Monday, 26 December 2011

Jargonised World

Easy things when said in the Jargon words looks very difficult. But then to know the language of the business one should know the Meaning of Basic Business Jargon. Due to unavoidable circumstances I was not in the position to write on the Blogs frequently, But now onwards I will try to post reugularly on the Blogs.

Happy readings
RAVI BHANDARI

Monday, 20 June 2011

Finance terminology


11. Diluted earnings per share:
An earnings measure calculated by dividing net income less preferred stock dividends for a period by the average number of shares of common stock that would be outstanding if all convertible securities were converted into shares of common stock.

12. IRR:
The discount rate often used in capital budgeting that makes the net present value of all cash flows from a particular project equal to zero. You can think of IRR as the rate of growth a project is expected to generate.

13. Leverage:
1. The use of various financial instruments or borrowed capital, such as margin, to increase the potential return of an investment. 
2. The amount of debt used to finance a firm's assets. A firm with significantly more debt than equity is considered to be highly leveraged.

14. Intrinsic value:
The actual value of a company or an asset based on an underlying perception of its true value including all aspects of the business, in terms of both tangible and intangible factors. This value may or may not be the same as the current market value. Value investors use a variety of analytical techniques in order to estimate the intrinsic value of securities in hopes of finding investments where the true value of the investment exceeds its current market value.

15. Market capitalization (often market cap)
It  is a measurement of size of a business enterprise (corporation) equal to the share price times the number of shares outstanding (shares that have been authorized, issued, and purchased by investors) of a publicly traded company.

Happy reading
RAVI BHANDARI

Soverign credit risk


Soverign credit crisis:

2010 will be known as the year of Sovereign credit risk as 2008 became know as the year of the housing bubble. In many ways, the credit crisis swirling around Europe is similar to the mortgage meltdown. Taking on debt that you cannot pay for is epidemic. Borrowing to pay for current consumption creates a false sense of wealth. At some point, you have to pay it back. Or those holding the debt have to forgive part of all of what you owe. If they do, they face financial ruin. There is no easy answer.
Greece and other European countries ran large deficits to pay for current consumption. Now someone has to pay for their excesses. Those holding the debt, primarily European banks and governments, want to be paid back. Citizens in Germany who have been careful with their money do not want to be saddled with covering the debts of Greece. The European banks cannot afford to write off the debt as they are recovering from the affects of the U.S. mortgage meltdown.
Since European banks are at the center of sovereign credit risk, many large investors, fearing the affects of the credit crisis, are moving their money to safer investments in other countries such as the U.S. As money flows out of Europe, the banks see the outflow of money causing their capital structure to deteriorate. Should one bank fail it will have a cascading affect on others, not unlike the sequence of the subprime defaults that began with HSBC’s Household Finance disclosure of mortgage losses in February 2007. The losses grew and expanded to other firms, eventually leading to the collapse of investment banking houses Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns.
The global trade and the banking system connects everyone. It is easy for money to move from one investment to another as capital flows from one country to others seeking higher returns, with lower risk. For example, the benchmark ten-year Treasury rate fell 47 basis points as investors sought the safety of U.S. Treasuries. This outflow of money negatively affects the European banks as they lose deposits.

Following Bernanke’s Model
To stem the fallout from the Greek credit crisis, finance ministers from the 16 European Union accepted the need to provide more than €100 billion ($146 billion) over the next three years. Leaders hope these funds (€80 billion from the EU and €30 billion from the International Monetary Fund) will replace the commercial borrowing in the financial markets between now and 2012. Their goal is to buy Greece time to bring its deficit under control through drastic cuts in public spending.  Greek authorities committed to cuts in public spending and higher taxes amounting to 13 percent of the countries GDP over the next four years. To accomplish this, the Greek government is cutting public sector salaries, raising the retirement age for women and imposing new taxes.
Essentially, the Europeans are following the Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke, model he used to avoid the collapse of the U.S.banking system from the subprime mortgage crisis. Bernanke, a student of the 1930’s depression, identified that liquidating debt was the reason the world fell into the prolonged depression during the 1930’s. By transferring private debt to public accounts, he avoided the massive contraction of the U.S. economy that would have occurred had banks and individuals written off the debt similar to the depression.
However, these bailout programs transferred the bad debt from the failing institutions to governments. The idea was to place the bad debt on the public’s books, giving everyone time to work out a better solution. In another form of financial engineering, the government thought they could undo the fallout of the bad debt stemming from the housing bubble. Rather than recognizing the losses quickly and placing the assets into stronger hands, the government transferred the excessive leverage to government books.
With the Federal Reserve keeping short-term rates near zero, it is facilitating the transfer of debt from weak organizations to the government. German Chancellor Merkel has stated that if the IMG-led austerity program for Greece succeeds, the package of rescue loans will make a profit for German taxpayers, since Germany can borrow money cheaply and lend it to Greece at rates of around 5 percent. Sounds great in theory. What if it does not work? What if there is too much debt to take on? This is the sovereign credit risk question.

Sovereign Credit Crisis is more than Greece
Many European countries are larger than Greece with growing debt problems. Portugal’s public debt will rise to 91 percent of Gross Domestic Product by 2011, up from 77 percent last year, according to the European Commission. Greece’s debt will increase to 135 percent of GDP in 2011 up from 113 percent last year. Spain’s percent of public debt will increase to 74 percent of GDP up from 54 percent.
The threat to European banks is real, just as they are recovering from their role in the subprime mortgage fallout. Many of these banks remain undercapitalized, meaning they can ill afford another credit crisis. Banks in PortugalSpainItalyIreland and the U.K. are at risk, according to a recent Moody’s report.
This threatens U.S. banks as they have important financial relationships with most of these banks. Remember, we are all connected. A failure of a European bank started the break down of the financial system in 1929.
The capital structure of U.S. banks is stronger thanks to the new programs recently instituted. This may help to cover some of these losses should they broaden beyond Greece.

Debt and Deficits Do Matter
A weaker Europe negatively affects the strength of the global recovery. Approximately, 20 percent of the U.S. trade is with Europe. If Europe finds its economy contracting, it will slow the U.S. economic recovery. The Greek credit crisis shows that debt and deficits do matter. Taking on too much debt that you cannot repay leads to a crisis. The only way out is to curtail spending across the board so the debt can be paid off and the capital of the banks that wrote off the loans is restored. It is a long and painful process.
By the way, according to the Congressional Budge Office (CBO) the public debt to GDP ratio for the United States was 40 percent in 2008. It will rise to 90 percent by 2020. According to economists Kenneth S. Rogoff of Harvard and Carmen M. Reinhard of the Universityof Maryland, countries with debt-to-GDP ratio “above 90 percent, median growth rates fall by 1 percent, and average growth falls considerably more”.
The sovereign credit crisis is not limited to a few European countries.

Happy reading
RAVI BHANDARI

Friday, 17 June 2011

Finance terminology


6. Capital employed & Shareholders fund:
1. The total amount of capital used for the acquisition of profits. 2. The value of all the assets employed in a business. 3. Fixed assets plus working capital. 4. Total assets less current liabilities.By "employing capital" you are making an investment. The capital invested in a business by the shareholders, including retained profits.

7. Depreciation vs amortization:
Amortization usually refers to spreading an intangible asset's cost over that asset's useful life. Depreciation, on the other hand, refers to prorating a tangible asset's cost over that asset's life.

8. Capital gain/loss:
An increase in the value of a capital asset (investment or real estate) that gives it a higher worth than the purchase price. The gain is not realized until the asset is sold. A capital gain may be short term (one year or less) or long term (more than one year) and must be claimed on income taxes. A capital loss is incurred when there is a decrease in the capital asset value compared to an asset's purchase price.


9. Memorandum of association and article of association:
Document that regulates a firm's external activities and must be drawn up on the formation of a registered or incorporated firm. Articles of association are simply the basic internal rules of operation for a business or non-profit organization that govern what tasks need to be done, what positions are required to perform the necessary functions, and how the processes in place are to be performed.

10. EPS:
Basic EPS is calculated by dividing profit or loss attributable to ordinary equity holders of the parent entity (the numerator) by the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding (the denominator) during the period.

Happy Readings

RAVI BHANDARI

Thursday, 16 June 2011

It's all about Paisa

The following terminologies will help you to have a basic Idea about several Finance Terms which are Used widely by the Industry. Today onwards I am going to give you the meaning of 5 finance Jargons which are used widely in the market. Happy readings.


1. Arbitrage:
The Economics Glossary defines arbitrage opportunity as "the opportunity to buy an asset at a low price then immediately selling it on a different market for a higher price."

2. Bear market:
A market condition in which the prices of securities are falling, and widespread pessimism causes the negative sentiment to be self-sustaining

3. Beta:
A measure of the volatility, or systematic risk, of a security or a portfolio in comparison to the market as a whole. Beta is used in the capital asset pricing model (CAPM), a model that calculates the expected return of an asset based on its beta and expected market returns.

4. Bond:
The indebted entity (issuer) issues a bond that states the interest rate (coupon) that will be paid and when the loaned funds (bond principal) are to be returned (maturity date)

5. Bonus shares:
Free shares of stock given to current shareholders, based upon the number of shares that a shareholder owns. While this stock action increases the number of shares owned, it does not increase the total value. This is due to the fact that since the total number of shares increases, the ratio of number of shares held to number of shares outstanding remains constant.


RAVI BHANDARI
Lecturer,AIMS,PUNE.

Journey which started today and will never end....

This is my first post. The Journey which I had started today and which will never end.Updating with business world is the need of today's Competitive world. This even apply to me & Hence there is a small attempt from mine side through the medium called as Blog. This Blog will help you to learn about the finance world and Update yourself with business world. I hope you all will enjoy the Trip which is never going to end.All your suggestions and comments are Welcome.

Happy readings.

RAVI BHANDARI
Lecturer,AIMS,Pune.