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Index
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Alphabetic list of all
topics.
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Contents
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An organized outline of
all topics.
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Types of
Assets
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The different types of
financial assets being traded
in the financial world.
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THE FINANCIAL WORLD
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FINANCIAL BASICS
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The financial sector of the
economy is important in that it is
the market of money and money is
the medium of exchange through
which all goods and services are
traded in all economies.
Financial assets are assets
owned by an owner under the
condition that the issuer of the
asset meet certain obligations. If
you own a financial asset, than
that means that someone gave you
that asset and that person owes you
in some way. There are many
different types of financial
assets, which we will go into
later.
There are also financial
institutions, or insitutions
set up for the purpose of trading
and holding financial assets.
Within financial institutions,
there are depositary institutions,
which are institutions set up to
store money in checking and savings
accounts. For example, banks are
depositary institutions. You save
money there in savings and checking
accounts so you can save money
until you need it. Financial assets
are all traded on financial
markets, whose sole purpose is
the trading of financial assets.
Primary financial markets sell new
assets that have been freshly
issued while secondary financial
markets facilitate trade of assets
that have already been distributed
into the financial markets.
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FINANCIAL ASSET-Assets that
are owned by an owner based on the condition
that the issuer of the asset meet certain
obligations.
FINANCIAL
INSTITUTION-Institutions set up for the purpose
of trading and holding financial
assets.
FINANCIAL MARKET-A market
whose sole purpose is to bring traders of
financial assets together.
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TYPES OF ASSETS
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There are several types of
financial assets. They can roughly
be divided into those sold in money
markets and those sold in capital
markets. Those sold in money
markets have a maturity of less
than one year. Those sold in
capital markets have a maturity of
more than one year. Financial
assets mature, meaning their value
increases over time. Many have
maturity dates, meaning that their
value will be paid back after a
certain amount of time.
A CD is one kind of
financial asset. A CD is a
certificate of deposit. You put
money into a bank with a set
interest rate and after an
agreed amount of time, you are free
to retrieve that money from the
bank. Interest is a percentage of
the original value of the asset
that is charged as long as that
asset is out there. Interest
increases exponentially. For
example, if a 2% interest is put on
$1000, compounded monthly, then
that asset is worth $1020 the next
month, and $1040.40 the month after
that. The interest is applied to
the immediately previous value of
the asset, not the beginning value
of the asset.
Bonds and stocks
are also important types of
financial assets. A bond is a
guarantee that promises that a
loaned amount of money will be paid
back in a given amount of time with
a given amount of interest charged.
A stock, however, is a different
type of asset. A stock has no
maturity date. A stock is a share
in the ownership of a business.
Once you own that piece of the
business, you keep it until you
decide to sell the stock to someone
else. Having ownership in the
company also means you are entitled
to a share of its profits and also
theoretically in the decisions the
company makes.
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CD-Certificate of deposit, a
guarantee by a bank that a certain amount of
money that is stored in the bank for a given
amount of time can be retrieved after that time
has passed with a certain amount of added
interest.
INTEREST-A percentage of an
asset's value that will be added on to the
asset's value repeatedly, building upon the
value that had already been
accrued.
BOND-A guarantee that
promises that a loaned amount of money will be
paid back in a given amount of time with a
given amount of interest added on.
STOCK-A share in the
ownership of a business.
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CLASSICAL AND
KEYNESIAN VIEWS OF FINANCE
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The financial sector is crucial
in the macroeconomic debate between
classical economists and Keynesian
economists. The classical
economists, as explained
previously, believe that all income
flowing from business to the people
always go back to business in a
perfect loop, because the money
that does not go back in the form
of spending goes back in the form
of investment. This is where the
financial sector comes in.
Classical economics states that the
financial sector efficiently turns
all savings into investment for
growing business.
However, on the other hand,
Keynesian economists disagree. As
stated before, they do not think
that the finance operates
completely smoothly. Rough
financial markets can have
repercussions in the real world,
generating wild business cycles.
Again, this shows the conflict
between Keynesians and classicals.
Classicals find that there's no
need for government regulation in
the smoothly operating market while
Keynesians see government
regulation to being crucial to
maintain stability in the naturally
volatile financial world.
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