquid secondary market for new equity issues in foreign markets. 2. Increase share price by overcoming mispricing in a segmented and illiquid home capital market. 3. Increase the firm’s visibility and political acceptance to its customers, suppliers, creditors and home governments. 4. Establish a secondary market for shares that are used to acquire other firms in the host market (eg: Tata acquiring Corus in Europe) 5. Create a secondary market for shares that may be used to compensate local management and employees in foreign affiliates.

4 IV. Alternative Instruments to source equity in international markets  Sale of directed public share issue to investors in a target market  Sale of a Euro equity public issue to investors in more than one market including both foreign and domestic markets (international equity issues originating and sold anywhere in the world)  Private placements (Sale of a security to a small set of qualified institutional buyers)  Sale of shares to private equity funds (limited partnerships of institutional and wealthy individual investors  Sale of shares to a foreign firm as part of a strategic alliance.

5 V. Sourcing Debt Major Sources of Debt Funding:  International bank loans: Traditionally sourced in the Eurocurrency markets. Eurodollar bank loans are also called Eurocredits – given to MNEs, governments, other banks. (Euro currency : domestic currency of one country on deposit in a second country. Euro currency deposits are an efficient and convenient money market device for holding excess corporate liquidity and a major source of short term bank loans to finance corporations and their working capital needs including financing of imports and exports.  Euronote Market: Collective term for short to medium debt instruments sourced in Eurocurrency markets (Note is a written acknowledgement of a debt)  International Bond Market Has variety of instruments, falling within two classifications: Eurobonds and Foreign bonds

6 Eurobond: Underwritten by an international syndicate of banks and other security firms and sold in countries other than the country in whose currency the issue is denominated. Foreign Bond: Underwritten by a syndicate composed of members from a single country, sold principally within that country and denominated in the currency of that country. The issuer, however, is from another country (A bond issued by a firm resident in Germany, denominated in dollars and sold in the US to American investors is a foreign bond – “Yankee bond”)

7 International Finance Centres New York Stock Exchange: World’s biggest market for share trading. Merged with Euro next, a pan-European exchange. Nearest rival in US is NASDAQ London Stock Exchange : Surpasses New York in structured finance and new stock listings. Its Alternative Investment Market (AIM) is geared to smaller firms. Alternative Investment Market (AIM) London: A sub market of London Stock Exchange, now becoming an international exchange, for smaller firms to float shares with a more flexible regulatory system than applicable to the big companies. There are no requirements for capitalization or number of shares issued.

8 Other financial hubs in US: Chicago: World’s derivatives centre. Famous for its Mercantile Exchange. Houston: An active cluster of energy traders and hedge funds. in Europe: Frankfurt: An important centre for banking and derivatives. Geneva: Specialized in private banking and wealth management. Zurich: Specialized in insurance. Paris: Largest market in Europe for trading in mutual funds.

9 in Asia: Tokyo: World’s second largest share market and Asia’s biggest financial centre. Hong Kong: With half of market capitalization from mainland Chinese companies. Singapore: Noted for strengths in stocks, derivatives, private banking and wealth management. Shanghai: Comes after Tokyo and Hong Kong in value of equities traded. Mumbai: India plans to make it a leading financial centre of Asia

10 Dubai: Growing as a new financial centre, with offices of several global financial institutions (Its style cramped lately!) Qatar : An important hub for infrastructure finance. Bahrain: Well established in Islamic banking.


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