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Unit 1 Equity Securities: 1. What is a security? i. An investment that represents either an ownership stake or a debt stake in a company. a. Balance sheet ii. Assets= liabilities + equity b. Net worth iii. Assets- liabilities= net worth 2. Rights of common stock ownership a. Voting rights i. Voting on important matters at annual meetings: 1. Issuance of convertible securities or additional common stock 2. Substantial changes in the corporations business, such as mergers or acquisitions 3. Declaration of stock splits ii. Statutory voting 1. Allows a stockholder to cast one vote per share owned for each item on a ballot, such as candidates for the BOD. A board candidate needs a simple majority to be elected iii. Cumulative voting 1. Allows stockholders to allocate their total votes in any matter they choose a. Benefits the small investor, whereas statutory voting benefits larger shareholders b. Proxy i. A form of absentee ballot c. Nonvoting common stock i. Issuing nonvoting stock allows a company to raise additional capital while maintaining management control and continuity without diluting voting power. d. Preemptive rights i. When a corporation raises capital through the sale of additional common stock, it may be required by law or its corporate charter to offer the securities to its common stockholders before the general public. This is known as an antidilution provision. Stockholders then

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Unit 1 Equity Securities:1. What is a security?i. An investment that represents either an ownership stake or a debt stake in a company.a. Balance sheetii. Assets= liabilities + equityb. Net worthiii. Assets- liabilities= net worth2. Rights of common stock ownershipa. Voting rightsi. Voting on important matters at annual meetings:1. Issuance of convertible securities or additional common stock2. Substantial changes in the corporations business, such as mergers or acquisitions3. Declaration of stock splitsii. Statutory voting1. Allows a stockholder to cast one vote per share owned for each item on a ballot, such as candidates for the BOD. A board candidate needs a simple majority to be electediii. Cumulative voting1. Allows stockholders to allocate their total votes in any matter they choosea. Benefits the small investor, whereas statutory voting benefits larger shareholdersb. Proxyi. A form of absentee ballot c. Nonvoting common stocki. Issuing nonvoting stock allows a company to raise additional capital while maintaining management control and continuity without diluting voting power.d. Preemptive rightsi. When a corporation raises capital through the sale of additional common stock, it may be required by law or its corporate charter to offer the securities to its common stockholders before the general public. This is known as an antidilution provision. Stockholders then have preemptive rights to purchase enough newly issued shares to maintain their proportionate ownership in the corporation.e. Limited liabilityi. Stockholders cannot lose more than the amount they have paid for a corporations stock. Limited liability protects stockholders from having to pay a corporations debts in bankruptcy

3. Stock splitsi. To make the stock price attractive to a wider base of investorsa. Forward splitsa. Increases the number of shares and reduces the price without affecting the total market value of the shares outstanding; an investor will receive more shares, but the value of each one will be reducedb. Reverse splitsa. Has the opposite effect on the number and price of shares; investor owns fewer shares worth more per share4. Preferred stocka. Has features of both equity and debt securitiesi. Preferred stock is an equity security because it represents ownership in the corporationii. Like a bond, preferred stock is usually issued as a fixed income security with a fixed dividendiii. Advantages over common stock:1. Receive their dividends before common stockholders2. If a corporation goes bankrupt, preferred stockholders have a priority claim over common stockholders on the assets remaining after creditors have been paidb. Categories of preferred stocki. Straight preferred (noncumulative)1. No special features beyond the stated dividend payment. Missed dividends are not paid to the holderii. Cumulative preferred1. Receive their current dividends plus the total accumulated dividends (dividends in arrears)iii. Convertible preferred1. Owner can exchange each preferred share for shares of common stocka. The price at which the investor can convert is a preset amount and is noted on the stock certificateb. Often issued with a lower stated dividend rate than nonconvertible preferred because the investor may have the opportunity to convert to common shares and enjoy capital gains.iv. Participating preferred1. Offers its owners a share of corporate profits that remain after all dividends and interest due other securities are paidv. Callable preferred1. A company can buy back from investors at a stated price after a specified date. Gives the issuer the ability to replace a high fixed dividend with a lower one.

5. Return on investmenta. Dividendsi. Distributions of a companys profits to its stockholders1. Cash dividends: distributed by check if an investor holds the stock certificate2. Stock dividends: issue shares of common stock as a dividend3. Calculating current yield: annual dividend/current market value6. Transferability of ownershipa. Transfer proceduresi. Transfer agent: responsible for:1. Ensuring that its securities are issued in the correct owners name2. Canceling old and issuing new certificates3. Maintaining records of ownership4. Handling problems relating to lost, stolen, or destroyed certificatesii. Registrar1. Ensures that a corporation does not have more shares outstanding than have been authorized and is also responsible for certifying that a bond represents a legal debt of the issuer b. Nasdaqs 3 market tiers:i. Nasdaq global select marketii. Nasdaq global marketiii. Nasdaq capital marketc. Dividend disbursing processi. Ex-dividend date1. Two business days before the record dateii. Due bills1. A printed statement showing a buyers right to a dividend7. Rights and warrantsa. Issuancei. Rights offering: allows stockholders to purchase common stock below the current market price. Rights are valued separately from the stock and trade in the secondary market during the subscription period1. A stockholder who receives rights may:a. Exercise the rights to buy stock by sending the rights certificates and a check for the required amount to the rights agentb. Sell the rights and profit from their market valuec. Let the rights expire and lose their valueii. Subscription right certificate: representing a short-term (30-45 days) privilege to buy additional shares of a corporation. One right is issued for each common stock share outstandingiii. Terms of the offering: stipulated on the subscription right certificates mailed to stockholders. The terms describe how many new shares a stockholder may buy, the price, the date the new stock will be issued, and the final date for exercising the rights. iv. Standby underwriting1. If the current stockholders do not subscribe to all the additional stock, the issuer may offer unsold rights to an investment banker in a standby underwriting. Done on a firm commitment basis, meaning the underwriter buys all unsold shares from the issuer and then resells them to the general public.v. Characteristics of warrants1. A warrant is a certificate granting its owner the right to purchase securities from the issuer at a specified price as of the date of issue of the warrant.a. Unlike a right, a warrant is usually a long-term instrument2. Warrants are usually offered to the public as sweeteners to make those securities more attractive. The warrants are detachable and trade separately from the bond or preferred stock. When first issued, a warrants exercise price is set well above the stocks market price. If the stocks price increases above the exercise price, the owner can exercise the warrant and buy the stock below the market price or sell the warrant in the market.b. Rights: short termi. On issuance, exercise price below market priceii. May trade with or separate from the common stockiii. Offered to existing shareholders with preemptive rightsc. Warrants: Long termi. On issuance, exercise price higher than market priceii. May trade with or separate from the unitsiii. Offered as a sweetener for another security8. ADRs and REITsa. ADRsi. No preemptive rightsii. Dividends in dollarsiii. Currency riskb. REITsi. Not a limited partnershipii. Not an investment companyiii. Pass through income, not lossesiv. 75% of total investment assets in real estatev. 75% of gross income from rents or mortgage interestvi. Must distribute 90% or more of income to shareholders to avoid taxation as a corporationvii. Trade on exchanges or OTCviii. Dividends received from REITs are taxed as ordinary income

Unit 2 Debt Securities1. Characteristics of bondsi. Bondholders have neither ownership interest in the issuing corporation nor voice in management. As creditors bondholders receive preferential treatment over common and preferred stockholders is a corporation files for bankruptcy. Considered senior securities. a. Issuersa. Corporations issue bonds to raise working capitali. Corporate bonds with maturities of 5 years or more are commonly referred to as funded debt.ii. The federal government is the nations largest borrower and the most secure credit risk. T-bills (less than 1 year), t-notes (2-10 years), t-bonds (10 years or more) are backed by the full faith and credit of the government and its unlimited taxing power.iii. Municipal securities are the debt obligations of state and local governments and their agencies. Usually used to raise capital to finance public works or construction projects that benefit the general public.b. Interesta. Interest on a bond accrues daily and is paid in semiannual installments over the life of the bond. The final semiannual interest payment is made when the bond matures, and it is combined with repayment of the principal amount.c. Maturitiesa. Term maturity: structured so that the principal of the whole issue matures at once. Because all of the principal is repaid at one time, issuers may establish a sinking fund account to accumulate money to retire the bonds at maturityb. Serial maturity: schedules portions of the principal to mature at intervals over a period of years until the entire balance has been repaid.c. Balloon maturity: an issuer sometimes schedules its bonds maturity using elements of both serial and term maturities. The issuer repays part of the bonds principal before the final maturity date, as with a serial maturity, but pays off the major portion of the bond at maturity.d. Series issues: instead of placing all of its bonds in the hands of investors at one time, any bond issuer may spread out its borrowing over several years as its needs dictate by issuing the bonds in separate seriesd. Bond certificatea. All bond certificates contain basic information:i. Name of issuerii. Interest rate and payment dateiii. Maturity dateiv. Call featuresv. Principal amountvi. CUSIP number for identificationvii. Dated date (date interest starts accruing)viii. Reference to the bond indenturee. Registered bondsa. Fully registered:i. When bonds are registered as to both principal and interest, the transfer agent maintains a list of bondholders and updates this list as bond ownership changes. Interest payments are automatically sent to bondholders of record. Most corporate bonds are issued in fully registered form.b. Registered as to principal only:i. Principal-only registered bonds have the owners name printed on the certificate, but the coupons are in bearer form. When bonds are registered as to principal only are sold, the names of the new owners are recorded (in order) on the bond certificates and on the issuers registration record.c. Book-entry bonds:i. Do not receive certificates, here the transfer agent maintains the securitys ownership records. Although the names of buyers of both registered and book-entry bonds are recorded (registered), the book-entry bond owner does not receive a certificate, but the registered bond owner does. Most US govt bonds are available only in book entry formd. Denominations:i. Bearer bonds were issued only in denominations of $1000 and $5000ii. Registered bonds are available in $1000 denominations or multiples of $1000 up to $100000 per certificate2. Pricingi. Once issued, bonds are bought and sold in the secondary market. Bond prices are determined primarily by interest rates. a. Par, premium, and discounta. Two primary factors affecting a bonds market price are the issuers financial stability and overall trends in interest rates. If an issuers credit rating remains constant, interest rates are the only factor that affect the market price.b. Corporate bond quotes are commonly stated as percentages of par in increments of 1/83. Rating and analyzing bondsa. Basis for bond ratings:i. Bond ratings are based on an issuers financial stability. The rating services apply a series of financial tests to assess a corporations financial strength.1. Specific criteria used to rate corporate and municipal bonds include:a. The amount and composition of existing debtb. The stability of the issuers cash flowc. The issuers ability to meet scheduled payments of interest and principal on its debt obligationsd. Asset protectione. Management capacityi. A bonds rating may change over time as the issuers ability to make interest and principal payments changes.ii. Investment grade:1. A municipal bond must be investment grade (rating of BBB or higher) to be suitable for purchase by banks. AKA: bank-grade bondsb. Relationship to rating of yieldi. Qualitative analysis:1. In addition to financial statistics, qualitative factors, such as an industrys suitability, the issuers quality of management, and the regulatory climate, may be considered when bonds are rated.c. Comparative safety of debt securitiesi. US govt securities1. The highest degree of safety is in securities backed by the full faith and credit of the US governmentii. Government agency issues1. 2nd highest degree of safety is in securities issued by government agencies and government-sponsored corporations, although the US government does not back the securities GNMA is the exception. These organizations include:a. GNMAb. Federal farm credit banksc. Federal home loan mortgage corporationd. Federal national mortgage associationiii. Municipal issues1. The next level of safety is in securities issued by municipalities. a. GO bonds backed by the taxing power of the issueriv. Corporate debt1. Corporate debt securities cover the safety spectrum, from very safe (AAA corporates) to very risky (junk bonds). Corporate bonds are backed, in varying degrees, by the issuing corporation. Usually, these securities are ranked from safe to risky, as follows:a. Secured debtb. Debenturesc. Subordinated debenturesd. Income bondsd. Liquidity (marketability)i. The ease with which a bond or any other security can be sold. Many factors determine a bonds liquidity, including:1. Size of the issue2. Quality3. Rating4. Maturity5. Call features6. Coupon rate and current market value7. Issuer8. Existence of a sinking fund4. Debt retirement: the schedule of interest and principal payments due on a bond issue known as the debt servicea. Redemption:i. When a bonds principal is repaid the bond is redeemed and usually occurs on the maturity date.ii. In addition to maturity, other terms used in connection with redemption are:1. Sinking funda. The issuer deposits cash in an account with the trustee. Because a sinking fund makes money available for redeeming bonds, it can aid the bonds marketability.2. Calla. Allows the issuer to redeem a bond issue before its maturity date with in whole or in part3. Refundinga. Practice of raising money to call a bond. Specifically, the issuer sells a new bond issue to generate funds to retire an existing issue. This is common for bonds approaching maturity.4. Pre-refundinga. AKA: advance refunding, a new issue is sold at a lower coupon before the original bond issue can be called. An issuer pre-refunds a bond issue to lock in a favorable interest rate. The proceeds are placed in an escrow account and invested in US govt securitiesi. They are AAA rated5. Tender offersa. When general interest rates are down, companies may wish to redeem callable and noncallable bonds and replace them with bonds paying less interest. A tender offer for outstanding bonds, most likely at a premium price as an inducement to bondholders to tender their securities.6. Puttable bonds (bonds with put options)a. Bonds issued with put optionsb. In return for accepting a slightly lower interest rate, an investor receives the right to put, or sell the bond to the issuer at full face valuec. The investor generally has once a year to force the issuer to buy back the bonds at pard. Put features are most commonly found in municipal bonds

5. Bond yieldsi. Expresses the cash interest payments in relation to the bonds value. Yield is determined by the issuers credit quality, prevailing interest rates, time to maturity, and call features.a. Nominal yield:a. A bonds coupon yield is set at issuance and printed on the face of the bond. It is a fixed percentage of the bonds par valueb. Current yield:a. Measures a bonds coupon payment relative to its market pricei. Coupon payment / market price = current yieldb. Bond prices and yields move in opposite directionsi. When a bond trades at a discount, its current yield increaseii. When a bond trades at a premium, its current yield decreasesc. Yield to maturity:a. Reflects the annualized return of the bond if held to maturityb. In calculating YTM, the bondholder takes into account the difference between the price paid for a bond and par valuei. If the bonds price is less than par, the discount amount increases the returnii. If the bonds price is greater than par, the premium amount decreases the returnd. Yield to call:a. May be redeemed before maturity at the issuers optionb. An investor who buys a callable bond at a premium loses the premium faster when the bond is called at par than if it were held to maturity.c. Since a bond sells for a premium when its coupon rate is higher than current market rates, premium bonds are likely to be called so the issuer can save on interest expenses. The sooner the bonds are called, the sooner the premium the investor paid is lost.d. The YTC for a premium bond called at par, is always lower than the nominal yield, current yield, and YTMe. For a bond bought at a discount, YTC is always higher than the nominal yield, current yield, and YTM.i. Ranking Yields from Highest to Lowest1. Discounts:1) YTC2) YTM3) Current Yield4) Nominal2. Premiums:1) Nominal 2) Current Yield3) YTM4) YTCe. Yield Curvea. Bond prices and yields have an inverse relationshipb. When interest rates are high and expected to begin declining, long-term bond yields can be lower than short-term yields as their market price anticipates the declining rates.i. When long term interest rates are lower than short term rates the yield curve is invertedii. When short term and long term rates are the same, the yield curve is flat1. Test topic Alert: 1) If you are given 2 discount bonds and asked which will appreciate the most if rates fall, choose the bond trading at the deeper discount (the one with the lower coupon)2) If you are given 2 callable bonds and asked which will appreciate the most if rates fall, choose the bond with the most distant call date.6. Corporate bonds:i. Issued to raise working capital or capital for expendituresa. Secured bonds: a bond is secured when the issuer has identified specific assets as collateral for interest and principal payments. A trustee holds the title to the assets that secure the bond.a. Mortgage bonds: Have the highest priority among all claims on assets pledged as collaterali. Open-end indentures: permits the corporation to issue more bonds of the same class later. Subsequent issues are secured by the same collateral backing the initial issue and have equal liens on the propertyii. Closed-end indentures: does not permit the corporation to issue more bonds of the same class in the future. Any subsequent issue has a subordinated claim on the collateraliii. Prior lien bonds: when a company is in financial trouble sometimes attract capital by issuing mortgage bonds that take precedence over first-mortgage bonds. Before issuing the corporation must have the consent of the first-mortgage bondholders (very unlikely)b. Collateral trust bonds:i. Issued by corporations that own securities of other companies as investments.ii. Collateral trusts bonds may be backed by:1. Another companys stocks and bonds2. Stocks and bonds of partially or wholly owned subsidiaries3. Pledging companys prior lien long-term bonds that have been held in trust to secure short-term bonds4. Installment payments or other obligations of the corporations clientsc. Equipment trust certificates:i. Used by railroads, airlines, trucking companies, and oil companies to finance the purchase of capital equipment.ii. ETCs are issued serially so that the amount outstanding goes down year to year in line with the depreciating value of the collateralb. Unsecured bonds:i. No specific collateral backing and are classified as either debentures or subordinate debenturesa. Debentures:a. Backed by the general credit of the issuing corporation, and a debenture owner is considered a general creditor of the companyb. Subordinate debentures:a. Subordinate debentures owners are paid last of all debt obligations, including general creditors, in the case of liquidation.b. Subordinated debentures generally offer higher yields than either straight debentures or secured bonds because of their subordinate status, and they often have conversion featuresc. Liquidation:a. In the event a company goes bankrupt, the hierarchy of claims on the companys assets is:i. Unpaid wagesii. IRS (taxes)iii. Secured debt (bonds and mortgages)iv. Unsecured liabilities (debentures) and general creditorsv. Subordinated debtvi. Preferred stockholdersvii. Common stockholdersd. Guaranteed bonds: backed by a company other than the issuer, such as a parent company. This increases the issues safety

e. Income bonds: AKA: adjustment bonds, are used when a company is reorganizing and coming out of bankruptcy. Income bonds pay interest only if the corporation has enough income to meet the interest payment and if the BOD declares a payment. Because missed interest payments do not accumulate for future payment, these bonds are not a suitable investments for customers seeking income.

f. Zero coupon bonds: an issuers debt obligations that do not make regular interest payments.

a. Issued or sold at a deep discount to their face value and mature at par. The discounted price is accreted.b. Issued by corporations, municipalities, and the US treasury and may be created by broker/dealers from other types of securitiesi. Advantages: 1. Requires a relatively small investment2. Offers a way to speculate on interest rate movesii. Disadvantages:1. Offer no cash interest payments2. Substantially more volatile than traditional bondsa. Prices fluctuate wildly with changes in market ratesb. The longer time to maturity the greater the volatilityiii. Taxation of zero-coupon bonds:1. Own income tax each year on the amount by which the bonds have accreted, just as if the investor had received it in cash.

7. The trust indenturei. The Trust Indenture of 1939: requires corporate bond issues of $5 million or more sold interstate to be issued under a trust indenture, a legal contract between the bond issuer and a trustee representing bondholders.ii. The trust indenture specifies the issuers obligation and bondholders rights, and it identifies the trusteea. The trustee:a. Usually a commercial bank or trust company, for its bonds. The trustee monitors compliance with the covenants of the indenture and may act on behalf of the bondholders if the issuer defaults.b. Exemptions:a. Federal and municipal governments are exempt from the Trust Indenture Act provisions, although municipal revenue bonds are typically issued with a trust indenture to make them more marketable.c. Protective Covenants:a. In the trust indenture for a mortgage bond, the debtor corporation agrees to:i. Pay the interest and principal of its bondsii. Specify where bonds can be presented for paymentiii. Defend the legal title to the propertyiv. Maintain the property to ensure that business can be conductedv. Insure the mortgaged property against the fire and other lossesvi. Pay all taxes and assessments (property, income, and franchise)vii. Maintain its corporate structure and the right to do business8. Trading corporate bondsa. Convertible bondsi. Corporate bonds that may be exchanged for a fixed number of shares of the issuing companys common stock. Convertible into common stock, so convertible bonds pay lower interest rates than nonconvertible bonds and generally trade in line with the common stock. They have fixed interest payments and maturity dates, so they are less volatile than common stock.ii. Advantages of convertible securities to the issuer:1. Convertibles can be sold with a lower coupon rate than nonconvertibles because of the conversion features2. A company can eliminate a fixed interest charge as conversion takes place, thus reducing debt3. Because conversion normally occurs over time, it does not have an adverse effect on the stock price, which may occur after a subsequent primary offering4. By issuing convertibles rather than common stock, a corporation avoids immediate dilution of primary earnings per share.5. At issuance, conversion price is higher than market price of the common stockiii. Disadvantages of convertible securities to the issuer1. When bonds are converted, shareholders equity is diluted; that is, more shares are outstanding, so each share now represents a smaller fraction of ownership in the company2. Common stockholders have a voice in the companys management, so a substantial conversion could cause a shift in the control of the company3. Reducing corporate debt though conversion means a loss of leverage4. The resulting decrease in deductible interest costs raises the corporations taxable income. Therefore, the corporation pays increased taxes as conversion takes place.iv. The market for convertible securities: convertible bonds offer the safety of the fixed income market and the potential appreciation of the equity market, providing investors with the following advantages:1. As a debt security, a convertible debenture pays interest at a fixed rate and is redeemable for its face value at maturity, provided the debenture is not converted. As a rule, interest income is higher and surer than dividend income on the underlying common stock. Convertible preferred stock usually pays a higher dividend than does common stock.2. If a corporation experiences financial difficulties, convertible bondholders have priority over common stockholders in the event of a corporate liquidation.3. A convertible debentures market price tends to be more stable during market declines that the underlying common stocks price. Current yields of other competitive debt securities support the debentures value in the marketplace.4. Since convertibles can be exchanged for common stock, their market price tends to move upward if the stock price moves up5. Conversion of a senior security into common stock is not considered a purchase and a sale for tax purposes. Thus, the investor incurs no tax liability on the conversion transaction6. Stable interest rates tend to result in a stable bond market. When rates are stable, the most volatile bonds tend to be those with a conversion feature because of their link to the underlying common stock. Therefore, in a stable rate environment, a convertible bond can be volatile if the underlying stock is volatile9. Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA)a. Features:i. $1000 minimumsii. Monthly interest and principal paymentsiii. Taxed at all levelsiv. Pass-through certificatesv. Significant reinvestment risk10. Issuance of government securities:a. Like municipal securities, US government securities are exempt securities, which means they are exempt from the registration provisions of the Act of 1933.b. T-bills and T-notes are sold through an auction conducted on behalf of the US treasury by the Federal Reserve.i. Treasury auctions: 2 types of bids1. Competitive bids: placed by primary dealers in US government securities. The number of banks and broker/dealers designated as primary dealers by the Federal Reserve changes. Primary dealers are required to bid at Treasury auctions.2. Noncompetitive bids: placed by other market participants: smaller banks and broker/dealers, insurance companies, and individuals. Noncompetitive bids are always filled, but the price these bidders pay is the lowest accepted competitive bid called the stop out pricea. Competitive bids are made in yield, not dollar priceii. Settlement of winning bids takes place on Thursday of that week for T-bills and the Thursday of the following week for T-notes11. Accrued interest calculationsa. Summary of Accrued Interest Calculations

Corporate or Municipal BondsUS GovernmentBonds

Regular way settlementThird business day fromtrade datenext business dayafter trade date

monthly interest days30-day months(including February)actual calendar days per month

accrued interest meter startslast interest payment dateis day one for accruedinterest purposesSame

accrued interest meter stopsbond interest accrues upto, but does not include,settlement dateSame

12. Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs): a type of asset-backed security whose value and income payments are derived from or backed by a specific pool of underlying assets. CMO interest is taxed at all levels.a. Classes of CMOs:i. Principal-only CMOs:1. The income stream comes from principal payments on the underlying mortgages- both scheduled mortgage principal payments and prepayments. Thus, the security ultimately repays its entire face value to the investor.2. Sells at a discount from par; the difference between the discounted price and the principal value is the investors return. Its market value, like all deeply discounted securities, tends to be volatile.3. Affected by fluctuations in prepayment ratesa. As interest rates drop and prepayments accelerate, and its value falls when interest rates rise and prepayments declineii. Interest-only CMOs:1. Receive the interest2. Sells at a discount and its cash flow declines over time, just as the proportion of interest in a mortgage payment declines over time. 3. They increase in value when interest rates rise and decline in value when rates fall because the number of interest payments changes as prepayment rates changea. Thus can be used to hedge a portfolio against interest rate riskiii. Planned amortization class CMOs (PACs):1. Have targeted maturity dates2. Retired first and offer protection from prepayment risk and extension riskiv. Targeted amortization class CMOs (TACs):1. Transfers prepayment risk only to a companion tranche and does not offer protection from extension risk2. TAC investors accept the extension risk and the resulting greater price risk in exchange for a slightly higher interest ratev. Zero-tranche CMO:1. Receives no payment until all preceding CMO tranches are retireda. This is the most volatile CMO tranchesvi. Inverse floater CMO:1. Another volatile and risky tranche type2. Contains thinly traded mortgage securities that are highly leveraged and vulnerable to a high degree of price volatility3. As interest rates rise, principal payments to the investor may decrease and the reduction in repayment of principal extends the maturity dateb. CMO suitability:i. The customer is required to sign a suitability statement before buying a CMO.ii. Potential investors must understand that the rate of return on CMOs may vary because of early repayment. Also that the performance of a CMO may not be compared to any other investment vehicle iii. When determining suitability, a discussion of all of the characteristics and risks of CMOs, should occur. This would include how changing interest rates may affect prepayment rates and therefore the average life of the security, tax considerations (CMOs are taxable at all levels), and the relationship b/t actual mortgage loans and mortgage-backed securities.13. Other debt security notes:a. Commercial paper is short-term, unsecured corporate debt. It is issued and traded at a discount of face value and does not pay periodic interest. Like all zeroes, it is quoted on a discounted yield basisi. Because commercial paper is issued with maturities of less than 270 days, it is exempt from SEC registration under the Act of 1933.b. Series I bonds: designed for investors seeking to protect the purchasing power of their investment. The interest rate on these bonds has 2 components: a fixed rate and an inflation rate tied to the Consumer Price Index. The inflation component is recalculated every 6 months. Series I bonds are an accrual-type security, meaning the interest is added to the bonds face value each month and is paid when the bond is sold or redeemed. If the customer were interested in buying marketable US government debt, the customer would purchase Treasury Inflation Protection Securities (TIPS).c. Debt Securities Question:i. Your customer has listed income and safety of principal as his primary investment objectives. Which of the following might be the least suitable recommendation?1. US government issued T-bonds2. GNMA securities3. Sovereign debt securities4. Preferred sharesa. The least suitable of the answer choices given would be sovereign debt securities due to the unique and varied risks with which they are associated. Amongst those risks would be the instability of the issuing government, unfavorable changes in currency exchange rates, or inaccurate estimates of the payback from the projects the bonds finance. All of these risks can adversely impact the investment.

ii. A customer is interested in diversifying a portfolio by using an investment technique known as bond laddering. Regarding suitability, which of the following are applicable and should be brought to the investors attention?1. Liquidations needed to be made before maturity may expose one to interest rate risk2. The strategy cannot be used to reduce investment risk3. This strategy is best suitable for someone with an income objective4. This strategy is best suitable for someone with a growth objectivea. Bond laddering reduces both interest rate risk and reinvestment risk because it spreads investments made in smaller bond denominations over time. This lends itself to smaller bonds maturing with proceeds needing to be reinvested at set intervals. It is most suitable for those seeking protection of principal and income from the bonds interest payments. However, if unexpected liquidations need to be made, the ill-timed liquidations could expose the portfolio to heightened interest rate risk if rates happen to be high at the time. This would deflate the prices of the bonds being liquidated.iii. A customer expresses the need to invest a fixed dollar sum now that will return a fixed dollar sum in 10 years. He mentions several investments. Of those listed which would not be a suitable recommendation for his objective?1. A zero-coupon bond maturing in 10 years2. A high-yield corporate bond maturing in 10 years3. CMOs4. TIPSa. Due to the interest rate sensitivity of mortgage=backed securities and the possibility of high prepayment risk a CMO would not be suitable.

Unit 3 Municipal Securities:1. Municipal debt securities:1. Municipal bonds: are securities issued either by state or local government or by US territories, authorities, and special districts. Investors that buy such bonds are loaning money to the issuers for the purpose of public works and construction projects. Municipal securities are considered second in safety of principal only to US government and US government agency securities. The safety of a particular issue is based on the issuing municipalitys financial stability.a. Tax benefits: the federal government does not generally tax the interest payments. a. Interest on municipal securities may be taxed by the municipal level (state and local governments), but not the federal government.b. Interest on issues of federal government is taxed by the federal government but is exempt from taxation at the state and local levels.c. Interest on issues of US territories is subject to a triple exemption (federal, state, and local)i. TAKE NOTE: 1. The interest on municipal debt is largely exempt from taxation, but not capital gains. Municipal bond investors who buy low and sell high will have capital gains to report.2. Investors that purchase municipal bonds issued by the state in which they live often receive a special tax exemption; they may not be required to pay taxes on interest to the federal or state government. For instance, if you live in Los Angeles, CA and buy a State of California municipal bond, the interest will not be subject to taxation on your federal or state of California return. However, if you live in Tempe, AZ and buy a California municipal bond, the interest will be exempt from taxation by the federal government but will be taxed by the state of Arizona.d. As a result of the tax-advantaged status of municipal bond interest, municipalities generally pay lower interest rates than do corporate issuers.i. Tax-free municipal securities are more appropriate for investors in high tax brackets and are not suitable for investors in low tax bracketsb. Issuers: 3 entities are legally entitled to issue municipal debt securitiesa. Territorial possessions of the United States (US virgin islands, Puerto Rico, and Guam)b. State governmentsc. Legally constituted taxing authorities (county and city governments, agencies created by these governments, and authorities that supervise ports and mass transit systems, such as port authorities and special districts)

c. Maturity structuresa. Municipal notes and bonds are issued with maturities that range from less than one year to more than 30 years. There are three types of maturity schedules common to municipal and corporate debt issues.i. Term maturity: all principal matures at a single date in the future1. Some issuers establish a sinking fund account to accumulate funds to pay off term bonds at or before the established maturity date. Term bonds are quoted by price (like corporate bonds) and are called dollar bonds.ii. Serial maturity: bonds with an issue mature on different dates according to a predetermined schedule. Serial bonds are quoted on the basis of their yield to maturity, called basis, to reflect the difference of maturity dates within one issue. A price/yield of 100% indicates the yield to maturity is equal to the coupon rate, which means the bond is being offered at par.iii. Balloon maturity: an issuer pays part of a bonds maturity before the final maturity date, but the largest portion is paid off at maturity. A balloon maturity is a type of serial maturity. Most municipal bonds are issued serially.d. Types of municipal issues:a. General obligation issues (GOs)i. Principal and interest must be paid by taxes collected by the issuerii. Sources of funds:1. Backed by the issuing municipalitys taxing power. a. Bonds issued by states are backed by income taxes, license fees, and sales taxes.b. Bonds issued by towns, cities, and counties are backed by property (ad valorem) taxes, license fees, fines, and all other sources of revenue to the municipality.c. School, road, and park districts may also issue municipal bonds backed by property taxes.iii. Statutory debt limits: amount of debt that a municipal government may incur can be limited by state or local statutes to protect taxpayers from excessive taxes. Debt limits can also make a bond safer for investors. The lower the debt limit, the less risk of excessive borrowing and default by the municipality.1. Voter approval: if an issuer wishes to issue GO bonds that would put it above its statutory limit, a public referendum is required2. Tax limits: some states limit property taxes to a certain percentage of the assessed property value or to a certain percentage increase in any single year. The tax rate is expressed in mills. One mill= .0013. Limited tax GO: secured by a specific tax (ex. Income tax). The issuer is limited as to what tax or taxes can be used to service the debt. This leads to more risk with a limited tax GO than with a comparable GO backed by the full taxing authority of the issuer4. Overlapping debt: several taxing authorities that draw from the same taxpayers can issue debt. Bonds issued by different municipal authorities that tap the same taxpayer wallets are known as coterminous debt.a. The term coterminous refers to two or more taxing agencies that share the same geographic boundaries and are able to issue debt separately. Overlapping debt occurs when two or more issuers are taxing the same property to service their respective debt.5. Double-barreled bonds: revenue bonds that have characteristics of GO bonds. Interest and principal are paid from a specified facilitys earnings. However, the bonds are also backed by the taxing power of the state or municipality and therefore have the backing of two sources of revenue. Although they are backed primarily by revenues from the facility, double-barreled bonds are rated and traded as GOsb. Revenue bonds:i. Used to finance any municipal facility that generates sufficient income. Revenue bonds are not subject to statutory debt limits and do not require voter approval. A particular revenue bond issue, however, may by subject to an additional bonds test before subsequent bond issues with equal liens on the projects revenue may be issued. The additional bonds test ensures the adequacy of the revenue stream to pay both the old and new debt.1. Feasibility study: before issuing a revenue bond, an issuer will engage various consultants to prepare a report detailing the economic feasibility and the need for a particular project (a new bridge or airport). The study will include estimates of revenues that will be generated and details of the operating, economic, or engineering aspects of the proposed project.2. Sources of revenue: revenue bonds interest and principal payments are payable to bondholders only from the specific earnings and net lease payments of revenue-producing facilities, such as:a. Utilities (water, sewer, and electric)b. Housingc. Transportation (airports and toll roads)d. Education (college dorms and student loans)e. Health (hospitals and retirement centers)f. Industrial (industrial development and pollution control)g. Sportsi. Debt service payments do not come from general or real estate taxes and are not backed by the municipalitys full faith and credit. Revenue bonds are considered self-supporting debt because principal and interest is paid by revenues generated.3. Protective covenants: face of a revenue bond certificate may refer to a trust indenture, this empowers the trustee to act on behalf of the bondholdersa. In the trust indenture, the municipality agrees to abide by certain protective covenants, or promises, meant to protect bondholders4. Bond covenants:a. Rate covenant: a promise to maintain the rates sufficient to pay expenses and debt serviceb. Maintenance covenant: a promise to maintain the equipment and facilityc. Insurance covenant: a promise to insure any facility built so bondholders can be paid off if the facility is destroyed or becomes inoperabled. Additional bonds test: whether the indenture is open-ended or closed-ended e. Sinking fund: money to pay off interest and principal obligationsf. Catastrophe clause: a promise to use insurance proceeds to call bonds and repay bondholders if a facility is destroyed; a catastrophe call is also called a calamity call or an extraordinary mandatory callg. Flow of funds: the priority of disbursing the revenues collectedh. Books and records covenant: requires outside audit of records and financial reportsi. Call features5. Types of revenue bonds:a. Industrial development revenue bonds: issued to construct facilities or purchase equipment, which is them leased to a corporation. The municipality uses the money from lease payments to pay the principal and interest on the bonds. The ultimate responsibility rests with the corporation leasing the facilityb. Lease rental bonds: a municipal issues bonds to finance office construction for itself or its state or communityi. Lease payments come from funds raised through special taxes or appropriations, from the lessors revenuesc. Certificates of participation: permits the investor to participate in a stream of revenue from lease, installment, or loan payments related to the acquisition of land or the acquisition or construction of specific equipment or facilities by the municipality. Requires no voter approval.d. Special tax bonds: secured by one or more designated taxes other than ad valorem taxes.e. Special assessment bonds: special assessment bonds are issued to finance the construction of public improvements. The issuer assesses a tax only on the property that benefits from the improvement and uses the funds to pay principal and interest.f. New housing authority bonds (section 8): issued to develop and improve low-income housing. Backed by the full faith and credit of the US government. Because of the federal backing, they are considered the most secure of all municipal bonds and are backed by rental income. If the rental income is not sufficient to service the debt, the federal government makes up any shortfall.g. Moral obligation bonds: a state or local-issued, or state or local agency issued bond. If revenues or tax collections backing the bond are not sufficient to pay the debt service, the state legislature has the authority to appropriate funds to make payments. h. Issuer default: if a GO bond goes into default, bondholders have the right to sue to compel a tax levy to pay off the bonds. If a moral obligation bond goes into default, the only way bondholders can be repaid is through legislative apportionment. The issuer has a moral but not a legal obligation to service the debt.c. Municipal notes: municipal anticipation notes are short-term securities that generate funds for a municipality that expects other revenues soon. Usually, Municipal notes have less than 12-month maturities, although maturities may range from 3 months to 3 years. They are repaid when the municipality receives the anticipated funds. The categories of municipal notes are:i. Tax anticipation notes: to finance current operations in anticipation of future tax receipts. ii. Revenue anticipation notes: offered periodically to finance current operations in anticipation of future revenues from revenue producing projects or facilitiesiii. Tax and revenue anticipation notes: combination of TANs and RANsiv. Bond anticipation notes: sold as interim financing that will eventually be converted to long-term funding through a sale of bondsv. Tax-exempt commercial paper: often used in place of BANs and TANs for up to 270 days, though maturities are most often 30, 60, 90 days.vi. Construction loan notes: issued to provide interim financing for the construction of housing projectsvii. Variable rate demand notes: fluctuating interest rate and are usually issued with a put optionviii. Grant anticipation notes: issued with the expectation of receiving grant money from the federal government1. Variable Rate Municipals (Variable Rate Demand Obligations-VRDOs)a. Some municipal bonds and notes are issued with variable, or floating interest rates. A Variable Rate Municipal Bond offers interest payments tied to the movements of another specified interest rate, much like an adjustable rate mortgage. Because the coupon rate of the bond changes with the market, the price of these bonds remains relatively stable.2. Auction Rate Securities (ARS)a. Issued by municipalities, nonprofit hospitals, utilities, housing finance agencies and universities, ARS are long-term variable rate bonds tied to short-term interest rates. With long-term maturities of 20 to 30 years, the interest rates are determined using a Dutch auction method at predetermined short-term intervals, typically 7, 28, or 35 days. This auction type uses a competitive bid process where the lowest bid rate at which all of the bonds can be sold at par is used to establish the new or reset rate (clearing rate)i. A failed auction can occur due to lack of demand and hence no bids received to reset the rate. Usually result in downgrades in the credit ratings of the securities and their issuers.d. Build America Bonds (BABs):i. Created under the Economic Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to assist in reducing costs to issuing municipalities and stimulating the economy.ii. Bondholders pay tax on interest received from BABs, but tax credits are provided in lieu of the tax-exempt status usually afforded the interest on municipal securities.iii. 2 types of Build America Bonds:1. Tax Credit BABs: provide the bondholder with a federal income tax credit equal to 35% of the interest paid on the bond in each tax year. If the bondholder lacks sufficient tax liability to fully use that years credit, the excess credit may be carried forward.2. Direct payment BABs: provide no credit to the bondholder but instead provide the municipal issuer with payments from the US Treasury equal to 35% of the interest paid by the issuer.e. Customer recommendations and suitability:a. MSRB rules require municipal securities broker/dealers to make suitable recommendations to customers. Before making a recommendation, a municipal securities firm must make a reasonable effort to learn the customers financial status, tax status, investment objectives, and other holdings. The suitability test applies to discretionary accounts as well as to all other accounts.b. Regarding suitability, one should always remember that the tax-free interest paid by municipal bonds makes them better suited to those in higher tax brackets. In addition, the ability to receive tax-free interest payments means that these bonds have no place in an investors tax-advantaged accounts like IRAs or 401(k) plans. Of course, because they are bonds, and bonds pay interest income, they are best suited to those who list income as an investment objective.c. Any recommendations beyond these parameters would be unusual and the practice of increasing commissions through excessive trading, known as churning, is specifically prohibited. Before an account is opened, it must be approved in writing by a principal and if investment objectives noted when the account was approved do not align with transactions in the account later, this would present a red flag to be addressed.i. If a customer refuses to disclose net worth, income, or both, the account can still be opened. However, in this situation, recommendations cannot be made.f.