Unit 4
Unit 4
Markets and
Instruments
What to study?
5. Capital Market and
1. Meaning and Instruments
Definition
2. Role and 6. SEBI guidelines
Functions of for Listing of Shares
Financial Markets and
3. Constituents Issue of Commercial
of Financial Papers.
Markets
4. Money Market
Instruments
A financial market is a transmission mechanism between investors-lenders and
borrowers-users through which transfer of funds is facilitated.
It consists of individual investors, financial institutions and credit instruments like bills
of exchange, promissory notes, treasury bills, shares, debentures, bonds, etc.
The financial markets in essence are the credit markets that cater to the various credit
needs of individuals, firms and institutions on the one hand, and help in mobilisation of
savings in the economy on the other.
Thus, the financial markets perform economic as well as financial functions. Their
principal economic function is in the form of transfer of real econiomic resources from
those who save a part of their earnings to those who desire to have command over
real resources for investment, and their financial function lies in facilitating the transfer
of funds to those who need them to implement their plans
Financial market refers to a market for
the creation and exchange of financial
assets (such as shares and
debentures).
01 Money Market
02 Capital Market
Money Market
1. Money market refers to the whole network of financial institutions dealing in short-term funds which provide an outlet to lenders and a
source of supply for such funds to borrowers.
2. It may be noted that it does not deal in cash or money as such, but handles the near money assets (short-term credit instruments) such as
the bills of exchange, promissory notes, commercial paper, treasury bills, etc. with the help of which funds are borrowed for a short
period by the business units etc.
3. The Reserve Bank of India describes money market as "the centre for dealings, mainly of short-term character, in monetary assets. It
meets the short-term requirements of borrowers and provides liquidity or cash to them by the lenders. It is the place where short-term
surplus invest funds at the disposal of the financial and other institutions and individuals are bid by borrowers, again comprising
institutions and individuals, and also the government".
4. The demand for short-term funds comes primarily from the government, business units and individual borrowers
5. The supply of loanable funds comes mostly from the central bank of the country, the commercial banks and other financial institutions.
The central bank is the primary source of credit to commercial banks while the commercial banks constitute the most important source
of short-term credit for business houses and individual borrowers.
Capital Market
1. Capital market refers to an organisation and the mechanism through which the companies, other institutions and the government raise
long term funds by issue of securities such as shares, debentures, bonds, etc.
2. It signifies the institutional arrangement for raising long-term funds and providing facilities for marketing and trading of securities. It
symbolizes a system through which the public takes up long term securities directly or through intermediaries, and thus, helps in
mobilising savings of the community and make them available to business units and others for long-term use.
3. The demand for long-term funds is made in most countries by individuals, business corporations, public corporations, the central bank,
and the state and local governments. On the supply side of the market for such funds, there are four categories of lenders in any capital
market, viz., individual investors, institutional investors, banks and special industrial financing institutions known as development banks
4. It may be noted that the capital market consists of primary and secondary markets. The primary market deals with new fresh issue of
securities and is, therefore, known as new issue market. The secondary market, on the other hand, provides a place for purchase and sale
of existing securities and is often termed as stock market or stock , exchange.
75%
Money Market- Instruments
01 Treasury Bill
Commercial Paper 02
03 Call Money
Certificate of
Deposit 04
05 Commercial Bill
It is a short-term borrowing instrument of the
Government of India.
less than one year.
Commercial
Basically, it is a promissory note which is
negotiable and transferable.
of 15 days to a maximum of one year.
Certificate of
presented in the bearer form.
and companies.
● It refers to the market or medium through which long-term funds, both debt and equity, are raised and
invested. It comprises channels through which the savings of the community are made available for the
business sector and the public in general.
● The capital market consists of development banks, commercial banks and stock exchanges.
● Instruments used in the capital market are shares, debentures, bonds, mutual funds and public deposits.
18
Features of Capital
Market
20
Offer through
prospectus
Private Placement
Secondary Market
(Stock Market/Stock Rights Issue
Exchange)
E-IPOs
Primary Market- Instruments
• Most popular method of raising funds by public
companies in the primary market.
● As a first step towards generating interest of investors in corporate securities, the Government of India
introduced the Companies Act in 1850.
● The first stock exchange was established in 1875 as ‘The Native Share and Stock Brokers Association’ in
Bombay. It was later renamed Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE).
● Subsequently, over the years, stock exchanges were also developed in Ahmedabad, Calcutta and Madras.
● Till the 1990s, the Indian secondary market comprised only regional stock exchanges.
● After the economic reforms of 1991, the Indian Stock Market acquired a three-tier system comprising
Regional Stock Exchanges, the National Stock Exchange and Over The Counter Exchange of India
(OTCEI).
1. Providing Liquidity and Marketability to
Existing Securities: