an introduction to investing fin 302 spring 2008 james dow

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An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

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Page 1: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

An Introduction to Investing

Fin 302

Spring 2008

James Dow

Page 2: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

2

Overview

1. Before You Invest

2. Some Basic Concepts

3. Asset Allocation

4. Investing Using Mutual Funds

5. Investing In Individual Securities

6. Good Habits For Investors

Page 3: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

3

1. Before You Invest

Have a Financial Plan Be Properly Insured Have Emergency Funds Determine Your Savings Goals

Page 4: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

4

What Are Your Savings Goals?

Short-Term Goals Down Payment on a House? Travel?

Longer-Term Goals College Education for Children? Retirement?

Page 5: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

5

Your Goals Can Affect Your Investing Decisions

Short-Term Goals Usually easy to figure out what you need Invest in low-risk assets (more about this later)

Long-Term Goals Harder to determine the amount you need Be less conservative with your investments

Page 6: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

6

How Much to Save for Retirement

Determine Expected Expenditures Sources of Retirement Income

Social Security Pensions Individual Savings

Page 7: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

7

Calculate Annual Savings

Start with needed annual income when you retire.

Calculate the amount of savings needed when you retire.

Calculate the amount to save each year.

Online calculators and FIN 303 can help you.

Page 8: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

8

Employer-Sponsored Programs

Defined Benefit: Amount paid is guaranteed by the company. It depends on salary and number of years with the company

Defined Contribution: Individual makes contributions. Amount paid depends on how well the investments do.

Page 9: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

9

Self-Directed Accounts

Traditional IRA Roth IRA Keogh Plans Annuities

Page 10: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

10

Now What?

You know how much you need to save. You’ve signed up for a savings plan with your

employer.

How do you invest the money?

Page 11: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

11

2. Some Basic Concepts

What is Return? What is Risk? What is the Risk-Return Tradeoff? What is Diversification?

Page 12: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

12

What is Return?

Where do returns come from? Current Income Capital Gains

Compounding: Interest earns interest.

Returns are uncertain: Investors refer to “expected” or “average” returns.

Page 13: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

13

What is Risk?

How likely is it that your return will be higher or lower than you expect.

Some assets (such as bank accounts) have little risk.

Other assets (such as stocks) will have greater risk.

Page 14: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

14

What is the Risk-Return Tradeoff?

Assets with higher risk will generally offer a higher expected return.

You can choose: investments with high risk and high return investments with low risk and low return but probably not low risk and high return

Page 15: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

15

There are a range of assets

Expected

Return

Risk

Bank Accounts

Short-Term Bonds

Long-Term Bonds

Small-Company Stocks

Large-Company Stocks

Page 16: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

16

What is Diversification?

Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.

You can reduce risk without hurting your expected return.

Page 17: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

17

3. Asset Allocation

What can you invest in? What is the right mix of investments? Who do you invest with?

Page 18: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

18

What Can You Invest In?

Bank Accounts Common Stock Bonds Real Estate Other Assets

Page 19: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Bank Accounts

Are convenient Are insured Are low risk

But do not offer the best returns Not the best choice for long-term investing

Page 20: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

20

Common Stock

A share represents ownership in the company.

Stocks generate capital gains (or losses). Stocks may also pay dividends.

Page 21: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

21

Bonds

An “IOU” issued by companies and governments.

Pay interest and can generate capital gains or losses.

Less risk than stock but also a lower expected return.

Page 22: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

22

Real Estate

Income Properties Commercial Properties Residential Properties Single-Family Homes

REITs

Page 23: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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What is the right mix of assets?

Asset allocation refers to how you allocate your wealth across different assets.

For example: 60% Stocks 30% Bonds 10% Short-Term Assets (Cash)

Page 24: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

24

How to determine the best allocation?

The appropriate allocation depends on: Your investing horizon Your tolerance for risk

You can find programs online that will suggest allocations for you.

Page 25: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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An Example

The Hudsons 30 years until retirement Average tolerance for risk

Recommended allocation is 55% stocks 30% bonds 10% real estate 5% cash Malkiel, Random Walk Down Wall Street, 2003

Page 26: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

26

Who can you invest with?

Mutual Funds Stock Brokers Through Your Employer

Page 27: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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4. Investing Using Mutual Funds

What are mutual funds? What is a mutual fund family? Why mutual funds? How to invest in mutual funds? What kind of fees are there?

Page 28: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

28

What is a Mutual Fund?

It is a financial company. Allows small investors to pool their money. Professional managers at the fund choose

how to invest the money. They invest in stocks, bonds and other

assets.

Page 29: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Why Mutual Funds?

Advantages Can invest small amounts Easy to be diversified Convenient Professional management

Disadvantages Less flexibility in choice of securities May have tax disadvantages

Page 30: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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What is a Mutual Fund Family?

Most mutual fund companies offer a number of different individual funds.

Each fund will have it’s own specific investment goals and strategies.

You will need to choose which specific funds to invest in.

Page 31: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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How to Invest?

Buy shares in the mutual fund.

When you want to collect your return, you redeem your shares (sell them back to the mutual fund).

Page 32: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Net Asset Value (NAV)

NAV = (value of all the securities in the fund’s portfolio)/(# of shares).

Funds generally will sell and redeem shares at the NAV.

If the value of the securities increases, the value of your shares will increase too.

Holding shares in a mutual fund is just like owning the underlying assets.

Page 33: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Fees

Fees reduce whatever return you earn – shop around.

One-Time Fees Annual Fees

Page 34: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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One-Time Fees (Loads)

Loads are like sales commissions.

Front-end loads are charged when you first buy the shares.

Back-end loads are charged when you redeem the shares.

No-load funds do not charge loads. Sometimes fees are charged if you redeem the

shares soon after you buy them.

Page 35: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Annual Fees

Management fees – The mutual fund company will take a percentage of the asset’s value each year – this is how they make their money.

12(b)-1 Fees – fees for marketing and promoting.

Page 36: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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How to get information

Online! A prospectus provides the details. What to look for:

What does the fund invest in? Does it match your investing plan?

What are the fees? How has it performed in the past?

Page 37: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Types of Funds

Money Market Funds Low risk but low return You can write checks

Bond Funds Corporate bond funds High-yield bond funds Municipal bond funds International bond funds

Page 38: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Types of Funds (cont’d)

Stock funds Growth Income Value Sector International Mixed/Balanced

Page 39: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Types of Funds (cont’d)

Index Funds Follows some index (S&P500) Stocks or bonds Low fees and highly diversified Good choice

Asset Allocation Funds Real Estate Funds

Page 40: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Implementing your investment plan using mutual funds

Start with an asset allocation. Choose 3-5 funds that match your asset

allocation. Look for diversified funds (internationally too) Take advantage of index funds. Shop around for low fees.

Page 41: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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5. Investing in Individual Securities

What if you want to pick your own stocks?

Go to a stockbroker Open an account Place an order for shares

Page 42: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Types of Brokers

Full-Service Brokers Discount Brokers Online Brokers Differ in terms of cost, information provided

and handholding.

Page 43: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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Why brokers?

You have a specific reason for buying a stock.

You have a large amount of wealth and need specialized advice.

Mutual funds are fine for the typical investor.

Page 44: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

44

Stock Picking

Judging whether a particular company’s stock is going to do well in the future.

Can be fun and profitable. You’ll get lots of advice – be skeptical. If you take this approach, do your research.

Page 45: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

45

6. Good Habits for Investors

Have a plan. Save, save, save. Get the big picture right, don’t stress about

the little things. Be diversified Have the right asset allocation

Page 46: An Introduction to Investing Fin 302 Spring 2008 James Dow

2/11/08 "An Introduction to Investing" Professor Dow, FIN 302

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More Good Habits

Avoid unnecessary taxes Avoid excessive fees Take a long-run approach

Keep trading to a minimum Don’t obsess about the short-run fluctuations of

the market.