- For security (collateral), the legal right given to a creditor by a borrower, see security
interest
A security is a
fungible,
negotiable
instrument representing financial value. Securities are broadly
categorized into
debt
securities, such as
banknotes,
bonds and
debentures, and
equity securities, e.g.
common
stocks. The company or other entity issuing the security is
called the issuer. What specifically qualifies as a security is
dependent on the regulatory structure in a country. For example
private investment pools may have some features of securities, but
they may not be registered or regulated as such if they meet
various restrictions.
Securities may be represented by a certificate
or, more typically, by an electronic book entry. Certificates may
be bearer, meaning they entitle the holder to rights under the
security merely by holding the security, or registered, meaning
they entitle the holder to rights only if he or she appears on a
security register maintained by the issuer or an intermediary. They
include shares of corporate
stock or
mutual funds,
bonds
issued by corporations or governmental agencies,
stock
options or other options, limited partnership units, and
various other formal investment instruments that are negotiable and
fungible.
Classification
Securities may be classified according to the
following categories:
- Issuer
- Currency of denomination
- Ownership rights
- Term to maturity
- Degree of liquidity
- Income payments
- Tax treatment
- Credit Rating
- Industrial Sector
- Region or Country
- Market Capitalization
By Type of Issuer
Issuers of securities include commercial
companies, government agencies, local authorities and international
and
supranational
organizations (such as the
World Bank).
Debt securities issued by a government (called
government
bonds or
sovereign
bonds) generally carry a lower interest rate than
corporate
debt issued by commercial companies. Interests in an asset --
for example, the flow of royalty payments from intellectual
property-may also be turned into securities. These repackaged
securities resulting from a
securitization are
usually issued by a company established for the purpose of the
repackaging-called a special purpose vehicle (SPV). See
"Repackaging" below. SPVs are also used to issue other kinds of
securities. SPVs can also be used to guarantee securities, such as
covered
bonds.
New capital: Commercial enterprises have
traditionally used securities as a means of raising new capital.
Securities may be an attractive option relative to bank loans
depending on their pricing and market demand for particular
characteristics. Another disadvantage of bank loans as a source of
financing is that the bank may seek a measure of protection against
default by the borrower via extensive financial covenants. Through
securities, capital is provided by investors who purchase the
securities upon their initial issuance. In a similar way,
governments may raise capital through the issuance of securities
(see
government
debt).
Repackaging: In recent decades securities have
been issued to repackage existing assets. In a traditional
securitisation, a financial institution may wish to remove assets
from its
balance
sheet in order to achieve regulatory capital efficiencies or to
accelerate its receipt of cash flow from the original assets.
Alternatively, an intermediary may wish to make a profit by
acquiring financial assets and repackaging them in a way which
makes them more attractive to investors.
By Type of Holder
Investors in securities may be
retail, i.e. members of the
public investing other than by way of business. The greatest part
in terms of volume of investment is
wholesale, i.e. by financial
institutions acting on their own account, or on behalf of clients.
Important
institutional
investors include
investment
banks,
insurance
companies,
pension
funds and other managed funds.
Investment: The traditional economic function of
the purchase of securities is investment, with the view to
receiving
income and/or
achieving
capital
gain. Debt securities generally offer a higher rate of interest
than bank deposits, and equities may offer the prospect of capital
growth.
Equity
investment may also offer control of the business of the
issuer. Debt holdings may also offer some measure of control to the
investor if the company is a fledgling start-up or an old giant
undergoing 'restructuring'. In these cases, if interest payments
are missed, the creditors may take control of the company and
liquidate it to recover some of their investment.
Collateral: The last decade has seen an enormous
growth in the use of securities as collateral. Purchasing
securities with borrowed money secured by other securities is
called "
buying on
margin." Where A is owed a debt or other obligation by B, A may
require B to deliver
property
rights in securities to A. These property rights enable A to
satisfy its claims in the event that B becomes
insolvent. Collateral
arrangements are divided into two broad categories, namely security
interests and outright collateral transfers. Commonly, commercial
banks, investment banks and government agencies are significant
collateral takers.
Debt and Equity
Securities are traditionally divided into
debt securities and equities.
Debt
Debt securities may be called
debentures,
bonds,
deposits,
notes or
commercial
paper depending on their maturity and certain other
characteristics. The holder of a debt security is typically
entitled to the payment of principal and interest, together with
other contractual rights under the terms of the issue, such as the
right to receive certain information. Debt securities are generally
issued for a fixed term and redeemable by the issuer at the end of
that term. Debt securities may be protected by collateral or may be
unsecured, and, if they are unsecured, may be contractually
"senior" to other unsecured debt meaning their holders would have a
priority in a bankruptcy of the issuer. Debt that is not senior is
"subordinated".
Corporate
bonds represent the debt of commercial or industrial entities.
Debentures have a long maturity, typically at least ten years,
whereas notes have a shorter maturity. Commercial paper is a simple
form of debt security that essentially represents a post-dated
check with a maturity of not more than 270 days.
Money market instruments are short term debt
instruments that may have characteristics of deposit accounts, such
as
certificates
of deposit, and certain
bills of
exchange. They are highly liquid and are sometimes referred to
as "near cash". Commercial paper is also often highly liquid.
Euro debt securities are securities issued
internationally outside their domestic market in a denomination
different from that of the issuer's domicile. They include
eurobonds and euronotes. Eurobonds are characteristically
underwritten, and not secured, and interest is paid gross. A
euronote may take the form of euro-commercial paper (ECP) or
euro-certificates of deposit.
Government bonds are medium or long term debt
securities issued by sovereign governments or their agencies.
Typically they carry a lower rate of interest than corporate bonds,
and serve as a source of finance for governments. U.S. federal
government bonds are called treasuries. Because of their liquidity
and perceived low risk, treasuries are used to manage the money
supply in the
open
market operations of non-US central banks.
Sub-sovereign government bonds, known in the U.S.
as
municipal
bonds, represent the debt of state, provincial, territorial,
municipal or other governmental units other than sovereign
governments.
Supranational bonds represent the debt of
international organizations such as the
World
Bank, the
International Monetary Fund, regional
multilateral development banks and others.
Equity
An equity security is a share in the capital
stock of a company (typically common stock, although preferred
equity is also a form of capital stock). The holder of an equity is
a shareholder, owning a share, or fractional part of the issuer.
Unlike debt securities, which typically require regular payments
(interest) to the holder, equity securities are not entitled to any
payment. In bankruptcy, they share only in the residual interest of
the issuer after all obligations have been paid out to creditors.
However, equity generally entitles the holder to a pro rata portion
of control of the company, meaning that a holder of a majority of
the equity is usually entitled to control the issuer. Equity also
enjoys the right to
profits and
capital
gain, whereas holders of debt securities receive only interest
and repayment of
principal regardless
of how well the issuer performs financially. Furthermore, debt
securities do not have voting rights outside of bankruptcy. In
other words, equity holders are entitled to the "upside" of the
business and to control the business.
Hybrid
Hybrid securities combine some of the
characteristics of both debt and equity securities.
Preference shares form an intermediate class of
security between equities and debt. If the issuer is liquidated,
they carry the right to receive interest and/or a return of capital
in priority to ordinary shareholders. However, from a legal
perspective, they are capital stock and therefore may entitle
holders to some degree of control depending on whether they contain
voting rights.
Convertibles are bonds or preferred stock which
can be converted, at the election of the holder of the
convertibles, into the common stock of the issuing company. The
convertibility, however, may be forced if the convertible is a
callable bond, and the issuer calls the bond. The bondholder has
about 1 month to convert it, or the company will call the bond by
giving the holder the call price, which may be less than the value
of the converted stock. This is referred to as a forced
conversion.
Equity warrants are options issued by the company
that allows the holder of the warrant to purchase a specific number
of shares at a specified price within a specified time. They are
often issued together with bonds or existing equities, and are,
sometimes, detachable from them and separately tradable. When the
holder of the warrant exercises it, he pays the money directly to
the company, and the company issues new shares to holder.
Warrants, like other convertible securities,
increases the number of shares outstanding, and are always
accounted for in financial reports as fully diluted earnings per
share, which assumes that all warrants and convertibles will be
exercised.
The Securities Market
Primary and Secondary Market
The public securities markets can be divided into
primary and secondary markets. The distinguishing difference
between the two markets is that in the primary market, the money
for the securities is received by the issuer of those securities
from investors, whereas in the secondary market, the money goes
from one investor to the other. When a company issues public stock
for the first time, this is called an
Initial
Public Offering (IPO). A company can later issue more new
shares, or issue shares that have been previously registered in a
shelf registration. These later new issues are also sold in the
primary market, but they are not considered to be an IPO. Issuers
usually retain investment banks to assist them in administering the
IPO, getting SEC (or other regulatory body) approval, and selling
the new issue. When the investment bank buys the entire new issue
from the issuer at a discount to resell it at a markup, it is
called an
underwriting, or firm
commitment. However, if the investment bank considers the risk too
great for an underwriting, it may only assent to a best effort
agreement, where the investment bank will simply do its best to
sell the new issue.
In order for the primary market to thrive, there
must be a secondary market, or
aftermarket, where holders
of securities can sell them to other investors for cash, hopefully
at a profit. Otherwise, few people would purchase primary issues,
and, thus, companies and governments would be unable to raise money
for their operations. Organized exchanges constitute the main
secondary markets. Many smaller issues and most debt securities
trade in the decentralized, dealer-based
over-the-counter
markets.
In Europe, the principal trade organization for
securities dealers is the
International Capital Market
Association. In the U.S., the principal organization for
securities dealers is the
Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association. The
Bond
Market Association represents bond dealers globally.
Public Offer and Private Placement
In the primary markets, securities may be offered
to the public in a
public
offer. Alternatively, they may be offered privately to a
limited number of qualified persons in a
private
placement. Often a combination of the two is used. The
distinction between the two is important to securities regulation
and
company law.
Privately placed securities are often not publicly tradable and may
only be bought and sold by sophisticated qualified investors. As a
result, the secondary market is not as liquid.
Another category, sovereign debt, is generally
sold by auction to a specialised class of dealers.
Listing and OTC Dealing
Securities are often listed in a
stock
exchange, an organized and officially recognized market on
which securities can be bought and sold. Issuers may seek listings
for their securities in order to attract investors, by ensuring
that there is a liquid and regulated market in which investors will
be able to buy and sell securities.
Growth in informal electronic trading systems has
challenged the traditional business of stock exchanges. Large
volumes of securities are also bought and sold "over the counter"
(OTC). OTC dealing involves buyers and sellers dealing with each
other by telephone or electronically on the basis of prices that
are displayed electronically, usually by commercial information
vendors such as
Reuters and
Bloomberg.
There are also eurosecurities, which are
securities that are issued outside their domestic market into more
than one jurisdiction. They are generally listed on the
Luxembourg
Stock Exchange or admitted to listing in
London. The reasons
for listing eurobonds include regulatory and tax considerations, as
well as the investment restrictions..
International Debt Market
London is the centre of the eurosecurities
markets. There was a huge rise in the eurosecurities market in
London in the early 1980s. Settlement of trades in eurosecurities
is currently effected through two European computerised systems
called
Euroclear (in
Belgium) and
Clearstream
(formerly Cedelbank) in Luxembourg.
The main market for Eurobonds is the EuroMTS,
owned by Borsa Italiana and Euronext. There are ramp up market in
Emergent countries, but it is growing slowly.
Physical Nature of Securities
Certificated Securities
Securities that are represented by certificates
are called certificated securities. They may be bearer or
registered.
Bearer Securities
Bearer securities are completely negotiable and
entitle the holder to the rights under the security (e.g. to
payment if it is a debt security, and voting if it is an equity
security). They are transferred by delivering the instrument from
person to person. In some cases, transfer is by endorsement, or
signing the back of the instrument, and delivery.
Regulatory and fiscal authorities sometimes
regard bearer securities negatively, as they may be used to
facilitate the evasion of regulatory restrictions and tax. In the
United
Kingdom, for example, the issue of bearer securities was
heavily restricted firstly by the Exchange Control Act
1947 until
1953. Bearer
securities are very rare in the United States because of the
negative tax implications they may have to the issuer and
holder.
Registered Securities
In the case of registered securities,
certificates bearing the name of the holder are issued, but these
merely represent the securities. A person does not automatically
acquire legal ownership by having possession of the certificate.
Instead, the issuer (or its appointed agent) maintains a register
in which details of the holder of the securities are entered and
updated as appropriate. A transfer of registered securities is
effected by amending the register.
Uncertificated Securities and Global Certificates
Modern practice has developed to eliminate both
the need for certificates and maintenance of a complete security
register by the issuer. There are two general ways this has been
accomplished.
Uncertificated Securities
In some jurisdictions, such as France, it is
possible for issuers of that jurisdiction to maintain a legal
record of their securities electronically.
In the
United
States, the current "official" version of Article 8 of the
Uniform
Commercial Code permits uncertificated securities. However, the
"official" UCC is a mere draft that must be enacted individually by
each of the
U.S. states.
Though all 50 states (as well as the
District
of Columbia and the
U.S.
Virgin Islands) have enacted some form of Article 8, many of
them still appear to use older versions of Article 8, including
some that did not permit uncertificated securities.
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uniform/ucc.html#a8
Global Certificates and Book Entry Interests
In order to facilitate the electronic transfer of
interests in securities without dealing with inconsistent versions
of Article 8, a system has developed whereby issuers deposit a
single global certificate representing all the outstanding
securities of a class or series with a universal depository. This
depository is called
The Depository Trust Company, or DTC. DTC's parent,
Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC), is a
non-profit cooperative owned by approximately thirty of the largest
Wall Street players that typically act as brokers or dealers in
securities. These thirty banks are called the DTC participants.
DTC, through a legal nominee, owns each of the global securities on
behalf of all the DTC participants.
All securities traded through DTC are in fact
held, in electronic form, on the books of various intermediaries
between the ultimate owner, e.g. a retail investor, and the DTC
participants. For example, Mr. Smith may hold 100 shares of Coca
Cola, Inc. in his brokerage account at local broker Jones & Co.
brokers. In turn, Jones & Co. may hold 1000 shares of Coca Cola
on behalf of Mr. Smith and nine other customers. These 1000 shares
are held by Jones & Co. in an account with Goldman Sachs, a DTC
participant, or in an account at another DTC participant. Goldman
Sachs in turn may hold millions of Coca Cola shares on its books on
behalf of hundreds of brokers similar to Jones & Co. Each day,
the DTC participants settle their accounts with the other DTC
participants and adjust the number of shares held on their books
for the benefit of customers like Jones & Co. Ownership of
securities in this fashion is called beneficial ownership. Each
intermediary holds on behalf of someone beneath him in the chain.
The ultimate owner is called the beneficial owner. This is also
referred to as owning in "Street name".
Other Depositories: Euroclear and Clearstream
Besides DTC, two other large securities
depositories exist, both in Europe: Euroclear and Clearstream.
Divided and Undivided Security
The terms "divided" and "undivided" relate to the
proprietary nature
of a security.
Each divided security constitutes a separate
asset, which is legally distinct from each other security in the
same issue. Pre-electronic bearer securities were divided. Each
instrument constitutes the separate covenant of the issuer and is a
separate debt.
With undivided securities, the entire issue makes
up one single asset, with each of the securities being a fractional
part of this undivided whole. Shares in the secondary markets are
always undivided. The issuer owes only one set of obligations to
shareholders under its memorandum, articles of association and
company law. A
share
represents an undivided fractional part of the issuing company.
Registered debt securities also have this undivided nature.
Fungible and Non-fungible Security
The terms "fungible" and "non-fungible" relate to
the way in which securities are held.
If an asset is fungible, this means that when
such an asset is lent, or placed with a custodian, it is customary
for the borrower or custodian to be obliged at the end of the loan
or custody arrangement to return assets equivalent to the original
asset, rather than the identical asset. In other words, the
redelivery of fungibles is equivalent and not in specie
(identical).
Undivided securities are always fungible by
logical necessity. Divided securities may or may not be fungible,
depending on market practice. The clear trend is towards fungible
arrangements.
Regulation
In the United States, the public offer and sale
of securities must be either registered pursuant to a registration
statement that is filed with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or are offered
and sold pursuant to an exemption therefrom. Dealing in securities
is heavily regulated by both federal authorities (SEC) and state
authorities. In addition the industry is heavily self policed by
Self Regulatory Organizations (SROs), such as
FINRA (the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, formerly the National Association of
Security Dealers or
NASD) or the
MSRB.
Due to the difficulty of creating a general
definition that covers all securities, Congress attempts to define
"securities" exhaustively (and not very precisely) as: "any
note,
stock,
treasury
stock,
security
future,
bond,
debenture,
certificate
of interest or participation in any
profit-sharing
agreement or in any oil, gas, or other
mineral
royalty or
lease, any
collateral-trust
certificate,
preorganization
certificate or subscription,
transferable
share,
investment
contract,
voting-trust
certificate,
certificate
of deposit for a security, any
put,
call,
straddle,
option,
or privilege on any security,
certificate
of deposit, or group or
index
of securities (including any interest therein or based on the
value thereof), or any
put,
call,
straddle,
option,
or privilege entered into on a national
securities
exchange relating to
foreign
currency, or in general, any instrument commonly known as a
'security'; or any certificate of interest or participation in,
temporary or interim certificate for, receipt for, or warrant or
right to subscribe to or purchase, any of the foregoing; but shall
not include
currency or
any
note,
draft,
bill of
exchange, or
bankers'
acceptance which has a
maturity at the time of
issuance of not exceeding nine months, exclusive of days of grace,
or any renewal thereof the maturity of which is likewise limited."
- Section 3a item 10 of the 1934 Act.
With respect to investment schemes that do not
fall within the traditional categories of securities listed in the
definition of a security (Sec. 2(a)(1) of the 33 act and Sec.
3(a)(10) of the 34 act) the US Courts have developed a broad
definition for securities that must then be registered with the
SEC. When determining if there a is an "investment contract" that
must be registered the courts look for an investment of money, a
common enterprise and expectation of profits to come primarily from
the efforts of others. See
SEC
v. W.J. Howey Co. and
SEC v. Glenn W. Turner Enterprises, Inc.
External links
- Investment
Banking - A concise, illustrated introduction to investment
banking and the issuance of new securities.
Association
Security Financial bank
securities in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Каштоўная папера
securities in Bosnian: Vrijednosni papir
securities in Bulgarian: Ценна книга
securities in Chuvash: Хаклă хут
securities in Czech: Cenný papír
securities in German: Wertpapier
securities in Modern Greek (1453-):
Χρεόγραφο
securities in Spanish: Título o valor
securities in Esperanto: Valorpapero
securities in French: Valeur mobilière
securities in Croatian: Vrijednosni papir
securities in Indonesian: Efek (keuangan)
securities in Icelandic: Verðbréf
securities in Italian: Titolo (finanza)
securities in Hebrew: נייר ערך
securities in Kara-Kalpak: Bahalı qag'az
securities in Lithuanian: Vertybinis
popierius
securities in Hungarian: Értékpapír
securities in Dutch: Effecten
securities in Norwegian: Verdipapir
securities in Japanese: 有価証券
securities in Polish: Papier wartościowy
(prawo)
securities in Russian: Ценная бумага
securities in Serbian: Хартије од
вредности
securities in Serbo-Croatian: Vrijednosni
papir
securities in Finnish: Arvopaperi
securities in Swedish: Värdepapper
securities in Vietnamese: Chứng khoán
securities in Ukrainian: Цінні папери
securities in Chinese: 證券