Are you thinking about starting to invest in the stock market? To begin with, it is worth understanding what a security is, what they are and what income they can bring
What is actually a security
A security is a document that confirms the various rights of the owner. Mainly, this is the right to fulfill property obligations — to receive a part of the company's profit, return the borrowed money, and so on. But not only that. It may also be the right to participate in the company's affairs — for example, at a shareholders' meeting. By presenting a security, you can exercise your rights (for example, receive dividends , vote at a meeting) or transfer them to another owner (for example, sell or assign).
Most often, it is not necessary to physically bring a paper that confirms the rights of the owner, there is enough information attested in the register of paper owners.
It is important to understand that a security, as a legal document, has its own criteria. There are several requirements that must be met:
- The paper must have circulation on the market, that is, it can be bought or sold freely, and other transactions can be made with it.
- Each issue paper gives the owner the same rights.
- The paper certifies the property rights to a standard asset, for example, a barrel of oil of a certain brand, a gold bar of a certain sample or a share of a certain company. If the object is not standardized, then the rights to it can be certified not by a security, but by another legal document.
- The security is made according to the form, secured with the details and confirmed by an authorized person.
- The security is publicly reliable. This means that it is enough for the owner to present a security in order to exercise his rights under it.
- Securities are those that are officially recognized by the state, since they are subject to mandatory state registration when issued.
- Securities have a value, and most often their value is regulated by the market, that is, supply and demand.
Interesting. Economists consider securities to be representatives of capital. Lawyers also consider securities to be a title of property law.
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Types of securities
Securities are classified according to several criteria. The most basic is the basic division into:
- Equity securities, that is, those securities that certify the right to a share of something, for example, a company and its profits in the form of dividends. In addition, equity securities provide the right to vote in the management of the company, but this right corresponds to the size of the share. That is, the larger the share, the stronger the weight of the asset owner. There is such a thing as a controlling stake in securities, that is, a sufficient number in order to make key decisions regarding the company. Equity securities include shares — ordinary or preferred, shares.
- Debt securities confirm the owner's right to repay the debt in a certain period and pay interest on it. Actually buying a debt security, the owner gives the company his funds in debt, the company in turn undertakes to return this money and regularly pay interest (coupons and discount). Such debt securities can be bonds or promissory notes.
Another division is the division into primary and derivative papers:
- Primary securities. These are the securities that are based on the rights regarding a specific asset. This can be a share in a company, a gold bar, a barrel of oil or a debt obligation.
- Derivative (secondary) securities. Usually this is the right to the right. These securities are based on primary securities and their combinations. For example, an option may give the right to buy shares. However, there is still no clear border. For example, futures on the stock market is definitely a derivative instrument. Oil futures, despite the fact that this is just a special contract for the supply of oil, still also applies to derivatives.
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It is also possible to distinguish securities that are traded on the stock exchange, and those that can only be bought directly — exchange-traded and over-the-counter securities.
Another important characteristic of the security by which they are divided is the ownership of the owner. Here you can distinguish registered papers (in which the owner is literally registered), bearer papers (it is enough to show them, the owner is the one who holds the paper in his hands) and order papers (they can be presented by both the owner and the person authorized by him).
Finally, the physical shape of the paper may also vary. The undocumented ones are distinguished by the fact that a special organization that enters information in the register is engaged in taking them into account and recording the transfer of rights to them.
Issuing of securities, stages of issue
Securities do not arise out of thin air, the company needs to issue and register them. This procedure is called issuing or issuing. It is strictly regulated and has several key stages.
- A company, a legal entity or an individual, or even a state, an authority or an administrative object, such as a city or region, that is, an issuer, decides to issue securities. Such a decision may be made at the Board of Directors or a meeting of shareholders.
This decision must be approved, in the case of joint-stock companies and other types of organizations. - Then the state registration of the issue takes place, after which the issuer places information about the issue in open sources.
- The issuer is not always engaged in the sale of securities and their placement on the stock exchange. Often, a copywriter is involved in the process at this stage — the primary owner, who undertakes to carry out all the procedures for placing securities on the exchange.
- Underwriters can either buy the securities at the established minimum price, in order to place them later with a surcharge in their favor, or accept an obligation to purchase non-placed securities, if this happens.
- The final stage is the state registration of the report on the results of the issue and its submission to the registration authority. The report indicates the duration of the procedure, the share price and the number of securities in the issue, information about the owners of 2% of the securities, the estimated profit.
Violation of the stages of issuing may be recognized as abuse, in which case the issue will be declared invalid, and the issuer may be subject to criminal prosecution.
The prospectus of the issue, the document accompanying the issue of securities, must contain all the data: who is the issuer and underwriter, the type of security, the specifics of its repayment (for debt securities), the nominal value, the rights of the owner on it, the storage procedure, who is the registrar, the payment procedure and the direction of using the money from the placement, the applicable taxes. Also, the issue prospectus should provide investors with an idea of the risks, therefore it should contain information about the issuer and its activities, as well as financial statements.
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Placement on exchanges is not free: in addition to the entrance fee, the issuer pays an annual subscription fee. Therefore, despite the fact that nothing prohibits issuers from placing their securities on any stock exchanges, most often they are limited to one or two.
Depositories (storage of securities)
Registrars — professional market participants-take into account the circulation of registered securities on the market. On the basis of an agreement with the issuer, they maintain a register of securities and take into account the transfer of ownership. Securities can change the owner literally every day, this situation is common in the futures market. At the same time, someone must record each new owner of the paper and store it. There is a depository for this purpose. The depository acts on the basis of an agreement with the owners of the securities.
It is called the "deposit account agreement" and in it the owner of the paper acts as a depositor. The depository may, under a corresponding agreement with the issuer, act as a registrar and maintain the register.
The purchase of a security and the acquisition of rights occurs as follows: the buyer declares his desire to purchase a security or a package, the broker makes a transaction, and after that the security enters the buyer's account in the depository, where it is placed until its next sale, and where the ownership of the rights under it is recorded.
In addition to the direct storage of securities in electronic or physical form (for example, mortgages, deposit certificates, savings certificates or promissory notes), the depository performs settlements on transactions and pays dividends.
The main duty of depositories is to protect the rights to securities, they cannot dispose of the securities themselves. In fact, when they get into the depository, the securities are in a reliable safe, protected from the risks of bankruptcy or fraud on the part of other market participants.
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How to buy securities
The purchase of securities is considered by many as an investment, that is, an investment of their funds in order to make a profit in the future or to insure financial risks.
Since securities are mostly divided into exchange-traded and over-the-counter, you can buy them either on the exchange, or directly from the issuer or another holder.
If earlier exchange transactions were accompanied by certain difficulties: it was necessary to open a physical account, pass a complex identification and be in touch with a broker, now the task has become much simpler. Securities are now often nothing more than lines on an electronic scoreboard.
To start buying and selling securities, it is enough to open a brokerage account , pay for the services of a broker and a depository according to the tariff and you can start trading. Or rather, to inform the broker about your desire to buy or sell a particular security on the stock exchange. The transactions themselves are carried out only by brokers, neither individuals nor legal entities can trade on the exchange. The broker also assumes the function of a tax agent, if you received income when selling a security.
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There is also a category of over-the-counter securities that cannot be bought on the exchange. Either these are securities that are not recognized by the exchange by their type, or those issues that have not been listed . In this case, you can try to buy securities on over-the-counter boards (OTC, over the counter). It should be borne in mind that even such a large platform cannot give the buyer the guarantees that the official exchange provides . And the purchase process is more complicated here. Even if you use the services of brokers, you may have to communicate with them personally, by phone, and not through terminals, as happens on the official exchanges.
But even on over-the-counter platforms, not all securities are represented, some can only be purchased directly from the issuer. For example, mutual fund units are bought directly from mutual funds and only a small part of them are traded on the stock exchange. In a direct transaction, a purchase and sale agreement is concluded between the buyer and the issuer.
How to get income from a security
By investing money in securities, an investor expects to receive a profit from his investment. Income from securities can be of two types:
- The one that brings the asset itself. These can be dividends from stocks, coupons from bonds;
- Speculative, that is, the one that is obtained due to the difference between the purchase price of a security and its sale.
The main types of accrued income are dividends and coupons. Dividends are payments of a part of the company's profit to the holders of shares, that is, shares. The payment and amount of dividends depend on a number of factors, including the success of the company. Therefore, when buying shares, it should be borne in mind that such a source of income is not guaranteed.
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Unlike bond coupons, which is essentially the interest on the loan that the company guarantees to pay you until the maturity of the bond.
Speculative income is the most unpredictable in the market. There are several ways to calculate promising securities that can grow in price. Investors who adhere to a speculative investment strategy try to buy shares cheaper, and sell them at the peak of their price in order to get the maximum difference. However, no one can guarantee the growth of the share price on the market.
When calculating the yield of a security, you should take into account expenses on commissions to brokers, depositories and taxes. Income from securities in the Russian Federation is subject to income tax in the amount of 13% for individuals. It should be noted that income from securities is subject to tax deductions.