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发表于 2003-7-24 02:34:00
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CAPITAL MARKETS
Commercial paper
Securities firms, including those associated with some banks, offer commercial paper services to corporations as a less expensive alternative to bank borrowing for short-term corporate needs. This is a relationship business, often with daily conversations about market conditions and corporate needs. Commercial paper itself is a simple instrument, so the skills are not those of structuring so much as those of knowing markets intimately. This brings commercial paper services very close to the world of sales and trading.
Debt underwriting
The SEC registration requirements for debt underwriting were dramatically simplified in the 1980s, so that new debt issues usually can be bid for and bought by single firms or small groups of firms without the complex mechanics of an underwriting syndicate. Consequently, winning new debt issues from corporate clients involves up-to-the-minute market information and a sense of sudden market opportunities. Capital market professionals, who are most often to be found on trading floors, specialize in knowing which corporations are inclined to issue what forms of new debt. This area is also akin to trading in that it lives on a substantial volume of transactions. Because debt underwriting has also been globalized, effective professionals in this area must understand opportunities in debt markets the world over. They must have a keen understanding of the mathematics of fixed-income securities and an intuitive sense of markets.
Swaps and options
The business of creating and using swaps and options is intimately connected with debt underwriting. Most swaps are written to match a debt instrument and convert it, in effect, to a different type of debt instrument--one currency to another, fixed rate to floating and so forth. Options, too, are often embedded in capital market instruments--alternative repayment currencies, for example. Capital market professionals specializing in derivatives need a highly creative and quantitative turn of mind to spot market anomalies and turn them into combinations of debt and derivative instruments that can be sold. This is a great domain for computer gurus and math experts, but it also requires a practical sense of markets.
Real estate and mortgage finance
As a capital-intensive industry, real estate has historically been tightly tied to the capital markets, yet current trends are radically restructuring past relationships. Real estate finance is being revolutionized by securitization--on both the debt and equity sides of the market. The pooling of mortgages and the creation of various claims against the pool have created new classes of fixed-income securities out of both residential and commercial mortgages. On the equity side, the rapid growth of publicly traded real estate securities has created significant investment opportunities and stimulated widespread business consolidation. Both career arenas are full of potential. The behavior of mortgage-based securities, particularly the more exotic ones, is still not fully understood, but the utility of creating derivative securities from mortgage pools is very high. Real estate markets are still relatively inefficient where the potential for value-creating transactions remains high. Skillful professionals in the mortgage-securitization field combine a thorough grasp of debt markets, derivatives, mortgage origination and government programs. Finance professionals focused on real estate investment banking and mergers and acquisitions combine sophisticated knowledge of real estate fundamentals, corporate finance, financial accounting and business strategy. Both groups can use quantitative tools with ease.
Risk management and funding
Every financial institution must attend not only to the funding of its clients but to its own funding as well. Furthermore, it must understand the risks it is taking, for businesses such as derivatives involve a firm's own balance sheet in a complex way. Such functions are among the most cerebral in any financial institution and attract people with exceptional ability to see the whole portfolio of assets, liabilities and offbalance sheet commitments as a complex of interacting quantitative risks. The tools of risk management, which are still evolving, are taught in several advanced courses. Many consulting firms specialize in risk management tools and systems, a field that is changing rapidly.
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