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Finance

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Contents
Articles
Introduction 1

Main article 2
Finance 2

The main techniques and sectors of the financial industry 11


Financial services 11

Personal finance 15
Personal finance 15

Corporate finance 18
Corporate finance 18
Financial capital 26
Cornering the market 31
Insurance 33

Risk Management 54
Derivative 54

Finance of states 62
Public finance 62

Financial economics 70
Financial economics 70

Financial mathematics 73
Financial mathematics 73

Experimental finance 77
Experimental finance 77

Behavioral finance 78
Behavioral finance 78

Intangible asset finance 87


Intangible asset finance 87
References
Article Sources and Contributors 90
Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 92

Article Licenses
License 93
Introduction 1

Introduction
Note. This book is based on the Wikipedia article, "Finance." The supporting articles are those referenced as major
expansions of selected sections.
2

Main article

Finance
Finance is the science of funds management.[1] The general areas of finance are business finance, personal finance,
and public finance.[2] Finance includes saving money and often includes lending money. The field of finance deals
with the concepts of time, money, risk and how they are interrelated. It also deals with how money is spent and
budgeted.
One facet of finance is through individuals and business organizations, which deposit money in a bank. The bank
then lends the money out to other individuals or corporations for consumption or investment and charges interest on
the loans.
Loans have become increasingly packaged for resale, meaning that an investor buys the loan (debt) from a bank or
directly from a corporation. Bonds are debt instruments sold to investors for organizations such as companies,
governments or charities.[3] The investor can then hold the debt and collect the interest or sell the debt on a
secondary market. Banks are the main facilitators of funding through the provision of credit, although private equity,
mutual funds, hedge funds, and other organizations have become important as they invest in various forms of debt.
Financial assets, known as investments, are financially managed with careful attention to financial risk management
to control financial risk. Financial instruments allow many forms of securitized assets to be traded on securities
exchanges such as stock exchanges, including debt such as bonds as well as equity in publicly traded corporations.
Central banks, such as the Federal Reserve System banks in the United States and Bank of England in the United
Kingdom, are strong players in public finance, acting as lenders of last resort as well as strong influences on
monetary and credit conditions in the economy.[4]

Overview of techniques and sectors of the financial industry


An entity whose income exceeds its expenditure can lend or invest the excess income. On the other hand, an entity
whose income is less than its expenditure can raise capital by borrowing or selling equity claims, decreasing its
expenses, or increasing its income. The lender can find a borrower, a financial intermediary such as a bank, or buy
notes or bonds in the bond market. The lender receives interest, the borrower pays a higher interest than the lender
receives, and the financial intermediary earns the difference for arranging the loan.
A bank aggregates the activities of many borrowers and lenders. A bank accepts deposits from lenders, on which it
pays interest. The bank then lends these deposits to borrowers. Banks allow borrowers and lenders, of different sizes,
to coordinate their activity.
Finance is used by individuals (personal finance), by governments (public finance), by businesses (corporate
finance) and by a wide variety of other organizations, including schools and non-profit organizations. In general, the
goals of each of the above activities are achieved through the use of appropriate financial instruments and
methodologies, with consideration to their institutional setting.
Finance is one of the most important aspects of business management and includes decisions related to the use and
acquisition of funds for the enterprise.
In corporate finance, a company's capital structure is the total mix of financing methods it uses to raise funds. One
method is debt financing, which includes bank loans and bond sales. Another method is equity financing - the sale of
stock by a company to investors. Possession of stock gives the investor ownership in the company in proportion to
the number of shares the investor owns. In return for the stock, the company receives cash, which it may use to
Finance 3

expand its business or to reduce its debt.[5] Investors, in both bonds and stock, may be institutional investors -
financial institutions such as investment banks and pension funds - or private individuals, called private investors or
retail investors.

Personal finance
Questions in personal finance revolve around
• How much money will be needed by an individual (or by a family), and when?
• How can people protect themselves against unforeseen personal events, as well as those in the external economy?
• How can family assets best be transferred across generations (bequests and inheritance)?
• How does tax policy (tax subsidies or penalties) affect personal financial decisions?
• How does credit affect an individual's financial standing?
• How can one plan for a secure financial future in an environment of economic instability?
Personal financial decisions may involve paying for education, financing durable goods such as real estate and cars,
buying insurance, e.g. health and property insurance, investing and saving for retirement.
Personal financial decisions may also involve paying for a loan, or debt obligations.

Corporate finance
Managerial or corporate finance is the task of providing the funds for a corporation's activities. For small business,
this is referred to as SME finance (Small and Medium Enterprises). It generally involves balancing risk and
profitability, while attempting to maximize an entity's wealth and the value of its stock.
Long term funds are provided by ownership equity and long-term credit, often in the form of bonds. The balance
between these elements forms the company's capital structure. Short-term funding or working capital is mostly
provided by banks extending a line of credit.
Another business decision concerning finance is investment, or fund management. An investment is an acquisition of
an asset in the hope that it will maintain or increase its value. In investment management – in choosing a portfolio –
one has to decide what, how much and when to invest. To do this, a company must:
• Identify relevant objectives and constraints: institution or individual goals, time horizon, risk aversion and tax
considerations;
• Identify the appropriate strategy: active v. passive – hedging strategy
• Measure the portfolio performance
Financial management is duplicate with the financial function of the Accounting profession. However, financial
accounting is more concerned with the reporting of historical financial information, while the financial decision is
directed toward the future of the firm.

Capital
Capital, in the financial sense, is the money that gives the business the power to buy goods to be used in the
production of other goods or the offering of a service.

The desirability of budgeting


Budget is a document which documents the plan of the business. This may include the objective of business, targets
set, and results in financial terms, e.g., the target set for sale, resulting cost, growth, required investment to achieve
the planned sales, and financing source for the investment. Also budget may be long term or short term. Long term
budgets have a time horizon of 5–10 years giving a vision to the company; short term is an annual budget which is
drawn to control and operate in that particular year.
Finance 4

Capital budget
This concerns proposed fixed asset requirements and how these expenditures will be financed. Capital budgets are
often adjusted annually and should be part of a longer-term Capital Improvements Plan.

Cash budget
Working capital requirements of a business should be monitored at all times to ensure that there are sufficient funds
available to meet short-term expenses.
The cash budget is basically a detailed plan that shows all expected sources and uses of cash. The cash budget has
the following six main sections:
1. Beginning Cash Balance - contains the last period's closing cash balance.
2. Cash collections - includes all expected cash receipts (all sources of cash for the period considered, mainly sales)
3. Cash disbursements - lists all planned cash outflows for the period, excluding interest payments on short-term
loans, which appear in the financing section. All expenses that do not affect cash flow are excluded from this list
(e.g. depreciation, amortization, etc.)
4. Cash excess or deficiency - a function of the cash needs and cash available. Cash needs are determined by the
total cash disbursements plus the minimum cash balance required by company policy. If total cash available is
less than cash needs, a deficiency exists.
5. Financing - discloses the planned borrowings and repayments, including interest.
6. Ending Cash balance - simply reveals the planned ending cash balance.

Management of current assets

Credit policy
Credit gives the consumer the opportunity to buy, purchase or acquire goods and services, and pay for them at a later
date. This has its advantages and disadvantages as follows:

Advantages of credit trade


• Usually results in more customers than cash trade.
• Can charge more for goods to cover the risk of bad debt.
• Gain goodwill and loyalty of customers.
• People can buy goods and pay for them at a later date.
• Farmers can buy seeds and implements, and pay for them only after the harvest.
• Stimulates agricultural and industrial production and commerce.
• Can be used as a promotional tool.
• Increase the sales.
• Modest rates to be filled.
• can be a marketing tool
Finance 5

Disadvantages of credit trade


• Risk of bad debt.
• High administration expenses.
• People can buy more than they can afford.
• More working capital needed.
• Risk of Bankruptcy.

Forms of credit
• Suppliers credit:
• Credit on ordinary open account
• Installment sales
• Bills of exchange
• Credit cards
• Contractor's credit
• Factoring of debtors
• Cash credit
• Cpf credits
• Exchange of product

Factors which influence credit conditions


• Nature of the business's activities
• Financial position
• Product durability
• Length of production process
• Competition and competitors' credit conditions
• Country's economic position
• Conditions at financial institutions
• Discount for early payment
• Debtor's type of business and financial position

Credit collection

Overdue accounts
• Attach a notice of overdue account to statement.
• Send a letter asking for settlement of debt.
• Send a second or third letter if first is ineffectual.
• Threaten legal actions.

Effective credit control


• Increases sales
• Reduces bad debts
• Increases profits
• Builds customer loyalty
• Builds confidence of financial industry
• Increase company capitalisation
• Increase the customer relationship
Finance 6

Sources of information on creditworthiness


• Business references
• Bank references
• Credit agencies
• Chambers of commerce
• Employers
• Credit application forms

Duties of the credit department


• Legal action
• Taking necessary steps to ensure settlement of account
• Knowing the credit policy and procedures for credit control
• Setting credit limits
• Ensuring that statements of account are sent out
• Ensuring that thorough checks are carried out on credit customers
• Keeping records of all amounts owing
• Ensuring that debts are settled promptly
• Timely reporting to the upper level of management for better management.

Stock
Purpose of stock control
• Ensures that enough stock is on hand to satisfy demand.
• Protects and monitors theft.
• Safeguards against having to stockpile.
• Allows for control over selling and cost price.
Stockpiling
This refers to the purchase of stock at the right time, at the right price and in the right quantities.
There are several advantages to the stockpiling, the following are some of the examples:
• Losses due to price fluctuations and stock loss kept to a minimum
• Ensures that goods reach customers timeously; better service
• Saves space and storage cost
• Investment of working capital kept to minimum
• No loss in production due to delays
There are several disadvantages to the stockpiling, the following are some of the examples:
• Obsolescence
• Danger of fire and theft
• Initial working capital investment is very large
• Losses due to price fluctuation
Rate of stock turnover
This refers to the number of times per year that the average level of stock is sold. It may be worked out by dividing
the cost price of goods sold by the cost price of the average stock level.
Determining optimum stock levels
• Maximum stock level refers to the maximum stock level that may be maintained to ensure cost effectiveness.
• Minimum stock level refers to the point below which the stock level may not go.
• Standard order refers to the amount of stock generally ordered.
Finance 7

• Order level refers to the stock level which calls for an order to be made.

Cash

Reasons for keeping cash


• Cash is usually referred to as the "king" in finance, as it is the most liquid asset.
• The transaction motive refers to the money kept available to pay expenses.
• The precautionary motive refers to the money kept aside for unforeseen expenses.
• The speculative motive refers to the money kept aside to take advantage of suddenly arising opportunities.

Advantages of sufficient cash


• Current liabilities may be catered for meeting the current obligations of the company
• Cash discounts are given for cash payments.
• Production is kept moving
• Surplus cash may be invested on a short-term basis.
• The business is able to pay its accounts in a timely manner, allowing for easily obtained credit.
• Liquidity
• Quick upfront pay.

Management of fixed assets

Depreciation
Depreciation is the allocation of the cost of an asset over its useful life as determined at the time of purchase. It is
calculated yearly to enforce the matching principle

Insurance
Insurance is the undertaking of one party to indemnify another, in exchange for a premium, against a certain
eventuality.
Uninsured risks
• Bad debt
• Changes in fashion
• Time lapses between ordering and delivery
• New machinery or technology
• Different prices at different places
Requirements of an insurance contract
• Insurable interest
• The insured must derive a real financial gain from that which he is insuring, or stand to lose if it is destroyed or
lost.
• The item must belong to the insured.
• One person may take out insurance on the life of another if the second party owes the first money.
• Must be some person or item which can, legally, be insured.
• The insured must have a legal claim to that which he is insuring.
• Good faith
• Uberrimae fidei refers to absolute honesty and must characterise the dealings of both the insurer and the
insured.
Finance 8

Shared Services
There is currently a move towards converging and consolidating Finance provisions into shared services within an
organization. Rather than an organization having a number of separate Finance departments performing the same
tasks from different locations a more centralized version can be created.

Finance of public entities


Public finance describes finance as related to sovereign states and sub-national entities (states/provinces, counties,
municipalities, etc.) and related public entities (e.g. school districts) or agencies. It is concerned with:
• Identification of required expenditure of a public sector entity
• Source(s) of that entity's revenue
• The budgeting process
• Debt issuance (municipal bonds) for public works projects

Financial economics
Financial economics is the branch of economics studying the interrelation of financial variables, such as prices,
interest rates and shares, as opposed to those concerning the real economy. Financial economics concentrates on
influences of real economic variables on financial ones, in contrast to pure finance.
It studies:
• Valuation - Determination of the fair value of an asset
• How risky is the asset? (identification of the asset-appropriate discount rate)
• What cash flows will it produce? (discounting of relevant cash flows)
• How does the market price compare to similar assets? (relative valuation)
• Are the cash flows dependent on some other asset or event? (derivatives, contingent claim valuation)
• Financial markets and instruments
• Commodities - topics
• Stocks - topics
• Bonds - topics
• Money market instruments- topics
• Derivatives - topics
• Financial institutions and regulation
Financial Econometrics is the branch of Financial Economics that uses econometric techniques to parameterise the
relationships.
Finance 9

Financial mathematics
Financial mathematics is a main branch of applied mathematics concerned with the financial markets. Financial
mathematics is the study of financial data with the tools of mathematics, mainly statistics. Such data can be
movements of securities—stocks and bonds etc.—and their relations. Another large subfield is insurance
mathematics. This is also known as quantitative finance, practitioners as Quantitative analysts.

Experimental finance
Experimental finance aims to establish different market settings and environments to observe experimentally and
provide a lens through which science can analyze agents' behavior and the resulting characteristics of trading flows,
information diffusion and aggregation, price setting mechanisms, and returns processes. Researchers in experimental
finance can study to what extent existing financial economics theory makes valid predictions, and attempt to
discover new principles on which such theory can be extended. Research may proceed by conducting trading
simulations or by establishing and studying the behaviour of people in artificial competitive market-like settings.

Behavioral finance
Behavioral Finance studies how the psychology of investors or managers affects financial decisions and markets.
Behavioral finance has grown over the last few decades to become central to finance.
Behavioral finance includes such topics as:
1. Empirical studies that demonstrate significant deviations from classical theories.
2. Models of how psychology affects trading and prices
3. Forecasting based on these methods.
4. Studies of experimental asset markets and use of models to forecast experiments.
A strand of behavioral finance has been dubbed Quantitative Behavioral Finance, which uses mathematical and
statistical methodology to understand behavioral biases in conjunction with valuation. Some of this endeavor has
been led by Gunduz Caginalp (Professor of Mathematics and Editor of Journal of Behavioral Finance during
2001-2004) and collaborators including Vernon Smith (2002 Nobel Laureate in Economics), David Porter, Don
Balenovich, Vladimira Ilieva, Ahmet Duran). Studies by Jeff Madura, Ray Sturm and others have demonstrated
significant behavioral effects in stocks and exchange traded funds. Among other topics, quantitative behavioral
finance studies behavioral effects together with the non-classical assumption of the finiteness of assets.

Intangible Asset Finance


Intangible asset finance is the area of finance that deals with intangible assets such as patents, trademarks, goodwill,
reputation, etc.

Related professional qualifications


There are several related professional qualifications in finance, that can lead to the field:
• Accountancy:
• Qualified accountant: Chartered Accountant (ACA - UK certification / CA - certification in Commonwealth
countries), Chartered Certified Accountant (ACCA, UK certification), Certified Public Accountant (CPA, US
certification),ACMA/FCMA ( Associate/Fellow Chartered Management Accountant) from Chartered Institute
of Management Accountant(CIMA) ,UK.
• Non-statutory qualifications: Chartered Cost Accountant CCA Designation from AAFM
• Business qualifications: Master of Business Administration (MBA), Bachelor of Business Management (BBM),
Master of Commerce (M.Comm), Master of Science in Management (MSM), Doctor of Business Administration
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(DBA)
• Generalist Finance qualifications:
• Degrees: Masters degree in Finance (MSF), Master of Financial Economics, Master of Finance & Control
(MFC), Master Financial Manager (MFM), Master of Financial Administration (MFA)
• Certifications: Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA), Certified International Investment Analyst (CIIA),
Association of Corporate Treasurers (ACT), Certified Market Analyst (CMA/FAD) Dual Designation,
Corporate Finance Qualification (CF)
• Quantitative Finance qualifications: Master of Science in Financial Engineering (MSFE), Master of
Quantitative Finance (MQF), Master of Computational Finance (MCF), Master of Financial Mathematics (MFM),
Certificate in Quantitative Finance (CQF).

See also
• Financial crisis of 2007–2010

References
[1] Gove, P. et al. 1961. Finance. Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged. Springfield,
Massachusetts: G. & C. Merriam Company.
[2] finance. (2009). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved June 23, 2009, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: Finance (http:/ / www.
britannica. com/ EBchecked/ topic/ 207147/ finance)
[3] Charitytimes.com (http:/ / www. charitytimes. com/ pages/ ct_news/ news archive/ July_06_news/ 030706_wellcome_trust_charity_bond.
htm)
[4] Board of Governors of Federal Reserve System of the United States. Mission of the Federal Reserve System. Federalreserve.gov (http:/ /
www. federalreserve. gov/ aboutthefed/ mission. htm) Accessed: 2010-01-16. (Archived by WebCite at Webcitation.org (http:/ / www.
webcitation. org/ 5mpS52OAl))
[5] Business.timesonline.co.uk (http:/ / business. timesonline. co. uk/ tol/ business/ industry_sectors/ natural_resources/ article5602963. ece)

External links
• OECD work on financial markets (http://www.oecd.org/finance)
• Wharton Finance Knowledge Project (http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/category.cfm?cid=1) - aimed to
offer free access to finance knowledge for students, teachers, and self-learners.
• Professor Aswath Damodaran (http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~adamodar/) (New York University Stern School of
Business) - provides resources covering three areas in finance: corporate finance, valuation and investment
management and syndicate finance.
11

The main techniques and sectors of the


financial industry

Financial services
Financial services refer to services provided by the finance industry. The finance industry encompasses a broad
range of organizations that deal with the management of money. Among these organizations are banks, credit card
companies, insurance companies, consumer finance companies, stock brokerages, investment funds and some
government sponsored enterprises. As of 2004, the financial services industry represented 20% of the market
capitalization of the S&P 500 in the United States.[1]

History of financial services

In the United States


The term "financial services" became more prevalent in the United States partly as a result of the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of the late 1990s, which enabled different types of companies operating in the U.S.
financial services industry at that time to merge. Companies usually have two distinct approaches to this new type of
business. One approach would be a bank which simply buys an insurance company or an investment bank, keeps the
original brands of the acquired firm, and adds the acquisition to its holding company simply to diversify its earnings.
Outside the U.S. (e.g., in Japan), non-financial services companies are permitted within the holding company. In this
scenario, each company still looks independent, and has its own customers, etc. In the other style, a bank would
simply create its own brokerage division or insurance division and attempt to sell those products to its own existing
customers, with incentives for combining all things with one company.

Banks
A "commercial bank" is what is commonly referred to as simply a "bank". The term "commercial" is used to
distinguish it from an "investment bank," a type of financial services entity which, instead of lending money directly
to a business, helps businesses raise money from other firms in the form of bonds (debt) or stock (equity).

Banking services
The primary operations of banks include:
• Keeping money safe while also allowing withdrawals when needed
• Issuance of checkbooks so that bills can be paid and other kinds of payments can be delivered by post
• Provide personal loans, commercial loans, and mortgage loans (typically loans to purchase a home, property or
business)
• Issuance of credit cards and processing of credit card transactions and billing
• Issuance of debit cards for use as a substitute for checks
• Allow financial transactions at branches or by using Automatic Teller Machines (ATMs)
• Provide wire transfers of funds and Electronic fund transfers between banks
• Facilitation of standing orders and direct debits, so payments for bills can be made automatically
• Provide overdraft agreements for the temporary advancement of the Bank's own money to meet monthly spending
commitments of a customer in their current account.
Financial services 12

• Provide Charge card advances of the Bank's own money for customers wishing to settle credit advances monthly.
• Provide a check guaranteed by the Bank itself and prepaid by the customer, such as a cashier's check or certified
check.
• Notary service for financial and other documents

Other types of bank services


• Private banking - Private banks provide banking services exclusively to high net worth individuals. Many
financial services firms require a person or family to have a certain minimum net worth to qualify for private
banking services.[2] Private banks often provide more personal services, such as wealth management and tax
planning, than normal retail banks.[3]
• Capital market bank - bank that underwrite debt and equity, assist company deals (advisory services, underwriting
and advisory fees), and restructure debt into structured finance products.
• Bank cards - include both credit cards and debit cards. Bank Of America is the largest issuer of bank cards.
• Credit card machine services and networks - Companies which provide credit card machine and payment
networks call themselves "merchant card providers".

Foreign exchange services


Foreign exchange services are provided by many banks around the world. Foreign exchange services include:
• Currency Exchange - where clients can purchase and sell foreign currency banknotes.
• Wire transfer - where clients can send funds to international banks abroad.
• Foreign Currency Banking - banking transactions are done in foreign currency.

Investment services
• Asset management - the term usually given to describe companies which run collective investment funds. Also
refers to services provided by others, generally registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as
Registered Investment Advisors.
• Hedge fund management - Hedge funds often employ the services of "prime brokerage" divisions at major
investment banks to execute their trades.
• Custody services - the safe-keeping and processing of the world's securities trades and servicing the associated
portfolios. Assets under custody in the world are approximately $100 trillion.[4]

Insurance
• Insurance brokerage - Insurance brokers shop for insurance (generally corporate property and casualty insurance)
on behalf of customers. Recently a number of websites have been created to give consumers basic price
comparisons for services such as insurance, causing controversy within the industry.[5]
• Insurance underwriting - Personal lines insurance underwriters actually underwrite insurance for individuals, a
service still offered primarily through agents, insurance brokers, and stock brokers. Underwriters may also offer
similar commercial lines of coverage for businesses. Activities include insurance and annuities, life insurance,
retirement insurance, health insurance, and property & casualty insurance.
• Reinsurance - Reinsurance is insurance sold to insurers themselves, to protect them from catastrophic losses.
Financial services 13

Other financial services


• Intermediation or advisory services - These services involve stock brokers (private client services) and discount
brokers. Stock brokers assist investors in buying or selling shares. Primarily internet-based companies are often
referred to as discount brokerages, although many now have branch offices to assist clients. These brokerages
primarily target individual investors. Full service and private client firms primarily assist and execute trades for
clients with large amounts of capital to invest, such as large companies, wealthy individuals, and investment
management funds.
• Private equity - Private equity funds are typically closed-end funds, which usually take controlling equity stakes
in businesses that are either private, or taken private once acquired. Private equity funds often use leveraged
buyouts (LBOs) to acquire the firms in which they invest. The most successful private equity funds can generate
returns significantly higher than provided by the equity markets
• Venture capital is a type of private equity capital typically provided by professional, outside investors to new,
high-potential-growth companies in the interest of taking the company to an IPO or trade sale of the business.
• Angel investment - An angel investor or angel (known as a business angel or informal investor in Europe), is an
affluent individual who provides capital for a business start-up, usually in exchange for convertible debt or
ownership equity. A small but increasing number of angel investors organize themselves into angel groups or
angel networks to share research and pool their investment capital.
• Conglomerates - A financial services conglomerate is a financial services firm that is active in more than one
sector of the financial services market e.g. life insurance, general insurance, health insurance, asset management,
retail banking, wholesale banking, investment banking, etc. A key rationale for the existence of such businesses is
the existence of diversification benefits that are present when different types of businesses are aggregated i.e. bad
things don't always happen at the same time. As a consequence, economic capital for a conglomerate is usually
substantially less than economic capital is for the sum of its parts.
• Debt resolution is a consumer service that assists individuals that have too much debt to pay off as requested, but
do not want to file bankruptcy and wish to payoff their debts owed. This debt can be accrued in various ways
including but not limited to personal loans, credit cards or in some cases merchant accounts. There are many
services/companies that can assist with this. These can include debt consolidation, debt settlement and
refinancing.

Financial crime

UK
Fraud within the financial industry costs the UK an estimated £14bn a year and it is believed a further £25bn is
laundered by British institutions.[6]

Market share
The financial services industry constitutes the largest group of companies in the world in terms of earnings and
equity market cap. However it is not the largest category in terms of revenue or number of employees. It is also a
slow growing and extremely fragmented industry, with the largest company (Citigroup), only having a 3 % US
market share.[7] In contrast, the largest home improvement store in the US, Home Depot, has a 30 % market share,
and the largest coffee house Starbucks has a 32 % market share.
Financial services 14

See also
• Accounting scandals
• BFSI
• European Financial Services Roundtable
• Financial analyst
• Financial data vendors
• Financial markets
• Financialization
• Financial transaction tax
• Government sponsored enterprise
• Institutional customers
• International Monetary Fund
• Investment management
• List of banks
• List of investment banks
• Misleading financial analysis
• Thomson Financial League Tables

References
[1] "The Mistakes Of Our Grandparents?" (http:/ / www. contraryinvestor. com/ 2004archives/ mofeb04. htm). Contrary Investor.com. February
2004. . Retrieved 2009-02-06.
[2] "Private Banking definition" (http:/ / www. investorwords. com/ 5946/ private_banking. html). Investor Words.com. . Retrieved 2009-02-06.
[3] "How Swiss Bank Accounts Work" (http:/ / money. howstuffworks. com/ personal-finance/ banking/ swiss-bank-account. htm). How Stuff
Works. . Retrieved 2009-02-06.
[4] http:/ / www. globalcustody. net/ no_cookie/ custody_assets_worldwide/ GlobalCustody.net Asset Table
[5] "Price comparison sites face probe" (http:/ / news. bbc. co. uk/ 1/ hi/ business/ 7201345. stm). BBC News. 2008-01-22. . Retrieved
2009-02-06.
[6] "Watchdog warns of criminal gangs inside banks" (http:/ / money. guardian. co. uk/ news_/ story/ 0,1456,1643860,00. html). The Guardian
(London). 2005-11-16. . Retrieved 2007-11-30.
[7] The Opportunity: Small Global Market Share (http:/ / www. citigroup. com/ citigroup/ fin/ data/ p040602. pdf), Page 11, from the Sanford C.
Bernstein & Co. Strategic Decisions Conference - 6/02/04

• Porteous, Bruce T.; Pradip Tapadar (December 2005). Economic Capital and Financial Risk Management for
Financial Services Firms and Conglomerates. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1-4039-3608-0.
• Schoppmann, Henning (Edit.); Julien Ernoult, Walburga Hemetsberger, Christoph Wengler (September 2008).
European Banking and Financial Services Law - Third Edition. Larcier. ISBN 2-8044-3180-0.
15

Personal finance

Personal finance
Personal finance is the application of the principles of finance to the monetary decisions of an individual or family
unit. It addresses the ways in which individuals or families obtain, budget, save, and spend monetary resources over
time, taking into account various financial risks and future life events. Components of personal finance might
include checking and savings accounts, credit cards and consumer loans, investments in the stock market, retirement
plans, social security benefits, insurance policies, and income tax management.

Personal financial planning


A key component of personal finance is financial planning, a dynamic process that requires regular monitoring and
reevaluation. In general, it has five steps:
1. Assessment: One's personal financial situation can be assessed by compiling simplified versions of financial
balance sheets and income statements. A personal balance sheet lists the values of personal assets (e.g., car,
house, clothes, stocks, bank account), along with personal liabilities (e.g., credit card debt, bank loan, mortgage).
A personal income statement lists personal income and expenses.
2. Setting goals: Two examples are "retire at age 65 with a personal net worth of $1,000,000" and "buy a house in 3
years paying a monthly mortgage servicing cost that is no more than 25% of my gross income". It is not
uncommon to have several goals, some short term and some long term. Setting financial goals helps direct
financial planning.
3. Creating a plan: The financial plan details how to accomplish your goals. It could include, for example,
reducing unnecessary expenses, increasing one's employment income, or investing in the stock market.
4. Execution: Execution of one's personal financial plan often requires discipline and perseverance. Many people
obtain assistance from professionals such as accountants, financial planners, investment advisers, and lawyers.
5. Monitoring and reassessment: As time passes, one's personal financial plan must be monitored for possible
adjustments or reassessments.
Typical goals most adults have are paying off credit card and or student loan debt, retirement, college costs for
children, medical expenses, and estate planning.
The six key areas of personal financial planning, as suggested by the Financial Planning Standards Board, are:
1 - Financial Position: this area is concerned with understanding the personal resources available by examining net
worth and household cash flow. Net worth is a person's balance sheet, calculated by adding up all assets under that
person's control, minus all liabilities of the household, at one point in time. Household cash flow totals up all the
expected sources of income within a year, minus all expected expenses within the same year. From this analysis, the
financial planner can determine to what degree and in what time the personal goals can be accomplished.
2 - Adequate Protection: the analysis of how to protect a household from unforeseen risks. These risks can be
divided into liability, property, death, disability, health and long term care. Some of these risks may be
self-insurable, while most will require the purchase of an insurance contract. Determining how much insurance to
get, at the most cost effective terms requires knowledge of the market for personal insurance. Business owners,
professionals, athletes and entertainers require specialized insurance professionals to adequately protect themselves.
Since insurance also enjoys some tax benefits, utilizing insurance investment products may be a critical piece of the
overall investment planning.
Personal finance 16

3 - Tax Planning: typically the income tax is the single largest expense in a household. Managing taxes is not a
question of if you will pay taxes, but when and how much. Government gives many incentives in the form of tax
deductions and credits, which can be used to reduce the lifetime tax burden. Most modern governments use a
progressive tax. Typically, as your income grows, you pay a higher marginal rate of tax. Understanding how to take
advantage of the myriad tax breaks when planning your personal finances can make a significant impact upon your
success.
4 - Investment and Accumulation Goals: planning how to accumulate enough money to acquire items with a high
price is what most people consider to be financial planning. The major reasons to accumulate assets is for the
following: a - purchasing a house b - purchasing a car c - starting a business d - paying for education expenses e -
accumulating money for retirement, to generate a stream of income to cover lifestyle expenses.
Achieving these goals requires projecting what they will cost, and when you need to withdraw funds. A major risk to
the household in achieving their accumulation goal is the rate of price increases over time, or inflation. Using net
present value calculators, the financial planner will suggest a combination of asset earmarking and regular savings to
be invested in a variety of investments. In order to overcome the rate of inflation, the investment portfolio has to get
a higher rate of return, which typically will subject the portfolio to a number of risks. Managing these portfolio risks
is most often accomplished using asset allocation, which seeks to diversify investment risk and opportunity. This
asset allocation will prescribe a percentage allocation to be invested in stocks, bonds, cash and alternative
investments. The allocation should also take into consideration the personal risk profile of every investor, since risk
attitudes vary from person to person.
5 - Retirement Planning: retirement planning is the process of understanding how much it costs to live at retirement,
and coming up with a plan to distribute assets to meet any income shortfall.
6 - Estate Planning: involves planning for the disposition of your asset when you die. Typically, there is a tax due to
the state or federal government at your death. Avoiding these taxes means that more of your assets will be distributed
to your heirs. You can leave your assets to family, friends or charitable groups.

See also
• Accounting software
• Corporate finance
• Credit card debt
• Debt consolidation
• Equity investment
• Financial literacy
• Financial Literacy Month
• Family planning
• Insurance
• Investment
• List of personal finance related articles
• Mortgage loan
• Payday loan
• Pension
• Personal budget
• Personal financial management
• Separately managed account
• Settlement (finance)
• Wealth
• Wealth management
Personal finance 17

References
• Kwok, H., Milevsky, M., and Robinson, C. (1994) Asset Allocation, Life Expectancy, and Shortfall, Financial
Services Review, 1994, vol 3(2), pg. 109-126.

External links
• Free Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning articles [1].

References
[1] http:/ / www. afcpe. org/ publications/ journal-articles. php
18

Corporate finance

Corporate finance
Corporate finance[1] is the field of
finance dealing with financial
decisions business enterprises make
and the tools and analysis used to make
these decisions. The primary goal of
corporate finance is to maximize
corporate value [2] while managing the
firm's financial risks. Although it is in
principle different from managerial
finance which studies the financial Domestic credit to private sector in 2005.
decisions of all firms, rather than
corporations alone, the main concepts in the study of corporate finance are applicable to the financial problems of all
kinds of firms.

The discipline can be divided into long-term and short-term decisions and techniques. Capital investment decisions
are long-term choices about which projects receive investment, whether to finance that investment with equity or
debt, and when or whether to pay dividends to shareholders. On the other hand, the short term decisions can be
grouped ". This subject deals with the short-term balance of current assets and current liabilities; the focus here is on
managing cash, inventories, and short-term borrowing and lending (such as the terms on credit extended to
customers).
The terms corporate finance and corporate financier are also associated with investment banking. The typical role
of an investment bank is to evaluate the company's financial needs and raise the appropriate type of capital that best
fits those needs.
(In the UK, the terms “corporate finance” and “corporate financier” tend to be associated with transactions in which
capital is raised in order to create, develop, grow or acquire businesses.)

Capital investment decisions


Capital investment decisions [3] are long-term corporate finance decisions relating to fixed assets and capital
structure. Decisions are based on several inter-related criteria. (1) Corporate management seeks to maximize the
value of the firm by investing in projects which yield a positive net present value when valued using an appropriate
discount rate. (2) These projects must also be financed appropriately. (3) If no such opportunities exist, maximizing
shareholder value dictates that management must return excess cash to shareholders (i.e., distribution via dividends).
Capital investment decisions thus comprise an investment decision, a financing decision, and a dividend decision.
Corporate finance 19

The investment decision


Management must allocate limited resources between competing opportunities (projects) in a process known as
capital budgeting. [4] Making this investment, or capital allocation, decision requires estimating the value of each
opportunity or project, which is a function of the size, timing and predictability of future cash flows.

Project valuation
In general [5] , each project's value will be estimated using a discounted cash flow (DCF) valuation, and the
opportunity with the highest value, as measured by the resultant net present value (NPV) will be selected (applied to
Corporate Finance by Joel Dean in 1951; see also Fisher separation theorem, John Burr Williams: theory). This
requires estimating the size and timing of all of the incremental cash flows resulting from the project. Such future
cash flows are then discounted to determine their present value (see Time value of money). These present values are
then summed, and this sum net of the initial investment outlay is the NPV. See Financial modeling.
The NPV is greatly affected by the discount rate. Thus, identifying the proper discount rate - often termed, the
project "hurdle rate" [6] - is critical to making an appropriate decision. The hurdle rate is the minimum acceptable
return on an investment—i.e. the project appropriate discount rate. The hurdle rate should reflect the riskiness of the
investment, typically measured by volatility of cash flows, and must take into account the financing mix. Managers
use models such as the CAPM or the APT to estimate a discount rate appropriate for a particular project, and use the
weighted average cost of capital (WACC) to reflect the financing mix selected. (A common error in choosing a
discount rate for a project is to apply a WACC that applies to the entire firm. Such an approach may not be
appropriate where the risk of a particular project differs markedly from that of the firm's existing portfolio of assets.)
In conjunction with NPV, there are several other measures used as (secondary) selection criteria in corporate finance.
These are visible from the DCF and include discounted payback period, IRR, Modified IRR, equivalent annuity,
capital efficiency, and ROI. Alternatives (complements) to NPV include MVA / EVA (Joel Stern, Stern Stewart &
Co) and APV (Stewart Myers). See list of valuation topics.

Valuing flexibility
In many cases, for example R&D projects, a project may open (or close) paths of action to the company, but this
reality will not typically be captured in a strict NPV approach.[7] Management will therefore (sometimes) employ
tools which place an explicit value on these options. So, whereas in a DCF valuation the most likely or average or
scenario specific cash flows are discounted, here the “flexibile and staged nature” of the investment is modelled, and
hence "all" potential payoffs are considered. The difference between the two valuations is the "value of flexibility"
inherent in the project.
[8] [9] [10]
The two most common tools are Decision Tree Analysis (DTA) and Real options analysis (ROA); they
may often be used interchangeably:
• DTA values flexibility by incorporating possible events (or states) and consequent management decisions. (For
example, a company would build a factory given that demand for its product exceeded a certain level during the
pilot-phase, and outsource production otherwise. In turn, given further demand, it would similarly expand the
factory, and maintain it otherwise. In a DCF model, by contrast, there is no "branching" - each scenario must be
modelled separately.) In the decision tree, each management decision in response to an "event" generates a
"branch" or "path" which the company could follow; the probabilities of each event are determined or specified
by management. Once the tree is constructed: (1) "all" possible events and their resultant paths are visible to
management; (2) given this “knowledge” of the events that could follow, and assuming rational decision making,
management chooses the actions corresponding to the highest value path probability weighted; (3) this path is
then taken as representative of project value. See Decision theory: Choice under uncertainty.
• ROA is usually used when the value of a project is contingent on the value of some other asset or underlying
variable. (For example, the viability of a mining project is contingent on the price of gold; if the price is too low,
Corporate finance 20

management will abandon the mining rights, if sufficiently high, management will develop the ore body. Again, a
DCF valuation would capture only one of these outcomes.) Here: (1) using financial option theory as a
framework, the decision to be taken is identified as corresponding to either a call option or a put option; (2) an
appropriate valuation technique is then employed - usually a variant on the Binomial options model or a bespoke
simulation model, while Black Scholes type formulae are used less often; see Contingent claim valuation. (3) The
"true" value of the project is then the NPV of the "most likely" scenario plus the option value. (Real options in
corporate finance were first discussed by Stewart Myers in 1977; viewing corporate strategy as a series of options
was originally per Timothy Luehrman, in the late 1990s.)

Quantifying uncertainty
Given the uncertainty inherent in project forecasting and valuation,[11] [9] analysts will wish to assess the sensitivity
of project NPV to the various inputs (i.e. assumptions) to the DCF model. In a typical sensitivity analysis the analyst
will vary one key factor while holding all other inputs constant, ceteris paribus. The sensitivity of NPV to a change
in that factor is then observed, and is calculated as a "slope": ΔNPV / Δfactor. For example, the analyst will
determine NPV at various growth rates in annual revenue as specified (usually at set increments, e.g. -10%, -5%,
0%, 5%....), and then determine the sensitivity using this formula. Often, several variables may be of interest, and
their various combinations produce a "value-surface" (or even a "value-space"), where NPV is then a function of
several variables. See also Stress testing.
Using a related technique, analysts also run scenario based forecasts of NPV. Here, a scenario comprises a particular
outcome for economy-wide, "global" factors (demand for the product, exchange rates, commodity prices, etc...) as
well as for company-specific factors (unit costs, etc...). As an example, the analyst may specify various revenue
growth scenarios (e.g. 5% for "Worst Case", 10% for "Likely Case" and 25% for "Best Case"), where all key inputs
are adjusted so as to be consistent with the growth assumptions, and calculate the NPV for each. Note that for
scenario based analysis, the various combinations of inputs must be internally consistent, whereas for the sensitivity
approach these need not be so. An application of this methodology is to determine an "unbiased" NPV, where
management determines a (subjective) probability for each scenario – the NPV for the project is then the
probability-weighted average of the various scenarios.
A further advancement is to construct stochastic or probabilistic financial models – as opposed to the traditional
static and deterministic models as above. For this purpose, the most common method is to use Monte Carlo
simulation to analyze the project’s NPV. This method was introduced to finance by David B. Hertz in 1964, although
has only recently become common: today analysts are even able to run simulations in spreadsheet based DCF
models, typically using an add-in, such as Crystal Ball. Here, the cash flow components that are (heavily) impacted
by uncertainty are simulated, mathematically reflecting their "random characteristics". In contrast to the scenario
approach above, the simulation produces several thousand random but possible outcomes, or "trials"; see Monte
Carlo Simulation versus “What If” Scenarios. The output is then a histogram of project NPV, and the average NPV
of the potential investment – as well as its volatility and other sensitivities – is then observed. This histogram
provides information not visible from the static DCF: for example, it allows for an estimate of the probability that a
project has a net present value greater than zero (or any other value).
Continuing the above example: instead of assigning three discrete values to revenue growth, and to the other relevant
variables, the analyst would assign an appropriate probability distribution to each variable (commonly triangular or
beta), and, where possible, specify the observed or supposed correlation between the variables. These distributions
would then be "sampled" repeatedly - incorporating this correlation - so as to generate several thousand scenarios,
with corresponding valuations, which are then used to generate the NPV histogram. The resultant statistics (average
NPV and standard deviation of NPV) will be a more accurate mirror of the project's "randomness" than the variance
observed under the scenario based approach. These are often used as estimates of the underlying "spot price" and
volatility for the real option valuation as above; see Real options analysis: Valuation inputs.
Corporate finance 21

The financing decision


Achieving the goals of corporate finance requires that any corporate investment be financed appropriately. [12] As
above, since both hurdle rate and cash flows (and hence the riskiness of the firm) will be affected, the financing mix
can impact the valuation. Management must therefore identify the "optimal mix" of financing—the capital structure
that results in maximum value. (See Balance sheet, WACC, Fisher separation theorem; but, see also the
Modigliani-Miller theorem.)
The sources of financing will, generically, comprise some combination of debt and equity financing. Financing a
project through debt results in a liability or obligation that must be serviced, thus entailing cash flow implications
independent of the project's degree of success. Equity financing is less risky with respect to cash flow commitments,
but results in a dilution of ownership, control and earnings. The cost of equity is also typically higher than the cost of
debt (see CAPM and WACC), and so equity financing may result in an increased hurdle rate which may offset any
reduction in cash flow risk.
Management must also attempt to match the financing mix to the asset being financed as closely as possible, in terms
of both timing and cash flows.
One of the main theories of how firms make their financing decisions is the Pecking Order Theory, which suggests
that firms avoid external financing while they have internal financing available and avoid new equity financing while
they can engage in new debt financing at reasonably low interest rates. Another major theory is the Trade-Off
Theory in which firms are assumed to trade-off the tax benefits of debt with the bankruptcy costs of debt when
making their decisions. An emerging area in finance theory is right-financing whereby investment banks and
corporations can enhance investment return and company value over time by determining the right investment
objectives, policy framework, institutional structure, source of financing (debt or equity) and expenditure framework
within a given economy and under given market conditions. One last theory about this decision is the Market timing
hypothesis which states that firms look for the cheaper type of financing regardless of their current levels of internal
resources, debt and equity.

The dividend decision


Whether to issue dividends,[13] and what amount, is calculated mainly on the basis of the company's unappropriated
profit and its earning prospects for the coming year. If there are no NPV positive opportunities, i.e. projects where
returns exceed the hurdle rate, then management must return excess cash to investors. These free cash flows
comprise cash remaining after all business expenses have been met.
This is the general case, however there are exceptions. For example, investors in a "Growth stock", expect that the
company will, almost by definition, retain earnings so as to fund growth internally. In other cases, even though an
opportunity is currently NPV negative, management may consider “investment flexibility” / potential payoffs and
decide to retain cash flows; see above and Real options.
Management must also decide on the form of the dividend distribution, generally as cash dividends or via a share
buyback. Various factors may be taken into consideration: where shareholders must pay tax on dividends, firms may
elect to retain earnings or to perform a stock buyback, in both cases increasing the value of shares outstanding.
Alternatively, some companies will pay "dividends" from stock rather than in cash; see Corporate action. Today, it is
generally accepted that dividend policy is value neutral (see Modigliani-Miller theorem).
Corporate finance 22

Working capital management


Decisions relating to working capital and short term financing are referred to as working capital management[14] .
These involve managing the relationship between a firm's short-term assets and its short-term liabilities.
As above, the goal of Corporate Finance is the maximization of firm value. In the context of long term, capital
investment decisions, firm value is enhanced through appropriately selecting and funding NPV positive investments.
These investments, in turn, have implications in terms of cash flow and cost of capital.
The goal of Working capital management is therefore to ensure that the firm is able to operate, and that it has
sufficient cash flow to service long term debt, and to satisfy both maturing short-term debt and upcoming operational
expenses. In so doing, firm value is enhanced when, and if, the return on capital exceeds the cost of capital; See
Economic value added (EVA).

Decision criteria
Working capital is the amount of capital which is readily available to an organization. That is, working capital is the
difference between resources in cash or readily convertible into cash (Current Assets), and cash requirements
(Current Liabilities). As a result, the decisions relating to working capital are always current, i.e. short term,
decisions.
In addition to time horizon, working capital decisions differ from capital investment decisions in terms of
discounting and profitability considerations; they are also "reversible" to some extent. (Considerations as to Risk
appetite and return targets remain identical, although some constraints - such as those imposed by loan covenants -
may be more relevant here).
Working capital management decisions are therefore not taken on the same basis as long term decisions, and
working capital management applies different criteria in decision making: the main considerations are (1) cash flow /
liquidity and (2) profitability / return on capital (of which cash flow is probably the more important).
• The most widely used measure of cash flow is the net operating cycle, or cash conversion cycle. This represents
the time difference between cash payment for raw materials and cash collection for sales. The cash conversion
cycle indicates the firm's ability to convert its resources into cash. Because this number effectively corresponds to
the time that the firm's cash is tied up in operations and unavailable for other activities, management generally
aims at a low net count. (Another measure is gross operating cycle which is the same as net operating cycle
except that it does not take into account the creditors deferral period.)
• In this context, the most useful measure of profitability is Return on capital (ROC). The result is shown as a
percentage, determined by dividing relevant income for the 12 months by capital employed; Return on equity
(ROE) shows this result for the firm's shareholders. As above, firm value is enhanced when, and if, the return on
capital, exceeds the cost of capital. ROC measures are therefore useful as a management tool, in that they link
short-term policy with long-term decision making.

Management of working capital


Guided by the above criteria, management will use a combination of policies and techniques for the management of
working capital [15] . These policies aim at managing the current assets (generally cash and cash equivalents,
inventories and debtors) and the short term financing, such that cash flows and returns are acceptable.
• Cash management. Identify the cash balance which allows for the business to meet day to day expenses, but
reduces cash holding costs.
• Inventory management. Identify the level of inventory which allows for uninterrupted production but reduces
the investment in raw materials - and minimizes reordering costs - and hence increases cash flow; see Supply
chain management; Just In Time (JIT); Economic order quantity (EOQ); Economic production quantity (EPQ).
Corporate finance 23

• Debtors management. Identify the appropriate credit policy, i.e. credit terms which will attract customers, such
that any impact on cash flows and the cash conversion cycle will be offset by increased revenue and hence Return
on Capital (or vice versa); see Discounts and allowances.
• Short term financing. Identify the appropriate source of financing, given the cash conversion cycle: the
inventory is ideally financed by credit granted by the supplier; however, it may be necessary to utilize a bank loan
(or overdraft), or to "convert debtors to cash" through "factoring".

Financial risk management


Risk management [16] is the process of measuring risk and then developing and implementing strategies to manage
that risk. Financial risk management focuses on risks that can be managed ("hedged") using traded financial
instruments (typically changes in commodity prices, interest rates, foreign exchange rates and stock prices).
Financial risk management will also play an important role in cash management.
This area is related to corporate finance in two ways. Firstly, firm exposure to business risk is a direct result of
previous Investment and Financing decisions. Secondly, both disciplines share the goal of enhancing, or preserving,
firm value. All large corporations have risk management teams, and small firms practice informal, if not formal, risk
management. There is a fundamental debate on the value of "Risk Management" and shareholder value that
questions a shareholder's desire to optimize risk versus taking exposure to pure risk. The debate links value of risk
management in a market to the cost of bankruptcy in that market.
Derivatives are the instruments most commonly used in financial risk management. Because unique derivative
contracts tend to be costly to create and monitor, the most cost-effective financial risk management methods usually
involve derivatives that trade on well-established financial markets or exchanges. These standard derivative
instruments include options, futures contracts, forward contracts, and swaps. More customized and second
generation derivatives known as exotics trade over the counter aka OTC.
See: Financial engineering; Financial risk; Default (finance); Credit risk; Interest rate risk; Liquidity risk;
Market risk; Operational risk; Volatility risk; Settlement risk; Value at Risk;.

Relationship with other areas in finance

Investment banking
Use of the term “corporate finance” varies considerably across the world. In the United States it is used, as above, to
describe activities, decisions and techniques that deal with many aspects of a company’s finances and capital. In the
United Kingdom and Commonwealth countries, the terms “corporate finance” and “corporate financier” tend to be
associated with investment banking - i.e. with transactions in which capital is raised for the corporation.[17] These
may include
• Raising seed, start-up, development or expansion capital
• Mergers, demergers, acquisitions or the sale of private companies
• Mergers, demergers and takeovers of public companies, including public-to-private deals
• Management buy-out, buy-in or similar of companies, divisions or subsidiaries - typically backed by private
equity
• Equity issues by companies, including the flotation of companies on a recognised stock exchange in order to raise
capital for development and/or to restructure ownership
• Raising capital via the issue of other forms of equity, debt and related securities for the refinancing and
restructuring of businesses
• Financing joint ventures, project finance, infrastructure finance, public-private partnerships and privatisations
Corporate finance 24

• Secondary equity issues, whether by means of private placing or further issues on a stock market, especially
where linked to one of the transactions listed above.
• Raising debt and restructuring debt, especially when linked to the types of transactions listed above

Personal and public finance


Corporate finance utilizes tools from almost all areas of finance. Some of the tools developed by and for corporations
have broad application to entities other than corporations, for example, to partnerships, sole proprietorships,
not-for-profit organizations, governments, mutual funds, and personal wealth management. But in other cases their
application is very limited outside of the corporate finance arena. Because corporations deal in quantities of money
much greater than individuals, the analysis has developed into a discipline of its own. It can be differentiated from
personal finance and public finance.

Related professional qualifications


Qualifications related to the field include:
• Finance qualifications:
• Degrees: Masters degree in Finance (MSF), Master of Financial Economics
• Certifications: Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA), Corporate Finance Qualification (CF), Certified
International Investment Analyst (CIIA), Association of Corporate Treasurers (ACT), Certified Market
Analyst (CMA/FAD) Dual Designation, Master Financial Manager (MFM), Master of Finance & Control
(MFC), Certified Treasury Professional (CTP), Association for Financial Professionals, Certified Merger &
Acquisition Advisor (CM&AA)
• Business qualifications:
• Degrees: Master of Business Administration (MBA), Master of Management (MM), Master of Science in
Management (MSM), Master of Commerce (M Comm), Doctor of Business Administration (DBA)
• Certification: Certified Business Manager (CBM), Certified MBA (CMBA)
• Accountancy qualifications:
• Qualified accountant: Chartered Accountant (ACA, CA), Certified Public Accountant (CPA), Chartered
Certified Accountant(ACCA), Chartered Management Accountant (CIMA)
• Non-statutory qualifications: Chartered Cost Accountant (CCA Designation from AAFM), Certified
Management Accountant (CMA)

See also
• Financial modeling
• Business organizations
• Financial planning
• Investment bank
• Managerial economics
• Private equity
• Real option
• Venture capital
• Right-financing
• Factoring (finance)
• Global Squeeze
Lists:
Corporate finance 25

• List of accounting topics


• List of corporate finance topics
• List of valuation topics
• List of finance topics

References
[1] See Corporate Finance (http:/ / pages. stern. nyu. edu/ ~adamodar/ New_Home_Page/ CFin/ CF. htm#ch7), Aswath Damodaran, New York
University's Stern School of Business
[2] See Corporate Finance: First Principles (http:/ / pages. stern. nyu. edu/ ~adamodar/ New_Home_Page/ AppldCF/ other/ Image2. gif), Aswath
Damodaran, New York University's Stern School of Business
[3] The framework for this section is based on Notes (http:/ / pages. stern. nyu. edu/ ~adamodar/ New_Home_Page/ AppldCF/ other/ Image2. gif)
by Aswath Damodaran at New York University's Stern School of Business
[4] See: Investment Decisions and Capital Budgeting (http:/ / www. duke. edu/ ~charvey/ Classes/ ba350_1997/ vcf2/ vcf2. htm), Prof. Campbell
R. Harvey; The Investment Decision of the Corporation (http:/ / www. bus. lsu. edu/ academics/ finance/ faculty/ dchance/ Instructional/
FinancialManagementDecisions. ppt#257,2,Slide), Prof. Don M. Chance
[5] See: Valuation (http:/ / pages. stern. nyu. edu/ ~adamodar/ New_Home_Page/ lectures/ val. html), Prof. Aswath Damodaran; Equity
Valuation (http:/ / www. duke. edu/ ~charvey/ Classes/ ba350_1997/ vcf1/ vcf1. htm), Prof. Campbell R. Harvey
[6] See for example Campbell R. Harvey's Hypertextual Finance Glossary (http:/ / biz. yahoo. com/ f/ g/ hh. html) or investopedia.com (http:/ /
www. investopedia. com/ terms/ h/ hurdlerate. asp)
[7] See: Real Options Analysis and the Assumptions of the NPV Rule (http:/ / www. realoptions. org/ papers2002/ SchockleyOptionNPV. pdf. ),
Tom Arnold & Richard Shockley
[8] See: Decision Tree Analysis (http:/ / www. mindtools. com/ pages/ article/ newTED_04. htm), mindtools.com; Decision Tree Primer (http:/ /
www. public. asu. edu/ ~kirkwood/ DAStuff/ decisiontrees/ index. html), Prof. Craig W. Kirkwood Arizona State University
[9] See: "Capital Budgeting Under Risk". Ch.9 in Schaum's outline of theory and problems of financial management (http:/ / books. google. com/
books?id=_lnmxnhoAUEC& printsec=frontcover& dq=related:ISBN0070580316#v=onepage& q& f=false), Jae K. Shim and Joel G. Siegel.
[10] See: Identifying real options (http:/ / faculty. fuqua. duke. edu/ ~charvey/ Teaching/ BA456_2002/ Identifying_real_options. htm), Prof.
Campbell R. Harvey; Applications of option pricing theory to equity valuation (http:/ / pages. stern. nyu. edu/ ~adamodar/ New_Home_Page/
lectures/ opt. html), Prof. Aswath Damodaran; How Do You Assess The Value of A Company's "Real Options"? (http:/ / www.
expectationsinvesting. com/ tutorial11. shtml), Prof. Alfred Rappaport Columbia University & Michael Mauboussin
[11] See Probabilistic Approaches: Scenario Analysis, Decision Trees and Simulations (http:/ / www. stern. nyu. edu/ ~adamodar/ pdfiles/
papers/ probabilistic. pdf), Prof. Aswath Damodaran
[12] See: The Financing Decision of the Corporation (http:/ / www. bus. lsu. edu/ academics/ finance/ faculty/ dchance/ Instructional/
FinancialManagementDecisions. ppt#256,1,Slide), Prof. Don M. Chance; Capital Structure (http:/ / pages. stern. nyu. edu/ ~adamodar/ pdfiles/
ovhds/ capstr. pdf), Prof. Aswath Damodaran
[13] See Dividend Policy (http:/ / pages. stern. nyu. edu/ ~adamodar/ pdfiles/ ovhds/ divid. pdf), Prof. Aswath Damodaran
[14] See Working Capital Management (http:/ / www. studyfinance. com/ lessons/ workcap/ index. mv), Studyfinance.com; Working Capital
Management (http:/ / www. treasury. govt. nz/ publicsector/ workingcapital/ chap2. asp), treasury.govt.nz
[15] See The 20 Principles of Financial Management (http:/ / www. bus. lsu. edu/ academics/ finance/ faculty/ dchance/ Instructional/
PrinciplesofFinancialManagement. htm), Prof. Don M. Chance, Louisiana State University
[16] See Professional Risk Managers' International Association (http:/ / www. prmia. org/ ) and Global Association of Risk Professionals (http:/ /
www. garp. com/ )
[17] Beaney, Shaun, "Defining corporate finance in the UK" (http:/ / www. icaew. co. uk/ index. cfm?route=122299), The Institute of Chartered
Accountants, April 2005
Financial capital 26

Financial capital
Financial capital can refer to money used by entrepreneurs and
businesses to buy what they need to make their products or provide
their services or to that sector of the economy based on its operation,
i.e. retail, corporate, investment banking, etc.

Financial capital vs. real capital Capital exports in 2006

Financial capital or just capital in finance and accounting, refers to


the funds provided by lenders (and investors) to businesses to purchase
real capital equipment for producing goods/services. Real Capital or
Economic Capital comprises physical goods that assist in the
production of other goods and services, e.g. shovels for gravediggers,
sewing machines for tailors, or machinery and tooling for factories.

Financial capital generally refers to saved-up financial wealth, Capital imports in 2006

especially that used to start or maintain a business. A financial concept


of capital is adopted by most entities in preparing their financial reports. Under a financial concept of capital, such as
invested money or invested purchasing power, capital is synonymous with the net assets or equity of the entity.
Under a physical concept of capital, such as operating capability, capital is regarded as the productive capacity of the
entity based on, for example, units of output per day.[1] Financial capital maintenance can be measured in either
nominal monetary units or units of constant purchasing power. [2] There are thus three concepts of capital
maintenance in terms of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS): (1) Physical capital maintenance (2)
Financial capital maintenance in nominal monetary units (3) Financial capital maintenance in units of constant
purchasing power.[3]

Financial capital is provided by lenders for a price: interest. Also see time value of money for a more detailed
description of how financial capital may be analyzed.
Furthermore, financial capital, is any liquid medium or mechanism that represents wealth, or other styles of capital.
It is, however, usually purchasing power in the form of money available for the production or purchasing of goods,
etcetera. Capital can also be obtained by producing more than what is immediately required and saving the surplus.
Financial capital has been subcategorized by some academics as economic or productive capital necessary for
operations, signaling capital which signals a company's financial strength to shareholders, and regulatory capital
which fulfills capital requirements.[4]

Sources of capital
• Long term - usually above 7 years
• Share Capital
• Mortgage loan
• Retained Profit
• Venture Capital
• Debenture
• Project Finance
• Medium term - usually between 2 and 7 years
• Term Loans
Financial capital 27

• Leasing
• Hire Purchase
• Short term - usually under 2 years
• Bank Overdraft
• Trade Credit
• Deferred Expenses
• Factoring

Capital market
• Long-term funds are bought and sold:
• Shares
• Debentures
• Long-term loans, often with a mortgage bond as security
• Reserve funds
• Euro Bonds

Money market
• Financial institutions can use short-term savings to lend out in the form of short-term loans:
• Credit on open account
• Bank overdraft
• Short-term loans
• Bills of exchange
• Factoring of debtors

Differences between shares and debentures


• Shareholders are effectively owners; debenture-holders are creditors.
• Shareholders may vote at AGMs and be elected as directors; debenture-holders may not vote at AGMs or be
elected as directors.
• Shareholders receive profit in the form of dividends; debenture-holders receive a fixed rate of interest.
• If there is no profit, the shareholder does not receive a dividend; interest is paid to debenture-holders regardless of
whether or not a profit has been made.
• In case of dissolution of firms debenture holders are paid first as compared to shareholder.

Fixed capital
This is money which is used to purchase assets that will remain permanently in the business and help it to make a
profit.

Factors determining fixed capital requirements


• Nature of business
• Size of business
• Stage of development
• Capital invested by the owners
• location of that area
Financial capital 28

Working capital
Working capital is money which is used to buy stock, pay expenses and finance credit.

Factors determining working capital requirements


• Size of business
• Stage of development
• Time of production
• Rate of stock turnover ratio
• Buying and selling terms
• Seasonal consumption
• Seasonal product
• profit level
• growth and expansion
• production cycle
• general nature of business
• business cycle

Instruments
A contract regarding any combination of capital assets is called a financial instrument, and may serve as a
• medium of exchange,
• standard of deferred payment,
• unit of account, or
• store of value.
Most indigenous forms of money (wampum, shells, tally sticks and such) and the modern fiat money is only a
"symbolic" storage of value and not a real storage of value like commodity money.

Capital vs. money


Liquidity requirements of these vary significantly – leading to a diversity of contracts and financial markets to trade
them on. When all four functions are served by one instrument, this is called money, which does not need to be
traded on financial markets since the risk of loss of value of money is uniform across the whole society. Where no
one form of money is agreed to have reliable value, and barter is undesirable, less liquid or more diverse instruments
have served the four functions. This article focuses mostly on financial instruments which are not uniformly affected
by native currency inflation and which are not guaranteed by a state.

Own and borrowed capital


Capital contributed by the owner or entrepreneur of a business, and obtained, for example, by means of savings or
inheritance, is known as own capital or equity, whereas that which is granted by another person or institution is
called borrowed capital, and this must usually be paid back with interest. The ratio between debt and equity is named
leverage. It has to be optimized as a high leverage can bring a higher profit but create solvency risk.

Borrowed capital
This is capital which the business borrows from institutions or people, and includes debentures:
• Redeemable debentures
• Irredeemable debentures
Financial capital 29

• Debentures to bearer
• Ordinary debentures

Own capital
This is capital that owners of a business (shareholders and partners, for example) provide:
• Preference shares/hybrid source of finance
• Ordinary preference shares
• Cumulative preference shares
• Participating preference shares
• Ordinary shares
• Bonus shares
• Founders' shares
These have preference over the equity shares. This means the payments made to the shareholders are first paid to the
preference shareholder(s) and then to the equity shareholders.

Issuing and trading


Like money, financial instruments may be "backed" by state military fiat, credit (i.e. social capital held by banks and
their depositors), or commodity resources. Governments generally closely control the supply of it and usually require
some "reserve" be held by institutions granting credit. Trading between various national currency instruments is
conducted on a money market. Such trading reveals differences in probability of debt collection or store of value
function of that currency, as assigned by traders.
When in forms other than money, financial capital may be traded on bond markets or reinsurance markets with
varying degrees of trust in the social capital (not just credits) of bond-issuers, insurers, and others who issue and
trade in financial instruments. When payment is deferred on any such instrument, typically an interest rate is higher
than the standard interest rates paid by banks, or charged by the central bank on its money. Often such instruments
are called fixed-income instruments if they have reliable payment schedules associated with the uniform rate of
interest. A variable-rate instrument, such as many consumer mortgages, will reflect the standard rate for deferred
payment set by the central bank prime rate, increasing it by some fixed percentage. Other instruments, such as citizen
entitlements, e.g. "U.S. Social Security", or other pensions, may be indexed to the rate of inflation, to provide a
reliable value stream.
Trading in stock markets or commodity markets is actually trade in underlying assets which are not wholly financial
in themselves, although they often move up and down in value in direct response to the trading in more purely
financial derivatives. Typically commodity markets depend on politics that affect international trade, e.g. boycotts
and embargoes, or factors that influence natural capital, e.g. weather that affects food crops. Meanwhile, stock
markets are more influenced by trust in corporate leaders, i.e. individual capital, by consumers, i.e. social capital or
"brand capital" (in some analyses), and internal organizational efficiency, i.e. instructional capital and infrastructural
capital. Some enterprises issue instruments to specifically track one limited division or brand. "Financial futures",
"Short selling" and "financial options" apply to these markets, and are typically pure financial bets on outcomes,
rather than being a direct representation of any underlying asset.
Financial capital 30

Broadening the notion


The relationship between financial capital, money, and all other styles of capital, especially human capital or labor, is
assumed in central bank policy and regulations regarding instruments as above.
Such relationships and policies are characterized by a political economy - feudalist, socialist, capitalist, green,
anarchist or otherwise. In effect, the means of money supply and other regulations on financial capital represent the
economic sense of the value system of the society itself, as they determine the allocation of labor in that society.
So, for instance, rules for increasing or reducing the money supply based on perceived inflation, or on measuring
well-being, reflect some such values, reflect the importance of using (all forms of) financial capital as a stable store
of value. If this is very important, inflation control is key - any amount of money inflation reduces the value of
financial capital with respect to all other types.
If, however, the medium of exchange function is more critical, new money may be more freely issued regardless of
impact on either inflation or well-being.

Marxian perspectives
It is common in Marxist theory to refer to the role of "Finance Capital" as the determining and ruling class interest in
capitalist society, particularly in the latter stages.[5] [6]

Valuation
Normally, a financial instrument is priced accordingly to the perception by capital market players of its expected
return and risk.
Unit of account functions may come into question if valuations of complex financial instruments vary drastically
based on timing. The "book value", "mark-to-market" and "mark-to-future"[7] conventions are three different
approaches to reconciling financial capital value units of account.

Economic role
Socialism, capitalism, feudalism, anarchism, other civic theories take markedly different views of the role of
financial capital in social life, and propose various political restrictions to deal with that.
Finance capitalism is the production of profit from the manipulation of financial capital. It is held in contrast to
industrial capitalism, where profit is made from the manufacture of goods.

See also
• banking
• capital
• capital market
• Capitalism
• finance
• financialization
• Financial commons
• Five Capitals
• funding
• money supply
• list of finance topics
• list of accounting topics
• spiritual capital
Financial capital 31

Notes
[1] (http:/ / www. aasb. com. au/ admin/ file/ content105/ c9/ Framework_07-04nd. pdf) Framework for the Preparation and Presentation of
Financial Statements, Par 102
[2] (http:/ / www. aasb. com. au/ admin/ file/ content105/ c9/ Framework_07-04nd. pdf) Framework for the Preparation and Presentation of
Financial Statements, Par 104
[3] (http:/ / www. aasb. com. au/ admin/ file/ content105/ c9/ Framework_07-04nd. pdf) Framework for the Preparation and Presentation of
Financial Statements, Par 104
[4] The Risk Report, April 2009. Volume XXXI No. 8. IRMI (http:/ / www. irmi. com/ ).
[5] Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism ibid. Finance Capital and the Finance Oligarchy (http:/ / www. marxists. org/ archive/ lenin/
works/ 1916/ imp-hsc/ ch03. htm)
[6] Monopoly-Finance Capital and the Paradox of Accumulation John Bellamy Foster and Robert W. McChesney [[Monthly Review (http:/ /
www. monthlyreview. org/ 091001foster-mcchesney. php)] Sept-Oct 2009]
[7] The New Generation of Risk Management for Hedge Funds and Private Equity Investments (http:/ / books. google. com/
books?id=2w0bRIv7cygC& pg=PA349& lpg=PA349& dq="mark-to-future"& source=bl& ots=-wAo4Ibldg&
sig=a8u9-GRjc2ng_8ltgiKnus_cURk& hl=en& ei=l0YSSs_oEpLhtgea6oCSBA& sa=X& oi=book_result& ct=result& resnum=5#PPP1,M1),
edited by Lars Jaeger, p. 349

References
F. Boldizzoni, Means and Ends: The Idea of Capital in the West, 1500-1970, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008,
chapters 7-8

Cornering the market


In finance, to corner the market is to purchase enough of a particular stock, commodity, or other asset to allow the
price to be manipulated, by analogy to the general business jargon where a company described as having "cornered
the market" has a very high market share. The cornerer hopes to gain control of enough of the supply of the
commodity to be able to set the price for it.
This can be done through several mechanisms. The most direct strategy is to simply buy up a large percentage of the
available commodity offered for sale in some spot market and hoard it. With the advent of futures trading, a cornerer
may buy a large number of futures contracts on a commodity and then sell them at a profit after inflating the price.
Although there have been many attempts to corner markets in everything from tin to cattle, to date very few of these
attempts have ever succeeded; instead, most of these attempted corners have tended to break themselves
spontaneously. The party attempting to corner a market can become very vulnerable due to the size of their position,
especially if their attempt becomes widely known. If the rest of the market senses weakness, it may resist any
attempt to artificially drive the market any further by actively taking opposing positions. When the price starts to
move against the cornerer, they are in a very difficult position, as it is likely to be impossible to exit much of their
position without catastrophically moving prices against themselves. In such a situation, many other parties will be
able to profit from the cornerer's need to unwind their position.
Cornering the market 32

Historical examples

1950s: The onion market


In the late 1950s, United States onion farmers alleged that Chicago Mercantile Exchange traders were attempting to
corner the market on onions. Their complaints resulted in the passage of the Onion Futures Act, which banned
trading in onion futures in the United States and remains in effect as of 2010.

1970s: The Hunt brothers and the silver market


Brothers Nelson Bunker Hunt and Herbert Hunt attempted to corner the world silver markets in the late 1970s and
early 1980s, at one stage holding the rights to more than half of the world's deliverable silver.[1] During the Hunts'
accumulation of the precious metal, silver prices rose from $11 an ounce in September 1979 to nearly $50 an ounce
in January 1980.[2] Silver prices ultimately collapsed to below $11 an ounce two months later,[3] much of the fall
occurring on a single day now known as Silver Thursday, due to changes made to exchange rules regarding the
purchase of commodities on margin.[4]

1990s: Hamanaka and the copper market


Rogue trader Yasuo Hamanaka, Sumitomo Corporation's chief copper trader, attempted to corner the international
copper market over a ten year period leading up to 1996.[5] At one point during this "Sumitomo copper affair,"
Hamanaka is believed to have controlled approximately 5% of the world copper market.[5] As his scheme collapsed,
Sumitomo was left with large positions in the copper market, ultimately losing US$2.6 billion.[6] In 1997 Hamanaka
pleaded guilty to criminal charges stemming from his trading activity and was sentenced to an eight year prison
sentence.[6]

2008: Porsche and shares in Volkswagen


During the financial crisis of 2007-2009 Porsche cornered the market in shares of Volkswagen, which briefly saw
Volkswagen become the world's most valuable company.[7] Porsche claimed that its actions were intended to gain
control of Volkswagen rather than to manipulate the market: in this case, while cornering the market in Volkswagen
shares, Porsche contracted with naked shorts—enabling it to perform a short squeeze on them.[8] It was ultimately
unsuccessful, leading to the resignation of Porsche's chief executive and financial director and to the merger of
Porsche into Volkswagen.[9]

Fictional examples
An attempt to corner the market on orange juice futures plays a key role in the 1983 movie Trading Places. The two
protagonists (played by Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd) eventually foil their rivals' plan by short-selling the
futures, causing hundreds of millions of dollars in losses for the latter.

References
[1] Gwynne, S. C. (September 2001), "Bunker HUNT", Texas Monthly (Austin, Texas, United States: Emmis Communications Corporation) 29
(9): p78.
[2] Eichenwald, Kurt (1989-12-21). "2 Hunts Fined And Banned From Trades" (http:/ / query. nytimes. com/ gst/ fullpage.
html?res=950DE0DD103FF932A15751C1A96F948260). New York Times. . Retrieved 2008-06-29.
[4] "Bunker's Busted Silver Bubble" (http:/ / www. time. com/ time/ magazine/ article/ 0,9171,920875-2,00. html), Time Magazine (Time Inc.),
1980-05-12, , retrieved 2008-06-29
[5] Gettler, Leon (2008-02-02), "Wake-up calls on rogue traders keep ringing, but who's answering the phone?" (http:/ / business. theage. com.
au/ wakeup-calls-on-rogue-traders-keep-ringing-but-whos-answering-the-phone-20080201-1plq. html), The Age, , retrieved 2008-06-29
[6] Petersen, Melody (1999-05-21), "Merrill Charged With 2d Firm In Copper Case" (http:/ / query. nytimes. com/ gst/ fullpage.
html?res=9E00E0DC1F3EF932A15756C0A96F958260& sec=& spon=& pagewanted=all), New York Times, , retrieved 2008-06-29
Cornering the market 33

[7] "Hedge funds make £18bn loss on VW" (http:/ / news. bbc. co. uk/ 1/ hi/ business/ 7697082. stm). BBC. 2008-10-29. .
[8] "Squeezy money" (http:/ / www. economist. com/ finance/ displaystory. cfm?story_id=12523898), Economist, 2008-10-30, , retrieved
2008-11-01; "A Clever Move by Porsche on VW’s Stock" (http:/ / www. nytimes. com/ 2008/ 10/ 31/ business/ worldbusiness/ 31norris.
html), New York Times; "Porsche crashes into controversy in the ultimate 'short squeeze'" (http:/ / www. telegraph. co. uk/ finance/
globalbusiness/ 3362913/ Porsche-crashes-into-controversy-in-the-ultimate-short-squeeze. html), The Daily Telegraph
[9] "VW prepares to take over Porsche" (http:/ / news. bbc. co. uk/ 1/ hi/ business/ 8165524. stm). BBC. 2009-07-23. .

Insurance
In law and economics, insurance is a form of risk management primarily used to hedge against the risk of a
contingent, uncertain loss. Insurance is defined as the equitable transfer of the risk of a loss, from one entity to
another, in exchange for payment. An insurer is a company selling the insurance; an insured or policyholder is the
person or entity buying the insurance policy. The insurance rate is a factor used to determine the amount to be
charged for a certain amount of insurance coverage, called the premium. Risk management, the practice of
appraising and controlling risk, has evolved as a discrete field of study and practice.
The transaction involves the insured assuming a guaranteed and known relatively small loss in the form of payment
to the insurer in exchange for the insurer's promise to compensate (indemnify) the insured in the case of a large,
possibly devastating loss. The insured receives a contract called the insurance policy which details the conditions and
circumstances under which the insured will be compensated.

Principles
Insurance involves pooling funds from many insured entities (known as exposures) in order to pay for relatively
uncommon but severely devastating losses which can occur to these entities. The insured entities are therefore
protected from risk for a fee, with the fee being dependent upon the frequency and severity of the event occurring. In
order to be insurable, the risk insured against must meet certain characteristics in order to be an insurable risk.
Insurance is a commercial enterprise and a major part of the financial services industry, but individual entities can
also self-insure through saving money for possible future losses.[1]

Insurability
Risk which can be insured by private companies typically share seven common characteristics.[2]
1. Large number of similar exposure units. Since insurance operates through pooling resources, the majority of
insurance policies are provided for individual members of large classes, allowing insurers to benefit from the law
of large numbers in which predicted losses are similar to the actual losses. Exceptions include Lloyd's of London,
which is famous for insuring the life or health of actors, actresses and sports figures. However, all exposures will
have particular differences, which may lead to different rates.
2. Definite Loss. The loss takes place at a known time, in a known place, and from a known cause. The classic
example is death of an insured person on a life insurance policy. Fire, automobile accidents, and worker injuries
may all easily meet this criterion. Other types of losses may only be definite in theory. Occupational disease, for
instance, may involve prolonged exposure to injurious conditions where no specific time, place or cause is
identifiable. Ideally, the time, place and cause of a loss should be clear enough that a reasonable person, with
sufficient information, could objectively verify all three elements.
3. Accidental Loss. The event that constitutes the trigger of a claim should be fortuitous, or at least outside the
control of the beneficiary of the insurance. The loss should be ‘pure,’ in the sense that it results from an event for
which there is only the opportunity for cost. Events that contain speculative elements, such as ordinary business
risks, are generally not considered insurable.
Insurance 34

4. Large Loss. The size of the loss must be meaningful from the perspective of the insured. Insurance premiums
need to cover both the expected cost of losses, plus the cost of issuing and administering the policy, adjusting
losses, and supplying the capital needed to reasonably assure that the insurer will be able to pay claims. For small
losses these latter costs may be several times the size of the expected cost of losses. There is little point in paying
such costs unless the protection offered has real value to a buyer.
5. Affordable Premium. If the likelihood of an insured event is so high, or the cost of the event so large, that the
resulting premium is large relative to the amount of protection offered, it is not likely that anyone will buy
insurance, even if on offer. Further, as the accounting profession formally recognizes in financial accounting
standards, the premium cannot be so large that there is not a reasonable chance of a significant loss to the insurer.
If there is no such chance of loss, the transaction may have the form of insurance, but not the substance. (See the
U.S. Financial Accounting Standards Board standard number 113)
6. Calculable Loss. There are two elements that must be at least estimable, if not formally calculable: the
probability of loss, and the attendant cost. Probability of loss is generally an empirical exercise, while cost has
more to do with the ability of a reasonable person in possession of a copy of the insurance policy and a proof of
loss associated with a claim presented under that policy to make a reasonably definite and objective evaluation of
the amount of the loss recoverable as a result of the claim.
7. Limited risk of catastrophically large losses. Insurable losses are ideally independent and non-catastrophic,
meaning that the one losses do not happen all at once and individual losses are not severe enough to bankrupt the
insurer; insurers may prefer to limit their exposure to a loss from a single event to some small portion of their
capital base, on the order of 5 percent. Capital constrains insurers' ability to sell earthquake insurance as well as
wind insurance in hurricane zones. In the U.S., flood risk is insured by the federal government. In commercial fire
insurance it is possible to find single properties whose total exposed value is well in excess of any individual
insurer’s capital constraint. Such properties are generally shared among several insurers, or are insured by a single
insurer who syndicates the risk into the reinsurance market.

Legal
When a company insures an individual entity, there are basic legal requirements. Several commonly cited legal
principles of insurance include:[3]
1. Indemnity – the insurance company indemnifies, or compensates the insured in the case of certain losses only up
to the insured's interest
2. Insurable interest – the insured typically must directly suffer from the loss. Insurable interest must exist whether
property insurance or insurance on a person is involved. The concept requires that the insured have a "stake" in
the loss or damage to the life or property insured. What that "stake" is will be determined by the kind of insurance
involved and the nature of the property ownership or relationship between the persons.
3. Utmost good faith – the insured and the insurer are bound by a good faith bond of honesty and fairness
4. Contribution – insurers which have similar obligations to the insured contribute in the indemnification,
according to some method
5. Subrogation – the insurance company acquires legal rights to pursue recoveries on behalf of the insured; for
example, the insurer may sue those liable for insured's loss
6. Causa Proxima or Proximate Cause – the cause of loss (the "peril") must be covered under the insuring
agreement of the policy, and dominant cause must not be excluded
Insurance 35

Indemnification
To "indemnify" means to make whole again, or to be put in the position that one was in, to the extent possible, prior
to the happening of a specified event or peril. Accordingly, life insurance is generally not considered to be indemnity
insurance, but rather "contingent" insurance (i.e., a claim arises on the occurrence of a specified event). There are
generally two types of insurance contracts that seek to indemnify an insured:
1. an "indemnity" policy and
2. a "pay on behalf" or "on behalf of"[4] policy.
The difference is significant on paper, but rarely material in practice.
An "indemnity" policy will never pay claims until the insured has paid out of pocket to some third party; for
example, a visitor to the home slips on a floor that you left wet and sues you for $10,000 and wins. Under an
"indemnity" policy the homeowner would have to come up with the $10,000 to pay for the visitor's fall and then
would be "indemnified" by the insurance carrier for the out of pocket costs (the $10,000).[4] [5]
Under the same situation, a "pay on behalf" policy, the insurance carrier would pay the claim and the insured (the
homeowner) would not be out of pocket for anything. Most modern liability insurance is written on the basis of "pay
on behalf" language.[4]
An entity seeking to transfer risk (an individual, corporation, or association of any type, etc.) becomes the 'insured'
party once risk is assumed by an 'insurer', the insuring party, by means of a contract, called an insurance 'policy'.
Generally, an insurance contract includes, at a minimum, the following elements: the parties (the insurer, the insured,
the beneficiaries), the premium, the period of coverage, the particular loss event covered, the amount of coverage
(i.e., the amount to be paid to the insured or beneficiary in the event of a loss), and exclusions (events not covered).
An insured is thus said to be "indemnified" against the loss covered in the policy.
When insured parties experience a loss for a specified peril, the coverage entitles the policyholder to make a 'claim'
against the insurer for the covered amount of loss as specified by the policy. The fee paid by the insured to the
insurer for assuming the risk is called the 'premium'. Insurance premiums from many insureds are used to fund
accounts reserved for later payment of claims—in theory for a relatively few claimants—and for overhead costs. So
long as an insurer maintains adequate funds set aside for anticipated losses (i.e., reserves), the remaining margin is
an insurer's profit.

Effects
Insurance can have various effects on society through the way that it changes who bears the cost of losses and
damage. It can increase fraud. On the other hand, it can help societies and individuals prepare for catastrophes and
mitigate the effects of catastrophes on both households and societies.
Insurance can influence the probability of losses through moral hazard, insurance fraud, and preventive steps by the
insurance company. Insurance scholars have typically used morale hazard to refer to the increased loss due to
unintentional carelessness and moral hazard to refer to increased risk due to intentional carelessness or
indifference.[6] Insurers attempt to address carelessness through inspections, policy provisions requiring certain types
of maintenance, and possible discounts for loss mitigation efforts. While in theory insurers could encourage
investment in loss reduction, some commentators have argued that in practice insurers had historically not
aggressively pursued loss control measures - particularly to prevent disaster losses such as hurricanes - because of
concerns over rate reductions and legal battles. However, beginning around 1996 insurers began to take a more
active role in loss mitigation through building codes.[7]
Insurance 36

Insurers' business model

Underwriting and investing


The business model can be reduced to a simple equation: Profit = earned premium + investment income - incurred
loss - underwriting expenses
Insurers make money in two ways:
1. Through underwriting, the process by which insurers select the risks to insure and decide how much in premiums
to charge for accepting those risks;
2. By investing the premiums they collect from insured parties.
The most complicated aspect of the insurance business is the underwriting of policies. Using a wide assortment of
data, insurers predict the likelihood that a claim will be made against their policies and price products accordingly.
To this end, insurers use actuarial science to quantify the risks they are willing to assume and the premium they will
charge to assume them. Data is analyzed to fairly accurately project the rate of future claims based on a given risk.
Actuarial science uses statistics and probability to analyze the risks associated with the range of perils covered, and
these scientific principles are used to determine an insurer's overall exposure. Upon termination of a given policy, the
amount of premium collected and the investment gains thereon minus the amount paid out in claims is the insurer's
underwriting profit on that policy. Of course, from the insurer's perspective, some policies are "winners" (i.e., the
insurer pays out less in claims and expenses than it receives in premiums and investment income) and some are
"losers" (i.e., the insurer pays out more in claims and expenses than it receives in premiums and investment income);
insurance companies essentially use actuarial science to attempt to underwrite enough "winning" policies to pay out
on the "losers" while still maintaining profitability.
An insurer's underwriting performance is measured in its combined ratio[8] which is the ratio of losses and expenses
to earned premiums. A combined ratio of less than 100 percent indicates underwriting profitability, while anything
over 100 indicates an underwriting loss. A company with a combined ratio over 100% may nevertheless remain
profitable due to investment earnings.
Insurance companies earn investment profits on “float”. “Float” or available reserve is the amount of money, at hand
at any given moment, that an insurer has collected in insurance premiums but has not paid out in claims. Insurers
start investing insurance premiums as soon as they are collected and continue to earn interest or other income on
them until claims are paid out. The Association of British Insurers (gathering 400 insurance companies and 94% of
UK insurance services) has almost 20% of the investments in the London Stock Exchange.[9]
In the United States, the underwriting loss of property and casualty insurance companies was $142.3 billion in the
five years ending 2003. But overall profit for the same period was $68.4 billion, as the result of float. Some
insurance industry insiders, most notably Hank Greenberg, do not believe that it is forever possible to sustain a profit
from float without an underwriting profit as well, but this opinion is not universally held.
Naturally, the “float” method is difficult to carry out in an economically depressed period. Bear markets do cause
insurers to shift away from investments and to toughen up their underwriting standards. So a poor economy
generally means high insurance premiums. This tendency to swing between profitable and unprofitable periods over
time is commonly known as the "underwriting" or insurance cycle.[10]
Property and casualty insurers currently make the most money from their auto insurance line of business. Generally
better statistics are available on auto losses and underwriting on this line of business has benefited greatly from
advances in computing. Additionally, property losses in the United States, due to unpredictable natural catastrophes,
have exacerbated this trend.
Insurance 37

Claims
Claims and loss handling is the materialized utility of insurance; it is the actual "product" paid for. Claims may be
filed by insureds directly with the insurer or through brokers or agents. The insurer may require that the claim be
filed on its own proprietary forms, or may accept claims on a standard industry form such as those produced by
ACORD.
Insurance company claims departments employ a large number of claims adjusters supported by a staff of records
management and data entry clerks. Incoming claims are classified based on severity and are assigned to adjusters
whose settlement authority varies with their knowledge and experience. The adjuster undertakes an investigation of
each claim, usually in close cooperation with the insured, determines if coverage is available under the terms of the
insurance contract, and if so, the reasonable monetary value of the claim, and authorizes payment.
The policy holder may hire their own public adjuster to negotiate the settlement with the insurance company on their
behalf. For policies that are complicated, where claims may be complex, the insured may take out a separate
insurance policy add on, called loss recovery insurance, which covers the cost of a public adjuster in the case of a
claim.
Adjusting liability insurance claims is particularly difficult because there is a third party involved, the plaintiff, who
is under no contractual obligation to cooperate with the insurer and may in fact regard the insurer as a deep pocket.
The adjuster must obtain legal counsel for the insured (either inside "house" counsel or outside "panel" counsel),
monitor litigation that may take years to complete, and appear in person or over the telephone with settlement
authority at a mandatory settlement conference when requested by the judge.
If a claims adjuster suspects underinsurance, the condition of average may come into play to limit the insurance
company's exposure.
In managing the claims handling function, insurers seek to balance the elements of customer satisfaction,
administrative handling expenses, and claims overpayment leakages. As part of this balancing act, fraudulent
insurance practices are a major business risk that must be managed and overcome. Disputes between insurers and
insureds over the validity of claims or claims handling practices occasionally escalate into litigation; see insurance
bad faith.

History of insurance
In some sense we can say that insurance appears simultaneously with the appearance of human society. We know of
two types of economies in human societies: money economies (with markets, money, financial instruments and so
on) and non-money or natural economies (without money, markets, financial instruments and so on). The second
type is a more ancient form than the first. In such an economy and community, we can see insurance in the form of
people helping each other. For example, if a house burns down, the members of the community help build a new
one. Should the same thing happen to one's neighbour, the other neighbours must help. Otherwise, neighbours will
not receive help in the future. This type of insurance has survived to the present day in some countries where modern
money economy with its financial instruments is not widespread.
Turning to insurance in the modern sense (i.e., insurance in a modern money economy, in which insurance is part of
the financial sphere), early methods of transferring or distributing risk were practised by Chinese and Babylonian
traders as long ago as the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC, respectively.[11] Chinese merchants travelling treacherous river
rapids would redistribute their wares across many vessels to limit the loss due to any single vessel's capsizing. The
Babylonians developed a system which was recorded in the famous Code of Hammurabi, c. 1750 BC, and practised
by early Mediterranean sailing merchants. If a merchant received a loan to fund his shipment, he would pay the
lender an additional sum in exchange for the lender's guarantee to cancel the loan should the shipment be stolen or
lost at sea.
Insurance 38

Achaemenian monarchs of Ancient Persia were the first to insure their people and made it official by registering the
insuring process in governmental notary offices. The insurance tradition was performed each year in Norouz
(beginning of the Iranian New Year); the heads of different ethnic groups as well as others willing to take part,
presented gifts to the monarch. The most important gift was presented during a special ceremony. When a gift was
worth more than 10,000 Derrik (Achaemenian gold coin) the issue was registered in a special office. This was
advantageous to those who presented such special gifts. For others, the presents were fairly assessed by the
confidants of the court. Then the assessment was registered in special offices.
The purpose of registering was that whenever the person who presented the gift registered by the court was in
trouble, the monarch and the court would help him. Jahez, a historian and writer, writes in one of his books on
ancient Iran: "[W]henever the owner of the present is in trouble or wants to construct a building, set up a feast, have
his children married, etc. the one in charge of this in the court would check the registration. If the registered amount
exceeded 10,000 Derrik, he or she would receive an amount of twice as much."[12]
A thousand years later, the inhabitants of Rhodes invented the concept of the 'general average'. Merchants whose
goods were being shipped together would pay a proportionally divided premium which would be used to reimburse
any merchant whose goods were deliberately jettisoned in order to lighten the ship and save it from total loss.
The Greeks and Romans introduced the origins of health and life insurance c. 600 AD when they organized guilds
called "benevolent societies" which cared for the families and paid funeral expenses of members upon death. Guilds
in the Middle Ages served a similar purpose. The Talmud deals with several aspects of insuring goods. Before
insurance was established in the late 17th century, "friendly societies" existed in England, in which people donated
amounts of money to a general sum that could be used for emergencies.
Separate insurance contracts (i.e., insurance policies not bundled with loans or other kinds of contracts) were
invented in Genoa in the 14th century, as were insurance pools backed by pledges of landed estates. These new
insurance contracts allowed insurance to be separated from investment, a separation of roles that first proved useful
in marine insurance. Insurance became far more sophisticated in post-Renaissance Europe, and specialized varieties
developed.
Some forms of insurance had developed in London by the early decades of the seventeenth century. For example, the
will of the English colonist Robert Hayman mentions two "policies of insurance" taken out with the diocesan
Chancellor of London, Arthur Duck. Of the value of £100 each, one relates to the safe arrival of Hayman's ship in
Guyana and the other is in regard to "one hundred pounds assured by the said Doctor Arthur Ducke on my life".
Hayman's will was signed and sealed on 17 November 1628 but not proved until 1633.[13] Toward the end of the
seventeenth century, London's growing importance as a centre for trade increased demand for marine insurance. In
the late 1680s, Edward Lloyd opened a coffee house that became a popular haunt of ship owners, merchants, and
ships’ captains, and thereby a reliable source of the latest shipping news. It became the meeting place for parties
wishing to insure cargoes and ships, and those willing to underwrite such ventures. Today, Lloyd's of London
remains the leading market (note that it is not an insurance company) for marine and other specialist types of
insurance, but it works rather differently than the more familiar kinds of insurance.
Insurance as we know it today can be traced to the Great Fire of London, which in 1666 devoured more than 13,000
houses. The devastating effects of the fire converted the development of insurance "from a matter of convenience
into one of urgency, a change of opinion reflected in Sir Christopher Wren's inclusion of a site for 'the Insurance
Office' in his new plan for London in 1667."[14] A number of attempted fire insurance schemes came to nothing, but
in 1681 Nicholas Barbon, and eleven associates, established England's first fire insurance company, the 'Insurance
Office for Houses', at the back of the Royal Exchange. Initially, 5,000 homes were insured by Barbon's Insurance
Office.[15]
The first insurance company in the United States underwrote fire insurance and was formed in Charles Town
(modern-day Charleston), South Carolina, in 1732. Benjamin Franklin helped to popularize and make standard the
practice of insurance, particularly against fire in the form of perpetual insurance. In 1752, he founded the
Insurance 39

Philadelphia Contributionship for the Insurance of Houses from Loss by Fire. Franklin's company was the first to
make contributions toward fire prevention. Not only did his company warn against certain fire hazards, it refused to
insure certain buildings where the risk of fire was too great, such as all wooden houses. In the United States,
regulation of the insurance industry is highly Balkanized, with primary responsibility assumed by individual state
insurance departments. Whereas insurance markets have become centralized nationally and internationally, state
insurance commissioners operate individually, though at times in concert through a national insurance
commissioners' organization. In recent years, some have called for a dual state and federal regulatory system
(commonly referred to as the Optional federal charter (OFC)) for insurance similar to that which oversees state banks
and national banks.

Types of insurance
Any risk that can be quantified can potentially be insured. Specific kinds of risk that may give rise to claims are
known as "perils". An insurance policy will set out in detail which perils are covered by the policy and which are
not. Below are (non-exhaustive) lists of the many different types of insurance that exist. A single policy may cover
risks in one or more of the categories set out below. For example, auto insurance would typically cover both property
risk (covering the risk of theft or damage to the car) and liability risk (covering legal claims from causing an
accident). A homeowner's insurance policy in the U.S. typically includes property insurance covering damage to the
home and the owner's belongings, liability insurance covering certain legal claims against the owner, and even a
small amount of coverage for medical expenses of guests who are injured on the owner's property.
Business insurance can be any kind of insurance that protects businesses against risks. Some principal subtypes of
business insurance are (a) the various kinds of professional liability insurance, also called professional indemnity
insurance, which are discussed below under that name; and (b) the business owner's policy (BOP), which bundles
into one policy many of the kinds of coverage that a business owner needs, in a way analogous to how homeowners
insurance bundles the coverages that a homeowner needs.[16]

Auto insurance
Auto insurance protects you against financial loss if you have an
accident.
Auto insurance provides property, liability and medical coverage:
1. Property coverage pays for damage to or theft of the car.
2. Liability coverage pays for the legal responsibility to others for
bodily injury or property damage.
3. Medical coverage pays for the cost of treating injuries,
rehabilitation and sometimes lost wages and funeral expenses. A wrecked vehicle
Most countries require you to buy some, but not all, of these coverages.
When a car is used as collateral for a loan the lender usually requires specific coverage. Most auto policies are for six
months to a year.

Home insurance
Home insurance provides compensation for damage or destruction of a home from disasters. In some geographical
areas, the standard insurances exclude certain types of disasters, such as flood and earthquakes, that require
additional coverage. Maintenance-related problems are the homeowners' responsibility. The policy may include
inventory, or this can be bought as a separate policy, especially for people who rent housing. In some countries,
insurers offer a package which may include liability and legal responsibility for injuries and property damage caused
by members of the household, including pets.[17]
Insurance 40

Health
Health insurance policies by the National Health Service in the United
Kingdom (NHS) or other publicly-funded health programs will cover
the cost of medical treatments. Dental insurance, like medical
insurance, is coverage for individuals to protect them against dental
costs. In the U.S. and Canada, dental insurance is often part of an
employer's benefits package, along with health insurance.

Accident, Sickness and Unemployment Insurance


• Disability insurance policies provide financial support in the event NHS Facility
the policyholder is unable to work because of disabling illness or
injury. It provides monthly support to help pay such obligations as mortgage loans and credit cards. Short-term
and long-term disability policies are available to individuals, but considering the expense, long-term policies are
generally obtained only by those with at least six-figure incomes, such as doctors, lawyers, etc. Short-term
disability insurance covers a person for a period generally up to six months, paying a stipend each month to cover
medical bills and other necessities.
• Long-term disability insurance covers an individual's expenses for the long term, up until such time as they are
considered permanently disabled and thereafter. Insurance companies will often try to find other ways to employ
the person and reintegrate them back into the work force in preference to and before declaring them unable to
work at all and therefore totally disabled. Insurance companies, for obvious reasons, frequently go to great
lengths, including undercover surveillance via videocam and repeated independent medical evaluations by
company doctors, in hopes of avoiding the necessity of paying permanent disability stipends to a claimant.
• Disability overhead insurance allows business owners to cover the overhead expenses of their business while they
are unable to work.
• Total permanent disability insurance provides benefits when a person is permanently disabled and can no longer
work in their profession, often taken as an adjunct to life insurance.
• Workers' compensation insurance replaces all or part of a worker's wages lost and accompanying medical
expenses incurred because of a job-related injury.

Casualty
Casualty insurance insures against accidents, not necessarily tied to any specific property.
• Crime insurance is a form of casualty insurance that covers the policyholder against losses arising from the
criminal acts of third parties. For example, a company can obtain crime insurance to cover losses arising from
theft or embezzlement.
• Political risk insurance is a form of casualty insurance that can be taken out by businesses with operations in
countries in which there is a risk that revolution or other political conditions will result in a loss.
Insurance 41

Life
Life insurance provides a monetary benefit to a decedent's family or other designated beneficiary, and may
specifically provide for income to an insured person's family, burial, funeral and other final expenses. Life insurance
policies often allow the option of having the proceeds paid to the beneficiary either in a lump sum cash payment or
an annuity.
Annuities provide a stream of payments and are generally classified as insurance because they are issued by
insurance companies and regulated as insurance and require the same kinds of actuarial and investment management
expertise that life insurance requires. Annuities and pensions that pay a benefit for life are sometimes regarded as
insurance against the possibility that a retiree will outlive his or her financial resources. In that sense, they are the
complement of life insurance and, from an underwriting perspective, are the mirror image of life insurance.
Certain life insurance contracts accumulate cash values, which may be taken by the insured if the policy is
surrendered or which may be borrowed against. Some policies, such as annuities and endowment policies, are
financial instruments to accumulate or liquidate wealth when it is needed.
In many countries, such as the U.S. and the UK, the tax law provides that the interest on this cash value is not taxable
under certain circumstances. This leads to widespread use of life insurance as a tax-efficient method of saving as
well as protection in the event of early death.
In U.S., the tax on interest income on life insurance policies and annuities is generally deferred. However, in some
cases the benefit derived from tax deferral may be offset by a low return. This depends upon the insuring company,
the type of policy and other variables (mortality, market return, etc.). Moreover, other income tax saving vehicles
(e.g., IRAs, 401(k) plans, Roth IRAs) may be better alternatives for value accumulation.

Property
Property insurance provides protection against risks to property, such
as fire, theft or weather damage. This includes specialized forms of
insurance such as fire insurance, flood insurance, earthquake insurance,
home insurance, inland marine insurance or boiler insurance.
• Automobile insurance, known in the UK as motor insurance, is
probably the most common form of insurance and may cover both
legal liability claims against the driver and loss of or damage to the
insured's vehicle itself. Throughout the United States an auto
This tornado damage to an Illinois home would
insurance policy is required to legally operate a motor vehicle on be considered an "Act of God" for insurance
public roads. In some jurisdictions, bodily injury compensation for purposes
automobile accident victims has been changed to a no-fault system,
which reduces or eliminates the ability to sue for compensation but provides automatic eligibility for benefits.
Credit card companies insure against damage on rented cars.

• Driving School Insurance provides cover for any authorized driver whilst undergoing tuition, cover also unlike
other motor policies provides cover for instructor liability where both the pupil and driving instructor are
equally liable in the event of a claim.
• Aviation insurance insures against hull, spares, deductibles, hull wear and liability risks.
• Boiler insurance (also known as boiler and machinery insurance or equipment breakdown insurance) insures
against accidental physical damage to equipment or machinery.
• Builder's risk insurance insures against the risk of physical loss or damage to property during construction.
Builder's risk insurance is typically written on an "all risk" basis covering damage due to any cause (including the
negligence of the insured) not otherwise expressly excluded. Builder's risk insurance is coverage that protects a
person's or organization's insurable interest in materials, fixtures and/or equipment being used in the construction
Insurance 42

or renovation of a building or structure should those items sustain physical loss or damage from a covered
cause.[18]
• Crop insurance "Farmers use crop insurance to reduce or manage various risks associated with growing crops.
Such risks include crop loss or damage caused by weather, hail, drought, frost damage, insects, or disease, for
instance."[19]
• Earthquake insurance is a form of property insurance that pays the policyholder in the event of an earthquake that
causes damage to the property. Most ordinary homeowners insurance policies do not cover earthquake damage.
Most earthquake insurance policies feature a high deductible. Rates depend on location and the probability of an
earthquake, as well as the construction of the home.
• A fidelity bond is a form of casualty insurance that covers policyholders for losses that they incur as a result of
fraudulent acts by specified individuals. It usually insures a business for losses caused by the dishonest acts of its
employees.
• Flood insurance protects against property loss due to flooding. Many insurers in the U.S. do not provide flood
insurance in some portions of the country. In response to this, the federal government created the National Flood
Insurance Program which serves as the insurer of last resort.
• Home insurance, also commonly called hazard insurance or homeowners insurance (often abbreviated in the real
estate industry as HOI), is the type of property insurance that covers private homes.
• Landlord insurance covers residential and commercial properties which are rented to others. Most homeowner's
insurance covers only owner-occupied homes.
• Marine insurance and marine cargo insurance cover the loss or damage of ships at sea or on inland waterways,
and of cargo in transit, regardless of the method of transit. When the owner of the cargo and the carrier are
separate corporations, marine cargo insurance typically compensates the owner of cargo for losses sustained from
fire, shipwreck, etc., but excludes losses that can be recovered from the carrier or the carrier's insurance. Many
marine insurance underwriters will include "time element" coverage in such policies, which extends the indemnity
to cover loss of profit and other business expenses attributable to the delay caused by a covered loss.
• Supplemental natural disaster insurance covers specified expenses after a natural disaster renders the
policyholder's home uninhabitable. Periodic payments are made directly to the insured until the home is rebuilt or
a specified time period has elapsed.
• Surety bond insurance is a three party insurance guaranteeing the performance of the principal.
• Terrorism insurance provides protection against any loss or damage caused by terrorist activities.
• Volcano insurance is an insurance that covers volcano damage in Hawaii.
• Windstorm insurance is an insurance covering the damage that can be caused by hurricanes and tropical cyclones.

Liability
Liability insurance is a very broad superset that covers legal claims against the insured. Many types of insurance
include an aspect of liability coverage. For example, a homeowner's insurance policy will normally include liability
coverage which protects the insured in the event of a claim brought by someone who slips and falls on the property;
automobile insurance also includes an aspect of liability insurance that indemnifies against the harm that a crashing
car can cause to others' lives, health, or property. The protection offered by a liability insurance policy is twofold: a
legal defense in the event of a lawsuit commenced against the policyholder and indemnification (payment on behalf
of the insured) with respect to a settlement or court verdict. Liability policies typically cover only the negligence of
the insured, and will not apply to results of wilful or intentional acts by the insured.
• Public liability insurance covers a business against claims should its operations injure a member of the public or
damage their property in some way.
• Directors and officers liability insurance protects an organization (usually a corporation) from costs associated
with litigation resulting from mistakes made by directors and officers for which they are liable. In the industry, it
is usually called "D&O" for short.
Insurance 43

• Environmental liability insurance protects the insured from bodily injury, property damage and cleanup costs as a
result of the dispersal, release or escape of pollutants.
• Errors and omissions insurance: See "Professional liability insurance" under "Liability insurance".
• Prize indemnity insurance protects the insured from giving away a large prize at a specific event. Examples would
include offering prizes to contestants who can make a half-court shot at a basketball game, or a hole-in-one at a
golf tournament.
• Professional liability insurance, also called professional indemnity insurance, protects insured professionals such
as architectural corporation and medical practice against potential negligence claims made by their
patients/clients. Professional liability insurance may take on different names depending on the profession. For
example, professional liability insurance in reference to the medical profession may be called malpractice
insurance. Notaries public may take out errors and omissions insurance (E&O). Other potential E&O
policyholders include, for example, real estate brokers, Insurance agents, home inspectors, appraisers, and website
developers.

Credit
Credit insurance repays some or all of a loan when certain things happen to the borrower such as unemployment,
disability, or death.
• Mortgage insurance insures the lender against default by the borrower. Mortgage insurance is a form of credit
insurance, although the name credit insurance more often is used to refer to policies that cover other kinds of
debt.
• Many credit cards offer payment protection plans which are a form of credit insurance.

Other types
• All-risk insurance is an insurance that covers a wide-range of incidents and perils, except those noted in the
policy. All-risk insurance is different from peril-specific insurance that cover losses from only those perils listed
in the policy.[20] In car insurance, all-risk policy includes also the damages caused by the own driver.
• Business interruption insurance covers the loss of income, and the expenses occurred, after a covered peril
interrupts normal business operations.
• Collateral protection insurance or CPI, insures property (primarily vehicles) held as collateral for loans made by
lending institutions.
• Defense Base Act Workers' compensation or DBA Insurance provides coverage for civilian workers hired by the
government to perform contracts outside the U.S. and Canada. DBA is required for all U.S. citizens, U.S.
residents, U.S. Green Card holders, and all employees or subcontractors hired on overseas government contracts.
Depending on the country, Foreign Nationals must also be covered under DBA. This coverage typically includes
expenses related to medical treatment and loss of wages, as well as disability and death benefits.
• Expatriate insurance provides individuals and organizations operating outside of their home country with
protection for automobiles, property, health, liability and business pursuits.
• Financial loss insurance or Business Interruption Insurance protects individuals and companies against various
financial risks. For example, a business might purchase coverage to protect it from loss of sales if a fire in a
factory prevented it from carrying out its business for a time. Insurance might also cover the failure of a creditor
to pay money it owes to the insured. This type of insurance is frequently referred to as "business interruption
insurance." Fidelity bonds and surety bonds are included in this category, although these products provide a
benefit to a third party (the "obligee") in the event the insured party (usually referred to as the "obligor") fails to
perform its obligations under a contract with the obligee.
• Kidnap and ransom insurance
• Legal expenses insurance covers policyholders against the potential costs of legal action against an institution or
an individual. When something happens which triggers the need for legal action, it is known as ‘the event'. There
Insurance 44

are two main types of legal expenses insurance, Before the event insurance and After the event insurance.
• Locked funds insurance is a little-known hybrid insurance policy jointly issued by governments and banks. It is
used to protect public funds from tamper by unauthorized parties. In special cases, a government may authorize
its use in protecting semi-private funds which are liable to tamper. The terms of this type of insurance are usually
very strict. Therefore it is used only in extreme cases where maximum security of funds is required.
• Media Insurance is designed to cover professionals that engage in film, video and TV production.
• Nuclear incident insurance covers damages resulting from an incident involving radioactive materials and is
generally arranged at the national level. See the Nuclear exclusion clause and for the United States the
Price-Anderson Nuclear Industries Indemnity Act)
• Pet insurance insures pets against accidents and illnesses - some companies cover routine/wellness care and
burial, as well.
• Pollution Insurance which consists of first-party coverage for contamination of insured property either by external
or on-site sources. Coverage for liability to third parties arising from contamination of air, water, or land due to
the sudden and accidental release of hazardous materials from the insured site. The policy usually covers the costs
of cleanup and may include coverage for releases from underground storage tanks. Intentional acts are specifically
excluded.
• Purchase insurance is aimed at providing protection on the products people purchase. Purchase insurance can
cover individual purchase protection, warranties, guarantees, care plans and even mobile phone insurance. Such
insurance is normally very limited in the scope of problems that are covered by the policy.
• Title insurance provides a guarantee that title to real property is vested in the purchaser and/or mortgagee, free
and clear of liens or encumbrances. It is usually issued in conjunction with a search of the public records
performed at the time of a real estate transaction.
• Travel insurance is an insurance cover taken by those who travel abroad, which covers certain losses such as
medical expenses, loss of personal belongings, travel delay, personal liabilities, etc.

Insurance financing vehicles


• Fraternal insurance is provided on a cooperative basis by fraternal benefit societies or other social
organizations.[21]
• No-fault insurance is a type of insurance policy (typically automobile insurance) where insureds are indemnified
by their own insurer regardless of fault in the incident.
• Protected Self-Insurance is an alternative risk financing mechanism in which an organization retains the
mathematically calculated cost of risk within the organization and transfers the catastrophic risk with specific and
aggregate limits to an insurer so the maximum total cost of the program is known. A properly designed and
underwritten Protected Self-Insurance Program reduces and stabilizes the cost of insurance and provides valuable
risk management information.
• Retrospectively Rated Insurance is a method of establishing a premium on large commercial accounts. The final
premium is based on the insured's actual loss experience during the policy term, sometimes subject to a minimum
and maximum premium, with the final premium determined by a formula. Under this plan, the current year's
premium is based partially (or wholly) on the current year's losses, although the premium adjustments may take
months or years beyond the current year's expiration date. The rating formula is guaranteed in the insurance
contract. Formula: retrospective premium = converted loss + basic premium × tax multiplier. Numerous
variations of this formula have been developed and are in use.
• Formal self insurance is the deliberate decision to pay for otherwise insurable losses out of one's own money. This
can be done on a formal basis by establishing a separate fund into which funds are deposited on a periodic basis,
or by simply forgoing the purchase of available insurance and paying out-of-pocket. Self insurance is usually used
to pay for high-frequency, low-severity losses. Such losses, if covered by conventional insurance, mean having to
pay a premium that includes loadings for the company's general expenses, cost of putting the policy on the books,
Insurance 45

acquisition expenses, premium taxes, and contingencies. While this is true for all insurance, for small, frequent
losses the transaction costs may exceed the benefit of volatility reduction that insurance otherwise affords.
• Reinsurance is a type of insurance purchased by insurance companies or self-insured employers to protect against
unexpected losses. Financial reinsurance is a form of reinsurance that is primarily used for capital management
rather than to transfer insurance risk.
• Social insurance can be many things to many people in many countries. But a summary of its essence is that it is a
collection of insurance coverages (including components of life insurance, disability income insurance,
unemployment insurance, health insurance, and others), plus retirement savings, that requires participation by all
citizens. By forcing everyone in society to be a policyholder and pay premiums, it ensures that everyone can
become a claimant when or if he/she needs to. Along the way this inevitably becomes related to other concepts
such as the justice system and the welfare state. This is a large, complicated topic that engenders tremendous
debate, which can be further studied in the following articles (and others):
• National Insurance
• Social safety net
• Social security
• Social Security debate (United States)
• Social Security (United States)
• Social welfare provision
• Stop-loss insurance provides protection against catastrophic or unpredictable losses. It is purchased by
organizations who do not want to assume 100% of the liability for losses arising from the plans. Under a stop-loss
policy, the insurance company becomes liable for losses that exceed certain limits called deductibles.

Closed community self-insurance


Some communities prefer to create virtual insurance amongst themselves by other means than contractual risk
transfer, which assigns explicit numerical values to risk. A number of religious groups, including the Amish and
some Muslim groups, depend on support provided by their communities when disasters strike. The risk presented by
any given person is assumed collectively by the community who all bear the cost of rebuilding lost property and
supporting people whose needs are suddenly greater after a loss of some kind. In supportive communities where
others can be trusted to follow community leaders, this tacit form of insurance can work. In this manner the
community can even out the extreme differences in insurability that exist among its members. Some further
justification is also provided by invoking the moral hazard of explicit insurance contracts.
In the United Kingdom, The Crown (which, for practical purposes, meant the Civil service) did not insure property
such as government buildings. If a government building was damaged, the cost of repair would be met from public
funds because, in the long run, this was cheaper than paying insurance premiums. Since many UK government
buildings have been sold to property companies, and rented back, this arrangement is now less common and may
have disappeared altogether.
Insurance 46

Insurance companies
Insurance companies may be classified into two groups:
• Life insurance companies, which sell life insurance, annuities and pensions products.
• Non-life, General, or Property/Casualty insurance companies, which sell other types of insurance.
General insurance companies can be further divided into these sub categories.
• Standard Lines
• Excess Lines
In most countries, life and non-life insurers are subject to different regulatory regimes and different tax and
accounting rules. The main reason for the distinction between the two types of company is that life, annuity, and
pension business is very long-term in nature — coverage for life assurance or a pension can cover risks over many
decades. By contrast, non-life insurance cover usually covers a shorter period, such as one year.
In the United States, standard line insurance companies are "mainstream" insurers. These are the companies that
typically insure autos, homes or businesses. They use pattern or "cookie-cutter" policies without variation from one
person to the next. They usually have lower premiums than excess lines and can sell directly to individuals. They are
regulated by state laws that can restrict the amount they can charge for insurance policies.
Excess line insurance companies (also known as Excess and Surplus) typically insure risks not covered by the
standard lines market. They are broadly referred as being all insurance placed with non-admitted insurers.
Non-admitted insurers are not licensed in the states where the risks are located. These companies have more
flexibility and can react faster than standard insurance companies because they are not required to file rates and
forms as the "admitted" carriers do. However, they still have substantial regulatory requirements placed upon them.
State laws generally require insurance placed with surplus line agents and brokers not to be available through
standard licensed insurers.
Insurance companies are generally classified as either mutual or stock companies. Mutual companies are owned by
the policyholders, while stockholders (who may or may not own policies) own stock insurance companies.
Demutualization of mutual insurers to form stock companies, as well as the formation of a hybrid known as a mutual
holding company, became common in some countries, such as the United States, in the late 20th century.
Other possible forms for an insurance company include reciprocals, in which policyholders 'reciprocate' in sharing
risks, and Lloyd's organizations.
Insurance companies are rated by various agencies such as A. M. Best. The ratings include the company's financial
strength, which measures its ability to pay claims. It also rates financial instruments issued by the insurance
company, such as bonds, notes, and securitization products.
Reinsurance companies are insurance companies that sell policies to other insurance companies, allowing them to
reduce their risks and protect themselves from very large losses. The reinsurance market is dominated by a few very
large companies, with huge reserves. A reinsurer may also be a direct writer of insurance risks as well.
Captive insurance companies may be defined as limited-purpose insurance companies established with the specific
objective of financing risks emanating from their parent group or groups. This definition can sometimes be extended
to include some of the risks of the parent company's customers. In short, it is an in-house self-insurance vehicle.
Captives may take the form of a "pure" entity (which is a 100% subsidiary of the self-insured parent company); of a
"mutual" captive (which insures the collective risks of members of an industry); and of an "association" captive
(which self-insures individual risks of the members of a professional, commercial or industrial association). Captives
represent commercial, economic and tax advantages to their sponsors because of the reductions in costs they help
create and for the ease of insurance risk management and the flexibility for cash flows they generate. Additionally,
they may provide coverage of risks which is neither available nor offered in the traditional insurance market at
reasonable prices.
Insurance 47

The types of risk that a captive can underwrite for their parents include property damage, public and product
liability, professional indemnity, employee benefits, employers' liability, motor and medical aid expenses. The
captive's exposure to such risks may be limited by the use of reinsurance.
Captives are becoming an increasingly important component of the risk management and risk financing strategy of
their parent. This can be understood against the following background:
• heavy and increasing premium costs in almost every line of coverage;
• difficulties in insuring certain types of fortuitous risk;
• differential coverage standards in various parts of the world;
• rating structures which reflect market trends rather than individual loss experience;
• insufficient credit for deductibles and/or loss control efforts.
There are also companies known as 'insurance consultants'. Like a mortgage broker, these companies are paid a fee
by the customer to shop around for the best insurance policy amongst many companies. Similar to an insurance
consultant, an 'insurance broker' also shops around for the best insurance policy amongst many companies. However,
with insurance brokers, the fee is usually paid in the form of commission from the insurer that is selected rather than
directly from the client.
Neither insurance consultants nor insurance brokers are insurance companies and no risks are transferred to them in
insurance transactions. Third party administrators are companies that perform underwriting and sometimes claims
handling services for insurance companies. These companies often have special expertise that the insurance
companies do not have.
The financial stability and strength of an insurance company should be a major consideration when buying an
insurance contract. An insurance premium paid currently provides coverage for losses that might arise many years in
the future. For that reason, the viability of the insurance carrier is very important. In recent years, a number of
insurance companies have become insolvent, leaving their policyholders with no coverage (or coverage only from a
government-backed insurance pool or other arrangement with less attractive payouts for losses). A number of
independent rating agencies provide information and rate the financial viability of insurance companies.

Across the world


Global insurance premiums grew by 3.4% in 2008 to reach $4.3
trillion. For the first time in the past three decades, premium income
declined in inflation-adjusted terms, with non-life premiums falling by
0.8% and life premiums falling by 3.5%. The insurance industry is
exposed to the global economic downturn on the assets side by the
decline in returns on investments and on the liabilities side by a rise in Life insurance premiums written in 2005
claims. So far the extent of losses on both sides has been limited
although investment returns fell sharply following the bankruptcy of
Lehman Brothers and bailout of AIG in September 2008. The financial
crisis has shown that the insurance sector is sufficiently capitalised.
The vast majority of insurance companies had enough capital to absorb
losses and only a small number turned to government for support.
Advanced economies account for the bulk of global insurance. With
premium income of $1,753bn, Europe was the most important region Non-life insurance premiums written in 2005

in 2008, followed by North America $1,346bn and Asia $933bn. The


top four countries generated more than a half of premiums. The US and Japan alone accounted for 40% of world
insurance, much higher than their 7% share of the global population. Emerging markets accounted for over 85% of
the world’s population but generated only around 10% of premiums. Their markets are however growing at a quicker
Insurance 48

pace.[22]

Regulatory differences
In the United States, insurance is regulated by the states under the McCarran-Ferguson Act, with "periodic proposals
for federal intervention", and a nonprofit coalition of state insurance agencies called the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners works to harmonize the country's different laws and regulations.[23] The National
Conference of Insurance Legislators (NCOIL) also works to harmonize the different state laws.[24]
In the European Union, the Third Non-Life Directive and the Third Life Directive, both passed in 1992 and effective
1994, created a single insurance market in Europe and allowed insurance companies to offer insurance anywhere in
the EU (subject to permission from authority in the head office) and allowed insurance consumers to purchase
insurance from any insurer in the EU.[25]

Controversies

Religious concerns
Muslim scholars have varying opinions about insurance. Insurance policies that earn interest are generally
considered to be a form of riba[26] (usury) and some consider even policies that do not earn interest to be a form of
gharar (speculation). Some argue that gharar is not present due to the actuarial science behind the underwriting.[27]
Jewish rabbinical scholars also have expressed reservations regarding insurance as an avoidance of God's will but
most find it acceptable in moderation.[28]
Some Christians believe insurance represents a lack of faith[29] and there is a long history of resistance to
commercial insurance in Anabaptist communities (Mennonites, Amish, Hutterites, Brethren in Christ) but many
participate in community-based self-insurance programs that spread risk within their communities.[30] [31] [32]

Insurance insulates too much


By creating a "security blanket" for its insureds, an insurance company may inadvertently find that its insureds may
not be as risk-averse as they might otherwise be (since, by definition, the insured has transferred the risk to the
insurer), a concept known as moral hazard. To reduce their own financial exposure, insurance companies have
contractual clauses that mitigate their obligation to provide coverage if the insured engages in behavior that grossly
magnifies their risk of loss or liability.
For example, life insurance companies may require higher premiums or deny coverage altogether to people who
work in hazardous occupations or engage in dangerous sports. Liability insurance providers do not provide coverage
for liability arising from intentional torts committed by or at the direction of the insured. Even if a provider were so
irrational as to want to provide such coverage, it is against the public policy of most countries to allow such
insurance to exist, and thus it is usually illegal.
Insurance 49

Complexity of insurance policy contracts


Insurance policies can be complex and some policyholders may not understand all the fees and coverages included in
a policy. As a result, people may buy policies on unfavorable terms. In response to these issues, many countries have
enacted detailed statutory and regulatory regimes governing every aspect of the insurance business, including
minimum standards for policies and the ways in which they may be advertised and sold.
For example, most insurance policies in the English language today have been carefully drafted in plain English; the
industry learned the hard way that many courts will not enforce policies against insureds when the judges themselves
cannot understand what the policies are saying. Typically, courts construe ambiguities in insurance policies against
the insurance company and in favor of coverage under the policy.
Many institutional insurance purchasers buy insurance through an insurance broker. While on the surface it appears
the broker represents the buyer (not the insurance company), and typically counsels the buyer on appropriate
coverage and policy limitations, it should be noted that in the vast majority of cases a broker's compensation comes
in the form of a commission as a percentage of the insurance premium, creating a conflict of interest in that the
broker's financial interest is tilted towards encouraging an insured to purchase more insurance than might be
necessary at a higher price. A broker generally holds contracts with many insurers, thereby allowing the broker to
"shop" the market for the best rates and coverage possible.
Insurance may also be purchased through an agent. Unlike a broker, who represents the policyholder, an agent
represents the insurance company from whom the policyholder buys. An agent can represent more than one
company.
An independent insurance consultant advises insureds on a fee-for-service retainer, similar to an attorney, and thus
offers completely independent advice, free of the financial conflict of interest of brokers and/or agents. However,
such a consultant must still work through brokers and/or agents in order to secure coverage for their clients.

Redlining
Redlining is the practice of denying insurance coverage in specific geographic areas, supposedly because of a high
likelihood of loss, while the alleged motivation is unlawful discrimination. Racial profiling or redlining has a long
history in the property insurance industry in the United States. From a review of industry underwriting and
marketing materials, court documents, and research by government agencies, industry and community groups, and
academics, it is clear that race has long affected and continues to affect the policies and practices of the insurance
industry.[33]
In July, 2007, The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) released a report presenting the results of a study concerning
credit-based insurance scores in automobile insurance. The study found that these scores are effective predictors of
risk. It also showed that African-Americans and Hispanics are substantially overrepresented in the lowest credit
scores, and substantially underrepresented in the highest, while Caucasians and Asians are more evenly spread across
the scores. The credit scores were also found to predict risk within each of the ethnic groups, leading the FTC to
conclude that the scoring models are not solely proxies for redlining. The FTC indicated little data was available to
evaluate benefit of insurance scores to consumers. [34] The report was disputed by representatives of the Consumer
Federation of America, the National Fair Housing Alliance, the National Consumer Law Center, and the Center for
Economic Justice, for relying on data provided by the insurance industry. [35]
All states have provisions in their rate regulation laws or in their fair trade practice acts that prohibit unfair
discrimination, often called redlining, in setting rates and making insurance available.[36]
In determining premiums and premium rate structures, insurers consider quantifiable factors, including location,
credit scores, gender, occupation, marital status, and education level. However, the use of such factors is often
considered to be unfair or unlawfully discriminatory, and the reaction against this practice has in some instances led
to political disputes about the ways in which insurers determine premiums and regulatory intervention to limit the
Insurance 50

factors used.
An insurance underwriter's job is to evaluate a given risk as to the likelihood that a loss will occur. Any factor that
causes a greater likelihood of loss should theoretically be charged a higher rate. This basic principle of insurance
must be followed if insurance companies are to remain solvent. Thus, "discrimination" against (i.e., negative
differential treatment of) potential insureds in the risk evaluation and premium-setting process is a necessary
by-product of the fundamentals of insurance underwriting. For instance, insurers charge older people significantly
higher premiums than they charge younger people for term life insurance. Older people are thus treated differently
than younger people (i.e., a distinction is made, discrimination occurs). The rationale for the differential treatment
goes to the heart of the risk a life insurer takes: Old people are likely to die sooner than young people, so the risk of
loss (the insured's death) is greater in any given period of time and therefore the risk premium must be higher to
cover the greater risk. However, treating insureds differently when there is no actuarially sound reason for doing so
is unlawful discrimination.
What is often missing from the debate is that prohibiting the use of legitimate, actuarially sound factors means that
an insufficient amount is being charged for a given risk, and there is thus a deficit in the system. The failure to
address the deficit may mean insolvency and hardship for all of a company's insureds. The options for addressing the
deficit seem to be the following: Charge the deficit to the other policyholders or charge it to the government (i.e.,
externalize outside of the company to society at large).

Insurance patents
New assurance products can now be protected from copying with a business method patent in the United States.
A recent example of a new insurance product that is patented is Usage Based auto insurance. Early versions were
independently invented and patented by a major U.S. auto insurance company, Progressive Auto Insurance (U.S.
Patent 5797134 [37]) and a Spanish independent inventor, Salvador Minguijon Perez (EP patent 0700009 [38]).
Many independent inventors are in favor of patenting new insurance products since it gives them protection from big
companies when they bring their new insurance products to market. Independent inventors account for 70% of the
new U.S. patent applications in this area.
Many insurance executives are opposed to patenting insurance products because it creates a new risk for them. The
Hartford insurance company, for example, recently had to pay $80 million to an independent inventor, Bancorp
Services, in order to settle a patent infringement and theft of trade secret lawsuit for a type of corporate owned life
insurance product invented and patented by Bancorp.
There are currently about 150 new patent applications on insurance inventions filed per year in the United States.
The rate at which patents have issued has steadily risen from 15 in 2002 to 44 in 2006.[39]
Inventors can now have their insurance U.S. patent applications reviewed by the public in the Peer to Patent
program.[40] The first insurance patent application to be posted was US2009005522 “Risk assessment company” [41].
It was posted on March 6, 2009. This patent application describes a method for increasing the ease of changing
insurance companies.[42]

The insurance industry and rent seeking


Certain insurance products and practices have been described as rent seeking by critics. That is, some insurance
products or practices are useful primarily because of legal benefits, such as reducing taxes, as opposed to providing
protection against risks of adverse events. Under United States tax law, for example, most owners of variable
annuities and variable life insurance can invest their premium payments in the stock market and defer or eliminate
paying any taxes on their investments until withdrawals are made. Sometimes this tax deferral is the only reason
people use these products. Another example is the legal infrastructure which allows life insurance to be held in an
irrevocable trust which is used to pay an estate tax while the proceeds themselves are immune from the estate tax.
Insurance 51

See also
• ACORD
• Agent of Record
• Earthquake loss
• Financial services (broader industry to which insurance belongs)
• Five for One
• Geneva Association, The (the International Association for the Study of Insurance Economics)
• Global assets under management
• Insurance fraud
• Insurance Hall of Fame
• Insurance law
• Insurance Premium Tax (UK)
• Intergovernmental Risk Pool
• The Invisible Bankers: Everything the Insurance Industry Never Wanted You to Know (book)
• List of finance topics
• List of insurance topics
• List of United States insurance companies
• Social security
• Uberrima fides
• Universal health care
• Welfare state
Country Specific Articles
• Insurance in Australia
• Insurance in India
• Insurance in the United States
• Insurance in the United Kingdom

Notes
[1] Gollier C. (2003). To Insure or Not to Insure?: An Insurance Puzzle (http:/ / dhenriet. perso. egim-mrs. fr/ gollier. pdf). The Geneva Papers
on Risk and Insurance Theory.
[2] This discussion is adapted from Mehr and Camack “Principles of Insurance”, 6th edition, 1976, pp 34 – 37.
[3] Irish Brokers Association. Insurance Principles (https:/ / www. iba. ie/ development2009/ index. php?option=com_content& view=article&
id=76& Itemid=167).
[4] C. Kulp & J. Hall, Casualty Insurance, Fourth Edition, 1968, page 35
[5] However, bankruptcy of the insured does not relieve the insurer. Certain types of insurance, e.g., workers' compensation and personal
automobile, are subject to statutory requirements that injured parties have direct access to coverage.
[6] Dembe AE, Boden LI. (2000). Moral hazard: A question of morality? (http:/ / baywood. metapress. com/ index/ 1GU8EQN802J62RXK. pdf).
New Solutions.
[7] Kunreuther H. (1996). Mitigating Disaster Losses Through Insurance (http:/ / opim. wharton. upenn. edu/ risk/ downloads/ archive/ arch167.
pdf). Journal of Risk and Uncertainty.
[8] Feldstein, Sylvan G.; Fabozzi, Frank J. (2008). The Handbook of Municipal Bonds (http:/ / books. google. com/ books?id=Juc4fb1Fx1cC&
lpg=PA614& ots=IryMrWB21p& pg=PA614#v=onepage& f=false). Wiley. p. 614. ISBN 978-0470108758. . Retrieved February 8, 2010.
[9] http:/ / www. abi. org. uk/ About_The_ABI/ role. aspx
[10] Fitzpatrick, Sean, Fear is the Key: A Behavioral Guide to Underwriting Cycles, (http:/ / ssrn. com/ abstract=690316) 10 Conn. Ins. L.J. 255
(2004).
[11] See, e.g., Vaughan, E. J., 1997, Risk Management, New York: Wiley.
[12] http:/ / www. iran-law. com/ article. php3?id_article=61
[13] "And whereas I have left in the hands of Doctor Ducke Channcellor of London two pollicies of insurance the one of one hundred pounds for
the safe arivall of our Shipp in Guiana which is in mine owne name, if we miscarry by the waie (which God forbid) I bequeath the advantage
thereof to my said Cosin Thomas Muchell...whereas there is an other insurance of one hundred pounds assured by the said Doctor Arthur
Insurance 52

Ducke on my life for one yeare if I chance to die within that tyme I entreat the said doctor Ducke to make it over to the said Thomas Muchell
his kinsman..." Will of Robert Hayman, 1628:Records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Catalogue Reference PROB 11/163
[14] Dickson (1960): 4
[15] Dickson (1960): 7
[16] Insurance Information Institute. "Business insurance information. What does a businessowners policy cover?" (http:/ / www. iii. org/
individuals/ business/ basics/ bop/ ). . Retrieved 2007-05-09.
[17] Insurance Information Institute. "What is homeowners insurance?" (http:/ / www. iii. org/ individuals/ homei/ hbasics/ whatis/ ). . Retrieved
2008-11-11.
[18] "Builder's Risk Insurance" (http:/ / www. adjustersinternational. com/ AdjustingToday/ ATfullinfo. cfm?start=1& page_no=1& pdfID=4).
Adjusters International. . Retrieved 2009-10-16.
[19] U.S. Patent Application 20060287896 (http:/ / appft1. uspto. gov/ netacgi/ nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2& Sect2=HITOFF& p=1& u=/ netahtml/
PTO/ search-bool. html& r=1& f=G& l=50& co1=AND& d=PG01& s1=20060287896& OS=20060287896& RS=20060287896) (http:/ /
www. pat2pdf. org/ pat2pdf/ foo. pl?number=20060287896) “Method for providing crop insurance for a crop associated with a defined
attribute”
[20] http:/ / www. business. gov/ manage/ business-insurance/ insurance-types. html
[21] Margaret E. Lynch, Editor, "Health Insurance Terminology," Health Insurance Association of America, 1992, ISBN 1-879143-13-5
[22] http:/ / www. thecityuk. com/ media/ 2377/ Insurance_2009. pdfPDF (365 KB) page 2
[23] Randall S. (1998). Insurance Regulation in the United States: Regulatory Federalism and the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners (http:/ / www. law. fsu. edu/ Journals/ lawreview/ downloads/ 263/ rand. pdf). FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY LAW
REVIEW.
[24] J Schacht, B Foudree. (2007). A Study on State Authority: Making a Case for Proper Insurance Oversight (http:/ / www. ncoil. org/ policy/
Docs/ 2007/ ILFStudy. pdf). NCOIL
[25] CJ Campbell, L Goldberg, A Rai. (2003). The Impact of the European Union Insurance Directives on Insurance Company Stocks (http:/ /
people. hofstra. edu/ Anoop_Rai/ research/ JORI70-1Campbell. pdf). The Journal of Risk and Insurance.
[26] "Islam Question and Answer - The true nature of insurance and the rulings concerning it" (http:/ / islamqa. com/ en/ ref/ 8889/ insurance). .
Retrieved 2010-01-18.
[27] "Life Insurance from an Islamic Perspective" (http:/ / www. islamonline. net/ servlet/
Satellite?pagename=IslamOnline-English-Ask_Scholar/ FatwaE/ FatwaE& cid=1119503543412). . Retrieved 2010-01-18.
[28] "Jewish Association for Business Ethics - Insurance" (http:/ / www. jabe. org/ insurance. html). . Retrieved 2008-03-25.
[29] "CIC Insurance - Insurance and the Church" (http:/ / www. cic. co. ke/ template/ t02. php?menuId=72). . Retrieved 2010-01-18.
[30] Rubinkam, Michael (October 5, 2006). "Amish Reluctantly Accept Donations" (http:/ / www. washingtonpost. com/ wp-dyn/ content/
article/ 2006/ 10/ 05/ AR2006100501360. html). The Washington Post. . Retrieved 2008-03-25.
[31] Donald B. Kraybill. The riddle of Amish culture. p. 277.
[32] "Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online, Insurance" (http:/ / www. gameo. org/ encyclopedia/ contents/ I583ME. html). .
Retrieved 2010-01-18.
[33] Gregory D. Squires (2003) Racial Profiling, Insurance Style: Insurance Redlining and the Uneven Development of Metropolitan Areas
Journal of Urban Affairs Volume 25 Issue 4 Page 391-410, November 2003
[34] Credit-Based Insurance Scores: Impacts on Consumers of Automobile Insurance, (http:/ / ftc. gov/ opa/ 2007/ 07/ facta. shtm) Federal Trade
Commission (July 2007)
[35] Consumers Dispute FTC Report on Insurance Credit Scoring (http:/ / www. consumeraffairs. com/ news04/ 2007/ 07/ insurance_credit.
html) www.consumeraffairs.com (July 2007)
[36] Insurance Information Institute. "Issues Update: Regulation Modernization" (http:/ / www. iii. org/ media/ hottopics/ insurance/ ratereg/ ). .
Retrieved 2008-11-11.
[37] http:/ / www. google. com/ patents?vid=5797134
[38] http:/ / v3. espacenet. com/ textdoc?DB=EPODOC& IDX=EP0700009
[39] (Source: Insurance IP Bulletin, December 15, 2006) (http:/ / marketsandpatents. com/ IPB-12152006. mht)
[40] Mark Nowotarski "Patent Q/A: Peer to Patent", Insurance IP Bulletin, August 15, 2008 (http:/ / www. marketsandpatents. com/ bulletin/
IPB-08152008. html)
[41] http:/ / www. peertopatent. org/ patent/ 20090055227/ activity
[42] Bakos, Nowotarski, “An Experiment in Better Patent Examination”, Insurance IP Bulletin, December 15, 2008 (http:/ / www.
marketsandpatents. com/ bulletin/ IPB-12152008. html)
Insurance 53

Bibliography
• Dickson, P.G.M. (1960). The Sun Insurance Office 1710-1960: The History of Two and a half Centuries of British
Insurance. London: Oxford University Press. pp. 324.

External links
• Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding the U.S. Insurance industry (http://digital.library.unt.
edu/govdocs/crs/search.tkl?type=subject&q=Insurance companies &q2=LIV)
• Federation of European Risk Management Associations (http://www.ferma.eu/)
• Insurance (http://www.dmoz.org/Home/Personal_Finance/Insurance/) at the Open Directory Project
• Insurance Bureau of Canada (http://www.ibc.ca/)
• Insurance Information Institute (http://www.iii.org/)
• Museum of Insurance (http://www.immediateannuities.com/museumofinsurance/) - displays thousands of
antique insurance policies and ephemera
• National Association of Insurance Commissioners (http://www.naic.org/)
• The British Library (http://www.bl.uk/collections/business/insurind.html) - finding information on the
insurance industry (UK bias)
54

Risk Management

Derivative
A derivative is a financial instrument - or more simply, an agreement between two people or two parties - that has a
value determined by the price of something else (called the underlying).[1] It is a financial contract with a value
linked to the expected future price movements of the asset it is linked to - such as a share, or a currency. There are
many kinds of derivatives, with the most notable being swaps, futures, and options.
Referring to derivatives as stand-alone assets would be a misconception, since a derivative is incapable of having
value of its own. However, some more commonplace derivatives, such as swaps, futures, and options, (which have a
theoretical face value that can be calculated using formulas, such as Black-Scholes), have been traded on markets
before their expiration date as if they were assets. Amongst the earlier derivatives, rice futures have been traded on
the Dojima Rice Exchange since 1710.

Categorization
Derivatives are usually broadly categorized by the:
• relationship between the underlying and the derivative (e.g., forward, option, swap)
• type of underlying (e.g., equity derivatives, foreign exchange derivatives, interest rate derivatives, commodity
derivatives or credit derivatives)
• market in which they trade (e.g., exchange-traded or over-the-counter)
• pay-off profile (Some derivatives have non-linear payoff diagrams due to embedded optionality)
Another arbitrary distinction is between:[2]
• vanilla derivatives (simple and more common) and
• exotic derivatives (more complicated and specialized)
There is no definitive rule for distinguishing one from the other, so the distinction is mostly a matter of custom.

Uses
Derivatives are used by investors to
• provide leverage or gearing, such that a small movement in the underlying value can cause a large difference in
the value of the derivative
• speculate and to make a profit if the value of the underlying asset moves the way they expect (e.g., moves in a
given direction, stays in or out of a specified range, reaches a certain level)
• hedge or mitigate risk in the underlying, by entering into a derivative contract whose value moves in the opposite
direction to their underlying position and cancels part or all of it out
• obtain exposure to underlying where it is not possible to trade in the underlying (e.g., weather derivatives)
• create option ability where the value of the derivative is linked to a specific condition or event (e.g., the
underlying reaching a specific price level)
Derivative 55

Hedging
Hedging is a technique that attempts to reduce risk. In this respect, derivatives can be considered a form of
insurance.
Derivatives allow risk about the price of the underlying asset to be transferred from one party to another. For
example, a wheat farmer and a miller could sign a futures contract to exchange a specified amount of cash for a
specified amount of wheat in the future. Both parties have reduced a future risk: for the wheat farmer, the uncertainty
of the price, and for the miller, the availability of wheat. However, there is still the risk that no wheat will be
available because of events unspecified by the contract, like the weather, or that one party will renege on the
contract. Although a third party, called a clearing house, insures a futures contract, not all derivatives are insured
against counter-party risk.
From another perspective, the farmer and the miller both reduce a risk and acquire a risk when they sign the futures
contract: The farmer reduces the risk that the price of wheat will fall below the price specified in the contract and
acquires the risk that the price of wheat will rise above the price specified in the contract (thereby losing additional
income that he could have earned). The miller, on the other hand, acquires the risk that the price of wheat will fall
below the price specified in the contract (thereby paying more in the future than he otherwise would) and reduces the
risk that the price of wheat will rise above the price specified in the contract. In this sense, one party is the insurer
(risk taker) for one type of risk, and the counter-party is the insurer (risk taker) for another type of risk.
Hedging also occurs when an individual or institution buys an asset (like a commodity, a bond that has coupon
payments, a stock that pays dividends, and so on) and sells it using a futures contract. The individual or institution
has access to the asset for a specified amount of time, and then can sell it in the future at a specified price according
to the futures contract. Of course, this allows the individual or institution the benefit of holding the asset while
reducing the risk that the future selling price will deviate unexpectedly from the market's current assessment of the
future value of the asset.
Derivatives serve a legitimate business purpose. For
example, a corporation borrows a large sum of money
at a specific interest rate.[3] The rate of interest on the
loan resets every six months. The corporation is
concerned that the rate of interest may be much higher
in six months. The corporation could buy a forward rate
agreement (FRA). A forward rate agreement is a
contract to pay a fixed rate of interest six months after
purchases on a notional sum of money.[4] If the interest
rate after six months is above the contract rate, the
seller pays the difference to the corporation, or FRA
buyer. If the rate is lower, the corporation would pay
Derivatives traders at the Chicago Board of Trade.
the difference to the seller. The purchase of the FRA
would serve to reduce the uncertainty concerning the
rate increase and stabilize earnings.

Speculation and arbitrage


Derivatives can be used to acquire risk, rather than to insure or hedge against risk. Thus, some individuals and
institutions will enter into a derivative contract to speculate on the value of the underlying asset, betting that the
party seeking insurance will be wrong about the future value of the underlying asset. Speculators will want to be able
to buy an asset in the future at a low price according to a derivative contract when the future market price is high, or
to sell an asset in the future at a high price according to a derivative contract when the future market price is low.
Derivative 56

Individuals and institutions may also look for arbitrage opportunities, as when the current buying price of an asset
falls below the price specified in a futures contract to sell the asset.
Speculative trading in derivatives gained a great deal of notoriety in 1995 when Nick Leeson, a trader at Barings
Bank, made poor and unauthorized investments in futures contracts. Through a combination of poor judgment, lack
of oversight by the bank's management and by regulators, and unfortunate events like the Kobe earthquake, Leeson
incurred a $1.3 billion loss that bankrupted the centuries-old institution.[5]

Types of derivatives

OTC and exchange-traded


In broad terms, there are two distinct groups of derivative contracts, which are distinguished by the way they are
traded in the market:
• Over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives are contracts that are traded (and privately negotiated) directly between
two parties, without going through an exchange or other intermediary. Products such as swaps, forward rate
agreements, and exotic options are almost always traded in this way. The OTC derivative market is the largest
market for derivatives, and is largely unregulated with respect to disclosure of information between the parties,
since the OTC market is made up of banks and other highly sophisticated parties, such as hedge funds. Reporting
of OTC amounts are difficult because trades can occur in private, without activity being visible on any exchange.
According to the Bank for International Settlements, the total outstanding notional amount is $684 trillion (as of
June 2008).[6] Of this total notional amount, 67% are interest rate contracts, 8% are credit default swaps (CDS),
9% are foreign exchange contracts, 2% are commodity contracts, 1% are equity contracts, and 12% are other.
Because OTC derivatives are not traded on an exchange, there is no central counter-party. Therefore, they are
subject to counter-party risk, like an ordinary contract, since each counter-party relies on the other to perform.
• Exchange-traded derivative contracts (ETD) are those derivatives instruments that are traded via specialized
derivatives exchanges or other exchanges. A derivatives exchange is a market where individuals trade
standardized contracts that have been defined by the exchange.[7] A derivatives exchange acts as an intermediary
to all related transactions, and takes Initial margin from both sides of the trade to act as a guarantee. The world's
largest[8] derivatives exchanges (by number of transactions) are the Korea Exchange (which lists KOSPI Index
Futures & Options), Eurex (which lists a wide range of European products such as interest rate & index products),
and CME Group (made up of the 2007 merger of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of
Trade and the 2008 acquisition of the New York Mercantile Exchange). According to BIS, the combined turnover
in the world's derivatives exchanges totaled USD 344 trillion during Q4 2005. Some types of derivative
instruments also may trade on traditional exchanges. For instance, hybrid instruments such as convertible bonds
and/or convertible preferred may be listed on stock or bond exchanges. Also, warrants (or "rights") may be listed
on equity exchanges. Performance Rights, Cash xPRTs and various other instruments that essentially consist of a
complex set of options bundled into a simple package are routinely listed on equity exchanges. Like other
derivatives, these publicly traded derivatives provide investors access to risk/reward and volatility characteristics
that, while related to an underlying commodity, nonetheless are distinctive.

Common derivative contract types


There are three major classes of derivatives:
1. Futures/Forwards are contracts to buy or sell an asset on or before a future date at a price specified today. A
futures contract differs from a forward contract in that the futures contract is a standardized contract written by a
clearing house that operates an exchange where the contract can be bought and sold, whereas a forward contract is
a non-standardized contract written by the parties themselves.
Derivative 57

2. Options are contracts that give the owner the right, but not the obligation, to buy (in the case of a call option) or
sell (in the case of a put option) an asset. The price at which the sale takes place is known as the strike price, and
is specified at the time the parties enter into the option. The option contract also specifies a maturity date. In the
case of a European option, the owner has the right to require the sale to take place on (but not before) the maturity
date; in the case of an American option, the owner can require the sale to take place at any time up to the maturity
date. If the owner of the contract exercises this right, the counter-party has the obligation to carry out the
transaction.
3. Swaps are contracts to exchange cash (flows) on or before a specified future date based on the underlying value
of currencies/exchange rates, bonds/interest rates, commodities, stocks or other assets.
More complex derivatives can be created by combining the elements of these basic types. For example, the holder of
a swaption has the right, but not the obligation, to enter into a swap on or before a specified future date.

Examples
The overall derivatives market has five major classes of underlying asset:
• interest rate derivatives (the largest)
• foreign exchange derivatives
• credit derivatives
• equity derivatives
• commodity derivatives
Some common examples of these derivatives are:

UNDERLYING CONTRACT TYPES

Exchange-traded Exchange-traded OTC swap OTC forward OTC option


futures options

Equity DJIA Index future Option on DJIA Index Equity swap Back-to-back Stock option
Single-stock future future Repurchase agreement Warrant
Single-share option Turbo warrant

Interest rate Eurodollar future Option on Eurodollar Interest rate swap Forward rate agreement Interest rate cap and
Euribor future future floor
Option on Euribor future Swaption
Basis swap
Bond option

Credit Bond future Option on Bond future Credit default Repurchase agreement Credit default option
swap
Total return swap

Foreign exchange Currency future Option on currency future Currency swap Currency forward Currency option

Commodity WTI crude oil futures Weather derivatives Commodity swap Iron ore forward Gold option
contract

Other examples of underlying exchangeables are:


• Property (mortgage) derivatives
• Economic derivatives that pay off according to economic reports[9] as measured and reported by national
statistical agencies
• Freight derivatives
• Inflation derivatives
• Weather derivatives
• Insurance derivatives
Derivative 58

• Emissions derivatives[10]

Valuation

Market and arbitrage-free


prices
Two common measures of value are:
• Market price, i.e. the price at which
traders are willing to buy or sell the
contract
• Arbitrage-free price, meaning that
no risk-free profits can be made by
trading in these contracts; see
rational pricing

Determining the market price Total world derivatives from 1998-2007


[11]
compared to total world wealth in the year
[12]
2000
For exchange-traded derivatives,
market price is usually transparent
(often published in real time by the exchange, based on all the current bids and offers placed on that particular
contract at any one time). Complications can arise with OTC or floor-traded contracts though, as trading is handled
manually, making it difficult to automatically broadcast prices. In particular with OTC contracts, there is no central
exchange to collate and disseminate prices.

Determining the arbitrage-free price


The arbitrage-free price for a derivatives contract is complex, and there are many different variables to consider.
Arbitrage-free pricing is a central topic of financial mathematics. The stochastic process of the price of the
underlying asset is often crucial. A key equation for the theoretical valuation of options is the Black–Scholes
formula, which is based on the assumption that the cash flows from a European stock option can be replicated by a
continuous buying and selling strategy using only the stock. A simplified version of this valuation technique is the
binomial options model.

Criticism
Derivatives are often subject to the following criticisms:

Possible large losses


The use of derivatives can result in large losses because of the use of leverage, or borrowing. Derivatives allow
investors to earn large returns from small movements in the underlying asset's price. However, investors could lose
large amounts if the price of the underlying moves against them significantly. There have been several instances of
massive losses in derivative markets, such as:
• The need to recapitalize insurer American International Group (AIG) with $85 billion of debt provided by the
US federal government.[13] An AIG subsidiary had lost more than $18 billion over the preceding three quarters
on Credit Default Swaps (CDS) it had written.[14] It was reported that the recapitalization was necessary
because further losses were foreseeable over the next few quarters.
• The loss of $7.2 Billion by Société Générale in January 2008 through mis-use of futures contracts.
Derivative 59

• The loss of US$6.4 billion in the failed fund Amaranth Advisors, which was long natural gas in September
2006 when the price plummeted.
• The loss of US$4.6 billion in the failed fund Long-Term Capital Management in 1998.
• The loss of US$1.3 billion equivalent in oil derivatives in 1993 and 1994 by Metallgesellschaft AG.[15]
• The loss of US$1.2 billion equivalent in equity derivatives in 1995 by Barings Bank.[16]
Members of President Clinton's Working Group on Financial Markets: Larry Summers, Alan Greenspan, Arthur
Levitt, and Robert Rubin, have been criticized for torpedoing an effort to regulate the derivatives' markets, and
thereby helping to bring down the financial markets in Fall 2008. President George W. Bush has also been criticized
because he was President for 8 years preceding the 2008 meltdown and did nothing to regulate derivative trading.
Bush has stated that deregulation was one of the core tenets of his political philosophy.

Counter-party risk
Some derivatives (especially swaps) expose investors to counter-party risk.
For example, suppose a person wanting a fixed interest rate loan for his business, but finding that banks only offer
variable rates, swaps payments with another business who wants a variable rate, synthetically creating a fixed rate
for the person. However if the second business goes bankrupt, it can't pay its variable rate and so the first business
will lose its fixed rate and will be paying a variable rate again. If interest rates have increased, it is possible that the
first business may be adversely affected, because it may not be prepared to pay the higher variable rate.
Different types of derivatives have different levels of counter-party risk. For example, standardized stock options by
law require the party at risk to have a certain amount deposited with the exchange, showing that they can pay for any
losses; banks that help businesses swap variable for fixed rates on loans may do credit checks on both parties.
However, in private agreements between two companies, for example, there may not be benchmarks for performing
due diligence and risk analysis.

Large notional value


Derivatives typically have a large notional value. As such, there is the danger that their use could result in losses
that the investor would be unable to compensate for. The possibility that this could lead to a chain reaction ensuing
in an economic crisis, has been pointed out by famed investor Warren Buffett in Berkshire Hathaway's 2002 annual
report. Buffett called them 'financial weapons of mass destruction.' The problem with derivatives is that they control
an increasingly larger notional amount of assets and this may lead to distortions in the real capital and equities
markets. Investors begin to look at the derivatives markets to make a decision to buy or sell securities and so what
was originally meant to be a market to transfer risk now becomes a leading indicator. (See Berkshire Hathaway
Annual Report for 2002) [17]

Leverage of an economy's debt


Derivatives massively leverage the debt in an economy, making it ever more difficult for the underlying real
economy to service its debt obligations, thereby curtailing real economic activity, which can cause a recession or
even depression. In the view of Marriner S. Eccles, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman from November, 1934 to
February, 1948, too high a level of debt was one of the primary causes of the 1920s-30s Great Depression. (See
Berkshire Hathaway Annual Report for 2002)
Derivative 60

Benefits
The use of derivatives also has its benefits:
• Derivatives facilitate the buying and selling of risk, and many people consider this to have a positive impact on
the economic system. Although someone loses money while someone else gains money with a derivative, under
normal circumstances, trading in derivatives should not adversely affect the economic system because it is not
zero sum in utility.
• Former Federal Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspan commented in 2003 that he believed that the use of
derivatives has softened the impact of the economic downturn at the beginning of the 21st century.

Definitions
• Bilateral netting: A legally enforceable arrangement between a bank and a counter-party that creates a single legal
obligation covering all included individual contracts. This means that a bank’s obligation, in the event of the
default or insolvency of one of the parties, would be the net sum of all positive and negative fair values of
contracts included in the bilateral netting arrangement.
• Credit derivative: A contract that transfers credit risk from a protection buyer to a credit protection seller. Credit
derivative products can take many forms, such as credit default swaps, credit linked notes and total return swaps.
• Derivative: A financial contract whose value is derived from the performance of assets, interest rates, currency
exchange rates, or indexes. Derivative transactions include a wide assortment of financial contracts including
structured debt obligations and deposits, swaps, futures, options, caps, floors, collars, forwards and various
combinations thereof.
• Exchange-traded derivative contracts: Standardized derivative contracts (e.g. futures contracts and options) that
are transacted on an organized futures exchange.
• Gross negative fair value: The sum of the fair values of contracts where the bank owes money to its
counter-parties, without taking into account netting. This represents the maximum losses the bank’s
counter-parties would incur if the bank defaults and there is no netting of contracts, and no bank collateral was
held by the counter-parties.
• Gross positive fair value: The sum total of the fair values of contracts where the bank is owed money by its
counter-parties, without taking into account netting. This represents the maximum losses a bank could incur if all
its counter-parties default and there is no netting of contracts, and the bank holds no counter-party collateral.
• High-risk mortgage securities: Securities where the price or expected average life is highly sensitive to interest
rate changes, as determined by the FFIEC policy statement on high-risk mortgage securities.
• Notional amount: The nominal or face amount that is used to calculate payments made on swaps and other risk
management products. This amount generally does not change hands and is thus referred to as notional.
• Over-the-counter (OTC) derivative contracts: Privately negotiated derivative contracts that are transacted off
organized futures exchanges.
• Structured notes: Non-mortgage-backed debt securities, whose cash flow characteristics depend on one or more
indices and / or have embedded forwards or options.
• Total risk-based capital: The sum of tier 1 plus tier 2 capital. Tier 1 capital consists of common shareholders
equity, perpetual preferred shareholders equity with non-cumulative dividends, retained earnings, and minority
interests in the equity accounts of consolidated subsidiaries. Tier 2 capital consists of subordinated debt,
intermediate-term preferred stock, cumulative and long-term preferred stock, and a portion of a bank’s allowance
for loan and lease losses.
Derivative 61

See also
• Dual currency deposit
• Forward contract
• FX Option

References
[1] McDonald, R.L. (2006) Derivatives markets. Boston: Addison-Wesley
[2] Taylor, Francesca. (2007). Mastering Derivatives Markets. Prentice Hall
[3] Chisolm, Derivatives Demystified (Wiley 2004)
[4] Chisolm, Derivatives Demystified (Wiley 2004) Notional sum means there is no actual principal.
[5] News.BBC.co.uk (http:/ / news. bbc. co. uk/ 2/ hi/ business/ 375259. stm), "How Leeson broke the bank - BBC Economy"
[6] BIS survey: The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) semi-annual OTC derivatives statistics (http:/ / www. bis. org/ statistics/ derstats.
htm) report, for end of June 2008, shows $683.7 billion total notional amounts outstanding of OTC derivatives with a gross market value of
$20 trillion. See also Prior Period Regular OTC Derivatives Market Statistics (http:/ / www. bis. org/ publ/ otc_hy0805. htm).
[7] Hull, J.C. (2009). Options, futures, and other derivatives . Upper Saddle River, NJ : Pearson/Prentice Hall, c2009
[8] Futures and Options Week: According to figures published in F&O Week 10 October 2005. See also FOW Website (http:/ / www. fow. com).
[9] "Biz.Yahoo.com" (http:/ / biz. yahoo. com/ c/ e. html). Biz.Yahoo.com. 2010-08-23. . Retrieved 2010-08-29.
[10] FOW.com (http:/ / www. fow. com/ Article/ 1385702/ Issue/ 26557/ Emissions-derivatives-1. html), Emissions derivatives, 1 December
2005
[11] "Bis.org" (http:/ / www. bis. org/ statistics/ derstats. htm). Bis.org. 2010-05-07. . Retrieved 2010-08-29.
[12] "Launch of the WIDER study on The World Distribution of Household Wealth: 5 December 2006" (http:/ / www. wider. unu. edu/ events/
past-events/ 2006-events/ en_GB/ 05-12-2006/ ). . Retrieved 9 June 2009.
[13] Derivatives Counter-party Risk: Lessons from AIG and the Credit Crisis (http:/ / www. compoundinghappens. com/ opinion/
DerivativesCounterPartyRisk. htm)
[14] Kelleher, James B. (2008-09-18). ""Buffett's Time Bomb Goes Off on Wall Street" by James B. Kelleher of Reuters" (http:/ / www. reuters.
com/ article/ newsOne/ idUSN1837154020080918). Reuters.com. . Retrieved 2010-08-29.
[15] Edwards, Franklin (1995), "Derivatives Can Be Hazardous To Your Health: The Case of Metallgesellschaft" (http:/ / www0. gsb. columbia.
edu/ faculty/ fedwards/ papers/ DerivativesCanBeHazardous. pdf), Derivatives Quarterly (Spring 1995): 8–17,
[16] Whaley, Robert (2006). Derivatives: markets, valuation, and risk management (http:/ / books. google. com/ books?id=Hb7xXy-wqiYC&
printsec=frontcover& source=gbs_ge_summary_r& cad=0#v=onepage& q& f=false). John Wiley and Sons. p. 506. ISBN 0471786322. .
[17] http:/ / www. berkshirehathaway. com/ 2002ar/ 2002ar. pdf
62

Finance of states

Public finance
Public finance is a field of economics concerned with paying for collective or governmental activities, and with the
administration and design of those activities. The field is often divided into questions of what the government or
collective organizations should do or are doing, and questions of how to pay for those activities. The broader term,
public economics, and the narrower term, government finance, are also often used.
The purview of public finance is considered to be threefold: governmental effects on (1) efficient allocation of
resources, (2) distribution of income, and (3) macroeconomic stabilization.

Overview
The proper role of government provides a starting point for the analysis of public finance. In theory, under certain
circumstances private markets will allocate goods and services among individuals efficiently (in the sense that no
waste occurs and that individual tastes are matching with the economy's productive abilities). If private markets were
able to provide efficient outcomes and if the distribution of income were socially acceptable, then there would be
little or no scope for government. In many cases, however, conditions for private market efficiency are violated. For
example, if many people can enjoy the same good at the same time (non-rival, non-excludable consumption), then
private markets may supply too little of that good. National defense is one example of non-rival consumption, or of a
public good.
"Market failure" occurs when private markets do not allocate goods or services efficiently. The existence of market
failure provides an efficiency-based rationale for collective or governmental provision of goods and services.
Externalities, public goods, informational advantages, strong economies of scale, and network effects can cause
market failures. Public provision via a government or a voluntary association, however, is subject to other
inefficiencies, termed "government failure."
Under broad assumptions, government decisions about the efficient scope and level of activities can be efficiently
separated from decisions about the design of taxation systems (Diamond-Mirlees separation). In this view, public
sector programs should be designed to maximize social benefits minus costs (cost-benefit analysis), and then
revenues needed to pay for those expenditures should be raised through a taxation system that creates the fewest
efficiency losses caused by distortion of economic activity as possible. In practice, government budgeting or public
budgeting is substantially more complicated and often results in inefficient practices.
Government can pay for spending by borrowing (for example, with government bonds), although borrowing is a
method of distributing tax burdens through time rather than a replacement for taxes. A deficit is the difference
between government spending and revenues. The accumulation of deficits over time is the total public debt. Deficit
finance allows governments to smooth tax burdens over time, and gives governments an important fiscal policy tool.
Deficits can also narrow the options of successor governments.
Public finance is closely connected to issues of income distribution and social equity. Governments can reallocate
income through transfer payments or by designing tax systems that treat high-income and low-income households
differently.
The Public Choice approach to public finance seeks to explain how self-interested voters, politicians, and
bureaucrats actually operate, rather than how they should operate.
Public finance 63

Public finance management


Collection of sufficient resources from the economy in an appropriate manner along with allocating and use of these
resources efficiently and effectively constitute good financial management. Resource generation, resource allocation
and expenditure management (resource utilization) are the essential components of a public financial management
system.
Public Finance Management (PFM) basically deals with all aspects of resource mobilization and expenditure
management in government. Just as managing finances is a critical function of management in any organization,
similarly public finance management is an essential part of the governance process. Public finance management
includes resource mobilization, prioritization of programmes, the budgetary process, efficient management of
resources and exercising controls. Rising aspirations of people are placing more demands on financial resources. At
the same time, the emphasis of the citizenry is on value for money, thus making public finance management
increasingly vital.

Government expenditures
Economists classify government expenditures into three main types. Government purchases of goods and services
for current use are classed as government consumption. Government purchases of goods and services intended to
create future benefits--- such as infrastructure investment or research spending--- are classed as government
investment. Government expenditures that are not purchases of goods and services, and instead just represent
transfers of money--- such as social security payments--- are called transfer payments.[1]

Government operations
Government operations are those activities involved in the running of a state or a functional equivalent of a state (for
example, tribes, secessionist movements or revolutionary movements) for the purpose of producing value for the
citizens. Government operations have the power to make, and the authority to enforce rules and laws within a civil,
corporate, religious, academic, or other organization or group.[2] In its broadest sense, "to govern" means to rule over
or supervise, whether over a state, a set group of people, or a collection of people.[3]

Income distribution
• Income distribution - Some forms of government expenditure are specifically intended to transfer income from
some groups to others. For example, governments sometimes transfer income to people that have suffered a loss
due to natural disaster. Likewise, public pension programs transfer wealth from the young to the old. Other forms
of government expenditure which represent purchases of goods and services also have the effect of changing the
income distribution. For example, engaging in a war may transfer wealth to certain sectors of society. Public
education transfers wealth to families with children in these schools. Public road construction transfers wealth
from people that do not use the roads to those people that do (and to those that build the roads).
• Income Security
• Employment insurance
• Health Care
Public finance 64

Financing of government expenditures


Government expenditures are financed
in two ways:
• Government revenue
• Taxes
• Non-tax revenue (revenue from
government-owned corporations,
sovereign wealth funds, sales of
assets, or Seigniorage)
• Government borrowing
Budgeted revenues of governments in 2006.
How a government chooses to finance
its activities can have important effects
on the distribution of income and wealth (income redistribution) and on the efficiency of markets (effect of taxes on
market prices and efficiency). The issue of how taxes affect income distribution is closely related to tax incidence,
which examines the distribution of tax burdens after market adjustments are taken into account. Public finance
research also analyzes effects of the various types of taxes and types of borrowing as well as administrative
concerns, such as tax enforcement.

Taxes
Taxation is the central part of modern public finance. Its significance arises not only from the fact that it is by far the
most important of all revenues but also because of the gravity of the problems created by the present day heavy tax
burden. The main objective of taxation is raising revenue. A high level of taxation is necessary in a welfare State to
fulfill its obligations. Taxation is used as an instrument of attaining certain social objectives i.e. as a means of
redistribution of wealth and thereby reducing inequalities. Taxation in a modern Government is thus needed not
merely to raise the revenue required to meet its ever-growing expenditure on administration and social services but
also to reduce the inequalities of income and wealth. Taxation is also needed to draw away money that would
otherwise go into consumption and cause inflation to rise.[4]
A tax is a financial charge or other levy imposed on an individual or a legal entity by a state or a functional
equivalent of a state (for example, tribes, secessionist movements or revolutionary movements). Taxes could also be
imposed by a subnational entity. Taxes consist of direct tax or indirect tax, and may be paid in money or as corvée
labor. A tax may be defined as a "pecuniary burden laid upon individuals or property to support the government
[ . . .] a payment exacted by legislative authority."[5] A tax "is not a voluntary payment or donation, but an enforced
contribution, exacted pursuant to legislative authority" and is "any contribution imposed by government [ . . .]
whether under the name of toll, tribute, tallage, gabel, impost, duty, custom, excise, subsidy, aid, supply, or other
name."[6]
• There are various types of taxes, broadly divided into two heads - direct (which is proportional) and indirect tax
(which is differential in nature):
• Stamp duty, levied on documents
• Excise tax (tax levied on production for sale, or sale, of a certain good)
• Sales tax (tax on business transactions, especially the sale of goods and services)
• Value added tax (VAT) is a type of sales tax
• Services taxes on specific services
• Road tax; Vehicle excise duty (UK), Registration Fee (USA), Regco (Australia), Vehicle Licensing Fee (Brazil)
etc.
• Gift tax
Public finance 65

• Duties (taxes on importation, levied at customs)


• Corporate income tax on corporations (incorporated entities)
• Wealth tax
• Personal income tax (may be levied on individuals, families such as the Hindu joint family in India,
unincorporated associations, etc.)

Debt
Governments, like any other legal
entity, can take out loans, issue bonds
and make financial investments.
Government debt (also known as
public debt or national debt) is money
(or credit) owed by any level of
government; either central or federal
government, municipal government or
local government. Some local
governments issue bonds based on
Map of countries by foreign currency reserves and gold minus external debt based on
their taxing authority, such as tax 2009 data from CIA Factbook.
increment bonds or revenue bonds.

As the government represents the people, government debt can be seen as an indirect debt of the taxpayers.
Government debt can be categorized as internal debt, owed to lenders within the country, and external debt, owed to
foreign lenders. Governments usually borrow by issuing securities such as government bonds and bills. Less
creditworthy countries sometimes borrow directly from commercial banks or international institutions such as the
International Monetary Fund or the World Bank.
Most government budgets are calculated on a cash basis, meaning that revenues are recognized when collected and
outlays are recognized when paid. Some consider all government liabilities, including future pension payments and
payments for goods and services the government has contracted for but not yet paid, as government debt. This
approach is called accrual accounting, meaning that obligations are recognized when they are acquired, or accrued,
rather than when they are paid.

Seigniorage
Seigniorage is the net revenue derived from the issuing of currency. It arises from the difference between the face
value of a coin or bank note and the cost of producing, distributing and eventually retiring it from circulation.
Seigniorage is an important source of revenue for some national banks, although it provides a very small proportion
of revenue for advanced industrial countries.

Public finance in socialist economies


Public finance in centrally planned economies has differed in fundamental ways from that in market economies.
Some state-owned enterprises generated profits that helped finance government activities. The government entities
that operate for profit are usually manufacturing and financial institutions, services such as nationalized healthcare
do not operate for a profit to keep costs low for consumers. The Soviet Union relied heavily on turnover taxes on
retail sales. Sales of natural resources, and especially petroleum products, were an important source of revenue for
the Soviet Union.
In Venezuela, the state-run oil company PSDVA provides revenue for the government to fund its operations and
programs that would otherwise be profit for private owners. Various market socialist systems or proposals utilize
Public finance 66

revenue generated by state-run enterprises to fund social dividends, eliminating the need for taxation altogether. In
various mixed economies, the revenue generated by state-run or state-owned enterprises are used for various state
endeavors; typically the revenue generated by state and government agencies goes into a sovereign wealth fund. An
example of this is the Alaska Permanent Fund and Singapore's Temasek Holdings.

Government Finance Statistics and Methodology


Macroeconomic data to support public finance economics are generally referred to as fiscal or government finance
statistics (GFS). The Government Finance Statistics Manual 2001 (GFSM 2001) [7] is the internationally accepted
methodology for compiling fiscal data. It is consistent with regionally accepted methodologies such as the European
System of Accounts 1995 [8] and consistent with the methodology of the System of National Accounts (SNA1993) [9]
and broadly in line with its most recent update, the SNA2008 [10].

Challenges in measuring government


The size of governments, their institutional composition and complexity, their ability to carry out large and
sophisticated operations, and their impact on the other sectors of the economy warrant a well-articulated system to
measure government economic operations.
The GFSM 2001 addresses the institutional complexity of government by defining various levels of government. The
main focus of the GFSM 2001 is the general government sector defined as the group of entities capable of
implementing public policy through the provision of primarily nonmarket goods and services and the redistribution
of income and wealth, with both activities supported mainly by compulsory levies on other sectors. The GFSM 2001
disaggregates the general government into subsectors: central government, state government, and local government
(See Figure 1). The concept of general government does not include public corporations. The general government
plus the public corporations comprise the public sector (See Figure 2).

Figure 1: General Government (IMF Government Finance Statistics Manual 2001(Washington,


2001) pp.13
Public finance 67

Figure 2: Public Sector(IMF Government Finance Statistics Manual 2001(Washington, 2001)


pp.15

The GFSM 2001 framework is similar to the financial accounting of businesses. For example, it recommends that
governments produce a full set of financial statements including the statement of government operations (akin to the
income statement), the balance sheet, and a cash flow statement. Two other similarities between the GFSM 2001 and
business financial accounting are the recommended use of accrual accounting as the basis of recording and the
presentations of stocks of assets and liabilities at market value. It is an improvement on the prior methodology -
Government Finance Statistics Manual 1986 – based on cash flows and without a balance sheet statement.

Users of GFS
The GFSM 2001 recommends standard tables including standard fiscal indicators that meet a broad group of users
including policy makers, researchers, and investors in sovereign debt. Government finance statistics should offer
data for topics such as the fiscal architecture, the measurement of the efficiency and effectiveness of government
expenditures, the economics of taxation, and the structure of public financing. The GFSM 2001 provides a blueprint
for the compilation, recording, and presentation of revenues, expenditures, stocks of assets, and stocks of liabilities.
The GFSM 2001 also defines some indicators of effectiveness in government’s expenditures, for example the
compensation of employees as a percentage of expense. The GFSM 2001 includes a functional classification of
expense as defined by the Classification of Functions of Government (COFOG) .
This functional classification allows policy makers to analyze expenditures on categories such as health, education,
social protection, and environmental protection. The financial statements can provide investors with the necessary
information to assess the capacity of a government to service and repay its debt, a key element determining
sovereign risk, and risk premia. Like the risk of default of a private corporation, sovereign risk is a function of the
level of debt, its ratio to liquid assets, revenues and expenditures, the expected growth and volatility of these
revenues and expenditures, and the cost of servicing the debt. The government’s financial statements contain the
relevant information for this analysis.
The government’s balance sheet presents the level of the debt; that is the government’s liabilities. The memorandum
items of the balance sheet provide additional information on the debt including its maturity and whether it is owed to
domestic or external residents. The balance sheet also presents a disaggregated classification of financial and
non-financial assets.
Public finance 68

These data help estimate the resources a government can potentially access to repay its debt. The statement of
operations (“income statement”) contains the revenue and expense accounts of the government. The revenue accounts
are divided into subaccounts, including the different types of taxes, social contributions, dividends from the public
sector, and royalties from natural resources. Finally, the interest expense account is one of the necessary inputs to
estimate the cost of servicing the debt.

Fiscal Data Using the GFSM 2001 Methodology


GFS can be accessible through several sources. The International Monetary Fund publishes GFS in two publications:
International Financial Statistics and the Government Finance Statistics Yearbook. The World Bank gathers
information on external debt. On a regional level, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) compiles general government account data for its members, and Eurostat, following a methodology
compatible with the GFSM 2001, compiles GFS for the members of the European Union.

See also
• Constitutional economics
• Corporate finance
• Fiscal incidence
• Functional finance
• Government budget
• Personal finance
• Public economics
• Public choice
• Rule according to higher law
• Harris School of Public Policy Studies

Notes
[1] Robert Barro and Vittorio Grilli (1994), European Macroeconomics, Ch. 15-16. Macmillan, ISBN 0-333-57764-7.
[2] Columbia Encyclopedia, Government, Columbia University Press
[3] See for example, The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, entry "Govern"
[4] http:/ / budget. ap. gov. in/ es2k_pf. htm
[5] Black's Law Dictionary, p. 1307 (5th ed. 1979).
[6] Id.
[7] http:/ / www. imf. org/ external/ pubs/ ft/ gfs/ manual/ index. htm
[8] http:/ / circa. europa. eu/ irc/ dsis/ nfaccount/ info/ data/ esa95/ esa95-new. htm
[9] http:/ / unstats. un. org/ unsd/ sna1993/ toctop. asp?L1=4
[10] http:/ / unstats. un. org/ unsd/ nationalaccount/ sna2008. asp

References
• Anthony B. Atkinson and Joseph E. Stiglitz (1980). Lectures in Public Economics, McGraw-Hill Economics
Handbook Series
• James M. Buchanan and Richard A. Musgrave (1989). Public Finance and Public Choice: Two Contrasting
Visions of the State. MIT Press. Scroll down to chapter-preview links. (http://books.google.com/
books?id=jEnjN7dKrzcC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_atb#v=onepage&q&f=false)
• Richard A. Musgrave (1959). The Theory of Public Finance: A Study in Public Economy. J.M. Buchanan review,
1st page. (http://www.jstor.org/pss/1054956)
• R.A. Musgrave (2008). "public finance," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics Abstract. (http://www.
dictionaryofeconomics.com/article?id=pde2008_P000244&edition=current&q=public finance&topicid=&
Public finance 69

result_number=1)
• Richard A. Musgrave and Peggy B. Musgrave (1973). Public Finance in Theory and Practice
• Joseph E. Stiglitz (2000). Economics of the Public Sector, 3rd ed. Norton.

External links
• (http://harrisschool.uchicago.edu/Programs/courses/description.html?course=32900) - Taxation and Public
Finance course at the Harris School of Public Policy Studies
• (http://harrisschool.uchicago.edu/Programs/courses/description.html?course=32100) - State and Local Public
Finance course at the Harris School of Public Policy Studies
• IMF--Dissemination Standards Bulletin Board-- Subscribing ... (http://dsbb.imf.org/Applications/web/
sddsnsdppage/) (see "fiscal sector")
• The IMF's Public Financial Management Blog (http://blog-pfm.imf.org)
• US Debt Clock.org (http://www.usdebtclock.org/) - Real Time U.S. Debt Clock
70

Financial economics

Financial economics
Financial economics is the branch of economics concerned with "the allocation and deployment of economic
resources, both spatially and across time, in an uncertain environment".[1] It is additionally characterised by its
"concentration on monetary activities", in which "money of one type or another is likely to appear on both sides of a
trade".[2] The questions within financial economics are typically framed in terms of "time, uncertainty, options and
information".[2]
• Time: money now is traded for money in the future.
• Uncertainty (or risk): The amount of money to be transferred in the future is uncertain.
• Options: one party to the transaction can make a decision at a later time that will affect subsequent transfers of
money.
• Information: knowledge of the future can reduce, or possibly eliminate, the uncertainty associated with future
monetary value (FMV).
The subject is usually taught at a postgraduate level; see Master of Financial Economics.

Subject matter
Financial economics is the branch of economics studying the interrelation of financial variables, such as prices,
interest rates and shares, as opposed to those concerning the real economy. Financial economics concentrates on
influences of real economic variables on financial ones, in contrast to pure finance.
It studies:
• Valuation - Determination of the fair value of an asset
• How risky is the asset? (identification of the asset appropriate discount rate)
• What cash flows will it produce? (discounting of relevant cash flows)
• How does the market price compare to similar assets? (relative valuation)
• Are the cash flows dependent on some other asset or event? (derivatives, contingent claim valuation)
• Financial markets and instruments
• Commodities - topics
• Stocks - topics
• Bonds - topics
• Money market instruments- topics
• Derivatives - topics
• Financial institutions and regulation
Financial Econometrics is the branch of Financial Economics that uses econometric techniques to parameterise the
relationships.
Financial economics 71

Models in Financial economics


Financial economics is primarily concerned with building models to derive testable or policy implications from
acceptable assumptions. Some fundamental ideas in financial economics are portfolio theory, the Capital Asset
Pricing Model. Portfolio theory studies how investors should balance risk and return when investing in many assets
or securities. The Capital Asset Pricing Model describes how markets should set the prices of assets in relation to
how risky they are. The Modigliani-Miller Theorem describes conditions under which corporate financing decisions
are irrelevant for value, and acts as a benchmark for evaluating the effects of factors outside the model that do affect
value.
A common assumption is that financial decision makers act rationally (see Homo economicus; efficient market
hypothesis). However, recently, researchers in experimental economics and experimental finance have challenged
this assumption empirically. They are also challenged - theoretically - by behavioral finance, a discipline primarily
concerned with the limits to rationality of economic agents.
Other common assumptions include market prices following a random walk, or asset returns being normally
distributed. Empirical evidence suggests that these assumptions may not hold, and in practice, traders and analysts,
and particularly risk managers, frequently modify the "standard models".

See also
• List of economics topics
• List of economists
• List of finance topics
• List of master's degrees in financial economics

References
[1] "Robert C. Merton - Nobel Lecture" (http:/ / nobelprize. org/ nobel_prizes/ economics/ laureates/ 1997/ merton-lecture. pdf) (PDF). .
Retrieved 2009-08-06.
[2] "Financial Economics" (http:/ / www. stanford. edu/ ~wfsharpe/ mia/ int/ mia_int2. htm). Stanford.edu. . Retrieved 2009-08-06.

External links

Theory
• Foundations of Finance (http://faculty.chicagogsb.edu/eugene.fama/research/index.htm), Theory of Finance
(http://faculty.chicagogsb.edu/eugene.fama/research/index.htm), Eugene Fama, University of Chicago
Graduate School of Business
• Macro-Investment Analysis (http://www.stanford.edu/~wfsharpe/mia/int/mia_int2.htm), Professor William
Sharpe, Stanford Graduate School of Business
• Lecture Notes in Financial Economics (http://personal.lse.ac.uk/mele/files/fin_eco.pdf), Antonio Mele,
London School of Economics
• Great Moments in Financial Economics I (http://web.archive.org/web/20070927123033/http://www.
in-the-money.com/artandpap/I+Present+Value.doc), II (http://web.archive.org/web/20070927123027/
http://www.in-the-money.com/artandpap/II+Modigliani-Miller+Theorem.doc), "III" (http://web.archive.
org/web/20070927123024/http://www.in-the-money.com/artandpap/III+Short-Sales+and+Stock+Prices.
doc). Archived from the original (http://www.in-the-money.com/artandpap/III Short-Sales and Stock Prices.
doc) on 2007-09-27.; IVa (http://web.archive.org/web/20070927123029/http://www.in-the-money.com/
artandpap/IV+Fundamental+Theorem+-+Part+I.doc); "IVb" (http://web.archive.org/web/
20070927123021/http://www.in-the-money.com/artandpap/IV+Fundamental+Theorem+-+Part+II.doc).
Archived from the original (http://www.in-the-money.com/artandpap/IV Fundamental Theorem - Part II.doc)
Financial economics 72

on 2007-09-27.. Prof. Mark Rubinstein, Haas School of Business


• Microfoundations of Financial Economics (http://www.ulb.ac.be/cours/solvay/farber/PhD.htm) Prof. André
Farber Solvay Business School
• Handbook of the Economics of Finance (http://ideas.repec.org/b/eee/finhes/2.html#related), G.M.
Constantinides, M. Harris, R. M. Stulz
• Financial economics (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=RefWorkIndexURL&_idxType=SC&
_cdi=23486&_refWorkId=21&_explode=151000131,151000133&_alpha=&_acct=C000050221&
_version=1&_userid=10&md5=f2c773b745753022e1cccc9a38d83508&refID=151000133#151000133),
International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences, Oxford: Elsevier, 2001.
• Financial economics topics (http://www.dictionaryofeconomics.com/articles_by_topic?topicid=G) with
Abstracts, The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2008.
• An introduction to investment theory (http://viking.som.yale.edu/will/web_pages/will/finman540/
classnotes/notes.html), Prof. William Goetzmann, Yale School of Management
• Notes on General Equilibrium Asset Pricing (http://pascal.iseg.utl.pt/~pbrito/cursos/mestrado/fef/fef2009.
pdf), Prof. Paulo Brito, ISEG, Technical University of Lisbon

Context and history


• Finance Theory (http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/schools/finance.htm), The History of Economic Thought
Website, The New School
• The Scientific Evolution of Finance (http://www.finance-and-physics.org/Library/Articles3/
scienceandfinance/science.htm) Prof. Don Chance, Prof. Pamela Peterson
• 50 Years of Finance (http://www.ulb.ac.be/cours/solvay/farber/VUB/01 Inaugurale rede.pdf) Prof. André
Farber, Université Libre de Bruxelles
• "A Short History of Investment Forecasting" (http://web.archive.org/web/20071012112134/http://
roundtable.informs.org/public-access/min061a.htm). Archived from the original (http://roundtable.informs.
org/public-access/min061a.htm) on 2007-10-12., Professor Michael Phillips, California State University,
Northridge
• Pioneers of Finance (http://campus.murraystate.edu/academic/faculty/larry.guin/FinancialHistory.htm),
Prof. Larry Guin, Murray State University

Links and portals


• Financial Economics Links on WebEc (http://www.helsinki.fi/WebEc/webecg.html)
• JEL Classification Codes Guide (http://www.aeaweb.org/jel/guide/jel.php?class=G)
• Financial Economics Links on RFE (http://rfe.org/showCat.php?cat_id=56)
• SSRN Financial Economics Network (http://www.ssrn.com/fen/index.html)
• "Books on Financial Economics": list on economicsnetwork.ac.uk (http://www.economicsnetwork.ac.uk/
books/FinancialEconomics.htm)
73

Financial mathematics

Financial mathematics
Mathematical finance is applied mathematics concerned with financial markets. The subject has a close relationship
with the discipline of financial economics, which is concerned with much of the underlying theory. Generally,
mathematical finance will derive, and extend, the mathematical or numerical models suggested by financial
economics. Thus, for example, while a financial economist might study the structural reasons why a company may
have a certain share price, a financial mathematician may take the share price as a given, and attempt to use
stochastic calculus to obtain the fair value of derivatives of the stock (see: Valuation of options).
In terms of practice, mathematical finance also overlaps heavily with the field of computational finance (also known
as financial engineering). Arguably, these are largely synonymous, although the latter focuses on application, while
the former focuses on modeling and derivation (see: Quantitative analyst). The fundamental theorem of
arbitrage-free pricing is one of the key theorems in mathematical finance. Many universities around the world now
offer degree and research programs in mathematical finance; see Master of Quantitative Finance.

History
The history of mathematical finance starts with The Theory of Speculation (published 1900) by Louis Bachelier,
which discussed the use of Brownian motion to evaluate stock options. However, it hardly caught any attention
outside academia.
The first influential work of mathematical finance is the theory of portfolio optimization by Harry Markowitz on
using mean-variance estimates of portfolios to judge investment strategies, causing a shift away from the concept of
trying to identify the best individual stock for investment. Using a linear regression strategy to understand and
quantify the risk (i.e. variance) and return (i.e. mean) of an entire portfolio of stocks and bonds, an optimization
strategy was used to choose a portfolio with largest mean return subject to acceptable levels of variance in the return.
Simultaneously, William Sharpe developed the mathematics of determining the correlation between each stock and
the market. For their pioneering work, Markowitz and Sharpe, along with Merton Miller, shared the 1990 Nobel
Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, for the first time ever awarded for a work in finance.
The portfolio-selection work of Markowitz and Sharpe introduced mathematics to the “black art” of investment
management. With time, the mathematics has become more sophisticated. Thanks to Robert Merton and Paul
Samuelson, one-period models were replaced by continuous time, Brownian-motion models, and the quadratic utility
function implicit in mean–variance optimization was replaced by more general increasing, concave utility functions
[1]
.
The next major revolution in mathematical finance came with the work of Fischer Black and Myron Scholes along
with fundamental contributions by Robert C. Merton, by modeling financial markets with stochastic models. For this
M. Scholes and R. Merton were awarded the 1997 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. Black was
ineligible for the prize because of his death in 1995.
More sophisticated mathematical models and derivative pricing strategies were then developed but their credibility
was damaged by the financial crisis of 2007–2010. Bodies such as the Institute for New Economic Thinking are now
attempting to establish more effective theories and methods.[2]
Financial mathematics 74

Mathematical finance articles

Mathematical tools
• Asymptotic analysis
• Calculus
• Copulas
• Differential equations
• Expected value
• Ergodic theory
• Feynman–Kac formula
• Fourier transform
• Gaussian copulas
• Girsanov's theorem
• Itô's lemma
• Martingale representation theorem
• Mathematical models
• Monte Carlo method
• Numerical analysis
• Real analysis
• Partial differential equations
• Probability
• Probability distributions
• Binomial distribution
• Log-normal distribution
• Quantile functions
• Heat equation
• Radon–Nikodym derivative
• Risk-neutral measure
• Stochastic calculus
• Brownian motion
• Lévy process
• Stochastic differential equations
• Stochastic volatility
• Numerical partial differential equations
• Crank–Nicolson method
• Finite difference method
• Value at risk
• Volatility
• ARCH model
• GARCH model
Financial mathematics 75

Derivatives pricing
• The Brownian Motion Model of Financial Markets
• Rational pricing assumptions
• Risk neutral valuation
• Arbitrage-free pricing
• Futures contract pricing
• Options
• Put–call parity (Arbitrage relationships for options)
• Intrinsic value, Time value
• Moneyness
• Pricing models
• Black–Scholes model
• Black model
• Binomial options model
• Monte Carlo option model
• Implied volatility, Volatility smile
• SABR Volatility Model
• Markov Switching Multifractal
• The Greeks
• Finite difference methods for option pricing
• Trinomial tree
• Optimal stopping (Pricing of American options)
• Interest rate derivatives
• Short rate model
• Hull–White model
• Cox–Ingersoll–Ross model
• Chen model
• LIBOR Market Model
• Heath–Jarrow–Morton framework

See also
• Computational finance
• Quantitative Behavioral Finance
• Derivative (finance), list of derivatives topics
• Modeling and analysis of financial markets
• International Swaps and Derivatives Association
• Fundamental financial concepts - topics
• Model (economics)
• List of finance topics
• List of economics topics, List of economists
• List of accounting topics
• Statistical Finance
• Brownian model of financial markets
Financial mathematics 76

Notes
[1] Karatzas, I., Methods of Mathematical Finance, Secaucus, NJ, USA: Springer-Verlag New York, Incorporated, 1998
[2] Gillian Tett (April 15 2010), Mathematicians must get out of their ivory towers (http:/ / www. ft. com/ cms/ s/ 0/
cfb9c43a-48b7-11df-8af4-00144feab49a. html), Financial Times,

References
• Harold Markowitz, Portfolio Selection, Journal of Finance, 7, 1952, pp. 77–91
• William Sharpe, Investments, Prentice-Hall, 1985
77

Experimental finance

Experimental finance
The goals of experimental finance are to establish different market settings and environments to observe
experimentally and analyze agents' behavior and the resulting characteristics of trading flows, information diffusion
and aggregation, price setting mechanism and returns processes. This can happen for instance by conducting trading
simulations or establishing and studying the behaviour of people in artificial competitive market-like settings.
Researchers in experimental finance can study to what extent existing financial economics theory makes valid
predictions and attempt to discover new principles on which theory can be extended.
The methodology of experimental finance is closely related to that of Experimental economics.

See also
• Experimental economics
• Game theory
78

Behavioral finance

Behavioral finance
Behavioral economics and its related area of study, behavioral finance, use social, cognitive and emotional factors
in understanding the economic decisions of individuals and institutions performing economic functions, including
consumers, borrowers and investors, and their effects on market prices, returns and the resource allocation. The
fields are primarily concerned with the bounds of rationality (selfishness, self-control) of economic agents.
Behavioral models typically integrate insights from psychology with neo-classical economic theory.
Behavioral analysts are not only concerned with the effects of market decisions but also with public choice, which
describes another source of economic decisions with related biases towards promoting self-interest.

History
During the classical period, economics was closely linked to psychology. For example, Adam Smith wrote The
Theory of Moral Sentiments, which proposed psychological explanations of individual behavior and Jeremy
Bentham wrote extensively on the psychological underpinnings of utility. However, during the development of
neo-classical economics economists sought to reshape the discipline as a natural science, deducing economic
behavior from assumptions about the nature of economic agents. They developed the concept of homo economicus,
whose psychology was fundamentally rational. This led to unintended and unforeseen errors.
However, many important neo-classical economists employed more sophisticated psychological explanations,
including Francis Edgeworth, Vilfredo Pareto, Irving Fisher and John Maynard Keynes. Economic psychology
emerged in the 20th century in the works of Gabriel Tarde[1] , George Katona[2] and Laszlo Garai.[3] Expected utility
and discounted utility models began to gain acceptance, generating testable hypotheses about decision making given
uncertainty and intertemporal consumption respectively. Observed and repeatable anomalies eventually challenged
those hypotheses, and further steps were taken by the Nobel prizewinner Maurice Allais, for example in setting out
the Allais paradox, a decision problem he first presented in 1953 which contradicts the expected utility hypothesis.
In the 1960s cognitive psychology began to shed more light on the brain as an information processing device (in
contrast to behaviorist models). Psychologists in this field, such as Ward Edwards,[4] Amos Tversky and Daniel
Kahneman began to compare their cognitive models of decision-making under risk and uncertainty to economic
models of rational behavior. In mathematical psychology, there is a longstanding interest in the transitivity of
preference and what kind of measurement scale utility constitutes (Luce, 2000).[5]

Prospect theory
In 1979, Kahneman and Tversky wrote Prospect theory: An Analysis of Decision Under Risk, an important paper
that used cognitive psychology to explain various divergences of economic decision making from neo-classical
theory.[6] Prospect theory is an example of generalized expected utility theory. Although not a conventional part of
behavioral economics, generalized expected utility theory is similarly motivated by concerns about the descriptive
inaccuracy of expected utility theory.
In 1967 Nobel Laureate Gary Becker wrote Theory of Crime, a seminal work that factored psychological elements
into economic decision making. Becker maintained strict consistency of preferences. Nobelist Herbert Simon
developed the theory of Bounded Rationality to explain how people irrationally seek satisfaction, instead of
maximizing utility, as conventional economics presumed. Maurice Allais produced "Allais Paradox", a crucial
Behavioral finance 79

challenge to expected utility.


Psychological traits such as overconfidence, projection bias, and the effects of limited attention are now part of the
theory. Other developments include a conference at the University of Chicago,[7] a special behavioral economics
edition of the Quarterly Journal of Economics ('In Memory of Amos Tversky') and Kahneman's 2002 Nobel for
having "integrated insights from psychological research into economic science, especially concerning human
judgment and decision-making under uncertainty".[8]

Intertemporal choice
Behavioral economics has also been applied to problems surrounding intertemporal choice. George Ainslie's
hyperbolic discounting (1975) is the most prominent idea, further developed by David Laibson, Ted O'Donoghue,
and Matthew Rabin, in which a high rate is used to discount the near future, and a lower rate for the far future. This
pattern of discounting is dynamically inconsistent (or time-inconsistent), and therefore inconsistent with basic
models of rational choice, since the rate of discount between time t and t+1 will be low at time t-1, when t is the near
future, but high at time t when t is the present and time t+1 the near future. Richard Herrnstein's animal and human
work on Melioration theory and Matching Law suggests that behavior follows previous reinforcement experience,
verbal framing, direct-acting and verbally-governed contingencies rather than expected utility. Financial and
utilitarian decision-making thus becomes a deterministic process amenable to empirical research.

Other areas of research


Other branches of behavioral economics enrich the model of the utility function without implying inconsistency in
preferences. Ernst Fehr, Armin Falk, and Matthew Rabin studied "fairness", "inequity aversion", and "reciprocal
altruism", weakening the neoclassical assumption of "perfect selfishness." This work is particularly applicable to
wage setting. Work on "intrinsic motivation" by Gneezy and Rustichini and on "identity" by Akerlof and Kranton
assumes agents derive utility from adopting personal and social norms in addition to conditional expected utility.
"Conditional expected utility" is a form of reasoning where the individual has an illusion of control, and calculates
the probabilities of external events and hence utility as a function of their own action, even when they have no causal
ability to affect those external events.[9] [10]
Behavioral economics caught on among the general public, with the success of books like Dan Ariely's Predictably
Irrational and the appointment of well-known behavioral economists such as Larry Summers to high government
offices. Practitioners of the discipline have studied quasi-public policy topics such as broadband mapping.[11] [12]

Methodology
Behavioral economics and finance theories developed almost exclusively from experimental observations and survey
responses, although in more recent times real world data have taken a more prominent position. Functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) allows determination of which brain areas are active during economic decision making.
Experiments simulating markets such as stock trading and auctions can isolate the effect of a particular bias upon
behavior. Such experiments can help narrow the range of plausible explanations. Good experiments are
incentive-compatible, normally involving binding transactions and real money.

Vs experimental economics
Note that behavioral economics is distinct from experimental economics, which uses experimental methods to study
economic questions. Not all economics experiments are psychological. While many experimental economics studies
(such as game theory) probe psychological aspects of decision making, other experiments explore institutional
features or serve as "beta testing" for new market mechanisms. And not all behavioral economics uses experiments;
behavioral economists rely heavily on theory and on observational studies "in the field."
Behavioral finance 80

Key observations
Three themes predominate in behavioral finance and economics:[13]
• Heuristics: People often make decisions based on approximate rules of thumb, not strict logic. See also cognitive
biases and bounded rationality.
• Framing: The collection of anecdotes and stereotypes that make up the mental emotional filters individuals rely
on to understand and respond to events.
• Market inefficiencies: These include mis-pricings, non-rational decision making, and return anomalies. Richard
Thaler, in particular, has described specific market anomalies from a behavioral perspective.
Barberis, Shleifer, and Vishny[14] and Daniel, Hirshleifer, and Subrahmanyam (1998)[15] built models based on
extrapolation (seeing patterns in random sequences) and overconfidence to explain security market under- and
overreactions, though their source continues to be debated. These models assume that errors or biases are positively
correlated across agents so that they do not cancel out in aggregate. This would be the case if a large fraction of
agents look at the same signal (such as the advice of an analyst) or have a common bias.
More generally, cognitive biases may also have strong anomalous effects in the aggregate if there is social contagion
of ideas and emotions (causing collective euphoria or fear) leading to phenomena such as herding and groupthink.
Behavioral finance and economics rests as much on social psychology within large groups as on individual
psychology. In some behavioral models, a small deviant group can have substantial market-wide effects (e.g. Fehr
and Schmidt, 1999).

Topics
Models in behavioral economics typically address a particular market anomaly and modify standard neo-classical
models by describing decision makers as using heuristics and subject to framing effects. In general, economics
continues to sit within the neoclassical framework, though the standard assumption of rational behavior is often
challenged.

Heuristics
• Prospect theory
• Loss aversion
• Status quo bias
• Gambler's fallacy
• Self-serving bias
• Money illusion

Framing
• Cognitive framing
• Mental accounting
• Anchoring

Anomalies (economic behavior)


• Disposition effect
• Endowment effect
• Inequity aversion
• Reciprocity
• Intertemporal consumption
• Present-biased preferences
Behavioral finance 81

• Momentum investing
• Greed and fear
• Herd behavior
• Sunk-cost fallacy

Anomalies (market prices and returns)


• Equity premium puzzle
• Efficiency wage hypothesis
• Price stickiness
• Limits to arbitrage
• Dividend puzzle
• Fat tails
• Calendar effect[15]

Criticisms and support


Critics of behavioral economics typically stress the rationality of economic agents.[16] They contend that
experimentally observed behavior has limited application to market situations, as learning opportunities and
competition ensure at least a close approximation of rational behavior.
Others note that cognitive theories, such as prospect theory, are models of decision making, not generalized
economic behavior, and are only applicable to the sort of once-off decision problems presented to experiment
participants or survey respondents.
Traditional economists are also skeptical of the experimental and survey-based techniques which behavioral
economics uses extensively. Economists typically stress revealed preferences over stated preferences (from surveys)
in the determination of economic value. Experiments and surveys are at risk of systemic biases, strategic behavior
and lack of incentive compatibility.
Rabin (1998)[17] dismisses these criticisms, claiming that consistent results are typically obtained in multiple
situations and geographies and can produce good theoretical insight. Behavioral economists have also responded
these criticisms by focusing on field studies rather than lab experiments. Some economists see a fundamental schism
between experimental economics and behavioral economics, but prominent behavioral and experimental economists
tend to share techniques and approaches in answering common questions. For example, behavioral economists are
actively investigating neuroeconomics, which is entirely experimental and cannot be verified in the field.
Other proponents of behavioral economics note that neoclassical models often fail to predict outcomes in real world
contexts. Behavioral insights can influence neoclassical models. Behavioral economists note that these revised
models not only reach the same correct predictions as the traditional models, but also correctly predict some
outcomes where the traditional models failed.
Behavioral finance 82

Behavioral finance

Topics
The central issue in behavioral finance is explaining why market participants make systematic errors. Such errors
affect prices and returns, creating market inefficiencies. It also investigates how other participants arbitrage such
market inefficiencies.
Behavioral finance highlights inefficiencies such as under- or over-reactions to information as causes of market
trends and in extreme cases of bubbles and crashes). Such reactions have been attributed to limited investor attention,
overconfidence, overoptimism, mimicry (herding instinct) and noise trading. Technical analysts consider behavioral
economics' academic cousin, behavioral finance, to be the theoretical basis for technical analysis.[18]
Other key observations include the asymmetry between decisions to acquire or keep resources, known as the "bird in
the bush" paradox, and loss aversion, the unwillingness to let go of a valued possession. Loss aversion appears to
manifest itself in investor behavior as a reluctance to sell shares or other equity, if doing so would result in a nominal
loss.[19] It may also help explain why housing prices rarely/slowly decline to market clearing levels during periods of
low demand.
Benartzi and Thaler (1995), applying a version of prospect theory, claim to have solved the equity premium puzzle,
something conventional finance models have been unable to do so far.[20] Experimental finance applies the
experimental method, e.g. creating an artificial market by some kind of simulation software to study people's
decision-making process and behavior in financial markets.

Models
Some financial models used in money management and asset valuation incorporate behavioral finance parameters,
for example:
• Thaler's model of price reactions to information, with two phases, underreaction-adjustment-overreaction,
creating a price trend
One characteristic of overreaction is that average returns following announcements of good news is lower than
following bad news. In other words, overreaction occurs if the market reacts too strongly or for too long to
news, thus requiring adjustment in the opposite direction. As a result, outperforming assets in one period are
likely to underperform in the following period.
• The stock image coefficient

Criticisms
Critics such as Eugene Fama typically support the efficient-market hypothesis. They contend that behavioral finance
is more a collection of anomalies than a true branch of finance and that these anomalies are either quickly priced out
of the market or explained by appealing to market microstructure arguments. However, individual cognitive biases
are distinct from social biases; the former can be averaged out by the market, while the other can create positive
feedback loops that drive the market further and further from a "fair price" equilibrium. Similarly, for an anomaly to
violate market efficiency, an investor must be able to trade against it and earn abnormal profits; this is not the case
for many anomalies.[21]
A specific example of this criticism appears in some explanations of the equity premium puzzle. It is argued that the
cause is entry barriers (both practical and psychological) and that returns between stocks and bonds should equalize
as electronic resources open up the stock market to more traders.[22] In reply, others contend that most personal
investment funds are managed through superannuation funds, minimizing the effect of these putative entry barriers.
In addition, professional investors and fund managers seem to hold more bonds than one would expect given return
differentials.
Behavioral finance 83

Quantitative
Quantitative behavioral finance uses mathematical and statistical methodology to understand behavioral biases.
Leading contributors include Gunduz Caginalp (Editor of the Journal of Behavioral Finance from 2001–2004) and
collaborators including 2002 Nobelist Vernon Smith, David Porter, Don Balenovich,[23] Vladimira Ilieva and Ahmet
Duran[24] and Ray Sturm.[25]
The research can be grouped into the following areas:
1. Empirical studies that demonstrate significant deviations from classical theories
2. Modeling using the concepts of behavioral effects together with the non-classical assumption of the finiteness of
assets
3. Forecasting based on these methods
4. Testing models against experimental asset markets

Key figures

Economics
• Dan Ariely[26]
• Colin Camerer
• Ernst Fehr
• Daniel Kahneman
• David Laibson
• George Loewenstein
• Sendhil Mullainathan[27]
• Drazen Prelec
• Matthew Rabin
• Herbert Simon
• Paul Slovic
• Vernon L. Smith
• Larry Summers[28]
• Richard Thaler
• Amos Tversky

Finance
• Malcolm Baker
• Nicholas Barberis
• Gunduz Caginalp
• David Hirshleifer
• Andrew Lo
• Terrance Odean
• Charles Plott
• Hersh Shefrin
• Robert Shiller
• Andrei Shleifer
• Richard Thaler
Behavioral finance 84

See also
• Adaptive market hypothesis
• Behavioral Operations Research
• Cognitive bias
• Cognitive psychology
• Confirmation bias
• Cultural economics
• Culture change
• Culture speculation
• Economic sociology
• Emotional bias
• Experimental economics
• Experimental finance
• Habit (psychology)
• Hindsight bias
• Important publications in behavioral finance(economics)
• Journal of Behavioral Finance
• List of cognitive biases
• Neuroeconomics
• Rationality
• Repugnancy costs
• Socioeconomics
• Socionomics

Notes
[1] Tarde, G. Psychologie économique (http:/ / classiques. uqac. ca/ classiques/ tarde_gabriel/ psycho_economique_t1/ psycho_eco_t1. html)
(1902),
[2] The Powerful Consumer: Psychological Studies of the American Economy. 1960.
[3] Garai,L. Identity Economics - An Alternative Economic Psychology. (http:/ / www. staff. u-szeged. hu/ ~garai/ Identity_Economics. htm)
1990-2006.
[4] "Ward Edward Papers" (http:/ / www. usc. edu/ libraries/ archives/ arc/ libraries/ collections/ records/ 427home. html). Archival Collections. .
Retrieved 2008-04-25.
[5] Luce 2000
[6] Kahneman 2003
[7] Hogarth 1987
[8] "Nobel Laureates 2002" (http:/ / nobelprize. org/ nobel_prizes/ lists/ 2002. html). Nobelprize.org. . Retrieved 2008-04-25.
[9] Grafstein R (1995). "Rationality as Conditional Expected Utility Maximization" (http:/ / jstor. org/ stable/ 3791450). Political Psychology 16
(1): 63–80. doi:10.2307/3791450. .
[10] Shafir E, Tversky A (1992). "Thinking through uncertainty: nonconsequential reasoning and choice". Cognitive Psychology 24 (4):
449–474. doi:10.1016/0010-0285(92)90015-T. PMID 1473331.
[11] "US National Broadband Plan: good in theory" (http:/ / www. telco2. net/ blog/ 2010/ 03/ us_national_broadband_plan_qui. html). Telco
2.0. March 17, 2010. . Retrieved 2010-09-23. "... Sara Wedeman’s awful experience with this is instructive...."
[12] Gordon Cook, Sara Wedeman (July 1, 2009). "Connectivity, the Five Freedoms, and Prosperity" (http:/ / www. muninetworks. org/ reports/
cook-report-broadband-mapping-connectivity-five-freedoms-and-prosperity). Community Broadband Networks. . Retrieved 2010-09-23. "In
this report, Gordon Cook interviews Sara Wedeman, a mapping expert who also works in behavioral economics"
[13] Shefrin 2002
[14] Barberis, Shleifer & Vishny 1998
[15] Daniel, Hirshleifer & Subrahmanyam 1998
[16] see Myagkov and Plott (1997) amongst others
[17] Rabin & 1998 11-46
[18] Kirkpatrick 2007, p. 49
[19] Genesove & Mayer, 2001
Behavioral finance 85

[20] Benartzi 1995


[21] http:/ / www. dimensional. com/ famafrench/ 2009/ 08/ fama-on-market-efficiency-in-a-volatile-market. html Fama on Market Efficiency in
a Volatile Market
[22] See Freeman, 2004 for a review
[23] "Dr. Donald A. Balenovich" (http:/ / www. ma. iup. edu/ people/ dabalen. html). Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Mathematics
Department. .
[24] "Ahmet Duran" (http:/ / www. umich. edu/ ~durana). Department of Mathematics, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor. .
[25] "Dr Ray R. Sturm, CPA" (http:/ / www. bus. ucf. edu/ rsturm). College of Business Administration. .
[26] "Predictably Irrational" (http:/ / www. predictablyirrational. com/ ?page_id=5). Dan Ariely. . Retrieved 2008-04-25.
[27] Sendhil Mullainathan: Solving social problems with a nudge (http:/ / www. ted. com/ talks/ sendhil_mullainathan. html)
[28] How Obama Is Using the Science of Change (http:/ / www. time. com/ time/ magazine/ article/ 0,9171,1889153,00. html). Michael
Grunwald, TIME, April 2, 2009.

References
• Ainslie, G. (1975). "Specious Reward: A Behavioral /Theory of Impulsiveness and Impulse Control".
Psychological Bulletin 82 (4): 463–496. doi:10.1037/h0076860. PMID 1099599.
• Barberis, N.; Shleifer, A.;; Vishny, R. (1998). "A Model of Investor Sentiment" (http://jfe.rochester.edu/).
Journal of Financial Economics 49 (3): 307–343. doi:10.1016/S0304-405X(98)00027-0. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
• Benartzi, Shlomo; Thaler, Richard H. (1995). "Myopic Loss Aversion and the Equity Premium Puzzle" (http://
jstor.org/stable/2118511). The Quarterly Journal of Economics (The MIT Press) 110 (1): 73–92.
doi:10.2307/2118511.
• Camerer, Colin, George Loewenstein, and Matthew Rabin (2003). Advances in Behavioral Economics.
Description (http://books.google.com/books?id=sA4jJOjwCW4C&dq=) and scroll to chapter-preview links.
(http://books.google.com/books?id=sA4jJOjwCW4C&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_v2_summary_r&
cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false)
• Cunningham, Lawrence A. (2002). "Behavioral Finance and Investor Governance". Washington & Lee Law
Review 59: 767. doi:10.2139/ssrn.255778. ISSN 19426658.
• Diamond, Peter A. and Hannu Vartiainen, ed. (2007). Behavioral Economics and its Applications. Description
(http://books.google.com/books?id=1-SVhlC9mVoC&dq=&source=gbs_navlinks_s) and scroll to chapter
-preview links. (http://books.google.com/books?id=1-SVhlC9mVoC&printsec=frontcover&
source=gbs_v2_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false)
• Daniel, K.; Hirshleifer, D.; Subrahmanyam, A. (1998). "Investor Psychology and Security Market Under- and
Overreactions". Journal of Finance 53 (6): 1839–1885. doi:10.1111/0022-1082.00077.
• Garai Laszlo (1990-2006). Identity Economics - An Alternative Economic Psychology.
• Hens, Thorsten; Bachmann, Kremena (2008). Behavioural Finance for Private Banking (http://www.bfpb.ch).
Wiley Finance Series. ISBN 0-470-77999-3.
• Hogarth, R. M.; Reder, M. W. (1987). Rational Choice: The Contrast between Economics and Psychology.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226348571.
• Kahneman, Daniel; Tversky, Amos (1979). "Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision under Risk" (http://jstor.
org/stable/1914185). Econometrica (The Econometric Society) 47 (2): 263–291. doi:10.2307/1914185.
• Kahneman, Daniel; Ed Diener (2003). Well-being: the foundations of hedonic psychology. Russell Sage
Foundation.
• Kirkpatrick, Charles D.; Dahlquist, Julie R. (2007). Technical Analysis: The Complete Resource for Financial
Market Technicians. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Financial Times Press. ISBN 0131531131.
• Kuran, Timur (1995). Private Truths, Public Lies: The Social Consequences of Preference Falsification, Harvard
University Press. Description (http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674707580) and scroll to
chapter-preview links. (http://books.google.com/books?id=HlKBaiCpSxYC&printsec=frontcover&
dq=private+truths+public+lies&source=bl&ots=zbKWjEqViP&sig=PwbkqOp05ErR3QeJ5p93B-u66yE&
hl=en&ei=GmMJTPafC4GBlAemw7mdDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&
Behavioral finance 86

ved=0CCYQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q&f=false)
• Luce, R Duncan (2000). Utility of Gains and Losses: Measurement-theoretical and Experimental Approaches.
Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers.
• Mullainathan, S.; Thaler, R. H. (2001). "Behavioral Economics". International Encyclopedia of the Social &
Behavioral Sciences. pp. 1094–1100.. Abstract. (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&
_udi=B7MRM-4MT09VJ-41P&_rdoc=2&_hierId=151000134&_refWorkId=21&
_explode=151000131,151000134&_fmt=high&_orig=na&_docanchor=&_idxType=SC&view=c&_ct=28&
_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=691f9ca74480a55183807ed9dcf1933e)
• Rabin, Matthew (1998). "Psychology and Economics". Journal of Economic Literature 36 (1): 11–46 (http://
pages.towson.edu/jpomy/behavioralecon/PsychologyandEconomicsRabin98JEL.pdf). Press +.
• Shefrin, Hersh (2002). Beyond Greed and Fear: Understanding behavioral finance and the psychology of
investing. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195161211.
• Shleifer, Andrei (1999). Inefficient Markets: An Introduction to Behavioral Finance. New York: Oxford
University Press. ISBN 0198292287.
• Simon, Herbert (1987). "Behavioral Economics". The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics,. 1. pp. 221–24.
• Richard H. Thaler and Sendhil Mullainathan (2008). "Behavioral Economics," (http://www.econlib.org/library/
Enc/BehavioralEconomics.html) The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics, 2nd Edition. Liberty Fund.
• Abstracts from The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (2008), 2nd Edition:
Augier, Mie. "Simon, Herbert A. (1916–2001)." (http:/ / www. dictionaryofeconomics. com/
article?id=pde2008_S000455&q=behavioural&topicid=&result_number=8)
Bernheim, B. Douglas; Rangel, Antonio. "Behavioral public economics." (http:/ / www.
dictionaryofeconomics.com/article?id=pde2008_B000331&q=public &topicid=&result_number=3)
Bloomfield, Robert. "Behavioral finance." (http:/ / www. dictionaryofeconomics. com/
article?id=pde2008_B000339&q=Behavioral economics &topicid=&result_number=5)
Camerer, Colin F. "Behavioral game theory." (http:/ / www. dictionaryofeconomics. com/
article?id=pde2008_B000302&q=Behavioral economics &topicid=&result_number=13)
Gul, Faruk. "Behavioural economics and game theory." (http:/ / www. dictionaryofeconomics. com/
article?id=pde2008_G000210&q=Behavioral economics &topicid=&result_number=2)
Simon, Herbert. "Rationality, bounded.' (http:/ / www. dictionaryofeconomics. com/
article?id=pde2008_B000176&q=behavioural economics&topicid=&result_number=4)

External links
• Behavioral Finance Initiative (http://icf.som.yale.edu/research/behav_finance.shtml) of the International
Center for Finance at the Yale School of Management
• Overview of Behavioral Finance (http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1488110)
• Geary Behavioural Economics Blog (http://gearybehaviourcenter.blogspot.com/), of the Geary Institute at
University College Dublin
87

Intangible asset finance

Intangible asset finance


Intangible Asset Finance is the branch of finance that deals with intangible assets such as patents (legal intangible)
and reputation (competitive intangible). Like other areas of finance, intangible asset finance is concerned with the
interdependence of value, risk, and time.

Basic principles
In 2003, one estimate put the economic equilibrium of intangible assets in the U.S. economy at $5 trillion, which
represented over one-third or more of the value of U.S. domestic corporations in the first quarter of 2001.[1]
One of the goals of people working in this field is to unlock the "hidden value" found in intangible assets through the
techniques of finance. Another goal is to measure how firm performance correlates with intangible asset
management.
Intangible assets include business processes, Intellectual Property (IP) such as patents, trademarks, reputations for
ethics and integrity, quality, safety, sustainability, security, and resilience. Today, these intangibles drive cash flow
and are the primary sources of risk. Intangible asset information, management, risk forecasting and risk transfer are
growing services as the economic base divests itself of physical assets.

Business models
A number of intangible asset business models have evolved over the years.
• Patent Licensing & Enforcement Companies ("P-LECs"): These are firms that acquire patents for the sole
purpose of securing licenses and/or damages awards from infringing parties. Perhaps the most famous P-LEC is
NTP, Inc., which has successfully asserted patents related to email push technology. Another name for a P-LEC is
"patent troll," although this is viewed as a pejorative reference. Recently, hedge funds have raised capital for the
specific purpose of investing in patent litigation. One such hedge fund is Altitude Capital Partners, which is based
in New York.
• Royalty stream securitizers: These are firms that are engaged in the buying and selling of what are essentially
specialized asset-backed securities. The assets that are securitized are typically intellectual properties, such as
patents, that have been bearing royalties for a period of time. Royalty Pharma is a well known firm that uses this
business model, and which has done by far the largest and most high-profile deals in this space.[2] Royalty
Pharma handled what many consider to be the first pharmaceutical patent-backed securitization to be rated by
Standard and Poors, which involved a patent on the HIV drug Zerit.[3] The other parties involved in the Zerit
transaction were Yale (the owner of the patent) and Bristol Myers Squibb.
• Reinsurers: These are firms that use the techniques of reinsurance to mitigate intangible asset risks. In the same
way that some firms issue Cat bonds to mitigate the risks associated with extreme weather, earthquakes, or other
natural disasters, firms exposed to substantial intangible risk can issue "intangible asset risk-linked securities" that
transfer intangible risk to hedge funds and other players in the capital markets with a sufficient appetite for risk.
Steel City Re, which is based in Pittsburgh, is a thought leader regarding the use of risk transfer techniques to
protect and recover intangible asset value.[4]
• Market makers: Firms that are working to provide more liquidity to the market for intellectual property. Early
market makers offered on-line intellectual property exchanges where buyers and sellers could exchange rights in
Intangible asset finance 88

licensed intellectual property, usually patents. In 2008, Ocean Tomo launched,[5] which it styled as "the only
public marketplace that allows buyers and sellers to place and receive offers for their intellectual property in a
completely transparent fashion." Patent Bid Ask now complements Ocean Tomo's experience in providing
multi-lot, live auctions for intellectual property. On April 22, 2008, Ocean Tomo reported[6] that it had transacted
approximately $70 million in its IP auctions across Europe and the United States. In 2009, The Intellectual
Property Exchange International (IPXI), headquartered in Chicago, will begin operations as the world’s first stock
exchange with an intellectual property focus.
• Investment Research Firms: Companies that provide specific advice to investors on intellectual property issues.
Recently, hedge fund managers have been hiring patent attorneys to follow and handicap outcomes in high stakes
patent cases. IPD Analytics, which is based in Miami, is known for is research reports on patent litigation pending
in the United States district court as well at the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

Significant transactions
• 1997: David Bowie securitizes the future royalty revenues earned from his pre-1990 music catalogue by issuing
Bowie Bonds.
• 2000: BioPharma Royalty Trust completes the $115 million securitization of a single Yale patent with claims
covering Stavudine, which is a reverse transcriptase inhibitor and the active ingredient in the drug Zerit. This was
the first publicly rated patent securitization in the U.S. At the time of the deal, Bristol Myers Squibb had the
exclusive rights to distribute Zerit in the U.S. Not long after closing slow sales of Zerit along with an accounting
scandal at Bristol Myers Squibb triggered the accelerated and premature amortization of the transaction. Many
observers believe that this deal was ultimately unsuccessful because of a lack of diversification as it involved a
single patent and a single licensee.
• 2005: UCC Capital Corporation securitization of BCBG Max Azria's royalty receivables generated from
worldwide intellectual property rights worth $53 million. This transaction is recognized as the first "whole
company securitization" involving primarily intangible assets. UCC Capital Corporation has since been acquired
by NexCen Brands, Inc., which is currently helmed by Robert W. D'Loren. NexCen is a vertically integrated
global brand management company focused on assembling a diversified portfolio of intellectual property-centric
companies operating in the consumer branded products and franchise industries. On May 19, 2008, NexCen
issued a press release in which it stated that there was substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going
concern.[7]
• 2005: Ocean Tomo holds its first live IP auction. Although proceeds from the first auction were unremarkable, the
relative success of the Ocean Tomo auctions that followed showed that the live auction is a reasonably viable
business model for monetizing intellectual property.
• 2006: Marvel Entertainment's film rights securitization in conjunction with Ambac Financial Group to provide a
triple-A financial guarantee on a credit facility for Marvel backed by a slate of 10 films to be produced by Marvel
Studios and intellectual property related to some of Marvel’s most popular comic book characters.[8]
Intangible asset finance 89

Government, societies, think tanks, and other non-profits


On June 23, 2008, the United States National Academies hosted a one-day conference in Washington, D.C. entitled
"Intangible Assets: Measuring and Enhancing Their Contribution to Corporate Value and Economic Growth."
The Intangible Asset Finance Society provides a forum for finance, innovation, legal and management professionals
to discover better ways to create, capture and preserve the value of intangible assets.
The Athena Alliance is a non-profit organization dedicated to public education and research on the emerging global
information economy. On April 16, 2008 it published[9] a widely-circulated working paper on the topic of intangible
asset finance.

References
[1] "A Trillion Dollars A Year In Intangible Investment," Leonard Nakamura in Intangible Assets: Values, Measures and Risks at 28, Hand &
Lev, Oxford University Press (2003). (http:/ / books. google. com/ books?id=RmFLUk7NydQC& printsec=frontcover& dq=Intangible+
Assets:+ Values,+ Measures+ and+ Risks,& sig=W2d87NPMzvfWlTDrmUNijOziu-8#PPA28,M1)
[2] "A seller's market," The Deal, September 5, 2008 (http:/ / www. thedeal. com/ newsweekly/ features/ a-seller's-market. php#bottom)
[3] "Avoiding Transaction Peril," Heller et al., in From Ideas to Assets: Investing Wisely in Intellectual Property at 487, Bruce Berman, John
Wiley & Sons, 2002 (http:/ / books. google. com/ books?id=rESRFPqSKzQC& pg=PA487& lpg=PA487& dq=zerit+ patent+ securitization&
source=web& ots=sN9S5ZWcrM& sig=LhlE-nYfxXddjCKeoGql6ap5KxM& hl=en#PPA487,M1)
[4] Steel City Re (http:/ / www. steelcityre. com/ accelerating_innovation. shtml)
[5] Patent Bid Ask (http:/ / www. patentbidask. com/ )
[6] Ocean Tomo Press Release April 22, 2008 (http:/ / www. oceantomo. com/ press/ Europe_Auction_Catalogue_Release_4. 22. 08. pdf)
[7] NexCen Press Release, May 19, 2008 (http:/ / www. nexcenbrands. com/ press_release93. html)
[8] Ambac's press release, 2006 (http:/ / www. ambac. com/ pdfs\Deals\marvel. pdf)
[9] "Intangible Asset Monetization: The Promise and the Reality" (http:/ / www. athenaalliance. org/ pdf/ IntangibleAssetMonetization. pdf)

Further reading
• Rembrandts In the Attic: Unlocking the Hidden Value of Patents (http://books.google.com/
books?id=jCLqq80CpwwC&dq=rembrandts+in+the+attic&pg=PP1&ots=XpvuUlYAtv&
sig=UkrpK3Dt_bFbI8Hcix46iZIQGhU&hl=en&prev=http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&
q=rembrandts+in+the+attic&btnG=Search&sa=X&oi=print&ct=title&
cad=one-book-with-thumbnail#PPR7,M1)
• "When Balance Sheets Collide With the New Economy," New York Times, September 9, 2007 (http://www.
nytimes.com/2007/09/09/business/09frame.html?ei=5124&en=f04ad9659c3221fa&ex=1346990400&
adxnnl=1&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink)
• "IP-Focused Hedge Funds Launch Amid Market Volatility", Dow Jones, April 29, 2008 (http://news.
morningstar.com/newsnet/ViewNews.aspx?article=/DJ/200804291343DOWJONESDJONLINE000826_univ.
xml)
• "Hedge Fund Spies in the Courtroom, IP Law & Business, May 10, 2007 (http://www.law.com/jsp/article.
jsp?id=1178701483131)
• Intellectual Asset Management Magazine Blog (http://www.iam-magazine.com/blog/default.aspx)
Article Sources and Contributors 90

Article Sources and Contributors


Introduction  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=365603795  Contributors: RichardF, X!

Finance  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=388382345  Contributors: .derf, 11B, 16@r, A. B., A3RO, ABF, APH, Aaronchall, Abdullais4u, Addihockey10, Afb525, Agemoi,
Ahd2007, Alansohn, Albertod4, Alphachimp, Altenmann, Amorymeltzer, Andman8, AndreaFox2, Andres, AndrewHowse, Andy Marchbanks, Andycjp, Andyjsmith, Apb123, Apparition11,
ArglebargleIV, Argon233, Ariaconditzione, Artman772000, Ayonbd2000, Balochdude, Barek, BarrelRollZRTwice, Bart133, Bcostel7, Beagel, Bearian, Beetstra, Berek, Betacommand,
Bhallukchana, BiT, Blanchardb, Blathnaid, Bluerasberry, Bobo192, Bongwarrior, Brahui, Brandon, Brillig20, Bryan Derksen, Burntsauce, C.Fred, COMPFUNK2, CRGreathouse, CaMpixx,
Cabe6403, Calcuscribe, Caltas, CambridgeBayWeather, Can't sleep, clown will eat me, Canterbury Tail, Capricorn42, CarlAndersOlsson, Carnildo, Catgut, Cflm001, Chasingsol, Chennaiseo,
Chicago god, Chocolateboy, Cholmes75, ChrisCork, Chriscm, Chrislk02, Chuck Marean, Ckatz, Claritas, CliffC, Cmcgurran84, Codetiger, Cometstyles, Conversion script, Cookie90, Courcelles,
Cretog8, Crobb305, Crzycheetah, Czalex, D6, DARTH SIDIOUS 2, DMCer, Da monster under your bed, Danielag2009, Danyng, Darth Panda, DavidLevinson, DeadEyeArrow, Deli, Denisutku,
Deor, Derigable, Diovi, Discospinster, DisillusionedBitterAndKnackered, Doc Tropics, DocWatson42, DocendoDiscimus, DominicConnor, Donald Duck, Dr.McLeons, Dudikoff1303, EdBever,
Edgar181, Edward321, Eglim, Ej463, El C, ElTyrant, Elemesh, Epbr123, Eric-Wester, Everyking, Excirial, Expertricky, FactsAndFigures, Falcon8765, Fawcett5, Feco, FelixKaiser,
Fieldday-sunday, Financeman11, Finbar Canavan, Fintor, Flowanda, Fluent aphasia, Fplay, Freddy S., Funandtrvl, GB fan, Galoubet, Garyjeppesen, Gatesbuffett, Gazimoff, Giftlite, Gilliam,
Girolamo Savonarola, Glossary, Goodwin.loves.sex, Goraikkonen, GraemeL, Green Giant, Gregalton, Guillaume Mallen, Gurch, Gwernol, Haakon, Hadal, Haffen, HamburgerRadio, Headbomb,
Hebrides, Hede2000, Helixweb, HenryLi, Heron, Hi2539, Hiiindwus, Hmu111, Hvghvghvghvg, Hydrogen Iodide, IA Finance Type, IceKarma, Ilyaskvk, ImperfectlyInformed, Iridescent,
Irishguy, J heisenberg, J.delanoy, JDDJS, JForget, JYolkowski, JaGa, Jackey0105, Jackzavaleta, Jahredtobin, Javierito92, Jeepday, Jeffrey Mall, Jem147, Jesse627, Jmnbatista, Joecool94,
John254, Johnchiu, Johnmc, Jojhutton, Joseph Solis in Australia, Jovianeye, Just James, Justin73, KABADDITENNIS, Kandyman1200, Kanpai, Kashi0341, Kbh3rd, Kevinsleem, Khmarks,
Killerfyang, Killiondude, King brosby, Kingpin13, Kinyupoo, Kortaggio, Kozuch, Kumar1211, Kungfukev, Kuru, Lamro, LedgendGamer, LeoNomis, Lindasepa, Lotje, Luna Santin, MER-C,
MLBOSU, MSDROULIS, Madhero88, Malhonen, Mamat Rohimat, Mana Excalibur, Mandarax, Maple626, Marcika, Marianocecowski, Masterpiece2000, Materialscientist, Meighan,
Memo12021969, Mentifisto, Mercy, Mgrollman, Mic, Michael Hardy, Mikigreen, Minesweeper, Mingzhi 86, Ministry of random walks, MitchMUCH, Mitsuhirato, Modulatum,
Mohankichluwiki, Monkeyman, Mordea, Morethom, Mr Stephen, MrOllie, Mrg3105, Msh210, Msrasnw, Mtlhedd, Muchness, Mydogategodshat, Mygerardromance, N5iln, NJGW, Nakos2208,
NeilN, Netalarm, NickMartin, Nihilozero, Ninja247, No1lakersfan, Noah Salzman, Noctibus, NoisyJinx, Notgoogle, Notinasnaid, Nuclear-Age, Nunh-huh, Nurg, Nycole365, OAG, Odie5533,
Ohnoitsjamie, Oleg Alexandrov, OllieFury, Opop5757, OverSS, PGPirate, PPerviz, PaePae, Para, Paramountpublishing, Pedro, Peter Tribe, Pgreenfinch, Piano non troppo, Pigman, Pion, Plinkit,
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Suhail Ambrose, SunCreator, Sundar77, Suneelkumar1, Supergeo, Swerfvalk, Tassedethe, TastyPoutine, Taxman, Techman224, Tedder, Tesfatsion, The Cunctator, The Transhumanist,
Thedrooling, Theresa knott, Thomas the tom, Tiger888, Toalewa98, Torrentweb, Tra, Triona, Truthflux, Tsumetai, Ttmmblogger, Twigletmac, UKbandit, Ubhudia, Urbanrenewal, Utility
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达伟, 1129 anonymous edits

Financial services  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=387922808  Contributors: 16@r, AJCham, Aitias, Alast0r, Ale jrb, Alphaxer0, Amolshah, Andre999, Antiliby, Arcenciel,
Ashwin palaparthi, Barkeep, Barticus88, Beetstra, Ben5082, Bobblewik, Boing! said Zebedee, BowChickaNeowNeow, Boyd Reimer, ButtonwoodTree, Calltech, Cameron Scott, Can't sleep,
clown will eat me, Carabinieri, Cavrdg, Ceyockey, Chendy, Chris the speller, Chumki91, Clarkk, CliffC, Cmdrjameson, Corza, CrazyTalk, Crocodile Punter, D6, DESiegel, DMCer, Damian
Yerrick, Darkedict, Darkieboy236, Davewho2, Deetdeet, Diasimon2003, Dougak, Dr Gangrene, ERcheck, Edward, Elementrider77, Elfguy, ElissaBuie, Feco, Finance C, FireballDWF2, Fireblae,
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Hmains, Hydroshock, InShaneee, IvanLanin, Jattaway, Jburchard1, Jcembree, Jernoult, Jerryseinfeld, JiFish, Jiang, Jkeene, Jmmbc, Johnmccollim, Joodferl, Joseph Solis in Australia, JustinRossi,
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Vegas949, Vivenot, WereSpielChequers, WikHead, Wiki wiki pedia lets go, WikiDon, Woohookitty, Wsubob, Www.crossprofit.com, Zedla, Zhenqinli, 229 anonymous edits

Personal finance  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=375910498  Contributors: 05runner, 1wealthbuilder, Aaron Brenneman, Al Wiseman, Alexandermin, Alonhu, Altenmann,
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Corporate finance  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=388201366  Contributors: A8UDI, Alsandro, Amjad120, Andman8, Anwar saadat, Arjan1071, B, BD2412, Barek,
Beetstra, Bmarmie, Bookboon, Buyoof, Can't sleep, clown will eat me, Canterbury Tail, Capecodeph, CharlotteWebb, Cherkash, Chrisvls, Ckatz, Colonies Chris, DMS, DanielDeibler, Dantadd,
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Financial capital  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=384795350  Contributors: Aaronbrick, Andre Engels, Anwar saadat, Bequw, Christian List, Crzycheetah, Ddxc, Docu,
EagleOne, Enchanter, Finnancier, Frank, Fratrep, Gregalton, Gurch, Headbomb, ImperfectlyInformed, Joowwww, Jusjih, Luís Felipe Braga, Lycurgus, MartinHarper, Maurreen, Max rspct, Mild
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Cornering the market  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=387814290  Contributors: Ajb, Amniarix, AngoraFish, Anne97432, Axeman89, Bernard S. Jansen, Blue Tie,
DanielRigal, Dman727, DocendoDiscimus, Dr. Slide, Edward, Elroch, Groyolo, Gwern, Gzornenplatz, Headbomb, Hooperbloob, Infrogmation, IronStranger, JAF1970, Jeffreymcmanus, Joyous!,
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Insurance  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=388243671  Contributors: -Midorihana-, 16@r, 24.5.153.xxx, A Softer Answer, A. B., AAAAA, Abrandvold, Actuarial disco boy,
Adashiel, Addihockey10, Aeklein, Ahadisnain, Ahoerstemeier, Aitias, AjaxSmack, Alai, Alan Liefting, Alansohn, AlasdairGreen27, Albatross2147, Alexjones9281, Allstateowego, Alphachimp,
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Article Sources and Contributors 91

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Derivative  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=389180723  Contributors: 2hot2handl, 49oxen, A. Parrot, A. Pichler, Aecis, Alastair Carnegie, Ale jrb, Aleator, Alex 686,
Altruism, Amatulic, Analoguni, AndrewHowse, Anomalocaris, Ask123, Aude, Babbage, Beetstra, Berland, Bhuna71, Bigfatloser, BigrTex, Bobblewik, Bonewith, Bryan Derksen, Btangren,
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Public finance  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=388754582  Contributors: 1958publius, Aaustin, Afdoug, Ajdz, Andman8, Andonic, Andrejj, Andycjp, Anwar saadat,
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Financial economics  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=381642199  Contributors: Acroterion, Alansohn, Aleksd, AndrewHowse, Bigboss88, Bluemoose, Bryan Derksen,
Calltech, Canterbury Tail, Christofurio, Ckways, Cretog8, David 5000, DocendoDiscimus, Dori, Edward, Ej463, Enchanter, Examtester, Exeunt, Fenice, Fintor, Forich, Funandtrvl, Gary King,
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StaticGull, Tank bund, Taxman, Template namespace initialisation script, Tesfatsion, Thomasmeeks, Tiger888, Torrentweb, Wesley, Zbodie, 83 anonymous edits

Financial mathematics  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=384426150  Contributors: A.j.g.cairns, Acroterion, Ahd2007, Albertod4, Allemandtando, Amckern, Angelachou,
Arthur Rubin, Author007, Avraham, Ayonbd2000, Baoura, Beetstra, Billolik, Btyner, Burakg, Burlywood, CapitalR, Cfries, Christofurio, Ciphers, Colonel Warden, DMCer, Drootopula,
DuncanHill, Eric Kvaalen, FF2010, Financestudent, Fintor, Flowanda, Gabbe, Gary King, Gene Nygaard, Giftlite, Giganut, HGB, Halliron, Hannibal19, Headbomb, Hroðulf, Hu12, Hégésippe
Cormier, JBellis, Jackol, Jamesfranklingresham, Jimmaths, Jmnbatista, JonHarder, JonMcLoone, Jonhol, Jrtayloriv, Kaslanidi, Kaypoh, Kimys, Kolmogorov Complexity, Kuru, Langostas,
MER-C, MM21, Michael Hardy, Michaltomek, MrOllie, Niuer, Nparikh, Oleg Alexandrov, Onyxxman, Optakeover, Pcb21, PhotoBox, Pnm, Portutusd, Punanimal, Quantchina, Quantnet,
Ralphpukei, Rhobite, Riskbooks, Ronnotel, SUPER-QUANT-HERO, Sardanaphalus, Sentriclecub, Silly rabbit, SkyWalker, Smesh, Stanislav87, Tassedethe, Tigergb, Timorrill, Uxejn,
Vabramov, Vasquezomlin, WebScientist, Willsmith, Woohookitty, Xiaobajie, YUL89YYZ, Yunli, 165 anonymous edits

Experimental finance  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=388420116  Contributors: Bluestreek, Financestudent, Funandtrvl, Gavin.collins, Headbomb, Jesse projet, Marcika,
MastCell, Ofol, WilyD, 5 anonymous edits

Behavioral finance  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=388284780  Contributors: AMH-DS, APH, Ahd2007, Aleksd, Alfredo ougaowen, Amritasenray, Antura, Ascorbic,
Asubrahm, BAxelrod, Baccy1, Beetstra, Bender235, Brick Thrower, Butko, C4duser, Calltech, Causa sui, Clefticjayjay, Coughinink, Countrydoc1, Cretog8, DCDuring, DanMS, DarwinPeacock,
Davewho2, DavidCBryant, Dedekinder, Deipnosophista, Dukealum, EcoMan, EconoPhysicist, EdBever, Edward, El C, Electrosaurus, EntmootsOfTrolls, Erianna, EvanHarper, Examtester,
Faizul Latif Chowdhury, FastLizard4, Fintor, Francob, Funandtrvl, Gadfium, Gainslie, Gaius Cornelius, Gary King, GaryLKaplan, Geniac, Gowish, Grayscale, Ground, Gwernol, HalfDome,
Headbomb, Hu12, Iakov, Ignatzmice, J Spratt, JDMBAHopeful, JHP, Jaccos, Jackzhp, Jarry1250, JenLouise, Jerryseinfeld, Jersey emt, Jfeckstein, JiveAlive5, Joannamasel, John Quiggin,
Johnkarp, Johnleemk, JzG, KLLvr283, Kai-Hendrik, Kickyandfun, Kk777, Koczy, Kpe, Lfstevens, Lockesdonkey, Lomoruth, Lucasreddinger, MER-C, MLCommons, Madchester, Madcoverboy,
Markory, MartinPoulter, MastCell, Maurreen, Mdz, Meredyth, Michael Hardy, Michael.schifferdecker, Midiom, Mlpearc, Morphh, Mydogategodshat, Mysdaao, Nakos2208, Nbearden,
Netsumdisc, Nick UA, Nirvana2013, Ofol, Oparadoha, Opop5757, Otto ter Haar, Outback the koala, Palma 01, Palmcluster, Pamri, Paranoid, Parisab, Paulscho, Pgreenfinch, Phronetic, Piotrus,
Psychobabble, Pushmedia1, Pwarnock, Quantpole, Quiddity, Radagast83, Rajeevthakkar, Randomtime, Rgfolsom, Richmeister, Rieger, Rinconsoleao, Rjwilmsi, RogerTango,
SUPER-QUANT-HERO, Sajishgp, Sam Hocevar, Shaddack, Sjors, Sky20nyc, Skywalker415, Slightlyslack, SmartGuy, Solitude, Solphusion, Some standardized rigour, Southwestpaw, Sposer,
Squids and Chips, StaticGull, Streque, Supernova new, Szalagloria, Szstanley, Taak, Tassedethe, Tekks, Tesfatsion, Thaimail, The wub, Thomasmeeks, Thrasibule, Tide rolls, Tobacman,
Tomwsulcer, Torrentweb, Trade2tradewell, Trialsanderrors, Usb10, VKokielov, Van helsing, Vingai09, Vmenkov, Wmahan, Wttsmyf2, Xcvb2010, Ztbs1000, Zzuuzz, 261 anonymous edits

Intangible asset finance  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=388542964  Contributors: Amoorman86, AndrewHowse, Bender235, Fuhghettaboutit, Funandtrvl, Gaius Cornelius,
Headbomb, IA Finance Type, Jeff3000, Mr pand, Pwnage8, Quercus basaseachicensis, Qwyrxian, RHaworth, Rjwilmsi, Woohookitty, 7 anonymous edits
Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 92

Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors


File:2005private sector credit.PNG  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:2005private_sector_credit.PNG  License: Public Domain  Contributors:
User:Anwar_saadat/bubble_maps_(FAQ)
Image:2006net capital export.PNG  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:2006net_capital_export.PNG  License: Public Domain  Contributors:
User:Anwar_saadat/bubble_maps_(FAQ)
Image:2006net capital import.PNG  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:2006net_capital_import.PNG  License: Public Domain  Contributors:
User:Anwar_saadat/bubble_maps_(FAQ)
File:2008-07-23 Wrecked car in Durham 2.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:2008-07-23_Wrecked_car_in_Durham_2.jpg  License: GNU Free Documentation
License  Contributors: User:Specious
File:NHS NNUH entrance.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:NHS_NNUH_entrance.jpg  License: GNU Free Documentation License  Contributors: Bhoeble,
FrancisTyers, 2 anonymous edits
File:Tornado Damage, Illinois 2.JPG  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Tornado_Damage,_Illinois_2.JPG  License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 2.5
 Contributors: User:Rklawton
File:2005life premia.PNG  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:2005life_premia.PNG  License: unknown  Contributors: V2k
File:2005nonlife premia.PNG  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:2005nonlife_premia.PNG  License: unknown  Contributors: V2k
Image:Chicago bot.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Chicago_bot.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: Infrogmation, JeremyA, Leslie, Yonatanh, 1 anonymous edits
Image:Total world wealth vs total world derivatives 1998-2007.gif  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Total_world_wealth_vs_total_world_derivatives_1998-2007.gif
 License: Public Domain  Contributors: User:Analoguni
Image:2006budget income.PNG  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:2006budget_income.PNG  License: Public Domain  Contributors:
User:Anwar_saadat/bubble_maps_(FAQ)
Image:Country foreign exchange reserves minus external debt.png  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Country_foreign_exchange_reserves_minus_external_debt.png
 License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0  Contributors: User:Peace01234
Image:General Government.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:General_Government.jpg  License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0  Contributors:
User:Cag244
Image:Public Sector.png  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Public_Sector.png  License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0  Contributors: User:Cag244
License 93

License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported
http:/ / creativecommons. org/ licenses/ by-sa/ 3. 0/

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