Asset classes and financial instruments - The money market
18 important questions on Asset classes and financial instruments - The money market
What are treasury bills (T-bills)?
T-bills are issued with initial maturities of 4, 13, 26, or 52 weeks. T-bills are highly liquid.
What is the bi price?
Why is the bid yield higher than the ask yield?
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What is the bank discount method and why is it flawed?
It is flawed for at least two reasons. First, it assumes that the year has only 360 days. Second, it computes the yield as a fraction of par value rather than of the price the investor paid to acquire the bill
What is the treasury bill's bond equivalent yield?
The T-bill return over a year. This is under the column asked yield.
What is a certificate of deposit?
What is commercial paper?
Large, well-known companies often issue their own short-term unsecured debt notes rather than borrow directly from banks. Very often, commercial paper is backed by a bank line of credit, which gives the borrower access to cash that can be used (if needed) to pay off the paper at maturity. Commercial paper maturities range up to 270 days.
What is a bankers acceptance?
What are Eurodollar CD's?
What are Eurodollar bonds?
What is a repurchase agreement?
What is the federal funds rate?
What is a broker's call?
What is the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR)?
What is a term repo and reverse repo?
Name three financial products traded in money markets
2. Certificate of deposit
3. Commercial paper (unsecured, like bank credit)
4. Bankers acceptance (postdated check)
5. Eurodollars
6. Repurchase agreements
7. Federal funds
8. LIBOR
Name (at least) three financial products traded in bond markets
2. TIPS
3. Federal agency debt
4. International bonds
5. Municipal bonds
6. Corporate bonds (secured, unsecured debentures & senior/subordinated)
7. Mortgages & MBS
Name (at least) three financial products traded in capital markets
Capital markets (assets with >1 year maturity)
1. Equity
2. Bonds
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