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Principles of Finance: Unit 2, Practical Examples of Inflation: Part II 4 Views
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Description:
In this video, we're going to hit you with some more practical examples of inflation. Everyone get your balloons ready.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop practical examples of inflation part 2
- 00:07
all right well remember our punch-drunk friend inflation well he's back [Two people fighting in the UFC]
- 00:13
yeah we're investors in the stock market in one form that is we only own one [People wearing suits appear]
- 00:17
thing its ticker SPY which is a huge ETF which basically tracks the
- 00:23
performance of the S&P 500 it pays a three percent dividend which is a
Full Transcript
- 00:27
mash-up amalgamation of all of the dividends of the stocks contained in the [List of all the stocks in the S&P 500]
- 00:32
SP 500 some pay no dividend others pay huge dividends like six seven eight [High dividend paying stocks are highlighted]
- 00:37
percent you know that historically the market goes up in eight or nine percent
- 00:41
a year over long periods of time and these investments are long-term in [S&P 500 chart showing price going up over time]
- 00:46
horizon so you expect 8% minus the 3 percent dividend to produce about 5% a
- 00:53
year growth of the actual value of ticker SPY well the market trades at
- 00:58
about 20 times earnings a pretty high multiple on its own by historical
- 01:02
standards but at 20 times investors are getting a quote 5 percent yield unquote [Long term return points written on a whiteboard]
- 01:07
on earnings that is if a company will earn $1 a share investors are paying $20
- 01:12
a share for it hmm interesting that's a 5% earnings yield plus the 3% [Company holds up 1 dollar and an investor holds up 20 dollars]
- 01:19
yield from dividends they add up to 8% magic well all the sudden some old white
- 01:24
guy in a suit in front of the mic at the White House [Guy with a beard stood at a podium]
- 01:27
stands there and announces that frozen concentrated orange juice is now $4 a
- 01:33
case instead of 3 and that milk prices are skyrocketing and that inflation is
- 01:38
suddenly a big fat deal and that the new president doesn't want to see old ladies [Woman with all her belongings next to her car]
- 01:44
living in their Lexuses because they bought bonds in their retirement funds
- 01:48
and had never taken this course immediately the bond market reacts it [Newspaper article about inflation]
- 01:52
predicts that inflation will grow fast from its current 2 to 3% levels
- 01:57
- well pundits talking about 5 to 6 percent meaning inflation is about to
- 02:02
hit in a really big way well guess what long-term bond prices collapse why long [The newspaper article is punched away by inflation]
- 02:07
term because inflation is something that goes on and on and on and if you're [Gravestone for long term bond prices]
- 02:11
married to a long term bond with low interest rates
- 02:14
predicted that rates will go up a lot in the future and the value of your current [Guy speaking next to a presentation about bonds collapsing]
- 02:18
low yielding bonds is worth a lot less a given bond used to have to yield 6% to
- 02:23
clear the market or get bought given its duration and risk well those
- 02:27
bonds were trading at a hundred cents on the dollar
- 02:29
got it yielding 6% but now that same bond must pay 10% to clear the market or [The 6% on the bond certificate is crossed out]
- 02:35
get bought or that's its market price the piece of paper bond investors are [10% is written on the bond]
- 02:39
holding however only pays sixty dollars a year for the thousand dollars invested [Woman holding up 60 dollars looks sad]
- 02:43
so that bonds market price now has to drop from a hundred cents on the dollar
- 02:48
to sixty cents got it at six hundred bucks for that
- 02:51
piece of paper which pays $60 a year the bonds now yields the 10 percent it has
- 02:57
to yield to reflect these new market conditions so what is the stock market [The changes in bond price are written onto the whiteboard]
- 03:02
do well we're clearly in a booming economy for inflation to be hitting us [Guy in a suit is punched in the face by inflation]
- 03:08
so hard but it's clear that the federal government wants to cool things off and [Government building on fire]
- 03:12
they have some real tools in their pocketbook to do so they also have some [Firefighter arrives with a hose]
- 03:16
financial tools to cool off the economy so the market adjusts what are those
- 03:21
tools well remember the Fed that can raise rates but here we go
- 03:24
if bond rates are going up and investors can get guaranteed returns of 5% on very
- 03:30
safe things like backed by the US government and corporate bonds return 8% [Whiteboard listing other securities]
- 03:35
like semi risky corporations and high-yield ie riskier bonds from risky
- 03:40
corporations return 10 11 12 % well why would investors cling to their stocks [Woman holding onto her stocks]
- 03:46
they won't they'll sell them down to a given level where they yield plus the
- 03:51
growth prospects corrects to reflect these new market conditions like if you [Woman trades some of her stock for cash]
- 03:56
get guaranteed rates from bonds of a certain level of appreciation you've got
- 04:00
to get a whole lot more that from equities to warrant the risk you're
- 04:03
taking right so think about it a different way the price to earnings
- 04:06
ratio of the market will fall and the dividend yield of that S&P 500 will go [Arrows showing P&E ratio falling and yields increasing]
- 04:12
up because the dividends don't change nearly as fast as the market prices do
- 04:16
right corporations aren't suddenly cutting their dividends because there's [Dividends being cut with a corporation saw]
- 04:19
inflation so numerically think about it like instead of 20 times earnings the
- 04:24
market might fall to being only 16 times earnings and its yield
- 04:28
all else being equal well dividend yield go from about three percent to about
- 04:32
four percent is twenty five percent ish correction and it's about where
- 04:35
they go so it's 16 times earnings investors are getting an earnings yield
- 04:39
of 1/16 or 6.25% investors are now getting up four percent cash dividend [Yield calculations are shown on a whiteboard]
- 04:45
plus the earnings yield to total ten point two five percent compared with the
- 04:49
eight percent before that inflation crisis yep the market just got a little
- 04:54
cheaper thank you fed well when interest rates go really high think about what [Joe Sixpack clinging to his beer]
- 04:58
happens to Joe Sixpack if quotes safe unquote rates backed by
- 05:02
the US government are four percent corporate bonds pay six percent and high
- 05:06
yield pays and twelve percent well then Joe pay something like
- 05:09
eighteen percent interest on his credit cards and remember that Joe carries a [Joe holding his credit card that says debtor's balance]
- 05:14
debtor's balance all the time on his credit cards because he likes beer now [Joe in the liquor store]
- 05:20
if safe bonds go up a lot like eight percent ten percent well then everything
- 05:24
else moves in lockstep as well and Joe wakes up with thirty percent interest on
- 05:28
his credit cards and while this change is probably good for his waistline it [Liquor store goes out of business]
- 05:33
destroys the economy in a way that is such high rent prices of money make a [Joe looks upset]
- 05:38
lot of people who had adjustable rate mortgages go up or have to evacuate
- 05:43
their homes because well they never imagined that interest rates would go so [Couple looks upset as their house starts to flood]
- 05:48
high and you're like well then why did you buy an adjustable rate mortgage
- 05:51
why'd you take all that risk yeah they really didn't know consumers plead [The couple are washed away]
- 05:55
ignorance all the time at six percent they could afford their mortgage but at
- 05:59
ten percent no not so much well this situation creates an even
- 06:02
wider spread between the haves and the have-nots the wealthy have investments [Gate with a sign that says 'poor wet people keep out]
- 06:07
like stocks and bonds and homes and custom fish tanks which they can use as
- 06:11
collateral to get low-interest loans if they want them or they can just spend [Guy cashing in his fish tank at a pawn shop]
- 06:15
less which they would likely do and many of the wealthy don't have mortgages they [Guy holding a big pile of money]
- 06:19
just pay cash for everything so how did all this start where is the foundation
- 06:22
of interest rates well in the modern economy everything starts at whatever is
- 06:26
at the time perceived as quote most safe and today that most safe thing is the US
- 06:33
government's ability to tax its upper half of taxpayers because remember the [Taxed stamp on the upper bracket]
- 06:38
bottom half the country really didn't pay anything
- 06:40
taxes the bet that borrowers are making is that the upper half will continue to [Someone betting chips in a card game]
- 06:44
work hard and pay their taxes and not Greece like you know where they all [Someone putting bundles of cash on the table]
- 06:48
leave the country or just become very corrupt and nobody pays any taxes in the [Taxes vanish in Greece]
- 06:52
country goes bankrupt well everything else is considered riskier than that
- 06:56
base case US government backed bonds situation so a risk premium is stacked [Least risky stamp on government bonds]
- 07:02
on top of it whenever other debt or investment opportunities are considered
- 07:06
for a well positioned large corporation rates are a bit higher but only maybe by [Stack of cash outside 'Large Co.']
- 07:12
a percent or two then as you get into the less well-positioned riskier players [Risk Co. floating on the sea]
- 07:17
obviously the risk premium gets higher and you build a stack of premiums added [Stacks of money labelled premiums]
- 07:22
on to the base rate foundation of the most safe fed and let's hope Uncle Sam
- 07:27
continues to be most safe [Uncle Sam wearing boxing gloves]
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