Showing posts with label Financial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Financial. Show all posts

11 Jun 2014

Benchmarking

In order to quantify the success or otherwise of a fund manager, a metric in the form of a benchmark is usually stipulated. Examples of equity benchmarks would be broadly based equity indices. In fixed income, the construction of a benchmark portfolio is more complex, as individual securities need to be selected.

The characteristics of the chosen benchmark should be:
  •  Specified in advance to the fund manager
  • Unambiguous and appropriate to the type of fund being run. For example, the Dow Jones index in the US is far less representative of the US larger capitalisation stocks compared with the S&P 500 index
  •  Liquid and easily measurable
  •  Reflective of current investment opinions

27 Mar 2014

Leadership is a "Contact Sport"

Executive Coach, Mike Grant, explains why "Leadership is a Contact Sport". Drawing on his experience managing a sales team of over 600 people for the Lloyds Banking Group, Mike Grant explains why leaders need to get away from the desk and the laptop and engage with their people Read More








www.bgconsulting.com

18 Mar 2014

BG Credit Public Courses

BG Credit, the specialised credit training division of the BG Consulting Group, announces its schedule of public training courses for spring 2014.



Want to find out more please contact us http://www.bgconsulting.com/

21 Aug 2013

Introduction to Capital Markets

Introduction

Financing for governments and corporations was originally dominated by a bilateral relationship between borrower and bank. As economies and companies grew, there was a need to raise larger and larger amounts of finance and with this came the need to distribute the risks that had become too large for a single bank.

The capital markets have become the means to achieve this diversification by allowing the issuance of tradable debt and equity securities by companies and governments. Initially, these markets had a physical nature but they have increasingly become “de-materialised”, becoming either an electronic trading system or even just a web of interested parties. The capital markets are generally regulated by institutions such as the Securities and Exchange Commission in the US and the Financial Services Authority in the UK, but the international and virtual nature of these markets poses a constant challenge to national regulators.

 
The market can be divided into primary and secondary. The primary market is where new issues in debt or equity are arranged by investment or universal banks. New equity issues are rarer than new debt issues and once launched, will generally trade on a recognised stock exchange such as the New York or London Stock Exchange.

Debt capital markets are more diverse and include the money markets where short-term loans and deposits are traded, the foreign exchange market where currencies are bought and sold, and the long‑term debt market where bonds are bought and sold. While there is no central market such as a stock exchange for the debt markets, the debt markets will have similar infrastructure such as settlement systems, trading conventions and inter-dealer brokers.

The debt capital markets have become far more important in the last 30 years, as the role of banks has shifted from the conventional “lend and hold” approach to a model whereby banks originate loans and distribute them on the capital markets. The final holders of the securities include insurance companies, pension funds and individuals.