Sexta-feira, Junho 19, 2009

Siglas e termos de IPOs

Frequentemente, vejo o mal uso de algumas siglas e termos relacionadas às IPOs. Um breve glossário (ordenado por relevância):

IPO:
Iniciais para a sigla em inglês Initial Public Offering. Traduzindo: Oferta Pública Inicial. É feita quando a empresa abre capital com a venda de ações através de uma oferta pública, seja primária, secundária ou mista. Só pode haver uma IPO; da mesma forma que uma porta, não se pode fazer a abertura de capital de uma empresa se esta já estiver aberta. A única possibilidade de haver mais de uma IPO é quando a empresa abre capital, depois fecha e volta a abrir (a Cremer havia fechado o capital em 2004 e voltou a abrir em 2007). A melhor forma de se usar a sigla IPO é no feminino, do contrário estaria-se dizendo “o Oferta Pública Inicial”. A última realizada foi a da OGX Petróleo.

Abertura de capital:
Nem todas as empresas abrem capital via oferta pública inicial de ações. Considera-se aberta uma companhia que tenha emitido debêntures ao mercado. Também é possível abrir o capital de uma empresa através de uma cisão, como a da LLX e da IRONX, empresas surgidas da cisão da MMX.

OPA:
Oferta Pública de Aquisição. É feita quando alguém compra ações no mercado através de uma oferta pública. Esse alguém pode ser a própria companhia, os acionistas controladores ou os novos controladores (no caso da empresa cujas ações estão sendo compradas ser alvo de aquisição). Geralmente (ou quase sempre) faz-se OPAs para fechar o capital da empresa. As últimas realizadas foram da Leco e da Vigor.

Oferta Primária:
Oferta pública cujo objetivo é a venda de novas ações com a captação de recursos para a empresa. Pode existir quantas a empresa desejar fazer. A última realizada foi da Vale.

Oferta Secundária:
Oferta pública cujo objetivo é a venda de ações já existentes por parte dos atuais acionistas da empresa. Também pode existir quantas os acionistas desejarem fazer (a Redecard fez duas além da IPO, que foi mista). A venda das ações é feita dessa forma para impactar o menos possível o preço das ações (imagine um grande acionista vendendo ao mercado milhões de ações de uma vez só). A última realizada foi da Redecard.

Follow-on:
Quando há oferta pública (seja primária ou secundária) de uma empresa já de capital aberto, chamam essa oferta de follow-on. Se você ler em algum lugar “segundo IPO” (sic), entenda-se follow-on. A última feita foi a oferta secundária da Redecard.

Assim, fica claro que não é IPO as ofertas de empresas já com capital aberto, mesmo que seja uma oferta primária (não há relação entre a oferta ser inicial e primária). IPO e OPA não são nem remotamente sinônimos, antônimos até.

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Sábado, Fevereiro 14, 2009

Financial Glossary: A

A
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying Class A shares.

AAII
See: American Association of Individual Investors

ABO
See: Accumulated Benefit Obligation

ABS
See: Automated Bond System

ACAT
See: Automated Customer Account Transfer

ACES
See: Advance Computerized Execution System

ACH
See: Automated Clearing House

ACRS
See: Accelerated cost recovery system

ACU
See: Asian currency units

AD
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ANDORRA.

ADB
See: Adjusted Debit Balance

ADB
See: Asian Development Bank

ADR
See: American Depositary Receipt

ADS
See: American Depositary Share

AE
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for UNITED ARAB EMIRATES.

AED
The ISO 4217 currency code for United Arab Emirates Dirham.

AEX
See: Amsterdam Exchange

AFA
The ISO 4217 currency code for Afghan Afghani.

AF
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AFGHANISTAN.

AFM
See: Amman Financial Market

AG
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ANTIGUA AND BARBUDAAG.

AI
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ANGUILLAAI.

AIBD
Association of International Bond Dealers

AL
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ALBANIA.

ALL
The ISO 4217 currency code for Albanian Lek.

ALT
Alternative Trading System. This term is defined under section 301 of the U.S. Securities Act.

AM
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ARMENIA.

AMD
The ISO 4217 currency code for Armenian Dram.

AMEX
See: American Stock Exchange

AMPS
See: Auction Market Preferred Stock

AN
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for NETHERLANDS ANTILLES.

ANG
The ISO 4217 currency code for Netherlands Antilles Guilder.

AO
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ANGOLA.

AON
See: All or none order

AOR
The ISO 4217 currency code for Angolan Reajustado Kwanza.

AOS
See: Automated Order System

APR
See: Annual Percentage Rate

APT
See: Arbitrage Pricing Theory

APT
See: Automated Pit Trading

APV
See: Adjusted Present Value

APY
See: Annual Percentage Yield

AR
See: Auto-Regressive

ARCH
See: Auto-Regressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity

AQ
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ANTARCTICA.

AR
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ARGENTINA.

ARS
The ISO 4217 currency code for Argentinian Peso.

ARM
See: Adjustable-rate mortgage

ARPS
See: Adjustable-rate preferred stock

ARPS
See: Auction rate preferred stock

ARR
See: Average rate of return

AS
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AMERICAN SAMOA.

ASE
See: Athens Stock Exchange.

ASX
See: Australian Stock Exchange

AT
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AUSTRIA.

ATP
See: Arbitrage Trading Program

ATS
The ISO 4217 currency code for Austrian Schilling.

AU
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AUSTRALIA.

AUD
The ISO 4217 currency code for Australian Dollar currency.

AW
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ARUBA.

AWG
The ISO 4217 currency code for Aruban Guilder.

AZ
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AZERBAIJAN.

AZM
The ISO 4217 currency code for Azerbaijani Manat.

AAA+ Bank
Refers to banks that are rated AAA by IBCA, Moodys Investor Service and Standard & Poors.

Abandonment
Controlling party giving up rights to property voluntarily.

Abandonment option
The option of terminating an investment earlier than originally planned.

ABC agreement
A contract between an employee and a brokerage firm outlining the rights of the firm purchasing an NYSE membership for that employee.

Ability to pay
Refers to the borrower's ability to make interest and principal payments on debts. See: Fixed charge coverage ratio.
In context of municipal bonds, refers to the issuer's present and future ability to create sufficient tax revenue to fulfill its contractual obligations, accounting for municipal income and property values.
In context of taxation, notion that tax rates should be determined according to income or wealth.

Abnormal returns
The component of the return that is not due to systematic influences (market-wide influences). In other words, the abnormal returns is the difference between the actual return and that is expected to result from market movements (normal return). Related: excess returns.

Above par
See: Par.

Absolute advantage
A person, company or country has an absolute advantage if its output per unit of input of all goods and services produced is higher than that of another person, company or country.

Absolute form of purchasing power parity
A theory that prices of products of two different countries should be equal when measured by a common currency. Also called the "law of one price."

Absolute Physical Life
The period of use after which an asset has deteriorated to such an extent that it can no longer be used.

Absolute priority
Rule in bankruptcy proceedings requiring senior creditors to be paid in full before junior creditors receive any payment.

Absorbed
Used in context of general equities. Securities are "absorbed" as long as there are correspondingorders to buy and sell. The market has reached the absorption point when further assimilation is impossible without an adjustment in price. See: Sell the book.

Abusive tax shelter
A limited partnership that the IRS judges to be claiming tax deductions illegally.

Accelerated cost recovery system (ACRS)
Schedule of depreciation rates allowed for tax purposes.

Acceleration clause
A contract stating that the unpaid balance becomes due and payable if specific actions transpire, such as failure to make interests payments on time.

Accelerated depreciation
Any depreciation method that produces larger deductions for depreciation in the early years of an asset's life. Accelerated cost recovery system (ACRS), which is a depreciation schedule allowed for tax purposes, is one such example.

Acceptance
Contractual agreement instigated when the drawee of a time draft "accepts" the draft by writing the word "accepted" thereon. The drawee assumes responsibility as the acceptor and for payment at maturity. See: Letter of credit and banker's acceptance.

Accommodative monetary policy
Federal Reserve System policy to increase the amount of money available to banks for lending. See: Monetary policy.

Account
In the context of bookkeeping, refers to the ledger pages upon which various assets, liabilities, income, and expenses are represented.
In the context of investment banking, refers to the status of securities sold and owned or the relationship between parties to an underwriting syndicate. In the context of securities, the relationship between a client and a broker/dealerfirm allowing the firm's employee to be the client's buying and selling agent. See: Account executive; account statement.


Account Ad Valorem Duty
An imported merchandise tax expressed as a percentage.

Account balance
Creditsminus debits at the end of a reporting period.

Account executive
The brokerage firm employee who handles stockorders for clients. See: Broker.

Account Party
Party who applies to open a bank for the issuance of a letter of credit.

Account reconciliation
The reviewing and adjusting of the balance in a personal checkbook to match your bank statement.

Account statement
In the context of banking, refers to a summary of all balances.
In the context of securities, a summary of all transactions and positions (long and short) between a broker/dealer and a client. See also: Option agreement.


Accountant's opinion
A signed statement from an independent public accountant after examination of a firm's records and accounts. The opinion may be unqualified or qualified. See: Qualified opinion.

Accounting earnings
Earnings of a firm as reported on its income statement.

Accounting exposure
The change in the value of a firm's foreign currency-denominated accounts due to a change in exchange rates.

Accounting insolvency
Total liabilities exceed total assets. A firm with a negative net worth is insolvent on the books.

Accounting liquidity
The ease and quickness with which assets can be converted to cash.

Accounts payable
Money owed to suppliers.

Accounts receivable
Money owed by customers.

Accounts receivable financing
A short-termfinancing method in which accounts receivable are collateral for cash advances. See: Factoring.

Accounts receivable turnover
The ratio of netcreditsales to averageaccounts receivable, which is a measure of how quickly customers pay their bills.

Accredited investor
Refers to an individual whose net worth, or joint net worth with a spouse, exceeds $1,000,000; or whose individual income exceeded $200,000 or whose joint income with a spouse exceeded $300,000 in each of the 2 most recent years and can be expected to meet that income in the current year. More details of the definitions for investors other that individuals are found in Regulation D of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Accreting Swap)
An interest rate swap in which the notional principal amount increases over time, for example as with a construction loan provided in tranches as each stage of the project is completed.

Accretion (of a discount)
In portfolio accounting, a straight-line accumulation of capital gains on a discount bond in anticipation of receipt of par at maturity.

Accrual Accounting Convention
An accounting system that tries to match the recognition of revenues earned with the expenses incurred in generating those revenues. It ignores the timing of the cash flows associated with revenues and expenses.

Accrual basis
In the context of accounting, practice in which expenses and income are accounted for as they are earned or incurred, whether or not they have been received or paid. Antithesis of cash basis accounting.

Accrual bond
A bond on which interest accrues but is not paid to the investor during the time of accrual. The amount of accrued interest is added to the remaining principal of the bond and is paid at maturity.

Accrued benefits
The pension benefits earned by an employee according to the years of the employee's service.

Accrued discount
Interest that accumulates on savings bonds from the date of purchase until the date of redemption or final maturity, whichever comes first. Series A, B, C, D, E, EE, F, I, and J are discount or accrual bonds, meaning principal and interest are paid when the bonds are redeemed. Series G, H, HH, and K are income bonds, and the semiannual interest paid to their holders is not included in accrued discount.

Accrued interest
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Interest that has accumulated between the most recent payment and the sale of a bond or other fixed-income security. At the time of sale, the buyer pays the seller the bond's price plus "accrued interest," calculated by multiplying the coupon rate by the fraction of the coupon period that has elapsed since the last payment. (If a bondholder receives $40 in coupon payments per bond semiannually and sells the bond one-quarter of the way into the coupon period, the buyer pays the seller $10 as the latter's proportion of interest earned.)

Accrued market discount
The rise in the market value of a discount bond as it approaches maturity (when it is redeemable at par) and not because of falling marketinterest rates.

Accumulate
Broker/analyst recommendation that could mean slightly different things depending on the broker/analyst. In general, it means to increase the number of shares of a particular security over the near term, but not to liquidate other parts of the portfolio to buy a security that might skyrocket. A buy recommendation, but not an urgent buy.

Accumulated Benefit Obligation (ABO)
An approximate measure of the liability of a pension plan in the event of a termination at the date the calculation is performed. Related: Projected benefit obligation.

Accumulated dividend
A dividend that has reached its due date, but is not paid out. See: Cumulative preferred stock.

Accumulated profits tax
A tax on earnings retained in a firm as a way for the principals to defer personal income taxes.

Accumulation
In the context of corporate finance, refers to profits that are added to the capital base of the company rather than paid out as dividends. See: Accumulated profits tax.
In the context of investments, refers to the purchase by an institutional broker of a large number of shares over a period of time in order to avoid pushing the price of that share up.
In the context of mutual funds, refers to the regular investing of a fixed amount while reinvesting dividends and capital gains.

Accumulation area
A range within which a buyer accumulatesshares of a stock. See: On-balance volume and distribution area.

Acid test ratio
Also called the quick ratio, the ratio of current assetsminusinventories, accruals, and prepaid items to current liabilities.

Acquired surplus
The surplus acquired when a company is purchased in a pooling of interests combination, i.e. the net worth not considered to be capital stock.

Acquiree
A firm that is being acquired.

Acquirer
A firm or individual that is purchasing another firm or asset.

Acquisition
When a firm buys another firm.

Acquisition cost
Refers to the price (including the closing costs) to purchase another company or property.
In the context of investments, refers to price plus brokerage commissions, of a security, or the sales charge applied to load funds. See: Tax basis.


Acquisition of assets
A merger or consolidation in which an acquirerpurchases the selling firm's assets.

Acquisition of stock
A merger or consolidation in which an acquirerpurchases the acquiree'sstock.

Across the board
Movement or trend in the stock market that causes all stocks in all sectors to move in the same direction.

Acting in concert
Investors working together and performing identical actions to attain the same investment goal.

Act of state doctrine
This doctrine says that a nation is sovereign within its own borders, and its domestic actions may not be questioned in the courts of another nation.

Active
A market in which there is frequent trading.

Active account
Refers to a brokerage account in which many transactions occur. Brokerage firms may levy a fee if an account generates an inadequate level of activity.

Active bond crowd
Refers to members of the bond department of the NYSE who trade the most bonds. Antithesis of cabinet crowd.

Active box
Securities that are held in safekeeping and are available as collateral for securing brokers'loans or customers' marginpositions.

Active fund management
An investment approach that purposely shifts funds either between asset classes (asset allocation) or between individual securities (security selection).

Active income
Income from an active business as opposed to passiveinvestment income according to the U.S. tax code.

Active Management
The pursuit of investmentreturns in excess of a specified benchmark.

Active portfolio strategy
A strategy that uses available information and forecasting techniques to seek better performance than a buy and holdportfolio. Related: Passive portfolio strategy.

Active Return
Return relative to a benchmark. If a portfolio'sreturn is 5%, and the benchmark's return is 3%, then the portfolio's active return is 2%.

Active Risk
The risk (annualizedstandard deviation) of the activereturn. Also called the tracking error.

Actual market
Used in context of general equities. Firm market. Antithesis of Subject market.

Actuals
The physical commoditiesunderlying a futures contract. Cash commodity, physical asset.

A-D
Advance-Decline, or measurement of the number of issuestrading above their previous closing prices less the number trading below their previous closing prices over a particular period. As a technical measure of marketbreadth, the steepness of the AD line indicates whether a strong bull or bear market is under way.

Ad valorem tax
A type of tax calculated based on percentage of gross or stated value. For example, VAT.

Additional bonds test
A test for ensuring that bondissuers can meet the debt service requirements of issuing any new additional bonds.

Additional hedge
A protection against fallout risk in the mortgage pipeline.

Adequacy of coverage
A test that measures the extent to which the value of an asset is protected from potential loss either through insurance or hedging.

Adjustable rate
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Refers to interest rate or dividend that is adjusted periodically, usually according to a standard market rate outside the control of the bank or savings institution, such as that prevailing on Treasury bonds or notes. Typically, such issues have a set floor or ceiling, called caps and collars that limits the adjustment.

Adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM)
A mortgage that features predetermined adjustments of the loaninterest rate at regular intervals based on an established index. The interest rate is adjusted at each interval to a rate equivalent to the index value plus a predetermined spread, or margin, over the index, usually subject to per-interval and to life-of-loaninterest rate and/or payment rate caps.

Adjustable-rate preferred stock (ARPS)
Publicly tradedissues that may be collateralized by mortgages and MBS

Adjusted balance method
Method of calculating finance charges that uses the account balance remaining after adjusting for all transactions posted during the given billing period as its basis. Related: Average daily balance method, previous balance method, past due balance method.

Adjusted basis
Price from which to calculate and derive capital gains or losses upon sale of an asset. Account actions such as any stock splits that have occurred since the initial purchase must be accounted for.

Adjusted debit balance (ADB)
The account balance for a margin account that is calculated by combining the balance owed to a broker with any outstanding balance in the special miscellaneous account, and any paper profits on short accounts.

Adjusted exercise price
Term used in options on Ginnie Mae (Government National Mortgage Association) contracts. The final exercise price of the option accounts for the coupon rates carried on Ginnie Maemortgages. For example, if the standard GNMA mortgage has an 9% yield, the price of GNMA pools with 13% mortgages in them is altered so that the investor receives the same yield.

Adjusted gross income (AGI)
Gross income less allowable adjustments, which is the income on which an individual is taxed by the federal government.

Adjusted present value (APV)
The net present value analysis of an asset if financed solely by equity (present value of unlevered cash flows), plus the present value of any financing decisions (levered cash flows). In other words, the various tax shields provided by the deductibility of interest and the benefits of other investment tax credits are calculated separately. This analysis is often used for highly leveraged transactions such as a leveraged buyout.

Adjustment bond
A bondissued in exchange for outstanding bonds when a corporation facing bankruptcy is recapitalized.

Administrative pricing rules
IRS rules used to allocate income on export sales to a foreign sales corporation.

Advance
Increase in the market price of stocks, bonds, commodities, or other assets.

Advance commitment
A promise to sell an asset before the seller has lined up purchase of the asset. This seller can offsetrisk by purchasing a futures contract to fix the sales price approximately.

Advance Computerized Execution System (ACES)
Refers to the Advance Computerized Execution System, run by Nasdaq. ACES automates trades between order entry and market makerfirms that have established trading relationships with each other. Securities are designated as specified for automatic execution.

Advance funded pension plan
A pension plan in which funds are set aside in advance of the date of retirement.

Advance refunding
In the context of municipal bonds, refers to the sale of new bonds (the refundingissue) before the first call date of old bonds (the issue to be refunded). The refunding issue usually specifies a rate lower than the issue to be refunded, and the proceeds are invested, usually in governmentsecurities, until the higher-rate bonds become callable. See: Refunding escrow deposits.

Advancement
Money or property given to a person by the deceased before death and intended as an advance against the beneficiary's share in the will.

Adverse opinion
An independent auditor's opinion expressing that a firm'sfinancial statements do not reflect the company'sposition accurately. See also: Qualified opinion.

Adverse selection
Refers to a situation in which sellers have relevant information that buyers lack (or vice versa) about some aspect of product quality.

Advising bank
Corresponding bank in the beneficiary's country to which an issuing bank sends a letter of credit.

Advisory letter
A newsletter offering financial advice to its readers.

Affidavit of Loss
A sworn statement describing the particulars and circumstances of the loss of securities. This affidavit is required before a Bond of Indemnity can be issued and the securities replaced.

Affiliate
Relationship between two companies when one company owns substantial interest, but less than a majority of the voting stock of another company, or when two companies are both subsidiaries of a third company. See: Subsidiaries, parent company.

Affiliated corporation
A corporation that is an affiliate to the parent company.

Affiliated person
An individual who possesses enough influence and control in a corporation as to be able to alter the actions of the corporation.

Affirmative covenant
A bond covenant that specifies certain actions the firm must take.

Affirmative obligation
A New York Stock Exchange rule that governs the behavior of specialists. Affirmative obligation is the mandate of the specialists to step in and act as either the buyer or the seller when public investor orders exist do not match up naturally. Also known as positive_obligation. Related: negative_obligation.

Affordability index
An index that measures the financial ability of consumers to purchase a home.

After acquired clause
A contractual clause in a mortgage agreement stating that any additional mortgageable property attained by the borrower after the mortgage is signed will be regarded as additional security for the obligation addressed in the mortgage.

After-hours dealing or trading
Securitiestrading after regular trading hours on organized exchanges.

Aftermarket
See: Secondary market.

After-tax basis
The comparisonbasis used to analyze the net after-tax returns on a corporate taxable bond and a municipal tax-free bond.

After-tax profit margin
The ratio of net income to net sales.

After-tax real rate of return
The after-tax rate of return minus the inflation rate.

Against the box
See: Selling short against the box.

Aged fail
An account between two broker/dealers that remains intact 30 days after the settlement date. The receiving firm must adjust its capital as it can no longer treat this account as an asset.

Agencies
See: Federal agency securities.

Agency
In context of general equities, buying or selling for the account and risk of a customer. Generally, an agent, or broker, acts as intermediary between buyer and seller, taking no financial risk personally or as a firm, and charging a commission for the service. The broker represents a customer buyer/seller to a customer seller/buyer and does not act as principal for the firm's own trading account. Antithesis of principal. See: Dealer.

Agency bank
A form of organization commonly used by foreign banks to enter the US market. An agency bank cannot accept deposits or extend loans in its own name; it acts as agent for the parent bank. It is also the financial_institution that issuesADRs to the general market.

Agency basis
A means of compensating the broker of a program trade solely on the basis of commission established through bids submitted by various brokerage firms.

Agency cost view
The argument that specifies that the various agency costs create a complex environment in which total agency costs are at a minimum with some, but less than 100%, debtfinancing.

Agency costs
The incremental costs of having an agent make decisions for a principal.

Agency incentive arrangement
A means of compensating the broker of a program trade using benchmarkprices for issues to be traded in determining commissions or fees.

Agency pass-throughs
Mortgage pass-through securities whose principal and interest payments are guaranteed by government agencies, such as the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae), Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac), and Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae).

Agency problem
Conflicts of interest among stockholders, bondholders, and managers.

Agency securities
Securitiesissued by federally related institutions and U.S. government-sponsored entities. Such agencies were created to reduce borrowingcosts for certain sectors of the economy, such as agriculture.

Agency theory
The analysis of principal-agent relationships, in which one person, an agent, acts on behalf of another person, a principal.

Agent
A party appointed to act on behalf of a principal entity or person. In context of project financing, refers to the bank in charge of administering the project financing.

Aggregate exercise price
The exercise price multiplied by the number of shares in a put or callcontract. The option premium is excluded in the aggregate exercise price. In the case of options traded on debt instruments, the aggregate exercise price is the exercise price of the underlying security multiplied by its face value.

Aggregation
Process in corporate financial planning whereby the smaller investment proposals of each of the firm's operational units are aggregated and effectively treated as a whole.

Aggressive Growth Hedge Fund
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that focuses primarily on equities that are expected to have strong earnings growth.

Aggressive growth mutual fund
A mutual fund designed for maximum capital appreciation that places its money in companies with high growth rates.

Aggressively
Used in context of general equities. For a customer it means working to buy or sell one's stock, with an emphasis on execution over price. For a trader it means acting in a way that puts the firm'scapital at higher risk through paying a higher price, selling cheaper, or making a larger short sale or purchase than the trader would under normal circumstances.

Aging schedule
A table of accounts receivable broken down into age categories (such as 0-30 days, 30-60 days, and 60-90 days), which is used to determine if customer payments are keeping close to schedule.

Agreement among underwriters
A contract among participating members of a syndicate that defines the members' proportionate liability, which is usually limited to and based on the participants' level of involvement. The contract outlines the payment schedule on the settlement date. Compare: Underwriting agreement.

Agreement corporation
Corporationchartered by a state to engage in international banking: so named because the corporation enters into an "agreement" with the Fed's Board of Governors that it will limit its activities to those permitted by an Edge Act Corporation.

Ahead of itself
In context of general equities, refers to equities that are overbought or oversold on a fundamental basis.

Ahead of you
Used for listed equity securities. At the same price but entered ahead of your order/interest, usually referring to the specialist's book. See: Behind,matched orders,priority,stock ahead.

AIMR Performance Presentation Standards Implementation Committee
The Association for Investment Management and Research (AIMR) Performance Presentation Standards Implementation Committee is charged with the responsibility to interpret, revise, and update the AIMR Performance Presentation Standards (AIMR-PPS(TM) for portfolio performance presentations.

Air Freight Consolidator
An air freight carrier that does not own or operate its own aircraft but ships its cargo with actual equipment operating carriers. Consolidators issue house air waybills to their customers and receive master air waybills from the actual carriers.

Air pocket stock
A stock whose price drops precipitously, often on the unexpected news of poor results.

Alien corporation
A company incorporated under the laws of a foreign country regardless of where the company conducts its operations.

All equity rate
The discount rate that reflects only the business risks of a project, distinct from the effects of financing.

All in
Refers to an issuer'sinterest rate after accounting for commissions and various related expenses.

All-in-rate
Rate used in charging customers for accepting banker's acceptances, consisting of the discount interest rate plus the commission.

All Ordinaries Index
The major stock price index in Australia. The capitalization weighted index is made up of the largest 500 companies as measured by market capitalization that are listed on the Australian Stock Exchange. The index was developed with a base value of 500 as of 1979.

All or none order (AON)
Used in context of general equities. A limited price order that is to be executed in its entirety or not at all (no partial transaction), and thus is testing the strength/conviction of the counterparty. Unlike an FOK order, an AON order is not to be treated as cancelled if not executed as soon as it is represented in the trading crowd, but instead remains alive until executed or cancelled. The making of "all or none" bids or offers in stocks is prohibited, and the making of "all or none" bids or offers in bonds is subject to the restrictions of Rule 61. AON orders are not shown on the specialist's book because they cannot be traded in pieces. Antithesis of any-part-of order. See: FOK order.

All-in cost
Total costs, explicit and implicit.

All-or-none underwriting
An arrangement whereby a securityissue is cancelled if the underwriter is unable to resell the entire issue.

All Risk Insurance
Marine cargo insurance which covers most perils except strikes, riots, civil unrest, capture, war, seizure, civil war, piracy, loss of market, and inherent vice.

Allied member
A partner or stockholder of a firm that is a member of the NYSE, the partner or stockholder is not personally a member of the NYSE.

Alligator spread
The term used to describe a spread in the optionsmarket that generates such a large commission that the client is unlikely to make a profit even if the markets move as the investoranticipated.

Allocation-of-income rules
US tax provisions that define how income and deductions are to be allocated between domestic source and foreign source income.

Allocational efficiency
The effectiveness with which a market channels capital toward its most productive uses.

Allotment
The number of securities assigned to each of the participants in an underwriting syndicate.

Alpha
Measure of risk-adjusted performance. An alpha is usually generated by regressing the security or mutual fund'sexcess return on the S&P 500 excess return. The beta adjusts for the risk (the slope coefficient). The alpha is the intercept. Example: Suppose the mutual fund has a return of 25%, and the short-terminterest rate is 5% (excess return is 20%). During the same time the market excess return is 9%. Suppose the beta of the mutual fund is 2.0 (twice as risky as the S&P 500). The expected excess return given the risk is 2 x 9%=18%. The actual excess return is 20%. Hence, the alpha is 2% or 200 basis points. Alpha is also known as the Jensen Index. Related: Risk-adjusted return.

Alpha equation
Regression usually run over 36-60 months of data: Return-Treasury bill= alpha + beta (S&P 500 - Treasury bill) + error. The alpha is the intercept. Note that the benchmark does not necessarily have to be the S&P 500. A mutual fund specializing in international investment might be benchmarked to a broader world market index, such as the MSCI World Index.

Alphabet stock
Categories of common stock of a corporation associated with a particular subsidiary resulting from acquisitions and restructuring. The various alphabetical categories have different voting rights and pay dividends tied to the operating performance of the particular divisions. See also: Tracking stocks.

Alternative investments
Usually refers to investments in hedge funds. Many hedge funds pursue strategies that are uncommon relative to mutual funds. Examples of alternative investment strategies are: long--short equity, event driven, statistical arbitrage, fixed income arbitrage, convertible arbritage, short bias, global macro, and equity market neutral. May also refer to the high frequency style of commodity trading advisors who often employ technical and quantitative tools for intraday investments

Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)
A federal tax aimed at ensuring that wealthy individuals, estates, trusts, and corporations pay a minimal level income tax. For individuals, the AMT is calculated by adding adjusted gross income to tax preference items.

Alternative mortgage instruments
Variations of mortgageinstruments such as adjustable-rate and variable-rate mortgages, graduated-payment mortgages, reverse-annuity mortgages, and several seldom-used variations.

Alternative order
Used in context of general equities. Order giving a broker a choice between two courses of action, either to buy or sell, never both. Execution of one course automatically eliminates the other. An example is a combination buy limit/ buy stop order, where the buy limit is below the current market and the buy stop is above. If the order is for one unit of trading, when one part of the order is executed on the occurrence of one alternative, the order on the other alternative is to be treated as cancelled. If the order is for an amount of more than one unit of trading, the number of units executed determines the amount of the alternative order to be treated as cancelled. Sometimes known as One Cancels the Other. Also see: Either-or order.

American Association of Individual Investors (AAII)
A not-for-profit organization to educate individual investors about stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and other financial instruments.

American Depositary Receipt (ADR)
Certificates issued by a US depository bank, representing foreign shares held by the bank, usually by a branch or correspondent in the country of issue. One ADR may represent a portion of a foreign share, one share or a bundle of shares of a foreign corporation. If the ADR's are "sponsored," the corporation provides financial information and other assistance to the bank and may subsidize the administration of the ADR. "Unsponsored" ADRs do not receive such assistance. ADRs are subject to the same currency, political, and economic risks as the underlying foreign share. Arbitrage keeps the prices of ADRs and underlying foreign shares, adjusted for the SDR/ordinary ratio essentially equal. American depository shares (ADS) are a similar form of certification.

American Depositary Receipt Fees
Fees associated with the creating or releasing of ADRs from ordinary shares, charged by the commercial banks with correspondent banks in the international sites.

American Depositary Receipt Ratio
The number of ordinary shares into which an ADR can be converted.

American Depositary Share (ADS)
Foreign stock issued in the US and registered in the ADR system.

American option
An option that may be exercised at any time up to and including the expiration date. Related: European option

American shares
Securitiescertificatesissued in the US by a transfer agent acting on behalf of the foreign issuer. The certificates represent claims to foreign equities.

American Stock Exchange (AMEX)
Stock exchange with the third highest volume of trading in the US. Located at 86 Trinity Place in downtown Manhattan. The bulk of trading on AMEX consists of index options (computer technology index, institutional index, major market index) and shares of small to medium-sized companies are predominant. Recently merged with Nasdaq See: Curb.

American-style option
An optioncontract that can be exercised at any time between the date of purchase and the expiration date. Most exchange-traded equity options are American style.

Amman Financial Market (AFM)
Established in 1976, the AFM is the only stock exchange in Jordan.

Amman Stock Exchange
The only agency authorized as a formal market for tradingsecurities in Jordan.

Amortization
The repayment of a loan by installments.

Amortization factor
The pool factor implied by the scheduled amortization assuming no prepayments.

Amortizing interest rate swap
Swap in which the principal or notional amount declines over time.

Amount outstanding and in circulation
All currency issued by the Bureau of the Mint and intended as a medium of exchange. Coins sold by the Bureau of the Mint at premium prices are not included; uncirculated coin sets sold at face value plus handling charge are included.

Amsterdam Exchange (AEX)
Exchange that comprises the AEX-Effectenbeurs, the AEX-Optiebeurs (formerly the European Options Exchange or EOE) and the AEX-Agrarische Termijnmarkt. AEX-Data Services is the operating company responsible for the dissemination of data from the Amsterdam Exchange via its integrated Mercury 2000 system.

AMTEL
Used in context of general equities. In-house message system entered and displayed through Quotron A page.

Analyst
Employee of a brokerage or fund management house who studies companies and makes buy-and-sell recommendations on stocks of these companies. Most specialize in a specific industry.

And interest
An indication that the buyer will receive accrued interest in addition to the price quoted for a bond.

Andean Pact
A regional trade pact that includes Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia.

Angel
An investment-grade bond. Antithesis to fallen angel. In the context of venture capital, the first investor.

Angels
Individuals providing venture capital.

Ankle biter
Stock issued with a market capitalization of less than $500 million.

Announcement date
Date on which particular news concerning a given company is announced to the public. Used in event studies, which researchers use to evaluate the economic impact of events of interest.

Annual basis
The technique in statistics of taking a figure covering a period of less than one year and extrapolating it to cover a full one year period. The process is known as annualizing.

Annual effective yield
See: Annual percentage yield.

Annual exclusion
A tax rule allowing the deduction of certain income from taxation.

Annual fund operating expenses
For investmentcompanies, the management fee and "other expenses," including the expenses for maintaining shareholder records, providing shareholders with financial statements, and providing custodial and accounting services. For 12b-1 funds, selling and marketingcosts are also included.

Annual meeting
Meeting of stockholders held once a year at which the managers of a companyreport to the stockholders on the year's results.

Annual percentage rate (APR)
The periodic rate times the number of periods in a year. For example, a 5% quarterly return has an APR of 20%.

Annual percentage yield (APY)
The effective, or true annual rate of return. The APY is the rate actually earned or paid in one year, taking into account the effect of compounding. The APY is calculated by taking one plus the periodic rate, raising it to the number of periods in a year and then subtracting one. For example, a 1% per month rate has an APY of 12.68% (1.01^12 -1).

Annual rate of return
There are many ways of calculating the annual rate of return. If the rate of return is calculated on a monthly basis, we sometimes multiply this by 12 to express an annual rate of return. This is often called the annual percentage rate (APR). The annual percentage yield (APY) includes the effect of compoundinginterest.

Annual renewable term insurance
See: Term insurance.

Annual report
Yearly record of a publicly heldcompany'sfinancial condition. It includes a description of the firm's operations, as well as balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement information. SEC rules require that it be distributed to all shareholders. A more detailed version is called a 10-K.

Annualized gain
If stock X appreciates 1.5% in one month, the annualizedgain for that stock over a twelve month period is (12 x 1.5%) = 18%. Compounded over the 12 month period, the gain is (1.015)^12 -1 = 19.6%.

Annualized holding-period return
The annual rate of return that when compoundedt times generates the same t-period holding return as actually occurred from period 1 to period t.

Annualizing
See: Annual basis.

Annuitant
An individual who receives benefits from an annuity.

Annuitize
To commence a series of payments from the capital that has accumulated in an annuity. The payments may be a fixed amount, for a fixed period of time, or for a lifetime.

Annuity
A regular periodic payment made by an insurance company to a policyholder for a specified period of time.

Annuity certain
An annuity that pays a specific amount on a monthly basis for a set amount of time.

Annuity due
An annuity with n payments, where the first payment is made at time t = 0, and the last payment is made at time t = n - 1.

Annuity factor
Present value of $1 paid for each of t periods.

Annuity in arrears
An annuity with a first payment one full period hence, rather than immediately.

Annuity starting date
The date when an annuitant starts receiving payments from an annuity.

Anticipated holding period
The period of time an individual expects to hold an asset.

Anticipation
Paying what is owed before it is due (usually to save interest charges).

Antidilutive effect
Result of a transaction that increases earnings per common share (e.g., by decreasing the number of sharesoutstanding).

Anti-Persistence
In R/S Analysis, an anti-persistent time series reverses itself more often than a random series would. If the system had been up in the previous period, it is more likely that it will be down in the next period and vice versa. Also called pink noise, or 1/f noise. See: Persistence, R/S Analysis, Hurst Exponent, Joseph Effect, Noah Effect.

Antigreenmail
Greenmail refers to the agreement between a large shareholder and a company in which the shareholder agrees to sell his stock back to the company, usually at a premium, in exchange for the promise not to seek control of the company for a specified period of time. Antigreenmail provisions prevent such arrangements unless the same repurchaseoffer is made to all shareholders or approved by shareholder vote. There are some states that have antigreenmail laws.

Antitrust laws
Legislation established by the federal government to prevent the formation of monopolies and to regulate trade.

Any-interest-date
A call provision in a municipal bondindenture that establishes the right of redemption for the issuer on any interest payment due date.

Any-or-all bid
Often used in risk arbitrage. Takeoverbid in which the acquireroffers to pay a set price for all outstanding shares of the target company, or any part thereof; contrasts with two-tier bid.

Any-part-of order
In context of general equities, order to buy or sell a quantity of stock in pieces if necessary. Antithesis of an all-or-none order (AON).

Appraisal ratio
The signal-to-noise ratio of an analyst'sforecasts. The ratio of alpha to residualstandard deviation.

Appraisal rights
A right of shareholders in a merger to demand the payment of a fair price for their shares, as determined independently.

Appreciation
Increase in the value of an asset.

Appropriation request
Formal request for funds for capital investment project.

Approved list
A list of equities and other investments that a financial institution or mutual fund is allowed to invest in. See: Legal list.

APS
Auction Preferred Stock. A type of Dutch Auction Preferred Stock (Goldman Sachs product).

Arbitrage
The simultaneous buying and selling of a security at two different prices in two different markets, resulting in profits without risk. Perfectly efficient markets present no arbitrage opportunities. Perfectly efficient markets seldom exist, but, arbitrage opportunities are often precluded because of transactionscosts.

Arbitrage bonds
Municipalityissuedbonds issued intended to gain an interest rate advantage by refunding a higher-rate bond in ahead of their call date. Lower-rate refunding issue proceeds are invested in Treasuries until the first call date of the higher-rate issue.

Arbitrage-free option-pricing models
Yield curve option-pricing models.

Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT)
An alternative model to the capital asset pricing model developed by Stephen Ross and based purely on arbitrage arguments. The APT implies that there are multiple risk factors that need to be taken into account when calculating risk-adjusted performance or alpha.

Arbitrage Trading Program (ATP)
See: Program trading.

Arbitrageur
One who profits from the differences in price when the same, or extremely similar, security, currency, or commodity is traded on two or more markets. The arbitrageur profits by simultaneously purchasing and selling these securities to take advantage of pricing differentials (spreads) created by market conditions. See: Risk arbitrage,convertible arbitrage,index arbitrage, and international arbitrage.

Are you open?
Used in context of general equities. "Can a new customer still participate on opposing side of the trade from that which the first customer initiated?", Inquiring as to whether any portion of that trade is still available See: Open.

Arithmetic average (mean) rate of return
Arithmetic mean return.

Arithmetic mean return
An average of the subperiod returns, calculated by summing the subperiod returns and dividing by the number of subperiods.

Arizona Stock Exchange
A single price auction exchange for equity trading that allows anonymous buyers and sellers to trade at low transactioncosts.

Arm's length price
The price at which a willing buyer and a willing unrelated seller would freely agree to transact or a trade between related parties that is conducted as if they were unrelated, so that there is no conflict of interest in the transaction.

Arms index
Also known as a TRading INdex (TRIN). The index is usually calculated as the number of advancing issues divided by the number of declining issues. This, in turn, is divided by the advancing volume divided by the declining volume. If there is considerably more advancing volume relative to declining volume this will tend to reduce the index (i.e. increase the denominator). Hence, a value less than 1.0 is bullish while values greater than 1.0 indicate bearish demand. The index often is smoothed with a simple moving average.

Around us
Used in context of general equities. See: Away from you.

Arranger
The senior tier of a syndication. This implies the entity that agreed and negotiated the project financing structure. Also refers to the bank or underwriter entitled to syndicate the loan or bondissue. Also known as the lead underwriter.

Arrearage
In the context of investments, refers to the amount by which interest on bonds or dividends on cumulative preferred stock is due and unpaid.

Articles of incorporation
Legal document establishing a corporation and its structure and purpose.

Artificial currency
A currency substitute, e.g., special drawing rights (SDRs).

Artificial Intelligence
The creation of models that mimic thought processes. See: Neural Networks, Fuzzy Logic, and Genetic Algorithms.

Ascending tops
A chart pattern that depicts that each peak in a security's price over a period of time is higher than the preceding peak. Antithesis of descending tops.

Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Pact (APEC)
A loose economic affiliation of Southeast Asian and Far Eastern nations. The most prominent members are China, Japan, and Korea.

Asian Currency Units (ACU)
Dollar deposits held in Singapore or other Asian centers.

Asian Development Bank
A financial_institution established in 1966 to reduce poverty in the Asia-Pacific region. The bank is headquartered in Manila, Philippines and consists of 61 member countries.

Asian dollar market
Asian banks that collect deposits and make loansdenominated in US dollars.

Asian option
Option based on the average price of the underlying assets during the life of the option.

Ask
This is the quoted ask, or the lowest price an investor will accept to sell a stock. Practically speaking, this is the quoted offer at which an investor can buyshares of stock; also called the offer price.

Asked price
In context of general equities, price at which a security or commodity is offered for sale on an exchange or in the OTCMarket.

Asked to bid/offer
Used in context of general equities. Usually a seller (buyer) looking to aggressively sell (buy) stock, usually asking for a capital commitment from an investment bank.

Aspirin
Australian Stock Price Riskless Indexed Notes. Zero-coupon four-year bonds repayable at face value plus the percentage increase by which the Australian stock index of all ordinaries (common stocks) rises above a predefined level during the given period.

Assay
Metal purity test to confirm that the metal meets the standards for trading on a commodities exchange (commodities exchange center).

Assessed valuation
The value assigned to property by a municipality for the purpose of tax assessment. Such an assessed valuation is important to investors in municipal bonds that are backed by property taxes.

Asset
Any possession that has value in an exchange.

Asset activity ratios
Ratios that measure how effectively the firm is managing its assets.

Asset allocation decision
The decision regarding how an institution's funds should be distributed among the major classes of assets in which it may invest.

Asset allocation mutual fund
A mutual fund that rotates among stocks, bonds, and money marketsecurities to maximize return on investment and minimize risk.

Asset-backed security
A security that is collateralized by loans,leases, receivables, or installmentcontracts on personal property, not real estate.

Asset-based financing
Methods of financing in which lenders and equity investors look principally to the cash flow from a particular asset or set of assets for a return on, and the return of, their financing.

Asset classes
Categories of assets, such as stocks, bonds, real estate, and foreign securities.

Asset-coverage test
A bond indenture restriction that permits additional borrowing if the ratio of assets to debt does not fall below a specified minimum.

Asset Depreciation Range System
A range of depreciable lives the IRS allows for particular classes of assets.

Asset/equity ratio
The ratio of total assets to stockholder equity.

Asset for asset swap
Creditors exchange the debt of one defaultingborrower for the debt of another defaulting borrower.

Asset/liability management
The task of managing the funds of a financial institution to accomplish two goals: (1) to earn an adequate return on funds invested and (2) to maintain a comfortable surplus of assets beyond liabilities. Also called surplus management.

Asset management account
Account at a brokerage house, bank, or savings institution that integrates banking services and brokerage features.

Asset play
A company with assets that are not believed to be accurately reflected in its stock price, making it an attractive buy or play.

Asset pricing model
A model for determining the required or expected rate of return on an asset. Related: Capital asset pricing model and arbitrage pricing theory.

Asset stripper
A corporate raider (company A) that takes over a target company (company B) in order to sell large assets of company B to repay debt. Company A calculates that the net, selling off the assets and paying off the debt, will leave the raider with assets that are worth more than what it paid for company B.

Asset substitution
Occurs when a firm invests in assets that are riskier than those that the debtholders expected.

Asset substitution problem
Arises when the stockholders substitute riskierassets for the firm's existing assets and expropriate value from the debtholders.

Asset swap
An interest rate swap used to alter the cash flow characteristics of an institution's assets in order to provide a better match with its liabilities.

Asset turnover
The ratio of net sales to total assets.

Asset value
The net market value of a corporation'sassets on a per-share basis, not the market value of the shares. A company is undervalued in the market when asset value exceeds market value.

Assets
A firm's productive resources.

Assets-in-place
Property in which a firm has already invested.

Assets requirements
A common element of a financial plan that describes projected capital spending and the proposed uses of net working capital.

Assignment
The receipt of an exercise notice by an optionswriter that requires the writer to sell (in the case of a call) or purchase (in the case of a put) the underlying security at the specified strike price.

Assignment of proceeds
Arrangement that allows the original beneficiary of a letter of credit to pledge or turn over proceeds to another, typically end supplier.

Assimilation
The public absorption of a new issue of stocks once the stock has been completely sold by underwriter. See: Absorbed.

Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
A loose economic and geopolitical affiliation that includes Singapore, Brunei, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam. Future members are likely to include Burma, Laos, and Cambodia.

Assumed interest rate
Rate of interest used by an insurancecompany to calculate the payout on an annuitycontract.

Assumption
Becoming responsible for the liabilities of another party.

ASX Derivatives and Options Market (ASXD)
Options markettrading options on more than 50 of Australia's and New Zealand's leading companies.

Asymmetric information
Information that is known to some people but not to other people.

Asymmetric taxes
When participants in a transaction have different net tax rates.

Asymmetric volatility
Phenomenon that volatility is higher in down markets than in up markets.

Asymmetry
A lack of equivalence between two things, such as the unequal tax treatment of interest expense and dividend payments.

"At"/"for"
Used in context of general equities. Paramount terms used to differentiate an offering. Stock is offered at; stock is bid for. In an offering, the trading syntax followed is "Quantity-at-Price"; in a bid, the syntax followed is "Price-for-Quantity."

Athens Stock Exchange
Greece's only major securities market. Greek language only.

At par
A price equal to nominal or face value of a security. See: Par.

At risk
The exposure to the danger of economic loss. Frequently used in the context of claiming tax deductions. For example, a person can claim a tax deduction in a limited partnership if the taxpayer can show it is at risk of never realizing a profit and of losing its initial investment. See: Value at risk.

At the bell
In context of general equities, at the opening or close of the market. See: MOC Order.

At the close order
In the context of securities, an all or nonemarket order that is to be executed at the closing price of the security on the exchange. If the execution cannot be made under this condition, the order is to be treated as cancelled.
In the context of futures and options, refers to a contract that is to be executed on some exchanges during the closing period, a period in which there is a range of prices.


At the figure
In context of general equities, at the whole integer price (excluding the fraction) closest to the side of the market (bid/ask) being discussed. At the full.

At the full
Used in context of general equities. At the figure.

At the market
See: Market order.

At-the-money
An option is at the money if the strike price of the option is equal to the market price of the underlying security. For example, if xyz stock is trading at 54, then the xyz 54 option is at the money.

At the opening order
In context of general equities, market order or limited price order that is to be executed at the opening (and corresponding price) of the stock or not at all, and any such order or portion thereof not so executed is to be treated as cancelled.

Attractor
In non-linear dynamic series, an attractor defines the equilibrium level of the system. See: Point Attractor, Limit Cycle, and Strange Attractor.

Attribute bias
The tendency of stocks preferred by the dividend discount model to share certain equity attributes such as low price-earnings ratios, high dividend yield, high book value ratio, or membership in a particular industry sector.

Athens Stock Exchange (ASE)
Greece's principal stock exchange.

Auction Market Preferred Stock (AMPS)
A type of Dutch Auction Preferred Stock (A Merrill Lynch product).

Auction markets
Markets in which the prevailing price is determined through the free interaction of prospective buyers and sellers, as on the floor of the stock exchange.

Auction rate preferred stock (ARPS)
Floating rate preferred stock, whose dividend is adjusted every seven weeks through a Dutch auction.

Audit
An examination of a company's accounting records and books conducted by an outside professional in order to determine whether the company is maintaining records according to generally accepted accounting principles. See: accountant's opinion.

Audit trail
Resolves the validity of an accounting entry by a step-by-step record by which accounting data can be traced to their source.

Auditor's certificate
See: Accountant's opinion.

Auditor's report
A section of an annual report that includes the auditor's opinion about the veracity of the financial statements.

Aunt Millie
An unsophisticated investor.

Australian Stock Exchange (ASX)
Australia's major securities market, formed when the six state stock exchanges (Adelaide, Brisbane, Hobart, Melbourne, Perth, and Sydney stock exchanges) were merged in 1987.

Autarky
Absence of a cross-border trade in models of international trade.

Autex
Video communication network through which brokerage houses alert institutional investors of their desire to transact block business (a purchase or sale) in a given security. Indications transmit small, medium, and large sizes only, with occasional limits mentioned. Supers are messages with specific size and price included. Both "indications" and "supers" can be only seen by customers (institutional subscribers to Autex). Trade recaps, advertised block trades entered by the dealer/subscribers, are also displayed, but can be seen by both institutions and dealers. See: Expunge, size.

Authentication
In the context of bonds, refers to the validation of a bond certificate.

Authority bond
A bond issued by a government agency or a corporation created to manage a revenue-producing public enterprise. The difference between an authority bond and a municipal bond is that margin protections may be incorporated in the authority bond contract as well as in the legislation that enables the authority.

Authorized shares
Number of shares authorized for issuance by a firm's corporate charter.

Autocorrelation
The correlation of a variable with itself over successive time intervals. Sometimes called serial correlation.

Automated bond system (ABS)
The computerized system that records bids and offers for inactively tradedbonds until they are cancelled or executed on the NYSE.

Automated Clearing House (ACH)
A collection of 32 regional electronic interbank networks used to process transactions electronically with a guaranteed one-day bank collection float.

Automated Customer Account Transfer (ACAT)
For transfers of securities from a non-equity trading account to your equity trading account with your broker.

Automated Export System
Electronic filing of Shippers Export Declaration (SEDs) with US Customs prior to departure.

Automated Order System (AOS)
Investment bank computerized order entry system that sends single order entries to DOT (Odd-Lot) or to investment banks floor brokers on the exchange. See: Round lot, GTC orders.

Automated Pit Trading (APT)
Introduced in 1989, APT is the LIFFE screen-based trading system that replicates the open outcry method of trading on screen. APT is used to extend the trading day for the major futures contracts as well as to provide a daytime trading environment for non-floor trading products.

Automated teller machine (ATM)
Computer-controlled terminal located on the premises of financial institutions or elsewhere, though which customers may make deposits, withdrawals or other transactions as they would through a bank teller. Other terms sometimes used to describe such terminals are customer-bank communications terminal (CBCT) and remote service unit (RSU). Groups of banks sometimes share ATMs. Sometimes called Automated Banking Machines.

Automatic Data Processing (ADP)
A private company that acts as an intermediary to perform proxy services for several banks and brokers. Distributes proxy material to beneficial owners, tabulates the returned proxies, and provides the Corporation or its tabulator compiled reports of the tabulation results. ADP also distributes quarterlyreports and other corporate information to the beneficial owners.

Automatic exercise
A protection procedure whereby the Options Clearing Corporation attempts to protect the holder of an expiring in-the-money option by automatically exercising the option on behalf of the holder.

Automatic extension
An automatic extension of time granted to a taxpayer to file a tax return.

Automatic funds transfer
A transfer of funds from one account or investment vehicle to another using electronic or telecommunications technology.

Automatic investment program
A program in which an investor can invest or withdraw funds automatically. A mutual fund, for example, automatically withdraws a pre determined specified amount from the investor's bank account on a regular basis.

Automatic reinvestment
See: Constant dollar plan.

Automatic stay
The restricting of liabilityholders from collection efforts related to collateral seizure. Automatically imposed when a firm files for bankruptcy under Chapter 11.

Automatic transfer service (ATS) account
A depositor's saving account from which funds may be transferred automatically to the same depositor's checking account to cover a check written or to maintain a minimum balance.

Automatic withdrawal
A mutual fund that gives shareholders the right to receive a fixed payment from dividends on a quarterly or monthly basis.

Autoquote
Autoquote indicative prices are generated for many of the financialoptions contractstraded at LIFFE using standard mathematical models as derived by Black and Scholes and Cox, Ross, Rubinstein. Autoquote calculates prices for all series by processing variables captured in real-time from other systems and trading members each time the underlying price changes. Autoquotes indicate where a series may trade, given the current level of the underlyinginstrument.

Autoregressive
Using past data or variable of interest to predict future values of the same variable.

Auto-Regressive (AR) Process
A stationary stochastic process where the current value of the time series is related to the past p values, where p is any integer, is called an AR(p) process. When the current value is related to the previous two values, it is an AR(2) process. An AR(1) process has an infinite memory.

Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity (ARCH)
A nonlinear stochastic process, where the variance is time-varying, and a function of the past variance. ARCH processes have frequency distributions which have high peaks at the mean and fat-tails, much like fractal distributions. The ARCH model was invented by Robert Engle. The Generalized ARCH (GARCH) model is the most widely used and was pioneered by Tim Bollerslev. See: Fractal Distributions.

Availability
The period in which the project financing is available for drawdown.

Availability float
Checks deposited by a company that have not yet been cleared.

Available cash flow
Total cash sources less total cash uses before payment of debt service.

Available on the way in
In context of general equities, stock is available to new customer as trade initiated by another customer is about to be consummated (on the exchangefloor). Usually said to an inquiring salesperson. See: Open.

Aval
Term meaning inseparable from the financialinstrument. This gives a guarantee and is abstracted from the performance of the underlying trade contract: Article 31 of the 1930 Geneva Convention of the Bills Of Exchange states that the aval can be written on the bill itself or on an allonge. US Banks are prohibited from avalizing drafts.

Avalizor
An institution or person who gives the aval.

Average
An arithmetic mean return of selected stocks intended to represent the behavior of the market or some component of it. One good example is the widely quoted Dow Jones Industrial Average, which adds the current prices of the 30 DJIA stocks, and divides the results by a predetermined number, the divisor.

Average accounting return
The average project earnings after taxes and depreciation divided by the averagebook value of the investment during its life.

Average (across-day) measures
An estimation of price that uses the average or representative price of a large number of trades.

Average age of accounts receivable
The weighted-average age of all the firm's outstanding invoices.

Average collection period, or days' receivables
The ratio of accounts receivables to sales, or the total amount of credit extended per dollar of daily sales (average AR/sales 365).

Average cost
In the context of investing, refers to the averagecost of shares or stock bought at different prices over time.

Average cost of capital
A firm's required payout to bondholders and stockholders expressed as a percentage of capitalcontributed to the firm. Average cost of capital is computed by dividing the total required cost of capital by the total amount of contributed capital.

Average daily balance
A method for calculating interest in which the balance owed each day by a customer is divided by the number of days. See also: Adjusted balance method and previous balance method.

Average discount rate
Purchaserstender their competitive bids on a discount rate basis. The weighted, or adjusted mean of all bids accepted in Treasury bill auctions.

Average down
A strategy used by investors to reduce the average cost of shares, in which the investorpurchases more shares with a fixed amount of capital as the price of the shares decreases. The investor receives more shares per dollar and decreases the average price per share.

Average equity
A customer's average daily balance in a trading account at a brokerage firm.

Average life
Also referred to as the weighted-average life (WAL). The average number of years that each dollar of unpaid principal due on the mortgage remains outstanding. Average life is computed as the weighted-average time to the receipt of all future cash flows, using as the weights the dollar amounts of the principal paydowns.

Average maturity
The average time to maturity of securities held by a mutual fund. Changes in interest rates have greater impact on funds with longer average maturity.

Average rate of return (ARR)
The ratio of the average cash inflow to the amount invested.

Average tax rate
Taxes as a fraction of income; total taxes divided by total taxable income.

Average up
A strategy used by investors to lower the overall cost of shares by buying as many shares with a given amount of capital in an increasing market. Buying $1000 worth of shares at $30, $35, $40, and $45, for instance, will make the average cost of the sharesx $36.65, lower than the average price of $37.50.

Averaging
See: Constant dollar plan.

Avoided cost
In context of project financing, the capital and expense that would have to be spent if the project did not proceed.

Away
A trade, quote, or market that does not originate with the dealer in question, e.g., "the bid is 98-10 away from me."

Away from the market
In context of general equities, out of line with the inside market at this time, such as when a bid on a limit order is lower or the offer price is higher than the current market price for the security; held by the specialist for later execution unless FOK. Antithesis of in-line.

Away from us
Used in context of general equities, to characterize role of a competing broker/dealer. Trading away from us signifies that stock is bought and/or sold with institutions using other tradingfirms.

Away from you
Used for listed equity securities. See: Outside of you.

Axe to grind
Used in context of general equities. Involvement in a security, whether through a position, order, or inquiry.

Marcadores:

Bookmark and Share

Financial Glossary: B

B
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock descriptor specifying that issue is the Class B shares of the company.

B2B
An Internet strategy of dealing directly with businesses, rather than consumers, i.e. business to (2) business.

BA
The two-character ISO 3166 country code forBOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA.

BAM
The ISO 4217 currency code for Bosnia & Herzegovinan Convertible Mark.

BAN
See: Bank anticipation notes

BAR
See: Builders' All Risk

BB
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BARBADOS.

BBD
The ISO 4217 currency code for Barbadian Dollar.

BD
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BANGLADESH.

BDT
The ISO 4217 currency code for Bangladeshi Taka currency.

BE
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BELGIUM.

BEACON
See: Boston Exchange Automated Communication Order-Routing Network

BEARS
See: Bonds Enabling Annual Retirement Savings (BEARS)

BEF
The ISO 4217 currency code for Belgian Franc.

BF
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BURKINA FASO.

BG
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BULGARIA.

BGL
The pre-July 1999 ISO 4217 currency code for Bulgarian Lev.

BGN
The current ISO 4217 currency code for Bulgarian Lev.

BH
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BAHRAIN.

BHD
The ISO 4217 currency code for Bahrainian Dinar.

BI
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BURUNDI.

BIC
See: Bank Investment Contract

BIF
See: Bank Insurance Fund

BIF
The ISO 4217 currency code for Burundian Franc.

BIPS
See: Basis point.

BIS
See: Bank for International Settlements

BJ
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BENIN.

BM
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BERMUDA.

BMD
The ISO 4217 currency code for Bermudan Dollar.

BN
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BRUNEI DARUSSALAM.

BND
The ISO 4217 currency code for Brunei Darussalam Dollar.

BO
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BOLIVIA.

BOB
The ISO 4217 currency code for Bolivian Boliviano.

BOT
See: Build Own Transfer

BPS
See: Basis point.

BR
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BRAZIL.

BRL
The ISO 4217 currency code for Brazilian Real.

BS
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BAHAMAS.

BSD
The ISO 4217 currency code for Bahamas Dollar.

BT
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BHUTAN.

BTM
See: Book to market.

BTN
The ISO 4217 currency code for Bhutan Ngultrum.

BV
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BOUVET ISLAND.

BW
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BOTSWANA.

BWP
The ISO 4217 currency code for Botswanan Pula.

BY
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BELARUS.

BYB
The ISO 4217 currency code for Belarus Rouble.

BZ
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for BELIZE.

BZD
The ISO 4217 currency code for Belize Dollar.

Baby bond
A bond with a par value of less than $1000.

Back away
In the context of general equities, to withdraw from a previously declared interest, indication, or transaction; broker-dealer's failure, as a market maker in a given security, to make good on a bid/offer for the minimum quantity.

Back fee
The fee paid on the extension date if the buyer wishes to continue the option.

Back months
In the context of futures and optionstrading, refers to the months of contracts with expiration dates farthest away. See farthest month.

Back office
Brokerage house clerical operations that support, but do not include, the trading of stocks and other securities. All written confirmation and settlement of trades, record keeping, and regulatory compliance happen in the back office.

Back on the shelf
In the context of general equities, permanently canceledorder/interest in a stock by a customer. See: Take a powder.

Back taxes
Due taxes that have not been paid on time.

Back up
(1) When bondyields rise and prices fall, the market is said to back up. (2) An investor who swaps out of one security into another of shorter current maturity is said to back up.

"Back up the truck"
In the context of general equities, "Prepare for a very large buyer."

Backdating
In the context of mutual funds, a feature allowing fundholders to use an earlier date on a letter of intent to invest in a mutual fund in exchange for a reduced sales charge, e.g. Giving retroactive value to purchases from the earlier date.

Backed in
In the context of general equities, to describe the result of unanticipated events that allow for a purchase at a discount or a sale at a premium.

Back-end load fund
A mutual fund that charges investors a fee to sell (redeem) shares, often ranging from 4% to 6%. Some back-end load funds impose a full commission if the shares are redeemed within a designated length of time, such as one year. The commission decreases, the longer the investorholds the shares. The formal name for the back-end load is the contingent deferred sales charge, or CDSC

Back-testing
Creating a hypothetical portfolio performance history by applying current asset selection criteria to prior time periods.

Back-to-back financing
An intercompany loan channeled through a bank.

Back-to-back loan
A loan in which two companies in separate countries borrow each other's currency for a specific time period and repay the other's currency at an agreed-upon maturity.

Backup line
A commercial paper issuer's bank line of credit covering maturing notes if, for some reason, selling new notes to cover the maturing notes is not possible.

Backup Line of Credit
A bank assurance of funds obtained by an issuer of commercial paper to protect the CP investor from default. The issuer pays a commitment fee to the bank.

Backwardation
A market condition in which futures prices are lower in the distant delivery months than in the nearest delivery month. This may occur when the costs of storing the product until eventual delivery are effectively subtracted from the price today. The opposite of contango.

Bad debt
A debt that is written off and deemed uncollectible.

Bad delivery
Antithesis of good delivery.

Bad title
Title to property that does not distinctly confer ownership, usually in the context of real estate.

Bai-kai
Two-sided marketpicture, in Japanese terminology applies mainly to international equities.

Bailing out
In the context of securities, refers to selling a security or commodity quickly, regardless of the price. May occur when an investor no longer wants to sustain further losses on a stock.

Also refers to relieving an individual, corporation, or government entity in financial trouble.

Bailout bond
A bondissued by the Resolution Funding Corporation (Refcorp) to save the failing savings and loan associations in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Baker Plan
A plan by former U.S. Treasury Secretary James Baker under which 15 principal middle-income debtor countries (the Baker 15) would undertake growth-oriented structural reforms, to be supported by increased financing from the World Bank and continued lending from commercial banks.

Balance of payments
A statistical compilation formulated by a sovereign nation of all economic transactions between residents of that nation and residents of all other nations during a stipulated period of time, usually a calendar year.

Balance of trade
Net flow of goods (exports minus imports) between two countries.

Balance on goods and services
Netting of transaction balances, including the net amount of payments of interest and dividends to foreign investors and investments, as well as receipts and payments resulting from international tourism. Also known as Trade Balance.

Balance sheet
Also called the statement of financial condition, it is a summary of a company'sassets, liabilities, and owners' equity.

Balance sheet exposure
See: Accounting exposure.

Balance sheet identity
Total assets = Total liabilities + Total stockholders' equity.

Balanced budget
A budget in which the income equals expenditure. See: budget.

Balanced fund
An investment company that invests in stocks and bonds. The same as a balanced mutual fund.

Balanced mutual fund
This is a fund that buyscommon stock, preferred stock, and bonds. The same as a balanced fund.

Balloon interest
In the context of serial bondissues, the elevated coupon rate on bonds with late maturities.

Balloon maturity
Any large principal payment due at maturity for a bond or loan with or without a sinking fund requirement.

Balloon Payment
See: Bullet.

Balloon Payment
The final (large) payment that repays all the remaining principal and interest of a partially amortized or unamortized loan.

Ballot
The document distributed at the annual meeting to shareholders of record who wish to vote their shares in person.

BAN
See: Bond anticipation note.

Bank-based corporate governance system
Organization of a supervisory board so that it is dominated by bankers and corporate insiders.

Bank anticipation notes (BAN)
Notes issued by states and municipalities to obtain interim financing for projects that will eventually be funded longterm through the sale of a bond issue.

Bank collection float
The time that elapses between when a check is deposited into a bank account and when the funds are available to the depositor, during which period the bank is collecting payment from the payer's bank.

Bank discount basis
A convention used for quoting bids and offers for Treasury bills in terms of annualized yield, based on a 360-day year.

Bank draft
A draft addressed to a bank.

Bank holding company
A company that owns or has controllinginterest in two or more banks and/or other bank holding companies.

Bank Insurance Fund (BIF)
A unit of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) that provides deposit insurance for banks excluding thrifts.

Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
An international bank headquartered in Basel, Switzerland, which serves as a forum for monetary cooperation among several European central banks, the Bank of Japan, and the US Federal Reserve System. Founded in 1930 to handle the German payment of World War I reparations, it now monitors and collects data on international banking activity and promulgates rules concerning international bank regulation.

Bank Investment Contract (BIC)
Interestguaranteed by the bank in a portfolio over a specific time frame with a specific yield.

Bank line
Line of credit that a bank grants to a customer.

Bank Letter of Credit Policy
Standards allowing banks to confirm letters of credit by foreign banks supporting the purchase of US exports.

Bank note
A term used synonymously with paper money or currency issued by a bank. Notes are, in effect, a promise to pay the bearer on demand the amount stated on the face of the note. Today, only the Federal Reserve Banks are authorized to issue bank notes, i.e. Federal Reserve notes, in the United States.

Bank regulation
The formulation and issuance by authorized agencies of specific rules or regulations, under governing law, for the conduct and structure of banking.

Bank run (bank panic)
A series of unexpected cash withdrawals caused by a sudden decline in depositor confidence or fear that the bank will be closed by the charteringagency, i.e. many depositors withdraw cash almost simultaneously. Since the cash reserve a bank keeps on hand is only a small fraction of its deposits, a large number of withdrawals in a short period of time can deplete available cash and force the bank to close and possibly go out of business.

Bank trust department
Bank department that deals with estates, administers trusts, and provides services such as estate planning advice to its clients.

Bank wire
A computer message system linking major banks. It is used not for effecting payments, but as a mechanism to advise the receiving bank of some action that has occurred, e.g., the payment by a customer of funds into that bank's account.

Banker's acceptance
A short-termcredit investment created by a nonfinancial firm and guaranteed by a bank as to payment. Acceptances are traded at discounts to face value in the secondary market. These instruments have been a popular investment for money market funds. They are commonly used in international transactions.

Banking Delay
Time required for processing and clearing a check through the banking system.

Bankmail
An agreement between a company engaged in a takeoverbid and a bank that the bank will not finance the bid of another acquirer.

Bankruptcy
Inability to pay debts. In bankruptcy of a publicly owned entity, the ownership of the firm'sassets is transferred from the stockholders to the bondholders.

Bankruptcy cost view
The argument that expected indirect and direct bankruptcycostsoffset the other benefits from leverage so that the optimal amount of leverage is less than 100% debt financing.

Bankruptcy risk
The risk that a firm will be unable to meet its debtobligations. Also referred to as default or insolvency risk.

Bankruptcy view
The argument that expected bankruptcy costs preclude firms from financing entirely with debt.

Bar
Slang for one million dollars.

Barbell strategy
A fixed income strategy in which the maturities of the securities included in the portfolio are concentrated at two extremes.

Barefoot Investor
A popular Australian radio program focused on teaching young people financial literacy.

Barefoot pilgrim
A slang term for an unsophisticated investor who has lost everything on the stock market. Not to be confused with Barefoot Investor.

Bargain hunter
In the context of general equities, purchaser who is extremely selective in the price sought on a transaction.

Bargain-purchase-price option
Gives the lessee the option to purchase the asset at a price below fair market value when the lease expires.

Barometer
Economic and market data that represent an overall trend. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is an example of a stock market barometer.

BARRA's performance analysis (PERFAN)
A method developed by BARRA, a consulting firm in Berkeley, Calif. It is commonly used by institutional investors applying performance attribution analysis to evaluate their money managers' performance.

Barrier options
Option contracts that remain dormant until a trigger point (the barrier price) is reached, at which point the call or put option is activated, and results either in a long or short options position, or in the automatic exercise of an options position. One example is an up-and-in call. Assume an exercise price of $50 and a barrier price of $53. If the stock stays below $53, the call option cannot be exercised. If the stock price reaches the $53 barrier price, the holder then has a call option on the shares at $50. These are exotic options.

Barron's confidence index
Index measuring the ratio of the averageyield on 10 top-grade bonds to the average yield on 10 intermediate-grade bonds. The discrepancy between high-rated top-grade bonds and low-rated bond yields establishes a measure that is indicative of investor confidence.

Barter
The trading/exchange of goods or services without using currency.

Base
A technical analysis tool. A chart pattern depicting the period when the supply and demand of a certain stock are in relative equilibrium, resulting in a narrow trading range. The merging of the support level and resistance level.

Base currency
Applies mainly to international equities. Currency in which gains or losses from operating an international portfolio are measured.

Base interest rate
Related: Benchmark interest rate.

Base market value
The average market price of a group of securities at a specific time. Used for the purpose of indexing.

Base period
A particular period of time used for comparative purposes when measuring economic data.

Base probability of loss
The probability of not achieving a portfolioexpected return. Related: Value at risk.

Base rate
British equivalent of the US prime rate.

Basel Accord Agreement concluded among country representatives in 1988 in Switzerland to develop standardized risk-based capital requirements for banks across countries.

Basic balance
In a balance of payments, the basic balance is the net balance of the combination of the current account and the capital account.

Basic business strategies
Key strategies a firm intends to pursue in carrying out its business plan.

Basic IRR rule
Accept the project if IRR is higher than the discount rate; reject the project if it is lower than the discount rate. It is wise to also consider net present value for project evaluation.

Basis
The price an investor pays for a security plus any out-of-pocket expenses. It is used to determine capital gains or losses for tax purposes when the stock is sold. Also, for a futures contract, the difference between the cash price and the futures price observed in the market.

Basis point
In the bondmarket, the smallest measure used for quoting yields is a basis point. Each percentage point of yield in bonds equals 100 basis points. Basis points also are used for interest rates. An interest rate of 5% is 50 basis points higher than an interest rate of 4.5%. Sometimes referred to as BPS, BIPS, and pronounced "Bips"

Basis price
Price expressed in terms of yield to maturity or annual rate of return.

Basis risk
Unexpected changes in the basis between the placing and the lifting of a hedge. Basis risk is in excess of convergence.

Basket
Applies to derivative products. Group of stocks that is formed with the intention of either being bought or sold all at once, usually to perform index arbitrage or a hedging program.

Basket options
Packages that involve the exchange of more than two currencies against a base currency at expiration. The basket option buyer purchases the right, but not the obligation, to receive designated currencies in exchange for a base currency, either at the prevailing foreign exchangemarket rate or at a prearranged rate of exchange. Multinational corporations with multicurrency cash flows frequently use basket options because it is generally cheaper to buy an option on a basket of currencies than to buy individual options on each of the currencies that make up the basket.

Basket trades
Related: Program trades.

BD form
An SEC document required of brokerage houses that outlines the firm's finances and officers.

BDS Statistic
A statistic based upon the correlation integral which examines the probability that a purely random system could have the same scaling properties as the system under study. See: Correlation Integral.

Boston Exchange Automated Communication Order-Routing Network (BEACON)
This system permits the automatic execution of trades based on the current stock prices on the consolidated markets at any of the US securitiesexchanges.

Bear
An investor who believes a stock or the overall market will decline. A bear market is a prolonged period of falling stock prices, usually by 20% or more. Related: bull.

Bear CD
A bear CD pays the holder a fraction of any fall in a given market index.

Bear hug
Often used in risk arbitrage. Hostile takeover attempt in which the acquireroffers an exceptionally large premium over the market value of the acquiree's shares so as to as to squeeze (hug) the target into acceptance.

Bear market
Any market in which prices exhibit a declining trend. For a prolonged period, usually falling by 20% or more.

Bear raid
In the context of general equities, attempt by investors to move the price of a stock opportunistically by selling large numbers of sharesshort. The investors pocket the difference between the initial price and the new, lower price after this maneuver. This technique is illegal under SEC rules, which stipulate that every shortsale must be on an uptick.

Bear spread
Applies to derivative products. Strategy in the options or futures markets designed to take advantage of a fall in the price of a security or commodity. A bear spread with call options is created by buying a call option with a certain strike price and selling a call option on the same stock with a lower strike price (with the same expiration date). A bear spread with put options is where an investor buys a put with a high strike price and sells a put with a low strike price. With futures, the investor sells the nearby contract and purchases the next out contract. All of these strategies are designed to profit from a fall in the underlying asset's price.

Bear trap
The predicament facing short sellers when a bear market reverses its trend and becomes bullish. The assets continue to sell in anticipation of further declines in price, and short sellers then are forced to cover at higher prices.

Bearer bond
Bonds that are not registered on the books of the issuer. Such bonds are held in physical form by the owner, who receives interest payments by physically detaching coupons from the bond certificate and delivering them to the paying agent.

Bearer form
Describes issue form of security not registered on the issuingcorporation's books, and therefore payable to its bearer. See also: Bearer bond; coupon bond.

Bearer share
Security not registered on the books of the issuing corporation and thus payable to possessor of the shares. Negotiable without endorsement and transferred by delivery, thus avoiding some of the control associated with ordinary shares. Dividends are payable upon presentation of dividend coupons, which are dated or numbered. Applies mainly to international equities.

Bearish
Words used to describe investor attitude. A bearish investor believes that a particular asset or the market as a whole will decline in value.

Beating the gun
In the context of general equities, gaining an advantageous price in a trade through a quick response to market developments.

Before-tax contributions
The portion of an employee's salary contributed to a retirement plan before federal income taxes are deducted; this reduces the individual's gross income for federal tax purposes.

Before-tax profit margin
The ratio of net income before taxes to net sales.

Beggar-thy-neighbor
An international trade policy of competitive devaluations and increased protective barriers that one country institutes to gain at the expense of its trading partners.

Beggar-thy-neighbor devaluation
A devaluation that is designed to cheapen a nation's currency and thereby increase its exports at the expense of other countries. Devaluation can also reduce a nation's imports. Such devaluations often lead to trade wars.

Behind
Used for listed equity securities. At the same price but entered after your order/interest, such as on the specialist's book. Antithesis of ahead of you.

Bell
Signal on a stock exchange to indicate the open and close of trading.

Bellwether issues
Related: Benchmark issues.

Below par
Less than the nominal or face value of a security.

Benchmark
The performance of a predetermined set of securities, used for comparison purposes. Such sets may be based on published indexes or may be customized to suit an investment strategy.

Benchmark error
Use of an inappropriate proxy for the true market portfolio.

Benchmark interest rate
Also called base interest rate, it is the minimum interest rate investors will demand for investing in a non-Treasury security. It is also tied to the yield to maturityoffered on the comparable-maturity treasury security that was most recently issued (on-the-run).

Benchmark issue
Also called on-the-run or current-couponissue or bellwether issue. In the secondary market, the benchmark issue is the most recently auctioned Treasury issues for each maturity.

Beneath
Used for listed equity securities. 1) Behind; 2) Lower in price.

Beneficial Owner
As used for most purposes under the federal securities laws. A beneficial owner of stock is any person or entity with sole or shared power to vote or dispose of the stock. This SEC definition is intended to include a holder who enjoys the benefits of ownership although the shares may be held in another name.

Beneficial ownership
Often used in risk arbitrage. Person who enjoys the benefits of ownership even though title is in another name. (Abused through the illegal use of a parking violation.)

Beneficiary
Term used to refer to the person who receives the benefits of a trust or the recipient of the proceeds of a life insurance policy.

Bequest
Property left to an heir under the terms of a will.

Best's rating
A rating A.M. Best Co. assigns to insurance companies based on the company's ability to meet its obligations to its policyholders.

Best efforts
A high standard of undertaking, but nevertheless excusable in the event of a force majeure.

Best-efforts sale
A method of securitiesdistribution/underwriting in which the securities firm agrees to sell as much of the offering as possible and return any unsold shares to the issuer. As opposed to a guaranteed or fixed-pricesale or bought deal, in which the underwriter agrees to sell a specific number of shares (and holds any unsold shares in its own account if necessary).

Best-interests-of-creditors test
The requirement that a claim holder voting against a plan of reorganization must receive at least as much as if the debtor were liquidated.

Beta
The measure of an asset'srisk in relation to the market (for example, the S&P500) or to an alternative benchmark or factors. Roughly speaking, a security with a beta of 1.5, will have move, on average, 1.5 times the market return. [More precisely, that stock'sexcess return (over and above a short-term money market rate) is expected to move 1.5 times the market excess return).] According to asset pricing theory, beta represents the type of risk, systematic risk, that cannot be diversified away. When using beta, there are a number of issues that you need to be aware of: (1) betas may change through time; (2) betas may be different depending on the direction of the market (i.e. betas may be greater for down moves in the market rather than up moves); (3) the estimated beta will be biased if the security does not frequently trade; (4) the beta is not necessarily a complete measure of risk (you may need multiple betas). Also, note that the beta is a measure of comovement, not volatility. It is possible for a security to have a zero beta and higher volatility than the market.

Beta equation (security) The market beta of a security is determined as follows: Regressexcess returns of stock y on excess returns of the market. The slope coefficient is beta. Define n as number of observation numbers. Beta= [(n) (sum of [xy]) ]-[ (sum of x) (sum of y)]/ [(n) (sum of [xx]) ]-[ (sum of x) (sum of x)] where: n = # of observations (usually 36 to 60 months) x = rate of return for the S&P 500 index y = rate of return for the security. Related: Alpha

Biased expectations theories
Related: Pure expectations theory.

Bid
The price a potential buyer is willing to pay for a security. Sometimes also used in the context of takeovers where one corporation is bidding for (trying to buy) another corporation. In trading, we have the bid-ask spread which is the difference between what buyers are willing to pay and what sellers are asking for in terms of price.

Bid away
Refers to over-the-counter trading. Bid from another dealer exists at the same (listed) or higher (OTC) price.

Bid-asked spread
The difference between the bid and the asked prices.

Bid bond
A bid "performance" bond consisting of a small percentage (1-3%) of the tender contract price, refunded to losers once the contract is awarded.

Bid price
This is the quotedbid, or the highest price an investor is willing to pay to buy a security. Practically speaking, this is the available price at which an investor can sell shares of stock. Related: Ask, offer.

Bid-to-cover ratio
The ratio of the number of bids received in a Treasury security auction compared to the number of accepted bids.

Bid wanted
Used in the context of general equities. Announcement that a holder of securities wants to sell and will entertain bids.

Bidder
A firm or person that wants to buy a firm or security.

Bidding buyer
In the context of general equities, a nonaggressive buyer who prefers to await a natural seller in the hope of paying a lower price.

Bidding through the market
In the context of general equities, aggressive willingness to purchase a security at a premium to the inside market. Contrasts with bidding buyer.

Bidding up
Moving the bid price higher.

Bifurcation
When a non-linear dynamic system develops twice the possible solutions that it had before it passed its critical level. A bifurcation cascade is often called the period doubling route to chaos because the transition from an orderly system to a chaotic system often occurs when the number of possible solutions begins increasing, doubling each time.

Bifurcation Diagram
A graph that shows the critical points where bifurcation occurs, and the possible solutions that exist at that point.

Big Bang
The term applied to the liberalization in 1986 of the London Stock Exchange (LSE) when trading was automated.

Big Board
A nickname for the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Also known as The Exchange. More than 2,000 common and preferred stocks are traded. Founded in 1792, the NYSE is the oldest exchange in the United States, and the largest. It is located on Wall Street in New York City.

Big picture
To highlight trading interest due to the size of the trade.

Big producer
A successful broker who generates a large volume of commission. See Rainmaker.

Big uglies
Unpopular stocks.

Bilateral Netting
Bilateral netting - the consolidation of all swap agreements between two counterparties into one master agreement. The result is that if one counterparty bankrupts, that counterparty cannot seek to collect on any swaps that are in-the-money to them while at the same time refusing to pay out on any that are out-of-the-money. Instead, the master agreement sets out that in this event all swaps between the two counterparties will be netted; only then will the bankrupt company receive money, and then only if they are net in-the-money.

Bill of exchange
General term for a document demanding payment.

Bill of lading
A contract between an exporter and a transportation company in which the latter agrees to transport the goods under specified conditions that limit its liability. It is the exporter's receipt for the goods as well as proof that goods have been or will be received.

Billing cycle
The time elapsed between billing periods for goods sold or services rendered.

Binder
An amount of money paid to indicategood faith in a transaction before the transaction is completed.

Binomial option pricing model
An option pricing model in which the underlying asset can assume one of only two possible, discrete values in the next time period for each value that it can take on in the preceding time period.

Bi-weekly mortgage loan
A mortgageloan on which interest and principal payments are made every half-month (total of 26 payments) as opposed to monthly payments. This results in earlier loan retirement.

Black Friday
A precipitous drop in a financial market . The original Black Friday occurred on September 24, 1869, when prospectors attempted to corner the gold market.

Black market
An illegal market.

Black Monday
Refers to October 19, 1987, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 508 points on the heels of sharp drops the previous week. On Monday, October 27, 1997, the Dow dropped 554 points. While the point drop set a new record, the percentage decline was substantially less than in 1987.

Black-Scholes option-pricing model
A model for pricing call options based on arbitrage arguments. Uses the stock price, the exercise price, the risk-freeinterest rate, the time to expiration, and the expected standard deviation of the stock return. Developed by Fischer Black and Myron Scholes in 1973.

Blank check
A check that is duly signed, but the amount of the check is left blank to be supplied by the drawee.

Blank check offering
An initial public offering by a company whose business activities are undefined and therefore peculative.

Blank Check Preferred Stock
This is stock over which the board of directors has broad authority to determine voting, dividend, conversion, and other rights. While it can be used to enable a company to meet changing financial needs, its most important use is to implement poison pills or to prevent takeovers by placement of this stock with friendly investors.

Blanket certification form
See: NASD form FR-1

Blanket fidelity bond
SEC-required insurance coverage that brokerage firms are required to have in order to cover fraudulent trading by employees.

Blanket inventory lien
A secured loan that gives the lender a lien against all the borrower'sinventories.

Blanket Mortgage A mortgage that covers at least two pieces of real estate as collateral for the same mortgage.

Blanket recommendation
A recommendation by a brokerage firm sent to all its customers advising that they buy or sell a particular stock regardless of investment objectives or portfolio size.

Blind pool
A limited partnership that does not announce its intentions as to what properties will be acquired.

Blind trust
A trust in which a fiduciary third party has total discretion to make investments on behalf of a beneficiary while the beneficiary is uninformed about the holdings of the trust.

Blitzkrieg tender offer
In the context of a takeover, refers to a tender offer that is priced so attractively that the tender is completed quickly.

Block
Large quantity of stock or large dollar amount of bondsheld or traded. As a rule of thumb, 10,000 shares or more of stock and $200,000 or more worth of bonds would be described as a block.

Block call
In the context of general equities, conference meeting during which customer indications and orders, along with the traders' own buy/sell preferences, are conveyed to the entire organization. See block list.

Block house
Brokerage firms that help to find potential buyers or sellers of large block trades.

Block list
In the context of general equities, listing of stock the investment bank is looking for (wants to buy) or (wants to sell) at the beginning of the day, whether on an agency or principalbasis.

Block trade
A large tradingorder, defined on the New York Stock Exchange as an order that consists of 10,000 shares of a given stock or at a total market value of $200,000 or more.

Block trader
A dealer who will take a position in the block trades to accommodate customer buyers and sellers of blocks. See: Dealer, market maker, principal.

Block voting
Describes a group of shareholders banding together to vote their shares in a single block.

Blocked currency
A currency that is not freely convertible to other currencies due to exchangecontrols.

Blocked funds
Cash flows generated by a foreign project that cannot be immediately repatriated to the parent firm because of capital flow restrictions imposed by the host government.

Blow-off top
A steep and rapid increase in price followed by a steep and rapid drop. This is an indicator seen in charts and used in technical analysis of stock price and markettrends.

Blowout
The rapid sale of all shares in a new securitiesoffering. See: hot issue.

Blue list
Daily financial publication featuring bondsoffered for sale by dealers and banks that represent billions of dollars in par value. Also available on-line at www.bluelist.com.

Blue-chip company
Used in the context of general equities. Large and creditworthycompany. Company renowned for the quality and wide acceptance of its products or services, and for its ability to make money and pay dividends. Gilt-edged security.

Blue chip stocks
Common stock of well-known companies with a history of growth and dividend payments.

Blue-sky laws
State laws covering the issue and trading of securities.

Bo Derek stock
High quality stock.

Board broker
Employee of the Chicago Board Options Exchange who manages away from the marketorders, which cannot be executed immediately.

Board of Directors
Individuals elected by the shareholders of a corporation who carry out certain tasks established in the charter.

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
The managing body of the Federal Reserve System, which sets policies on bank practices and the money supply.

Board room
A room at a brokerage firm where its clients can watch an electronic board displaying stock prices and transactions. Also refers to the room where Board of Directors meetings take place.

Bogey
The return an investment manager is compared to for performance evaluation.

Boiler room
Used to describe place or operation in which unscrupulous salespeople call and try to sell people speculative, even fraudulent securities.

Boilerplate
Standard terms and conditions.

Bollinger Bands Plus or minus two standard deviations where the standard deviations are calculated historically in a moving window estimation. Hence, the bands will widen if the most recent data is more volatile. If the prices break out of the band, this is considered a significant move.

Bolsa
Spanish for stock exchange.

Bolsa de Commercio de Santiago (SSE)
Chile's preeminent stock exchange.

Bolsa de Valores de Rio de Janeiro (BVRJ)
Brazil's second-largest stock exchange.

Bolsa de Valores de Sao Paulo (BOVESPA)
The largest stock exchange in Brazil.

Bolt
Used for listed equity securities. Block trading version of COLT.

Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE)
See: National Stock Exchange; Mumbai stock exchange.

Bond
Bonds are debt and are issued for a period of more than one year. The US government, local governments, water districts, companies and many other types of institutions sell bonds. When an investorbuys bonds, he or she is lendingmoney. The seller of the bond agrees to repay the principal amount of the loan at a specified time. Interest-bearing bonds pay interest periodically.

Bond agreement
A contract for privately placed debt.

Bond anticipation note (BAN)
A short-termdebt instrument issued by a state or municipality to borrow against the proceeds of an upcoming bondissue.

Bond broker
A broker on the floor of an exchange or in the over-the-counter market (OTC) who tradesbonds.

Bond Buyer
A daily publication featuring many essential statistics and index figures relevant to the fixed income markets.

Bond Buyer's municipal bond index
A municipal bond price tracking index published daily by the Bond Buyer.

Bond counsel
An attorney who prepares the legal opinion concerning a municipal bondissue.

Bond covenant
A contractual provision in a bond indenture. A positive covenant requires certain actions, and a negative covenant limits certain actions.

Bond crowd
Members of the stock exchange who transact bondorders on the floor of the exchange.

Bond discount
The difference by which a bond'smarket price is lower than its face value. The antithesis of a bond premium, which prevails when the market price of a bond is higher than its face value. See: Original issue discount.

Bond-equivalent basis
The method used for computing the bond-equivalent yield.

Bond equivalent yield
Bond yield calculated on an annual percentage rate method. Differs from annual effective yield.

Bond fund
A mutual fund that emphasizes income—consistent with risk, rather than growth—by investing in corporate, municipal, or US government debtobligations, or some combination of them.

Bond indenture
Contract that sets forth the promises of a bond issuer and the rights of investors.

Bond indexing
Designing a bond portfolio so that its performance will match the performance of some bondindex.

Bond market association
An international trade association of broker/dealers and banks in US government and federal agencysecurities, municipal securities, mortgage-backed securities, and money market securities.

Bond mutual fund
A mutual fund which primarily or exclusively holds bonds.

Bond of Indemnity
An insurance policy that indemnifies the corporation, the shareholder and the Transfer Agent against any and all claims arising from the replacement by the Transfer Agent of certificates lost or stolen.

Bond points
A conventional unit of measure for bond prices set at $1 and equivalent to 1% of the $100 face value of the bond. A price of 80 means that the bond is selling at 80% of its face or par value.

Bond power
A form used in the transfer of registered bonds from one owner to a different owner.

Bond premium
See: Bond discount

Bond rating
A rating based on the possibility of default by a bondissuer. The ratings range from AAA (highly unlikely to default) to D (in default). See: Rating, investment grade.

Bond ratio
The percentage of a company'scapitalization represented by bonds. The ratio is calculated by dividing the total bonds due after one year by that same figure plus all other equity. See: Debt-to-equity-ratio.

Bond swap
The sale of one bondissue and purchase of another bond issue simultaneously. See: Swap; swap order.

Bond value
With respect to convertible bonds, the value the security would have if it were not convertible. That is, the market value of the bondminus the value of the conversion option.

Bondholder
A firm often has stockholders and bondholders. In a liquidation, the bondholders have first priority.

BONDPAR
A system that monitors and evaluates the performance of a fixed income portfolio, as well as the individual securities held in the portfolio. BONDPAR decomposes the return into the elements beyond the manager's control--such as the interest rate environment and client-imposed duration policy constraints--and those that the management process contributes to, such as interest rate management, sector/quality allocations, and individual bond selection.

Bonds Enabling Annual Retirement Savings (BEARS)
Holders of BEARS receive the face value of the bondsunderlyingcall option, which is exercised by CUBS (an acronym for Calls Underwritten by Swanbrook). If the calls are exercised by CUBS, BEARS holders receive the total of the exercise price.

Bon voyage bonus
See: Greenmail.

Boning
Charging a lot more for an asset than its worth.

Book
A banker or trader'spositions.

Book cash
A firm'scash balance as reported in its financial statements. Also called ledger cash.

Book to market
The ratio of book value to market value of equity. A high ratio is often interpreted as a value stock (the market is valuing equity relatively cheaply compared to book value). This is the same as a low price-to-book value ratio. Value managers often form portfolios of securities with high book to market values.

Book profit
The cumulative book income plus any gain or loss on disposition of assets.

Book runner
The managing underwriter for a new issue. The book runner maintains the book of securities sold.

Book to bill
The book-to-bill ratio is the ratio of orders taken (booked) to products shipped and bills sent (billed). The ratio measures whether the company has more orders than it can deliver (>1), equal amounts (=1), or less (<1). This ratio is of significant interest to investors/traders in the high-technology sector.

Book value
A company's total assetsminusintangible assets and liabilities, such as debt. A company'sbook value might be higher or lower than its market value.

Book value per share
The ratio of stockholder equity to the average number of common shares. Book value per share should not be thought of as an indicator of economic worth, since it reflects accounting valuation (and not necessarily market valuation).

Book-Entry
Registered ownership of stock without the issuance of a correspondingstock certificate, as is the case with dividend reinvestment and direct purchase plans, employee plans and Direct Registration System issuances. Periodic statements of ownership are issued instead of certificates.

Book-entry securities
Securities which are not represented by paper certificates but are maintained in computerized records at the Fed in the names of member banks, which in turn keep computer records of the securities they own as well as those they are holding for customers. In the case of other securities where a book-entry has developed, certificates reside in a central clearinghouse or are held by another agent. These securities do not move from holder to holder.

Bootstrap
Term used to describe the start-up of a company with very little capital.

Bootstrapping
Creating a theoretical spot rate curve using one yield projection as the basis for the yield of the next maturity. Bootstrapping follows the work of Efron. It involves a Monte Carlo approach.

Borrow
To obtain or receive money on loan with the promise or understanding that it will be repaid.

Borrowed reserves
Funds borrowed from a Federal Reserve Bank by member banks to maintain the required reserve ratios.

Borrower fallout
In the mortgage pipeline, the risk that prospective borrowers of loans committed to be closed will elect to withdraw from the contract.

Bot
Shorthand for bought. Antithesis of SL, meaning sold.

Bottom
Refers to the basesupport level for market prices of any type. Also used in the context of securities to refer to the lowest market price of a security during a specific time-frame.

Bottom fisher
An investor seeking stocks that have fallen to prices at or near their bottom, which he or she believes will trend up in the future.

Bottomline growth
Growth in net profit. Also see topline growth.

Bottom-up equity management style
A management style that de-emphasizes the significance of economic and marketcycles, focusing instead on the analysis of individual stocks.

Bought deal
Securityissue in which one or two underwritersbuy the entire issue. Also known as a guaranteed or fixed-price sale; opposite of a best-efforts sale.

Bounce
A check returned by a bank because it is not payable, usually because of insufficient funds. Also used in the context of securities to refer to the rejection and ensuing reclamation of a security; a stock price's abrupt decline and recovery.

Bourse
French for a stock market.

Boutique
A small, specialized brokerage firm that offers limited services and products to a limited number of clients. Antithesis of financial supermarket.

Box
The actual physical location at a brokerage house or bank where securities or other documents are stored for safekeeping. Alternatively, a quotation machine or battery march. Also known as 'the cage.'

Box spread
This strategy refers to a type of optionarbitrage in which both a bull spread and a bear spread are implemented for an almost-risklessposition. One spread is implemented using put options and the other is implemented with calls. The spreads may both be debit spreads (call bull spread vs. put bear spread) or both credit spreads (call bear spread vs. put bull spread).

Bracket
A term signifying the extent of an underwriter's commitment in a new issue, e.g., major bracket or minor bracket.

Bracket creep
The gradual movement into higher tax brackets when incomes increase as a result of inflation.

Brady bonds
Bondsissued by emerging countries under a debt reduction plan.

Branch
An operation in a foreign country incorporated in the home country.

Breadth
The percentage of assets or stocks advancing relative to those unchanged or declining. Also the number of independent forecasts available per year. A stock picker forecasting returns to 100 stocks every quarter exhibits a breadth of 400, assuming each forecast is independent (based on separate information).

Breadth of the market
In the context of general equities, percentage of stocks participating in a particular market move. Technical analysts say there was significant breadth if two-thirds of the stocks listed on an exchange move in the same direction during a trading session. See: A/D line.

Break
A rapid and sharp price decline. Related: Crash.

Break even
The reduction of a project's netcash flow to zero by altering an input variable such as price or costs.

Break price
Used in the context of general equities. Change one's offering or bid prices to move to a more realistic, tight level where execution is more feasible. Often done to trim one's position, thus "breaking price" from where the trades occurred (if long, "break price" downward by a certain amount).

Break-even analysis
An analysis of the level of sales at which a project would make zero profit.

Break-even lease payment
The lease payment at which a party to a prospective lease is indifferent between entering and not entering into a lease arrangement.

Break-even payment rate
The prepayment rate of an MBScoupon that will produce the same cash flow yield (CFY) as that of a predetermined benchmark MBS coupon. Used to identify for coupons higher than the benchmark coupon the prepayment rate that will produce the same cash flow yield (CFY) as that of the benchmark coupon; and for coupons lower than the benchmark coupon the lowest prepayment rate that will do so.

Break-even point
Refers to the price at which a transaction produces neither a gain nor a loss. In the context of options, the term has the additional definitions:
1. Longcalls and shortuncovered calls: strike price plus premium.
2. Longputs and shortuncovered puts: strike priceminuspremium.
3. Short covered call: purchase price of underlying stock minus premium.
4. Shortput covered by shortstock: shortsale price of underlyingstock plus premium.

Break-even tax rate
The tax rate at which a party to a prospective transaction is indifferent between entering into and not entering into the transaction.

Break-even time
Related: Premiumpayback period.

Breaking the syndicate
Terminating an agreement among underwriters, specifically the investment banking group assembled to underwrite the issue of a security.

Breakout
A rise in a security's price above a resistance level (commonly its previous high price) or a drop below a level of support (commonly the former lowest price.) A breakout is taken to signify a continuing move in the same direction. Can be used by technical analysts as a buy or sell indicator.

Breakpoint
For mutual funds, the point at which the amount invested reduces the sales charge is called the "breakpoint." Each mutual fund may have several breakpoints; the larger the investment, the greater the discount. Note that the actual reduction in the sales charge is known as the "breakpoint discount". Also, the term "breakpointing" is sometimes used to refer to the offering of breakpoint discounts. The practice of soliciting mutual fund purchases just below the breakpoint (to earn more commissions) is considered unethical and in violation of NASD rules. See: right of accumulation.

Breakpoint Sale
For mutual funds, this refers to the practice of soliciting mutual fund purchases just below the breakpoint (to earn more commissions). The practice is considered unethical and in violation of NASD rules.

Breakup value
See: Private market value.

Breeden, Douglas T.
Inventor of one of the foundational asset pricing models in finance, the consumption based capital asset pricing model. Chairman of Smith Breeden Associates, and Dean of the Fuqua School of Business.

Bretton Woods Agreement
An agreement signed by the original United Nations members in 1944 that established the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the post-World War II international monetary system of fixed exchange rates.

Bridge financing
Interim financing of one sort or another used to solidify a position until more permanent financing is arranged.

"Bring it out"
In the context of general equities, "make stock available for sale to indicatedbuyers."

British clearers
The large clearing banks that dominate deposit taking and short-termlending in the domestic sterling market.

Broad-Base
Generally referring to an index, it indicates that the index is composed of a sufficient number of stocks or of stocks in a variety of industry groups. See also: Narrow-Based.

Broad Market Usually refers to indices such as the Wilshire 5000 that track the performance of 5,000 securities, rather than the more narrow measures such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500.

Broad tape
An expanded version of the ticker tape, which is displayed on a screen in the board room of a brokerage firm and shows constantly updated financial information and news.

Broken up
Used for listed equity securities. Prevented from executing a trade (committed to upstairs) due to exchange priority rules excluding one's order (e.g., higher bid/lower offer on floor, market order to satisfy).

Broker
An individual who is paid a commission for executing customer orders. Either a floor broker who executesorders on the floor of the exchange, or an upstairs broker who handles retail customers and their orders. Also, person who acts as an intermediary between a buyer and seller, usually charging a commission. A "broker" who specializes in stocks, bonds, commodities, or options acts as an agent and must be registered with the exchange where the securities are traded. Antithesis of dealer.

Broker-dealer
Any person, other than a bank, engaged in the business of buying or selling securities on its own behalf or for others. See: Dealer.

Broker loan rate
Related: Call money rate.

Brokered CD
A certificate of deposit issued by a bank or thrift institution bought by a brokerage firm in bulk for the purpose of reselling to brokerage customers. A broker CD features a higher interest rate, usually 1% higher, and are FDIC insured and do not usually have commissions.

Brokered market
A market in which an intermediaryoffers search services to buyers and sellers.

Brokers' loans
Money borrowed by brokers from banks for uses such as financing specialists's inventories of stock, financing the underwriting of new issues of corporate and municipal securities, and financing customer margin accounts.

Brought over the wall
Compelling a research analyst of an investment bank to work in the underwriting department for a corporate client, therefore allowing for the transmission of insider information. Also called "Over the Chinese wall".

Brussels Stock Exchange (BSE)
Stock exchange that handles the majority of securitiestransactions in Belgium.

Bubble theory
A theory under which security prices sometimes move wildly above their true values, or the price falls sharply until the "bubble bursts". It is also possible for a bubble to deflate gradually.

Budget
A detailed pro forma schedule of financial activity, such as an advertising budget, a sales budget, or a capital budget.

Budget authority
Broad responsibility conferred by Congress that empower government agencies to spend federal funds. Congress can specify criteria for the spending of these funds. For example, it may stipulate that a given agency must spend within a specific year, number of years, or any time in the future.

The basic forms of budget authority are; appropriations, authority to borrow, contract authority, and authority to obligate and expend offsettingreceipts and collections. The period of time during which Congress makes funds available may be specified as one-year, multiple years or no year. The available amount may be classified as either definite or indefinite; a specific amount or an unspecified amount can be made available. Authority may also be classified as current or permanent. Permanent authority requires no current action by Congress.

Budget deficit
The amount by which government spending exceeds government revenues.

Buck
Slang for one million dollars.

Bucket shop
An illegal brokerage firm that accepts customer orders but does not attain immediate executions. A bucket shop broker promises the customer a certain price, but waits until a price discrepancy is present and the trade is advantageous to the firm and then keeps the difference as profit. Alternatively, the broker may never fill the customer's order but keep the money.

Budapest Stock Exchange Established in 1864, the major securities market of Hungary.

Budget surplus
The amount by which government revenues exceed government spending.

Buenos Aires Stock Exchange (Bolsa de Comercio de Buenos Aires) Argentina's major securitiesmarket.

Build a book
In the context of general equities, develop customer orders to gather demand/supply in order to make a bid or an offer. Also refers to a commissioned salesperson amassing a 'book' of regular clients.

Build Own Transfer
The transfer of a project back to the party granting the concession, either with or at no cost.

Builder buydown loan
A mortgageloan on newly developed property that the builder subsidizes during the early years of the development. The builder uses cash to buydown the mortgage rate to a lower level than the prevailing marketloan rate for some period of time. The typical buydown is 3% of the interest rate amount for the first year, 2% for the second year, and 1% for the third year (also referred to as a 3-2-1 buydown).

Builders' All Risk
A standard construction insurance package.

Bulge
A short-lived stock price increase. Synonymous with bubble.

Bulge bracket
A tier of firms in an underwriting syndicate that have the highest participation level. See: Mezzanine bracket.

Bull
An investor who thinks the market will rise. Related: Bear.

Bull-bear bond
Bond whose principal repayment is linked to the price of another security. The bonds are issued in two tranches: In the first tranche repayment increases with the price of the other security, and in the second tranche repayment decreases with the price of the other security.

Bull CD
A bullCD pays its holder a specified percentage of the increase in return on a specified marketindex while guaranteeing a minimum rate of return.

Bull market
Any market in which prices are in an upward trend.

Bull spread
A spread strategy used in options and futures trading that is designed to capitalize on expected price appreciation. A bull spread using call options is created by buying a call option on an asset with a certain strike price and selling a call option on the same asset with a higher strike price (same expiration date). A bull spread with put options is created by buying a put option with a low strike and selling a put option with a high strike price (same expiration date). Less frequently, the bull spread is implemented by buying the nearby futures contract and selling the next out contract.

Bulldog bond
Foreign bondissue made in London.

Bulldog market
The foreign market in the United Kingdom.

Bullet
A one-time repayment, often after little or no amortization of the loan. See: Balloon Payment.

Bullet contract
A guaranteed investment contractpurchased with a single (one-shot) premium. Related: Window contract.

Bullet loan
A bank term loan that calls for no amortization.

Bullet strategy
A fixed income strategy in which a portfolio is constructed so that the maturities of its securities are highly concentrated at one point on the yield curve.

Bullion coins
Metal coins consisting of gold, silver, platinum, or palladium that are activelytraded. Some examples include the American eagle and the Canadian maple leaf. Their price is directly connected to the underlying price of their metal.

Bullish
Word used to describe an investor's attitude. Bullish refers to an optimistic outlook, while bearish means a pessimistic outlook.

Bump-up CD
A certificate of deposit granting the owner the right to increase its yield one time for the remaining term of the CD. The power is exercised by the owner in the event of an interest rate hike.

Bunching
Describes the act of traders combining round-lot orders for execution at the same time. Bunching can also be used to combine odd-lot orders to save the odd-lot differential for customers. Also used to refer to the pattern on the ticker tape when a series of trades for a security appear consecutively.

Bundling, unbundling
Creation of securities either by combining primitive and derivative securities into one composite hybrid or by separating returns on an asset into classes.

Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
A research agency of the U.S. Department of Labor; it compiles statistics on hours of work, average hourly earnings, employment and unemployment, consumer prices and many other variables.

Burn rate
Used in venture capital financing to refer to the rate at which a startup company expends capital to financeoverheadcosts prior to the generation of positive cash flow.

Burnout
Depletion of a tax shelter's benefits. In the context of mortgage backed securities it refers to the percentage of the pool that has prepaid their mortgage.

Business combination
See: Merger

Business Combination laws
These laws impose a moratorium on certain kinds of transactions (e.g., asset sales, mergers) between a large shareholder and the firm for a period usually ranging between three and five years after the shareholder's stake passes a pre-specified (minority) threshold. These laws are in place in more than half the U.S. states.

Business cycle
Repetitive cycles of economic expansion and contractions. The official peaks and troughs of the US cycle are determined by the National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, MA.

Business day
A day in which financial markets are open for trading.

Business failure
A business that has terminated operations with a loss to creditors.

Business risk
The risk that the cash flow of an issuer will be impaired because of adverse economic conditions, making it difficult for the issuer to meet its operating expenses.

Business segment reporting
Reporting the results of the separate divisions or subsidiaries of a business.

Busted convertible
Related: Fixed income equivalent. Mainly applies to convertible securities. Convertible bond selling essentially as a straightbond. Assuming the issuer is "money good," or will continue to meet credit obligations, such issues can be highly attractive since the price makes virtually no allowance for the bond's call on the common stock, when most such issues usually carry premiums.

Bust-up takeover
A leveraged buyout in which the buyer sells off the assets of the target company to repay the debt that financed the takeover.

Butterfly
In the context of equities, a firm with two divisions may split into two companies and issue original shareholders two shares (one in each of the new companies) for every old share they have.

Butterfly shift
A nonparallel shift in the yield curve involving the height of the curve.

Butterfly spread
Applies to derivative products. Complex optionstrategy that involves buying a call option with a relatively low strike price; buying a call option with a relatively high strike price; and selling two call options with an intermediate strike price. Essentially, this is a bear call spread stacked on top of a bull call spread. One can also do this with puts. The investor buys a put with a low strike, buys a put at high strike and sells two puts at intermediate strike price. The payoff diagram resembles the shape of a butterfly.

Buy
To purchase an asset; taking a long position.

Buy-and-hold strategy
A passive investment strategy with no activebuying and selling of stocks from the time the portfolio is created until the end of the investment horizon. Opposite of active strategy.

Buy-and-write strategy
An optionsstrategy that calls for the purchase of stocks and the writing of covered call options on them.

Buy the book
An order typically from a large institutional investor to a broker to purchase all the shares available at the market from the specialist and other brokers and dealers at the current offer price. The book refers to the record a specialist kept before the advent of computers.

Buydown
A lump sum payment made to the creditor by the borrower or by a third party to reduce the amount of some or all of the consumer's periodic payments to repay the indebtedness.

Buy hedge
See: Long hedge

Buy in
To cover, offset, or close out a short position. Related: Evening up, liquidation.

Buy limit order
A conditional tradingorder that indicates a security may be purchased only at the designated price or lower. Related: Sell limit order.

Buy minus order
In the context of general equities, rare market or limit order to buy a stated amount of a stock, provided that the price to be obtained is not higher than the last sale if the last sale is a minus or zero-minus tick, and is not higher than the last sale minus the minimum fractional change in the stock if the last sale is a plus or zero-plus tick. (If limit, then the buy cannot occur above the limit, regardless of tick.)

Buy on the bad news
Buyingstock shortly after a price drop resulting from bad news from the company. Investors believe that the price has hit bottom and will trend upward. See: Bottom fisher.

Buy on close
Buying at the end of the trading session at a price within the closing range.

Buy on margin
Borrowing to buy additional shares, using the shares themselves as collateral.

Buy on opening
Buying at the beginning of a trading session at a price within the opening range.

Buy order
An order to a broker to purchase a specific quantity of a security.

Buy-side analyst
A financial analyst employed by a nonbrokerage firm, typically one of the larger money managementfirms that purchasessecurities on its own account.

Buy stop order
A buy order not to be executed until the market price rises to the stop price. Once the security has broken through that price, the order is then treated as a market order. Also known as a suspended market order. Often used to protect against loss on a short sale.

"Buy them back"
Used for listed equity securities. "Cover my short position.

Buy write
See also Covered Call.

Buyback
The covering of a short position by purchasing a longcontract, usually resulting from the short sale of a commodity. See: Short covering, stock buyback. Also used in the context of bonds. The purchase of corporate bonds by the issuing company at a discount in the open market. Also used in the context of corporate finance. When a firm elects to repurchase some of the sharestrading in the market.

Buydown
Mortgages in which monthly payments consist of principal and interest. During the early part of the loan, portions of these payments are provided by a third party to reduce the borrower's monthly payments. In the context of project financing, refers to a one-time payment out of liquidated damages to reflect cash flowlosses from sustained underperformance.

Buyer credit
A financing provided to a buyer to pay for the supply of goods or services usually by an exporting country or by the supplier company.

Buyer's market
Market in which the supply exceeds the demand, creating lower prices. Antithesis of seller's market.

Buyers/sellers on balance
Used for listed equity securities. Indicates that at a given time (usually before the opening of a stock market or at expiration time), there are more buyers than sellers in the marketplace, usually with market orders. See: Imbalance of orders.

Buying climax
A rapid rise in the price of a stock resulting from heavy buying, which usually creates the market condition for a rapid fall in the price.

Buying the index
Purchasing the stocks in the S&P 500 in the same proportion as the index to achieve the same return.

Buying power
The amount of money available to buysecurities, determined by adding the totalcash held in brokerage accounts and the amount that could be spent if securities were margined to the limit.

Buyout
Purchase of a controllinginterest (or percent of shares) of a company'sstock. A leveraged buy out is effected with borrowedmoney.

Bylaws
Rules and practices that govern management of an organization.

Bylaw Amendment Limitations
These provisions limit shareholders' ability to amend the governing documents of the corporation. This might take the form of a supermajority vote requirement for charter or bylaw amendments, total elimination of the ability of shareholders to amend the bylaws, or the ability of directors beyond the provisions of state law to amend the bylaws without shareholder approval.

Bypass trust
An irrevocable trust that is designed to pay trust income (and principal, if needed) to an individual's spouse for the duration of the spouse's lifetime. The bypass trust is not part of the beneficiary spouse's estate and is not subject to federal estate taxes upon his/her death.

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Financial Glossary: C

C
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock descriptor specifying that issue is exempt from Nasdaq listing requirements for a temporary period.

CA
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CANADA.

CAD
The ISO 4217 currency code for Canada Dollar.

CADS
See Cash Available for Debt Service.

CAGR
See: Compound Annual Growth Rate

CAMPS
See: Cumulative Auction Market Preferred Stocks

Capex
See: Capital expenditures

CAPM
See: Capital asset pricing model

CAPS
See: Convertible adjustable preferred stock

CARs
See: Certificates of Automobile Receivables

CARDs
See: Certificates of Amortized Revolving Debt

CATS
See: Certificate of Accrual on Treasury Securities (CATS)

CAX
The ISO 4217 currency code for Canadian Cent.

CBD
See: Cash In Advance.

CBO
See: Collateralized Bond Obligation.

CBOE
See: Chicago Board Options Exchange

CC
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for COCOS (KEELING) ISLANDS.

CD
See: Certificate of deposit

CD
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CONGO, THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF.

CDN
See: Canadian Dealing Network

CDO
See: Collateralized Debt Obligation.

CEC
See: Commodities Exchange Center

CF
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC.

CFAT
Cash flow after taxes.

CFAT
See: Cash flow after taxes

CFC
See: Controlled foreign corporation

CFR
See: Cost and Freight

CFTC
See: Commodity Futures Trading Commission

CG
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for The Congo.

CH
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SWITZERLAND.

CHAP
See: Clearing House Automated Payments System

CHESS
See: Clearing House Electronic Subregister System

CHF
The ISO 4217 currency code for Swiss Franc.

CHIPS
See: Clearing House Interbank Payments System

CI
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for COTE D'IVOIRE.

CIF
See: Cost Insurance and Freight

CK
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for COOK ISLANDS.

CL
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CHILE.

CLF
The ISO 4217 currency code for Chile Unidades de Fomento.

CLO
See: Collateralized Loan Obligation.

CLP
The ISO 4217 currency code for Chilean Peso.

CM
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CAMEROON.

CMBS
See: Commercial Mortgage Backed Securities

CME
See: Chicago Mercantile Exchange

CML
See: Capital market line

CMO
See: Collateralized mortgage obligation

CMTA
See: Clearing Member Trade Agreement

CN
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CHINA.

CNY
The ISO 4217 currency code for Chinese Renminbi (Yuan).

CO
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for COLOMBIA.

COP
The ISO 4217 currency code for Colombian Peso.

CDC
See: Commonwealth Development Corp

CPT
See: Carriage Paid To

CR
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for COSTA RICA.

CRB
See: Commodity Research Bureau.

CRC
The ISO 4217 currency code for Costa Rican Colon.

CTA
See: Cumulative Translation Adjustment. Also refers to Commodity Trading Advisor.

CU
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CUBA.

CUP
The ISO 4217 currency code for Cuban Peso.

CUSIP
See: Committee on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures

CV
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CAPE VERDE.

CVE
The ISO 4217 currency code for Cape Verde Islands Escudo.

CX
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CHRISTMAS ISLAND.

CY
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CYPRUS.

CYP
The ISO 4217 currency code for Cyprus Pound.

CZ
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CZECH REPUBLIC.

CZK
The ISO 4217 currency code for Czech Republic Koruna.

Cabinet crowd
NYSE members who tradebonds with a low daily traded volume. See: Automated Bond System.

Cabinet security
A stock or bond listed on a major exchange with low daily tradedvolume.

Cable
Exchange rate between British pound sterling and the U.S. dollar.

CAC 40 index
A broad-basedindex of common stocks composed of 40 of the 100 largest companies listed on the forward segment of the official list of the Paris Bourse.

Cage
A section of a brokerage firm used for receiving and disbursing funds.

Calendar
List of new issues scheduled to come to market shortly.

Calendar effect
Describes the tendency of stocks to perform differently at different times. For example, a number of researchers have documented that historically, returns tend to be higher in January compared to other months (especially February). Others have documented returns patterns across days of the week and within the day. Some of these patterns are found in volume and volatility as well as returns.

Calendar spread
Applies to derivative products. A strategy in which there is a simultaneous purchase and sale of options of the same class at the same strike prices, but with different expiration date.

Calendar Straddle or Combination
See Calendar Spread.

Call
An option that gives the holder the right to buy the underlying asset.

Call date
A date before maturity, specified at issuance, when the issuer of a bond may retire part of the bond for a specified call price.

Call feature
Part of the indenture agreement between the bond issuer and buyer describing the schedule and price of redemptions prior to maturity.

Call loan
A loan repayable on demand. Sometimes used as a synonym for broker loan or broker overnight loan.

Call loan rate
See: Call money rate

Call money rate
Also called the broker loan rate , the interest rate that banks charge brokers to financemarginloans to investors. The broker charges the investor the call money rate plus a service charge.

Call option
An optioncontract that gives its holder the right (but not the obligation) to purchase a specified number of shares of the underlyingstock at the given strike price, on or before the expiration date of the contract.

Call an option
To exercise a call option.

Call premium
Premium in price above the par value of a bond or share of preferred stock that must be paid to holders to redeem the bond or share of preferred stock before its scheduled maturity date.

Call price
The price, specified at issuance, at which the issuer of a bond may retire part of the bond at a specified call date.

Call protection
A feature of some callablebonds that establishes an initial period when the bonds may not be called.

Call provision
An embedded option granting a bondissuer the right to buy back all or part of an issue prior to maturity.

Call risk
The combination of cash flow uncertainty and reinvestment risk introduced by a call provision.

Call swaption
A swaption in which the buyer has the right to enter into a swap as a fixed-rate payer. The writer therefore becomes the fixed-rate receiver/floating-rate payer.

Callability
Feature of a security that allows the issuer to redeem the security prior to maturity by calling it in, or forcing the holder to sell it back.

Callable
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Redeemable by the issuer before the scheduled maturity under specific conditions and at a stated price, which usually begins at a premium to par and declines annually. Bonds are usually called when interest rates fall so significantly that the issuer can save money by issuing new bonds at lower rates.

Called away
Convertible: Redeemed before maturity.
Option: Call or put optionexercised against the stockholder.
Sale: Delivery required on a short sale.

Cumulative Auction Market Preferred Stocks (CAMPS)
Stands for Cumulative Auction Market Preferred Stocks, Oppenheimer & Company's Dutch Auction preferred stock product.

Canadian agencies
Agency banks established by Canadian Banks in the U.S.

Canadian Dealing Network (CDN)
The organized OTC market of Canada. Formerly known as the Canadian Over-the-Counter Automated Trading System (COATS), the CDN became a subsidiary of the Toronto Stock Exchange in 1991.

"Can get $xxx"
Refers to over-the-counter trading. "I have a buyer who will pay $xxx for the stock". Usually a standard markdown from $xxx is applied to this price in bidding the seller for its stock. Antithesis of cost me.

Cancel
To void an order to buy or sell from (1) the floor, or (2) the trader/salesperson's scope. In Autex, the indication still remains on record as having once been placed unless it is expunged.

Canceled Certificates
Before the issuance of a new certificate, the old certificate is presented to the Transfer Agent and is canceled.

"Cannot compete"
In the context of general equities, cannot accommodate customers at that price level (i.e., compete with other market makers), often because there is no natural opposite side of the trade.

"Cannot complete"
In the context of general equities, inability to finish an order on a principal or agency basis, given prevailing price instructions and/or market conditions.

Cap
An upper limit on the interest rate on a floating-rate note (FRN) or an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM). Also, an OTC derivatives contract consisting of a series of European interest rate call options; used to protect an issuer of floating-rate debt from interest rate increases. Each individual call option within the cap is called a caplet. Opposite of a floor.

Capacity
Creditgrantors' measurement of a person's ability to repay loans.

Capacity utilization rate
The percentage of the economy's total plant and equipment that is currently in production. Usually, a decrease in this percentage signals an economic slowdown, while an increase signals economic expansion.

Capital
Moneyinvested in a firm.

Capital account
Net result of public and private international investment and lending activities.

Capital allocation decision
Allocation of invested funds between risk-free assets and the riskyportfolio.

Capital appreciation
See: Capital growth

Capital appreciation fund
See: Aggressive growth fund

Capital asset
A long-termasset, such as land or a building, not purchased or sold in the normal course of business.

Capital asset pricing model (CAPM)
An economic theory that describes the relationship between risk and expected return, and serves as a model for the pricing of riskysecurities. The CAPM asserts that the only risk that is priced by rational investors is systematic risk, because that risk cannot be eliminated by diversification. The CAPM says that the expected return of a security or a portfolio is equal to the rate on a risk-free security plus a risk premium multiplied by the asset's systematic risk. Theory was invented by William Sharpe (1964) and John Lintner (1965). The early work of Jack Treynor is was also instrumental in the development of this model.

Capital budget
A firm's planned capital expenditures.

Capital budgeting
The process of choosing the firm'slong-termassets.

Capital Builder Account (CBA)
A Merrill Lynch brokerage account that allows investors to access the loan value of his or her eligible securities to buy or sell securities. Excess cash in a CBA can be invested in a money market fund or an insuredmoney market deposit account without losing access to the money.

Capital expenditures
Amount used during a particular period to acquire or improve long-termassets such as property, plant, or equipment.

Capital flight
The transfer of capital abroad in response to fears of political risk.

Capital formation
Expansion of capital or capital goods through savings, which leads to economic growth.

Capital gain
When a stock is sold for a profit, the capital gain is the difference between the net sales price of the securities and their netcost, or original basis. If a stock is sold below cost, the difference is a capital loss.

Capital gains distribution
A distribution to the shareholders of a mutual fund out of profits from selling stocks or bonds, that is subject to capital gains taxes for the shareholders.

Capital gains tax
The tax levied on profits from the sale of capital assets. A long-termcapital gain, which is achieved once an asset is held for at least 12 months, is taxed at a maximum rate of 20% (taxpayers in 28% tax bracket) and 10% (taxpayers in 15% tax bracket). Assets held for less than 12 months are taxed at regular income tax levels, and, since January 1, 2000, assets held for at least five years are taxed at 18% and 8%.

Capital gains yield
The price change portion of a stock's return.

Capital goods
Goods used by firms to produce other goods, e.g., office buildings, machinery, equipment.

Capital growth
The increase in an asset'smarket price. Also called capital appreciation.

Capital infusion
Often refers to the cross-subsidization of divisions within a firm. When one division is not doing well, it might benefit from an infusion of new funds from the more successful divisions. In the context of venture capital, it can also refer to funds received from a venture capitalist to either get the firm started or to save it from failing due to lack of cash.

Capital-intensive
Used to describe industries that require large investments in capital assets to produce their goods, such as the automobile industry. These firms require large profit margins and/or low costs of borrowing to survive.

Capital International Indexes
Market indexes maintained by Morgan Stanley that track major stock markets worldwide.

Capital investment
See: Capital expenditure.

Capital lease
A leaseobligation that has to be capitalized on the balance sheet.

Capital loss
The difference between the netcost of a security and the sales price, if the security is sold at a loss. Also used in a more general context to refer to the market for stocks, bonds, derivatives and other investments.

Capital market
Traditionally, this has referred to the market for trading long-termdebt instruments (those that mature in more than one year). That is, the market where capital is raised. More recently, capital markets is used in a more general context to refer to the market for stocks, bonds, derivatives and other investments.

Capital market efficiency
The degree to which the present asset price accurately reflects current information in the market place. See: Efficient market hypothesis.

Capital market imperfections view
The view that issuingdebt is generally valuable, but that the firm's optimal choice of capital structure involves various other views of capital structure ( net corporate/personal tax, agencycost, bankruptcy cost, and pecking order), that result from considerations of asymmetric information, asymmetric taxes, and transaction costs.

Capital market line (CML)
The line defined by every combination of the risk-free asset and the market portfolio. The line represents the risk premium you earn for taking on extra risk. Defined by the capital asset pricing model.

Capital rationing
Placing limits on the amount of new investment undertaken by a firm, either by using a higher cost of capital, or by setting a maximum on the entire capital budget or parts of it.

Capital requirements
Financing required for the operation of a business, composed of long-term and working capital plus fixed assets.

Capital shares
One of two types of shares in a dual-purpose investmentcompany, which entitle the holder to the appreciation or depreciation in the value of a portfolio, as well as the gains from trading in the portfolio. Antithesis of income shares.

Capital stock
Stock authorized by a firm'scharter and having par value, stated value, or no par value. The number and the value of issued shares are usually shown, together with the number of shares authorized, in the capital accounts section of the balance sheet. See: Common stock.

Capital structure
The makeup of the liabilities and stockholders'equity side of the balance sheet, especially the ratio of debt to equity and the mixture of short and longmaturities.

Capital surplus
Amounts of directly contributed equitycapital in excess of the par value.

Capital turnover
Calculated by dividing annual sales by average stockholderequity (net worth). The ratio indicates how much a company could grow its current capital investment level. Low capital turnover generally corresponds to high profit margins.

Capitalization
The debt and/or equity mix that funds a firm'sassets.

Capitalization method
A method of constructing a replicating portfolio in which the manager purchases a number of the most highly capitalized names in the stockindex in proportion to their capitalization.

Capitalization rate
The interest rate used to calculate the present value of a number of future payments.

Capitalization ratios
Also called financial leverage ratios, these ratios compare debt to total capitalization and thus reflect the extent to which a corporation is trading on its equity. Capitalization ratios can be interpreted only in the context of the stability of industry and company earnings and cash flow.

Capitalization table
A table showing the capitalization of a firm, which typically includes the amount of capital obtained from each source - long-termdebt and common equity - and the respective capitalization ratios.

Capitalization-Weighted Index
A stock index which is computed by adding the capitalization (float times price) of each individual stock in the index, and then dividing by the divisor. The stocks with the largest market values have the heaviest weighting in the index. See also Float, Divisor.

Capitalized
Recorded in asset accounts and then depreciated or amortized, as is appropriate for expenditures for items with useful lives longer than one year.

Capitalized interest
Interest that is not immediately expensed, but rather is considered as an asset and is then amortized through the income statement over time. In the context of project financing, interest that is paid by additional borrowing.

Capped-Style Option
A capped option is an option with an established profit cap or cap price. The cap price is equal to the option's strike price plus a cap interval for a call option or the strike price minus a cap interval for a put option. A capped option is automatically exercised when the underlying security closes at or above (for a call) or at or below (for a put) the Option's cap price.

Captive finance company
A company, usually a subsidiary that is wholly owned, whose main function is financing consumer purchases from the parent company.

Caput
An exotic option. It represents a call option on a put option. That is, you purchase the option to buy a put option at a particular price on or before the expiration date.

Car
A loose quantity term sometimes used to describe the amount of a commodityunderlying one commoditycontract; e.g., "a car of bellies." Derived from the fact that quantities of the product specified in a contract once corresponded closely to the capacity of a railroad car.

Caracas Stock Exchange
Originally established in 1947 and merged with a competitor in 1974 to become the only securities exchange of Venezuela.

Cargo
Goods being transported.

Carriage and Insurance Paid To (CIP)
Seller is responsible for the payment of freight to carry goods to a named overseas destination. The seller is also responsible for providing cargo insurance at minimum coverage against the buyer's risk of loss or damage to the goods during transport. The risk of loss or damage is transferred from the seller to the buyer once the goods are delivered into the carrier's custody. This term may be used for any mode of transport.

Carriage Paid To (CPT)
Seller is responsible for the payment of freight to carry goods to a named overseas destination. The risk of loss or damage is transferred from the seller to the buyer when the goods have been delivered into the carrier's custody. This term may be used for any mode of transport.

Carrot equity
British slang for an equityinvestment with the added benefit of an opportunity to purchase more equity if the company reaches certain financial goals.

Carry
Related: Net financing cost.

Carry Trade
A trade where you borrow and pay interest in order to buy something else that has higher interest. For example, with a positively sloped term structure (short rates lower than long rates), one might borrow at low short term rates and finance the purchase of long-term bonds. The carry return is the coupon on the bonds minus the interest costs of the short-term borrowing. Of course, if long-term interest rates unexpectedly rose(and long-term bond prices fell as a result), the carry trade could become unprofitable. Indeed, if this occured, there could be a number of investors trying to unwind the carry trade, which would involve selling the long-term bonds. It is possible that this could exacerbate the increase in long-term interest rates, i.e. push the rates even higher. Related: Currency Carry Trade.

Carryforwards
Tax losses allowed to be applied to offset future income in some specified number of future years.

Carrying charge
The fee a broker charges for carryingsecurities on credit, such as on a margin account. Also, any component of a futures basis, such as storage costs, interest charges or insurance costs on the underlying interest.

Carrying costs
Costs that increase with increases in the level of investment in current assets.

Carrying value
Book value.

Cartel
A group of businesses or nations that act together as a single producer to obtain marketcontrol and to influence prices in their favor by limiting production of a product. The United States has laws prohibiting cartels.

Carve out
Usually occurs when a company decides to IPO one of their subsidiaries or divisions. The company usually only offers a minority share to the equity market. Also known as equity carve out.

Cash
The value of assets that can be converted into cash immediately, as reported by a company. Usually includes bank accounts and marketable securities, such as government bonds and banker's acceptances. Cash equivalents on balance sheets include securities that mature within 90 days (e.g., notes).

Cash account
A brokerage account that settles transactions on a cash-rather than credit-basis.

Cash Available for Debt Service
Ratio of cash assets to debt service (interest plus nearby principal). Used in evaluating the risk of a project or firm. The higher the ratio the less likely the firm or project will fail to meet its debt obligations.

Cash asset ratio
Cash and marketable securities divided by current liabilities. See: Liquidity ratios.

Cashed-Based
Refering to an option or future that is settled in cash when exercised or assigned. No physical entity, either stock or commodity, is received or delivered.

Cash basis
Refers to the accounting method that recognizes revenues and expenses when cash is actually received or paid out.

Cash and equivalents
The value of assets that can be converted into cash immediately, as reported by a company. Usually includes bank accounts and marketable securities, such as bonds and Banker's Acceptances. Cash equivalents on balance sheets include securities (e.g., notes) that mature within 90 days.

Cash budget
A forecasted summary of a firm's expected cash inflows and cash outflows as well as its expected cash and loan balances.

Cash & carry
Applies to derivative products. Combination of a long position in a stock/index/commodity and short position in the underlyingfutures, which entails a cost of carry on the long position. Also known as cash and carry arbitrage.

Cash commodity
The actual physical commodity, as distinguished from a futures contract.

Cash conversion cycle
The length of time between a firm'spurchase of inventory and the receipt of cash from accounts receivable.

Cash cow
A company that pays out most of its earnings per share to stockholders as dividends. Or, a company or division of a company that generates a steady and significant amount of free cash flow.

Cash cycle
In general, the time between cash disbursement and cash collection. In networking capital management, it can be thought of as the operating cycle less the accounts payable payment period.

Cash deficiency agreement
An agreement to investcash in a project to the extent required to cover any cash deficiency the project may experience.

Cash delivery
The provision of some futures contracts that requires not delivery of underlying assets but settlement according to the cash value of the asset.

Cash discount
An incentive offered to purchasers of a firm's product for payment within a specified time period, such as ten days.

Cash dividend
A dividend paid in cash to a company'sshareholders. The amount is normally based on profitability and is taxable as income. A cashdistribution may include capital gains and return of capital in addition to the dividend.

Cash earnings
A firm'scash revenues less cash expenses, which excludes the costs of depreciation.

Cash-equivalent items
Examples include Treasury bills and Banker's Acceptances.

Cash flow
In investments, cash flow represents earnings before depreciation, amortization, and non-cash charges. Sometimes called cash earnings. Cash flow from operations (called funds from operations by real estate and other investment trusts) is important because it indicates the ability to pay dividends.

Cash flow after interest and taxes
Net income plus depreciation.

Cash flow break-even point
The point below which the firm will need either to obtain additional financing or to liquidate some of its assets to meet its fixed costs.

Cash flow per common share
Cash flow from operations minus preferred stockdividends, divided by the number of common sharesoutstanding.

Cash flow coverage ratio
The number of times that financial obligations (for interest, principal payments, preferred stockdividends, and rental payments) are covered by earnings before interest, taxes, rental payments, and depreciation.

Cash flow matching
Also called dedicating a portfolio, this is an alternative to multiperiod immunization that calls for the manager to match the maturity of each element in the liability stream, working backward from the last liability to assure all required cash flows.

Cash flow from operations
A firm'snetcash inflow resulting directly from its regular operations (disregarding extraordinary items such as the sale of fixed assets or transaction costs associated with issuingsecurities), calculated as the sum of net income plus noncash expenses that are deducted in calculating net income.

Cash flow time line
Line depicting the operating activities and cash flows for a firm over a particular period.

Cash in Advance
A payment term meaning the buyer pays the seller before shipment is effected.

Cash In Lieu (CIL)
In a typical exchange offer, "old" shares of the target company are exchanged for "new shares".

Cash investments
Short-termdebt instruments—such as commercial paper, banker's acceptances, and Treasury bills—that mature in less than one year. Also known as money marketinstruments or cash reserves.

Cash management
Refers to the efficient management of cash in a business in order to put the cash to work more quickly and to keep the cash in applications that produce income, such as the use of lock boxes for payments.

Cash management bill
Very short-maturity bills that the Treasury occasionally sells because its cash balances are down and it needs money for a few days.

Cash markets
Also called spot markets, these are markets that involve the immediate delivery of a security or instrument. Related: Derivative markets.

Cash offer
Often used in risk arbitrage. Proposal, either hostile or friendly, to acquire a target company through the payment of cash for the stock of the target. Compare to exchange offer.

Cash-on-cash return
A method used to find the return on investments when there is no activesecondary market. The yield is determined by dividing the annual cash income by the total investment. See: Current yield or yield to maturity.

Cash on delivery (COD)
In the context of securities, this refers to the practice of institutional investors paying the full purchase price for securities in cash.

Cash-out Laws
These laws enable shareholders to sell their stakes to a "controlling" shareholder at a price based on the highest price of recently acquired shares. This works something like Fair-Price provisions extended to nontakeover situations. A few states have these laws.

Cash plus convertible
Convertible bond that requires cash payment upon conversion.

Cash position
The percentage of a mutual fund'sassetsinvested in short-term reserves, such as US Treasury bills or other money marketinstruments.

Cash price
Applies to derivative products. See: Spot price.

Cash ratio
The proportion of a firm'sassets held as cash.

Cash reserves
See: Cash investments

Cash sale/settlement
Transaction in which a contract is settled on the same day as the trade date, or the next day if the trade occurs after 2:30 p.m. EST and the parties agree to this procedure. Often occurs because a party is strapped for cash and cannot wait until the regular three-business daysettlement. See: Settlement date.

Cash Settlement
The process by which the terms of an option contract are fulfilled through the payment or receipt in dollars of the amount by which the option is in-the-money as opposed to delivering or receiving the underlying stock.

Cash settlement contracts
Futures contracts such as stock index futures that settle for cash and do not involve delivery of the underlying.

Cash-surrender value
The amount an insurance company will pay if the policyholdertenders or cashes in a whole life insurance policy.

Cash transaction
A transaction in which exchange is immediate in the form of cash, unlike a forward contract (which calls for future delivery of an asset at an agreed-upon price).

Cashbook
An accounting book that is composed of cash receipts plus disbursements. This balance is posted to the cash account in the ledger.

Cashier's check
A check drawn directly on a customer's account, making the bank the primary obligor, and assuring firm that the amount will be paid.

Cashout
Occurs when a firm runs out of cash and cannot readily sell marketable securities.

Casualty-insurance
Insurance protecting a firm or homeowner against loss of property, damage, and other liabilities.

Casualty loss
A financial loss caused by damage, destruction, or loss of property as a result of an unexpected or unusual event.

Catastrophe call
Early redemption of a municipal revenue bond because a catastrophe has destroyed the project that provided the revenue source backing the bond.

Cats and dogs
Speculative stocks with short histories of sales, earnings, and dividend payments.

Caveat emptor, caveat subscriptor
Latin expressions for "buyer beware" and "seller beware," which warn of overly risky, inadequately protectedmarkets.

Cease-and-desist order
An order issued after notice and opportunity for hearing, requiring a depository institution, a holding company or a depository institution official to terminate unlawful, unsafe or unsound banking practices. Cease-and-desist orders are issued by the appropriate federal regulatory agencies under the Financial Institutions Supervisory Act and can be enforced directly by the courts.

Cede & Co.
Nominee name for The Depository Trust Company, a large clearing house that holds shares in its name for banks, brokers and institutions in order to expedite the sale and transfer of stock.

CEDEL
A centralized clearing system for Eurobonds.

Ceiling
The highest price, interest rate, or other numerical factor allowable in a financial transaction.

Central bank
A country's main bank whose responsibilities include the issue of currency, the administration of monetary policy, open market operations, and engaging in transactions designed to facilitate healthy business interactions. See: Federal Reserve System.

Central bank intervention
The buying or selling of currency, foreign or domestic, by central banks in order to influence market conditions or exchange rate movements.

Central Limit Theorem
The Law of Large Numbers states that as a sample of independent, identically distributed random numbers approaches infinity, its probability density function approaches the normal distribution. See: Normal Distribution.

Centralized cash flow management
Provision of consolidated cash management decisions to all MNCunits from one location, usually at the parent's headquarters.

Cents per share
The amount of a mutual fund'sdividend or capital gains distributions that a shareholder will receive for each share owned.

Checkwriting
Free checkwriting privileges offered with non retirement accounts for select mutual funds.

Certainty equivalent
An amount that would be accepted today (risk free) in lieu of a chance to receive a possibly higher, but uncertain, amount.

Certainty Equivalent Return
The certain (zero risk) return an investor would trade for a given (larger) return with an associated risk. For example, a particular investor might trade an uncertain expected 4% activereturn with 6% risk, for a certain active return of 1.5%. Used as a way to incorporate individual investor risk tolerances into financial decisions.

Certificate
A formal document used to record a fact and used as proof of the fact, such as stock certificates, that evidence ownership of stock in a corporation.

Certificate of Accrual on Treasury Securities (CATS)
Refers to a zero-coupon US Treasuryissue that is sold at a deep discount from the face value and pays no couponinterest during its lifetime, but returns the full face value at maturity.

Certificate of deposit (CD)
Also called a time deposit this is a certificateissued by a bank or thrift that indicates a specified sum of money has been deposited. A CD has a maturity date and a specified interest rate, and can be issued in any denomination. The duration can be up to five years.

Certificate of Origin
A document certifying the country of origin for goods sold internationally.

Certificates of Amortized Revolving Debt (CARD)
Pass-through securities backed by credit card receivables.

Certificates of Automobile Receivables (CAR)
Pass-through securities backed by automobile loan receivables.

Certificateless municipals
Municipal bonds with one certificate which is valid for the entire issue, and having no individual certificates, easing transactions. See: Book-entry securities.

Certified check
A bank guaranteedcheck for which funds are immediately withdrawn, and for which the bank is legally liable.

Certified Financial Planner (CFP)
A person who has passed examinations accredited by the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, showing that the person is able to manage a client's banking, estate, insurance, investment, and tax affairs.

Certified financial statements
Financial statements that include an accountant's opinion.

Certified Public Accountant (CPA)
An accountant who has met certain standards, including experience, age, and licensing, and passed exams in a particular state.

Chair of the board
Highest-ranking member of a Board of Directors, who presides over its meetings and who is often the most powerful officer of a corporation.

Chaos
A deterministic non-linear dynamic system that can produce random looking results. A chaotic system must have a fractal dimension, and exhibit sensitive dependence on initial conditions. See: Fractal Dimension, Lyapunov Exponent, Strange Attractor.

Chapter 7 Proceedings
Provisions of the Bankruptcy Reform Act under which the debtorfirm'sassets are liquidated by a court because reorganization would fail to establish a profitable business.

Chapter 11 Proceedings
Provisions of the Bankruptcy Reform Act under which the debtorfirm is reorganized by a court because the estimated value of the reorganized firm exceeds the expected proceeds from its liquidation.

Changes in financial position
Sources and uses of funds provided from operations that alter a company'scash flowposition: depreciation, deferred taxes, other sources, and capital expenditures.

Characteristic line
The market model applied to a single security; a regression of security returns on the benchmark return. The slope of the regression line is a security's beta.

Characteristic portfolio
A portfolio which efficiently represents a particular asset characteristic. For a given characteristic, it is the minimum risk portfolio, with portfolio characteristic equal to 1. For example, the characteristic portfolio of assetbetas is the benchmark. It is the minimum risk beta = 1 portfolio.

Charge
The document evidencing mortgagesecurity required by Crown Law (law derived from English law). A Fixed Charge refers to a defined set of assets and is usually registered. A Floating Charge refers to other assets which change from time to time (ie. cash, inventory, etc.), which become a Fixed Charge after a default.

Charge off
See: Bad debt

Charitable remainder trust
An irrevocable trust that pays income to a designated person or persons until the grantor's death, when the income is passed on to a designated charity. A charitable lead trust by contrast allows the charity to receive income during the grantor's life, and the remaining income to pass to designated family members upon the grantor's death.

Charter
See: Articles of incorporation

Charter Amendment Limitations
These provisions limit shareholders' ability to amend the governing documents of the corporation. This might take the form of a supermajority vote requirement for charter or bylaw amendments, total elimination of the ability of shareholders to amend the bylaws, or the ability of directors beyond the provisions of state law to amend the bylaws without shareholder approval.

Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA)
An experienced financial analyst who has passed examinations in economics, financial accounting, portfolio management, security analysis, and standards of conduct given by the Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts.

Chartists
A technical analyst who charts the patterns of stocks, bonds, and commodities to find trends in patterns of trading used to advise clients. Related: Technical analysts.

Chasing the market
Purchasing a security at a higher price than expected because prices are rapidly climbing, or selling a security at a lower level when prices are quickly falling.

Chastity bonds
Bondsredeemable at par value in the case of a takeover.

Chatter
See: Whipsawed

Chattel Mortgage
A loan agreement that grants to the lender a lien on property other than real estate. Chattel is personal or movable property.

Cheapest to deliver issue
The acceptable Treasury security with the highest implied repo rate; the rate that a seller of a futures contract can earn by buying an issue and then delivering it at the settlement date.

Check
A bill of exchange representing a draft on a bank from deposited funds that pays a certain sum of money to a certain person or party.

Check clearing
The movement of a check from the depository institution at which it was deposited back to the institution on which it was written; the movement of funds in the opposite direction and the corresponding credit and debit to the involved accounts. The Federal Reserve operates a nationwide check-clearing system.

Checking the market
Searching for bid and offer prices from market makers to find the best deal.

Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE)
A securities exchange created in the early 1970s for the public trading of standardized optioncontracts. Primary place for the trading of stockoptions,foreign currency options, and index options (S&P 100, 500, and OTC 250 index)

Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT)
The second largest futures exchange in the US, and a pioneer in the development of financial futures and options.

Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME)
Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) is the largest futures exchange in the United States and the second largest exchange in the world for the trading of futures and options on futures. Founded in 1898 as a not-for-profitcorporation, in November 2000 CME became the first U.S. financial exchange to demutualize and become a shareholder-owned corporation. Its futures and options on futurestrade on CME's trading floors, on its GLOBEX electronic trading platform and through privately negotiated transactions. CME has four major product areas based on interest rates (including Eurodollar futures, the world's most actively traded futures contract), stock indexes (such as the (S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 futures), foreign exchange and commodities.

Chicago Stock Exchange (CHX)
A major exchangetrading only stocks, with 90% of trades taking place on an automated execution system, called MAX.

Chief Executive Officer (CEO)
A title held often by the Chairperson of the Board, or the president. The person principally responsible for the activities of a company.

Chief Financial Officer (CFO)
The officer of a firm responsible for handling the financial affairs of a company.

Chief Operating Officer (COO)
The officer of a firm responsible for day-to-day management, usually the president or an executive vice-president.

Chinese hedge
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Trading hedge in which one is short the convertible and long the underlying common, in the hope that the convertible's premium will fall. Antithesis of set-up.

Chinese wall
Communication barrier between financiers at a firm (investment bankers) and traders. This barrier is erected to prevent the sharing of inside information that bankers are likely to have.

Choice market
Applies mainly to international equities. Locked market in London terminology.

Churning
Excessive trading of a client's account in order to increase the broker'scommissions.

Cincinnati Stock Exchange (CSE)
Stock exchange based in Cincinnati that is the only fully automated stock exchange in the US. It has no tradingfloor, but handles all members'transactions using computers.

Circle
Underwriters, actual or potential, often seek out and "circle" investor interest in a new issue before final pricing. The customer circled has basically made a commitment to purchase the issue if it is available at an agreed-upon price. If the actual price is other than that stipulated, the customer supposedly has first offer at the actual price.

Circuit breakers
Measures instituted by exchanges to stop trading temporarily when the market has fallen by a certain percentage in a specified period. They are intended to prevent a market free fall by permitting buy and sell orders to rebalance.

Circus swap
A fixed-rate currency swap against floating US dollar LIBOR payments. An acronym that stands for Combined Interest Rate and CUrrency Swap.

Citizen bonds
Certificateless municipals that can be registered on stock exchanges and are listed in newspapers.

City code on takeovers and mergers
See: Dawn raid

Claim dilution
A decrease in the likelihood that one or more of a firm'sclaimants will be fully repaid, including time value of money considerations.

Claimant
A party to an explicit or implicit contract.

Class
In the case of derivative products, options of the same type-put or call-with the same underlying security. See: Series. In general, refers to a category of assets such as: domestic equity, fixed income, etc.

Class A/Class B shares
See: Classified stock

Class action
A legal complaint filed by a lawyer or group of lawyers for a group of petitioners with an identical grievance, often with an award proportionate to the number of shareholders involved.

Class of Options
Option contracts of the same type (call or put) and Style (American, European or Capped) that cover the same underlying security.

Classified Board
Also known as Staggered Board: is one in which the directors are placed into different classes and serve overlapping terms. Since only part of the board can be replaced each year, an outsider who gains control of a corporation may have to wait a few years before being able to gain control of the board. This slow replacement makes a classified board an effective delays of takeovers. Sometimes known as a delay provision.

Classified stock
The division of stock into more than one class of common stock, usually called Class A and Class B. The specific features of each class, which are set out in the charter and bylaws, usually give certain advantages to the Class A shares, such as increased voting power.

Claused Bill of Lading
A bill of lading with a notation that indicates damage or shortage. Also called foul bill of lading and are the opposite of clean bills of lading.

Clawback
The ability to recover prior project cash flow that may have been distributed or paid away as dividends to sponsors.

Clawback
A dividend clawback is an arrangement whereby the equity owners commit to use dividends they have received in the past to finance the cash needs of the project or corporation in the future. Clawback has a more general definition. For example, premiums paid on an insurance policy may be refunded (or clawed back) if the policy is cancelled in a certain time frame. Such an arrangement is specified in the contract and referred to as a clawback provision.

Clean
In the context of general equities, block trade that matches buy or sell orders/interests, sparing the block trader any inventoryrisk (no net position and hence none available for additional customers). Natural. Antithesis of open.

Clean Bill of Lading
A bill of lading bearing no findings of damage or shortage.

Clean opinion
An auditor's opinion reflecting an unqualified acceptance of a company'sfinancial statements.

Clean price
Bond price excluding accrued interest.

Clean Report of Findings
A report issued by an inspection firm, indicating that price has been verified, that the goods have been inspected prior to shipment, and that both conform to buyer specifications.

Clean up
In the context of general equities, purchase/sale of all the remaining supply of stock, or the last piece of a block, in a trade-leaving a net zero position.

"Clean your skirts"
In the context of general equities, i.e. "make all your obligatedcalls" check with all prior obligations in a security. Often preceded by "subject to."

Clear
To settle a trade by the seller delivering securities and the buyer delivering funds in the proper form. A trade that does not clear is said to fail. Comparison of the details of a transaction between broker/dealers prior to settlement; final exchange of securities for cash on delivery.

Clear a position
To eliminate a long or short position, leaving no ownership or obligation.

Clear title
Title to ownership that is untainted by any claims on the property or disputed interests, and therefore available for sale. This is usually checked through a title search by a title company.

Clearing corporations
Organizations that are affiliated with exchanges and are used to complete securities transactions by taking care of validation, delivery, and settlement.

Clearing House Automated Payments System (CHAPS)
A computerized clearing system for sterling funds that began operations in 1984. It includes 14 member banks, nearly 450 participating banks, and is one of the clearing companies within the structure of the Association for Payment Clearing Services (APACS).

Clearing House Electronic Subregister System (CHESS)
CHESS is the automatic transfer and settlement system for the majority of Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) listed securities.

Clearing house funds
Funds from the Federal Reserve System, requiring three days to clear, that are passed to and from banks.

Clearing House Interbank Payments System (CHIPS)
An international wire transfer system for high-value payments operated by a group of major banks.

Clearinghouse
An adjunct to a futures exchange through which transactionsexecuted on its floor where trades are settled by a process of matching purchases and sales. A clearing organization is also charged with the proper conduct of delivery procedures and the adequate financing of the entire operation.

Clearing member
A member firm of a clearing house. Each clearing member must also be a member of the exchange. Not all members of the exchange, however, are members of the clearing organization. All trades of a non-clearing member must be registered with, and eventually settled through, a clearing member.

Clearing Member Trade Agreement (CMTA)
An agreement that allows a client to executederivativetrades through different brokers yet consolidate positions for clearing purposes at one brokerage firm.

Clientele effect
Describes the tendency of funds or investments to be followed by groups of investors who have similar preferences for a firm which follows a particular financing policy, such as the amount of leverage it uses.

Clone fund
A new fund set up in a fund family to emulate another successful fund.

Close
The close is the period at the end of the trading session. Sometimes used to refer to closing price. Related: Opening.

Close a position
In the context of general equities, eliminate an investment from one's portfolio, by either selling a long position or covering a short position.

Close-end credit
An agreement in which advancedcredit plus any finance charges are expected to be repaid in full over a definite time. Most real estate and automobile loans are closed-end agreements.

Close market
An market in which there is a narrow spread between bid and offer prices, due to a high volume of trading and many competing market makers.

Closed corporation
A corporation whose shares are owned by just a few people, having no public market.

Closed-end management company
An investment company that issues a fixed number of shares of the mutual fund that it manages, and does not create new shares if demand increases. Antithesis of an open-end management company.

Closed-end fund
An investment company that issues shares like any other corporation and usually does not redeem its shares. A publicly traded fund sold on stock exchanges or over the counter that may trade above or below its net asset value. Related: Open-end fund.

Closed-end management company
An investment company that has only a set number of shares of the mutual fund that it manages, and does not create new shares if demand increases. Antithesis of an open-end management company.

Closed-end mortgage
Mortgage against which no additional debt may be issued.

Closed fund
A mutual fund that is no longer issuingshares, mainly because it has grown too large.

Closed out
Position that is liquidated when the client does not meet a margin call or cover a short sale.

Closely held
A corporation whose voting stock is owned by only a few shareholders.

Closely held company
A company who has a small group of controllingshareholders. In contrast, a widely-held firm has many shareholders. It is difficult or impossible to wage a proxy battle for any closely-held firm.

Closing costs
All the expenses involved in transferring ownership of real estate.

Closing price
Price of the last transaction of a particular stock completed during a day's trading session on an exchange.

Closing purchase
A transaction in which the purchaser's intention is to reduce or eliminate a short position in a stock, or in a given series of options.

Closing quote
The last bid and offer prices of a particular stock at the close of a day's trading session on an exchange.

Closing range
Also known as the range. The high and low prices, or bids and offers, recorded during the period designated as the official close. Related: Settlement price.

Closing sale
A transaction in which the seller's intention is to reduce or eliminate a long position in a stock, or a given series of options.

Closing tick
The net of the number of stocks whose closing prices are higher than their previous trades ( uptick) against the number of stocks whose closing prices were lower than their previous trades (downtick). A positive closing tick indicates "buying at the close", or a bullishmarket; a negative closing tick indicates "selling at the close," or a bearishmarket. See: TRIN.

Closing transaction
Applies to derivative products. Buy or sell transaction that eliminates an existing position (selling a long option or buying back a short option). Antithesis of opening transaction.

Closing TRIN
See: TRIN

Cloud on title
Any claim or encumbrance, usually discovered in a title search, that may impair the title to a property, and make its validity questionable. See: bad title.

Club
A group of underwriters who do not need to proceed to form a syndicate.

Cluster analysis
A statistical technique that identifies clusters of stocks whose returns are highly correlated within each cluster and relatively uncorrelated across clusters. Cluster analysis has identified groupings such as growth, cyclical, stable, and energy stocks.

CMO REIT
A very risky type of Real Estate Investment Trustinvesting in the residual cash flows of Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMOs). CMO cash flows are derived from the difference between the rates paid by the mortgageloan holders and the lower, shorter-term rates paid to CMO investors.

Co-financing
A type of financing in which the different lenders agree to fund under the same documentation and security packages but may have different interest rates, repayment profiles, and terms.

Co-manager
A second-tier Participant, ranked by size of participation.

Co-agent
An institution appointed by the issuer as co-transfer agent accepts and transfers certificates and sends daily activity journals to the primary record-keeping agent. A co-agent does not maintain security holder records, but is used to facilitate the transfer of stock in a geographic region not easily accessible to the issuer or its principal transfer agent.

Coattail investing
A riskytrading practice of making trades similar to those of other successful investors, usually institutional investors.

COD transaction
See: Delivery versus payment

Code of procedure
The guide of the National Association of Securities Dealers used to adjudicate complaints filed against NASD members.

Coefficient of determination
A measure of the goodness of fit of the relationship between the dependent and independent variables in a regression analysis; for instance, the percentage of variation in the return of an asset explained by the market portfolio return. Also known as R-square.

Coefficient of Variation
A measure of investment risk that defines risk as the standard deviation per unit of expected return.

Coface
The French Export Credit Agency.

Coffee, Sugar & Cocoa Exchange (CS&CE)
The New York-based commodity exchange trading futures and options. The CS&CE shares the trading floor at the Commodities Exchange Center.

Cofinancing agreements
Joint participation of the World Bank and other agencies or lenders in providing funds to developing countries.

Coherent Market Hypothesis
A hypothesis that the probability density function of the market may be determined by a combination of group sentiment and fundamental bias. Depending on combinations of these two factors, the market can be in one of four states: random walk, unstable transition, chaos, or coherence.

Coincident indicators
Economic indicators that give an indication of the current status of the economy.

Coinsurance effect
Refers to the fact that the merger of two firms lessens the probability of default on either firm's debt.

Cold-calling
Calling potential new customers in the hope of selling stocks, bonds or other financial products and receiving commissions.

Collar
Refers to the ceiling and floor of the price fluctuation of an underlying asset. A collar is usually set up with options, swaps, or by other agreements. In corporate finance, the collar strategy of buying puts and selling calls is often used to mitigate the risk of a concentrated position in (sometimes) restricted stock. When the restricted owner can't sell the stock, but needs to diversify the risk, a collar transaction is one of the few tools available. Many corporate executives who receive chunks of their compensation in restricted stock need to employ this strategy to mitigate the diversification risk in their overall portfolio.

Collateral
In the context of project financing, additional security pledged to support the project financing.

Collateral trust bonds
A bond in which the issuer (often a holding company) grants investors a lien on stocks, notes, bonds, or other financial asset as security. Compare mortgage bond.

Collateralized Bond Obligation (CBO)
Investment-grade bonds backed by a collection of junk bonds with different levels of risk, called tiers, that are determined by the quality of junk bond involved. CBOs backed by highly riskyjunk bonds receive higher interest rates than other CBOs.

Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO)
A general inclusive term which covers Collateralized Bond Obligations, Collateralized Loan Obligations, and Collateralized Mortgage Obligations,

Collateralized loan obligation (CLO)
A security backed by a pool of commercial or personal loans , structured so that there are several classes of bondholders with varying maturities, called tranches. Similar in structure to Collateralized Mortgage Obligations.

Collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO)
A security backed by a pool of pass-through rates , structured so that there are several classes of bondholders with varying maturities, called tranches. The principal payments from the underlying pool of pass-through securities are used to retire the bonds on a priority basis as specified in the prospectus. Related: mortgage pass-through security.

Collecting Bank
A bank that assists in obtaining payment in accordance with draft payment terms.

Collection
The presentation of a negotiable instrument for payment, or the conversion of any accounts receivable into cash.

Collection float
The period between the time is a check is deposited in an account and the time funds are made available.

Collection fractions
The percentage of a given month's salescollected during the month of sale and each month following the month of sale.

Collection period
See: Collection ratio

Collection policy
Procedures a firm follows in attempting to collectaccounts receivables.

Collection ratio
The ratio of a company'saccounts receivable to its average daily sales, which gives the average number of days it takes the company to convert receivables into cash.

Collective wisdom
The combination of all the individual opinions about a stock's or security's value.

Colombo Stock Exchange
Established in 1984, the only public stock exchange of Sri Lanka.

COLT (Continuous on-line trading system)
Computerized OTC traders assistance system that provides for trade entry and position monitoring, among other functions.

Comanager
A bank that ranks just below a lead manager in a syndicatedEurocredit or international bond issue. Comanagers may assist the lead manager bank in the pricing and issue of the instrument.

Combination
Applies to derivative products. Arrangement of options involving two long or two short positions with different expiration dates or strike (exercise) prices. See: Straddle.

Combination annuity
See: Hybrid annuity

Combination bond
A bond backed by the government unit issuing it as well as by revenue from the project that is to be financed by the bond.

Combination order
See: Alternative order

Combination matching
Also called horizon-matching, a variation of multiperiod immunization and cash flow-matching in which a portfolio is created that is always duration-matched and also cash-matched in the first few years.

Combination strategy
A strategy in which a put and call with different strike prices and the same expiration are either both bought or both sold. Related: Straddle

Combined financial statement
A financial statement that merges the assets, liabilities, net worth, and operating figures of two or more affiliated companies. A combined statement is distinguished from a consolidated financial statement of a company and subsidiaries, which must reconcile investment and capital accounts.

Come in
In the context of general equities, a fall in price.

Come out of the trade
In the context of general equities, trader'sposition in a security that results from executing a trade (or the expectations thereof). Antithesis of going into the trade.

Comeout
In the context of general equities, the opening. Antithesis of the close.

COMEX
A division of the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX). Formerly known as the Commodity Exchange, COMEX is the leading US market for metals futures and options trading.

Comfort letter
A letter from an independent auditor included in a preliminary prospectus stating that, while a full audit has not been undertaken, the auditor has done a 'review' sufficient to assure that financial statement information in the preliminary prospectus is correctly prepared to the best of the auditor's knowledge. The auditor in effect states that, had a full audit been done, they are comfortable that the audited financial statements would not be materially different from the ones presented in the preliminary prospectus.

Commercial bank
Bank that offers a broad range of deposit accounts, including checking, savings and time deposits and extends loans to individuals and business. Commercial banks can be contrasted with investment banking firms, such as brokerage firms, which generally are involved in arranging for the sale of corporate or municipal securities.

Commercial draft
Demand for payment.

Commercial hedgers
Companies that take futurespositions in commodities so that they can guarantee prices at which they will buy raw materials or sell their products.

Commercial invoice
Bill for merchandise sold.

Commercial letters of credit
Trade-related agreement that a certain amount of bank funds is available to an entity.

Commercial loan
A short-termloan, typically 90 days, used by a company to finance seasonal working capital needs.

Commercial Mortgage Backed Securities
Similar to MBS but backed by loans secured with commercial rather than residential property. Commercial property includes multi-family, retail, office, etc., They are not standardized so there are a lot of details associated with structure, credit enhancement, diversification, etc., that need to be understood when valuing these instruments.

Commercial paper
Short-term promissory notes either unsecured or backed by assets such as loans or mortgages issued by a corporation. The maturity of commercial paper is typically less than 270 days; the most common maturity range is 30 to 50 days or less. They are usually sold, like Treasury bills, at a discount.

Commercial property
Real estate that produces some sort of income-producing property.

Commercial risk
The risk that a debtor will be unable to pay its debts because of business events, such as bankruptcy.

Commingling
In the context of securities, this involves mixing customer-owned securities with brokerage firm-owned securities. This process is referred to as rehypothecation, which is the use of customers' collateral to secure their loans. This is legal with customer consent, although some securities and collateral must be kept separately.

Commission
The fee paid to a broker to execute a trade, based on number of shares, bonds, options, and/or their dollar value. In 1975, deregulation led to the establishment of discount brokers, who charge lower commissions than full service brokers. Full service brokers offer advice and usually have a staff of analysts who follow specific industries. Discount brokers simply execute a client's order and usually do not offer an opinion on a stock. Also known as a round-turn. Commissions are known as round-turn only in futures trading, since the commission is assessed only after liquidation of the position.

Commission broker
A broker on the floor of an exchange who acts as agent for a particular brokerage house and buys and sells stocks for the brokerage house on a commission basis.

Commission house
A firm that buys and sells futures contracts for customer accounts. Related: futures commission merchant, omnibus account.

Commission-only compensation
Payment to a financial advisers of only commissions on investmentspurchased when the client implements the recommended financial plan.

Commitment
Describes a trader'sobligation to accept or make delivery on a futures contract. Related: Open interest.

Committee on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures (CUSIP)
Committee that assigns identifying numbers and codes for all securities. These "CUSIP" numbers and symbols are used when recording all buy or sell orders.

Commodities Exchange Center (CEC)
The location of five New York futures exchanges: Commodity Exchange, Inc. (COMEX); the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX); New York Cotton Exchange, Coffee, Sugar & Cocoa Exchange (CS&CE), and New York Futures Exchange (NYFE).

Commodity
A commodity is food, metal, or another fixed physical substance that investorsbuy or sell, usually via futures contracts.

Commodity-backed bond
A bond with interest payments tied to the price of an underlyingcommodity.

Commodity Bundle
One unit of the collection of the complete set of goods produced and sold in the world market.

Commodity Channel Index
An index used in technical analysis. High values mean a potential future correction (downward movement in underlying asset) and low values potentially forecast a rally. Details in Donald Lambert's October 1980 article in Commodities Magazine.

Commodity futures contract
An agreement to buy a specific amount of a commodity at a specified price on a particular date in the future, allowing a producer to guarantee the price of a product or raw material used in production.

Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
An agency created by the US Congress in 1974 to regulate exchange trading in futures.

Commodity indices
Indices measuring the price and performance of physical commodities, often by the price of futures contracts for the commodities that are listed on commodityexchanges.

Commodity paper
A loan or advance secured by commodities.

Commodity Research Bureau
Produces a popular price index of 17 commodities which is often used to track inflationarytrends in the economy.

Commodity Trading Advisor
An investment manager that focuses on long and short trading in the futures markets. The trades are often intraday trades. Sometimes referred to as Managed Futures.

Common-base-year analysis
The representing of accounting information over multiple years as percentages of amounts in an initial year.

Common code
A nine-digit identification code issued jointly by CEDEL and Euroclear. As of January 1991 common codes replaced the earlier separate CEDEL and Euroclear codes.

Common factor
An element of return that influences many assets. According to multiple factor risk models, the factors determine correlations between asset returns. Common factors include size (often measured by market capitalization), valuation measures such as price to book value ratio and dividend yield, industries and risk indices.

Common market
An agreement between two or more countries that permits the free movement of capital and labor as well as goods and services.

Common shares
In general, a publiccorporation has two types of shares, common and preferred. The common shares usually entitle the shareholders to vote at shareholders meetings. The common shares have a discretionary dividend.

Common-size analysis
The representing of balance sheet items as percentages of assets and of income statement items as percentages of sales.

Common-size statement
A statement in which all items are expressed as a percentage of a base figure, useful for purposes of analyzing trends and changing relationship among financial statement items. For example, all items in each year's income statement could be presented as a percentage of netsales.

Common stock
Securities that represent equity ownership in a company. Common shares let an investor vote on such matters as the election of directors. They also give the holder a share in a company's profits via dividend payments or the capital appreciation of the security. Units of ownership of a publiccorporation with junior status to the claims of secured/unsecured creditors, bondholders and preferred shareholders in the event of liquidation.

Common stock equivalent
A convertible security that is traded like an equityissue because the optioned common stock is trading above the conversion price.

Common stock fund
A mutual fundinvesting only in common stock.

Common stock market
The market for trading equities, not including preferred stock.

Common stock/other equity
Value of outstandingcommon shares at par, plus accumulatedretained earnings. Also called shareholders' equity.

Common stock ratios
Ratios that are designed to measure the relative claims of stockholders to earnings (cash flow per share), and equity ( book value per share) of a firm.

Commonwealth Development Corp
A British development finance institute.

Comnmunity Bank
A smaller bank that is regulated by the Office of the Comptroller of Currency (OCC).Currently, there is no official definition of Community Bank, i.e. in terms of asset size.

Community Reinvestment Act (CRA)
Enacted by Congress in 1977, the CRA encourages banks to help meet the credit needs of their communities for housing and other purposes, particularly in neighborhoods with low or moderate incomes, while maintaining safe and sound operations.

Companion bonds
A class of a Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO) whose principal is paid off first when the underlyingmortgages are prepaid due to falling interest rates. When interest rates rise, there will be lower prepayments of the principal; companion bonds therefore absorb most of the prepayment risk of a CMO.

Company
A proprietorship, partnership, corporation, or other form of enterprise that engages in business.

Company doctor
An executive, usually appointed from outside, brought in to turn a company around and make it profitable.

Company-specific risk
Related: Unsystematic risk

Comparative advantage
Theory suggesting that specialization by countries can increase worldwide production.

Comparative credit analysis
Comparing a firm to others that have a desired target debt rating in order to deduce an appropriate financial ratio target.

Comparative statements
Financial statements for different periods, that allow the comparison of figures to illustrate trends in a company's performance.

Comparison
Short for "comparison ticket," a memorandum between two brokers that confirms the details of a transaction to be carried out.

Comparison universe
A group of money managers of similar investment style used to assess relative performance of a portfolio manager.

Compensation trade
The form of countertrade in which an incoming investment is repaid from the revenues generated by that investment.

Compensating balance
An excess balance that is left in a bank to provide indirect compensation for loans extended or services provided.

Compensation
Arrangement under which the delivery of goods to a party is paid for by buying back a certain amount of the product from the recipient of the goods.

Compensatory Financing Facility (CFF)
Entity that attempts to reduce the impact of export instability on country economies.

Competence
Sufficient ability or fitness for one's needs. The necessary abilities to be qualified to achieve a certain goal or complete a project.

Competition
Intra- or intermarket rivalry between or among businesses trying to obtain a larger piece of the same market share.

Competition ahead
Often used in risk arbitrage. Situation whereby another OTC market maker has transacted with investment bank at the stated market level before the bid/offer has been made.

Competitive bidders
One of two categories of bidders on Treasury securities: competitive and noncompetitive. Competitive bidders are usually financial institutions.

Competitive bidding
A securitiesoffering process in which securities firms submit competing bids to the issuer for the securities the issuer wishes to sell.

Competitive offering
An offering of securities through competitive bidding.

Complementary Financing
A type of financing in which different lenders agree to fund under similar yet parallel documentation and a pro rata security package.

Complete
In the context of general equities, to fill an order.

Complete capital market
A market in which there is a distinctive marketable security for each and every possible outcome.

Complete portfolio
The entire portfolio, including risky and risk-free assets.

Completion
In the context of project financing, occurs after a Completion Test, when the project's cash flows become the primary method of repayment. Prior to completion, the primary source of repayment is usually from the sponsors or from the turnkey contractor.

Completion bonding
Insurance that a construction contract will be completed successfully.

Completion risk
The risk that a project will not be brought into operation successfully or be able to pass its completion test.

Completion test
A test of the project's ability to perform as planned and generate the expected cash flows. After the completion test, the project can move from recourse to project financing.

Completion undertaking
An undertaking either (1) to complete a project so that it meets certain specified performance criteria on or before a certain specified date, or (2) to repay project debt if the completion test cannot be met.

Complexity Theory
The theory that processes with a large number of seemingly independent agents can spontaneously organize themselves into a coherent system.

Compliance department
A department in all organized stock exchanges to ensure that all companies, traders, and brokerage firms comply with Securities and Exchange Commission and exchange rules and regulations.

Composite tape
See: Tape

Composition
Voluntary arrangement to restructure a firm'sdebt, under which payment is reduced.

Compound Annual Growth Rate
Annual return calculated based on each year's previous balances where each previous balance includes both the original principal and all interest accrued from prior years. Best defined by example. If you invest $100 today and make 5% in the first year and reinvest ($105) and make 8% in the second year, the compound annualgrowth rate is 6.489%. The calculation is $100x1.05x1.08=$113.4 which is what you end up with at the end of year two. The average return is [square root(113.4/100) -1]= 0.06489 or 6.489%. Note 1. If we had three compounding periods we would take the cubic root (power of 1/3). Note 2. If we had invested at exactly 6.489 in both periods, we get $100x1.06489x1.06489=$113.4. Note 3. The example is directed to a return - but CAGR could be applied to earnings growth, GDP growth, etc.

Compound Annual Return
See: Compound Annual Growth Rate

Compound growth rate
See: Compound Annual Growth Rate

Compound interest
Interest paid on previously earned interest as well as on the principal.

Compound option
Option on an option.

Compounding
The process of accumulating the time value of money forward in time. For example, interest earned in one period earns additional interest during each subsequent time period.

Compounding frequency
The number of compounding periods in a year. For example, quarterly compounding has a compounding frequency of 4.

Compounding period
The length of the time period that elapses before interestcompounds (a quarter in the case of quarterly compounding).

Comprehensive due diligence investigation
The investigation of a firm's business in conjunction with a securitiesoffering to determine whether the firm's business and financial situation and its prospects are adequately disclosed in the prospectus for the offering.

Comprehensive Income
Comprehensive income is the change in equity of a business enterprise during a period from transactions and other events from non-owner sources. It includes all non-owner changes in equity (in contrast to net income which does not include some changes in equity). Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued the Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 130 (SFAS 130), Reporting Comprehensive Income. For fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1997, SFAS 130 requires the disclosure of both net income and a more 'comprehensive' measure of income which includes four items recorded as owners' equity under previous FASB pronouncements: adjustments to unrealized gains and losses on available-for-sale marketable securities (SFAS 115), foreign currency translation adjustments (SFAS 52), minimum required pension liability adjustments (SFAS 87), and changes in the market values of certain futures contracts qualifying as hedges (SFAS 80).

Comptroller
The corporate manager responsible for the firm's accounting activities. Sometimes referred to as the contoller (which means the same thing).

Comptroller of the Currency
A government official, appointed by the President of the United States, who keeps control over all national banks, and receives reports from the banks at least quarterly, to be published in newspapers.

Computerized market timing system
A computer system that compiles large amounts of trading data in search of patterns and trends to make buy and sell recommendations.

Concave
Property that a curve is below a straight line connecting two end points. If the curve falls above the straight line, it is called convex.

Concentration account
A single centralized account into which funds collected at regional locations (lockboxes) are transferred.

Concentration Banks
A small number of large banks a firm contracts with to periodically collect the firm's deposit balances from a group of smaller banks.

Concentration services
Movement of cash from different lockbox locations into a single concentration account from which disbursements and investments are made.

Concession
The per-share or per- bondcompensation of a selling group for participating in a corporate underwriting.

Concession agreement
An understanding between a company and the host government that specifies the rules under which the company can operate locally.

Conditional call
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Circumstances under which a company can effect an earlier call, usually stated as percentage of a stock'strading price during a particular period, such as 140% of the exercise price during a 40-day trading span.

Conditional call options
A protective guarantee that, in the event a high yield bond is called, the issuingcorporation will replace the bond with a non callable bond of the same life and terms as the bond that is being called.

Conditional sales contracts
Similar to equipment trust certificates, except that the lender is either the equipment manufacturer or a bank or finance company to which the manufacturer has sold the conditional sales contract.

Condor
Applies to derivative products. Optionstrategy consisting of both puts and calls at different strike prices to capitalize on a narrow range of volatility. The payoff diagram takes the shape of a bird.

Conduit theory
A theory that because investmentcompanies are merely conduits for capital gains, dividends, and interest, which are in fact passed through to shareholders, the investmentcompany should not be taxed at the corporate level.

Confidence indicator
A measure of investors' faith in the economy and the securities market. A low or deteriorating level of confidence is considered by many technical analysts as a bearish sign.

Confidence letter
Statement by an investment bank that it is highly confident that the financing for its client/acquirer'stakeover can and will be obtained. Often used in risk arbitrage.

Confidence level
In risk analysis, the degree of assurance that a specified failure rate is not exceeded.

"Confirm me out"
Used for listed equity securities. "Go to the floor and check with the specialist or floor broker that my previously activeorder has been canceled and was not executed". One does not have to honor any trade reported after being given a "firm out".

Confirmation
The written statement that follows any "trade" in the securities markets. Confirmation is issued immediately after a trade is executed. It spells out settlement date, terms, commission, etc.

Confirmed Letter of Credit
A letter of credit which a bank other than the bank that opened it agrees to honor as though they had themselves issued it. This additional confirmation is in addition to the obligation of the bank which issued the letter of credit.

Confirming Bank
The bank which has confirmed a letter of credit opened by another bank.

Conflict between bondholders and stockholders
Bondholders and stockholders may have interests in a corporation that conflict. Sources of conflict include dividends, distortion of investment, and underinvestment. Protective covenants in bond documents work to resolve these conflicts.

Conforming loans
Mortgageloans that meet the qualifications of Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae, which are bought from lenders and issued as pass-through securities.

Conglomerate
A firm engaged in two or more unrelated businesses.

Conglomerate merger
A merger involving two or more firms that are in unrelated businesses.

Consensus forecast
The mean of all financial analysts' forecasts for a company.

Consignee
The party named in the bill of lading to whom delivery is promised and/or title is passed.

Consignment
Transfer of goods to a seller while title to the merchandise is retained by the owner.

Consol
A government bond with no maturity . Popular in Great Britain. The formula for valuing these bonds is simple. The consol payment divided by yield to maturity is the price of the bond.

Consolidated financial statement
A financial statement that shows all the assets, liabilities, and operating accounts of a parent company and its subsidiaries.

Consolidated mortgage bond
A bond that covers several units of property, sometimes refinancingmortgages on the properties.

Consolidated tape
Used for listed equity securities. Combined ticker tapes of the NYSE and the curb. Network A covers the NYSE-listed securities and is used to identify the originating market. Network B does the same for AMEX-listed securities and also reports on securities listed on regional stock exchanges. See: tape.

Consolidated tax return
A tax return combining the reports of affiliated companies, that are at least 80% owned by a parent company.

Consolidation
The combining of two or more firms to form an entirely new entity.

Consolidation loan
A loan that is used to combine and finance payments on other loans.

Consortium
A group of companies that cooperate and share resources in order to achieve a common objective.

Consortium banks
A merchant bankingsubsidiary set up by several banks that may or may not be of the same nationality. Consortium banks are common in the Euromarket and are active in loansyndication.

Constant dollar
Condition in which inflation or escalation is not applicable. Prices and costs are deescalated or reescalated to a single point in time.

Constant-dollar plan
Method of purchasing securities by investing a fixed amount of money at set intervals. The investorbuys more shares when the price is low and fewer shares when the price is high, thus reducing the average cost.

Constant-growth model
Also called the Gordon-Shapiro model, an application of the dividend discount model that assumes (1) a fixed growth rate for future dividends, and (2) a single discount rate.

Constant ratio plan
Maintaining a predetermined ratio between stock and fixed income investments through regular adjustments of distribution of funds into different investments. See: formula investing.

Constant yield method
Allocation of annual interest on a zero-coupon security for income tax use.

Construction loan
A short-termloan to finance building costs.

Constructive receipt
The date a taxpayer receives dividends or other income, for use in the determination of taxes.

Consular Invoice
A document prepared by the shipper and certified in the country of origin by a consul of the country of importation. It shows the transaction details and origin of the goods.

Consumer Advisory Council (CAC)
A statutory body established by Congress in 1976. The Council, with 30 members who represent a broad range of consumer and creditor interests, advises the Federal Reserve Board on the exercise of its responsibilities under the Consumer Credit Protection Act and on other matters on which the Board seeks its advice.

Consumer credit
Credit a firm grants to consumers for the purchase of goods or services. Also called retail credit.

Consumer Credit Protection Act of 1968
Federal legislation establishing rules for the disclosure of the terms of a loan to protectborrowers. See: Truth in lending.

Consumer debenture
An investmentnoteissued directly to the public by a financial institution.

Consumer durables
Consumer products that are expected to last three years or more, such as an automobile or a home appliance.

Consumer finance company
See: Finance company

Consumer goods
Goods not used in production but bought for personal or household use such as food, clothing, and entertainment.

Consumer interest
Interest paid on consumer loans; e.g., interest on credit cards and retailpurchases.

Consumer Price Index (CPI)
The CPI, as it is called, measures the prices of consumer goods and services and is a measure of the pace of US inflation. The US Department of Labor publishes the CPI every month.

Consumption tax
See: Value-added tax

Contagion
Excess correlation of delivering or bondreturns. For example, under usual conditions we might observe a certain level of correlation of market returns. A period of contagion would be associated with much higher-than-expected correlation. Some examples are the conjectured contagion in East Asian markets beginning in July 1997 when the Thai currency devalued and the impact across many emerging markets of the Russian default. Contagion is difficult to identify because you need some sort of measure of the expected correlation. It is complicated because correlations are known to change through time, for example, see Erb, Harvey and Viskanta's article in the 1994 Financial Analysts Journal. In periods of negative returns, correlations (and volatility) are known to increase, so what might appear to be excessive may not be contagion.

Contango
A market condition in which futures prices are higher in the distant delivery months.

Contingency
An additional amount or percentage added to any cash flow item (ie. Capex). Care is needed to ensure it is either to be spent or to remain as a cushion.

Contingency graph
A plot of the net profit to a speculator in currency options under various exchange rate scenarios.

Contingency order
In the context of general equities, order to buy one security, if the trader can sell another, usually given that certain price limits or conditions reach a certain level. Swap, switch order.

Contingent
In context of liabilities, those liabilities that do not yet appear on the balance sheet (ie. guarantees, supports, lawsuit settlements). For support or recourse, the trigger may occur at any time in the future.

Contingent claim
A claim that can be made only if one or more specified outcomes occur.

Contingent conversion trigger
Used in the context of convertible instruments. The price of the stock must exceed the trigger price before the bond holder can convert to common stock at a pre-established conversion price. The trigger price exceeds the conversion price. In addition, after a certain number of years, the convertible instrument usually specifies that both the conversion price and the contingent conversion trigger will increase every year by, for example, a rate equal to LIBOR.

Contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC)
The formal name for the load of a back-end load fund.

Contingent immunization
An arrangement in which the money manager pursues an activebondportfoliostrategy until an adverse investment experience drives the then-available potential return down to the safety net level. When that point is reached, the money manager is obligated to pursue an immunization strategy to lock in the safety-net level return.

Contingent order
An order which can be executed only if another event occurs; i.e. "sell Oct 45 call 7-1/4 with stock 52 or lower".

Contingent pension liability
Under ERISA, a firm is liable to its pension plan participants for up to 39% of the net worth of the firm.

Contingent Voting Power
Enables preferredstockholders to vote when the company fails to satisfy the agreement between itself and the preferred stockholders.

Continuous compounding
The process of accumulating the time value of money forward in time on a continuous, or instantaneous, basis. Interest is earned constantly, and at each instant, the interest that accrues immediately begins earning interest on itself.

Continuous net settlement (CNS)
Method of securities clearing and settlement using a clearing house, which matches transactions to securities available, resulting in one net receive or deliver position at the end of the day.

Continuous random variable
A random value that can take any fractional value within specified ranges, as contrasted with a discrete variable.

Contra broker
The broker on the buy side of a sell order or the sell side of a buy order.

Contract
A term of reference describing a unit of trading for a financial or commodityfuture. Also, the actual bilateral agreement between the buyer and seller of a transaction as defined by an exchange.

Contract month
The month in which futures contracts may be satisfied by making or accepting a delivery.

Contractual Claim
An amount that by legal agreement must be paid periodically to the buyer of a security; contractual claim may also specify the time at which the principal must be repaid and other details.

Contractual Intermediary
Holder of an indirect claim through a legal agreement that specifies that the individual must make periodic, fixed payments to the intermediary in exchange for the right to receive payments from the intermediary in the future.

Contractual plan
A plan in which fixed dollar amounts of mutual fundshares are purchased through periodic investments, usually featuring some sort of additional incentive for the fixed period payments.

Contramarket stock
In the context of general equities, stock that tends to go against the trend of the market as a whole, such as a commodities-related stock or one in an industry out of favor with investors in a bull market.

Contrarian
An investment style that leads one to buyassets that have performed poorly and sell assets that have performed well. There are two possible reasons this strategy might work. The first is a mean-reversion argument; that is, if the asset has deviated from its usual level, it should eventually return to that usual level. The second reason has to do with overreaction. Investors might have overreacted to bad news sending the asset price lower than it should be.

Contrarian investing
Ignoring markettrends by buyingsecurities that the investor considers undervalued and out of favor with other investors.

Contributed capital
See: Paid-in capital

Contribution
Money placed in an individual retirement account (IRA), an employer-sponsored retirement plan, or other retirement plan for a particular tax year. Contributions may be deductible or nondeductible, depending on the type of account.

Contribution margin
The difference between variable revenue and variable cost.

Control
50% of the outstanding votes plus one vote.

Control Limits
The upper and lower limits on the acceptable level of cash that minimizes the sum of the opportunity cost of excessive cash and the cost of marketable security transactions.

Control parameters
In a nonlinear dynamic system, the coefficient of the order parameter; the determinant of the influence of the order parameter on the total system. See: Order Parameter.

Control person
See: Affiliated person

Control-share Acquisition Laws
See Supermajority.

Control stock
The shares owned by the controllingshareholders of a corporation. Sometimes refers to stock that has voting rights rather than stock that carries no voting rights. In a situation where all stock has voting rights, it sometimes refers to the shareholdings of one investors or a group of investors that effectively control the firm.

Controlled commodities
Commodities regulated by the Commodities Exchange Act of 1936 in order to prevent fraud and manipulation in commoditiesfuturesmarkets.

Controlled disbursement
A service that provides for a single presentation of checks each day (typically in the early part of the day).

Controlled foreign corporation (CFC)
A foreign corporation whose voting stock is more than 50% owned by US stockholders, each of whom owns at least 10% of the voting power.

Controller
The corporate manager responsible for the firm's accounting activities. Sometimes referred to as the comptroller (which means the same thing).

Convenience yield
The extra advantage that firms derive from holding the commodity rather than a futureposition.

Convention statement
An annual statement filed by a life insurancecompany in each state where it does business in compliance with that state's regulations. The statement and supporting documents show, among other things, the assets, liabilities, and surplus of the reporting company.

Conventional mortgage
A loan based on the credit of the borrower and on the collateral for the mortgage.

Conventional option
An optioncontract arranged on the tradingfloor and traded regularly. The opposite of exotic option.

Conventional pass-throughs
Also called private-label pass-throughs, any mortgage pass-through security not guaranteed by government agencies. Compare agency pass-throughs.

Conventional project
A project with a negative initial cash flow (cash outflow), which is expected to be followed by one or more future positive cash flows (cash inflows).

Convertible
A financialinstrument that can be exchanged for another security or equity interest at a pre-agreed time and exchange ratio.

Convertible Arbitrage
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that involves the simultaneous purchase of a convertible bond and the short sale of shares of the underlying stock. Interest rate risk may or may not be hedged.

Convergence
The movement of the price of a futures contract toward the price of the underlying cash commodity. At the start, the contract price is usually higher because of time value. But as the contract nears expiration, and time value decreases, the futures price and the cash price converge.

Conversion
In the context of securities, refers to the exchange of a convertible security such as a bond into stock.

In the context of mutual funds, refers to the free exchange of mutual fundshares from one fund to another in a single family.


Conversion factors
Rules set by the Chicago Board of Trade for determining the invoice price of each acceptable deliverable Treasuryissue against the Treasury Bondfutures contract.

Conversion feature
Specification of the right to transform a particular investment to another form of investment, such as switching between mutual funds or converting preferred stock or bonds to common stock.

Conversion parity
See: Market conversion price

Conversion parity price
Related: Market conversion price

Conversion parity/value
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Common stock price at which a convertible bond can become exchangeable for common shares of equal value; value of a convertible bond based solely on the market value of the underlyingequity. Par value plus conversion ratio. See bond value, investment value, parity.

Conversion Period
The time period during which an investor can exchange a convertible security for common stock.

Conversion premium
The extent by which the conversion price of a convertible security exceeds the prevailing common stock price at the time the convertible security is issued. In general usage, the conversion premium is the amount by which the convertible security trades above its conversted value. For example, if a $1,000 par bond is trading at $1,100, it is convertible into 50 shares, and the shares are trading at $21, the converted value is 50 X 20.50 = $1,025, and the conversion premium is $75.

Conversion price
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Dollar value at which convertible bonds, debentures, or preferred stock can be converted into common stock, as specified when the convertible is issued.

Conversion ratio
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Relationship that determines how many shares of common stock will be received in exchange for each convertible bond or preferred stock when a conversion takes place. It is determined at the time of issue and is expressed either as a ratio or as a conversion price from which the ratio can be figured by dividing the par value of the convertible by the conversion price.

Conversion value
The value of a convertible security if it is converted immediately. Also called parity value or converted value.

Converted put
See Synthetic Put.

Convertibility
The ability to exchange a currency without government restrictions or controls.

Convertible adjustable preferred stock (Caps)
The interest rate on caps is adjustable and is pegged to Treasurysecurity rates. They can be exchanged at par value for common stock or cash after the next period's dividend rates are revealed.

Convertible arbitrage
A practice, usually of buying a convertible bond and shorting a percentage of the equivalent underlyingcommon shares, to create a positive cash flowposition (with expected returns above the riskless rate) in a static environment and benefit from capital appreciation should the convertible's premium rise. This form of investing is far from riskless and requires constant monitoring. See: Chinese hedge and setup

Convertible bond
General debtobligation of a corporation that can be exchanged for a set number of common shares of the issuing corporation at a prestatedconversion price.

Convertible eurobond
A eurobond that can be converted into another asset, often through exercise of attached warrants.

Convertible exchangeable preferred stock
Convertible preferred stock that may be exchanged, at the issuer's option, into convertible bonds that have the same conversion features as the convertible preferred stock.

Convertible 100
Goldman Sachs index of the 100 convertibles of greatest institutional importance. Weighted by issue size, it measures the performance of its components against that of their underlyingcommon stock and against other broad marketindexes as well.

Convertible preferred stock
Preferred stock that can be converted into common stock at the option of the holder. See also: participating convertible preferred stock.

Convertible price
The contractually specified price per share at which a convertible security can be converted into shares of common stock.

Convertible security
A security that can be converted into common stock at the option of the securityholder; includes convertible bonds and convertible preferred stock.

Convex
Curved, as in the shape of the outside of a circle. Usually referring to the price/required yield relationship for option-free bonds.

Convexity
Property that a curve is above a straight line connecting two end points. If the curve falls below the straight line, it is called concave.

Cook the books
To deliberately falsify the financial statements of a company. This is an illegal practice.

Cooling-off period
The period of time between the filing of a preliminary prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the actual public offering of the securities.

Cooperative
An organization owned by its members. Examples are agriculture cooperatives that assist farmers in selling their products more efficiently and apartment buildings owned by the residents who have full control of the property.

Copenhagen Stock Exchange
The only securitiesexchange in Denmark. It features electronic trading of stocks, bonds, futures, and options.

Core capital
The capital required of a thrift institution, which must be at least 2% of assets to meet the rules of the Federal Home Loan Bank.

Core competence
Primary area of expertise. Narrowly defined fields or tasks at which a company or business excels. Primary areas of specialty.

Cornering the market
Purchasing a security or commodity in such volume as to achieve control over its price. An illegal practice.

C Corporation
A corporation that elects to be taxed as a corporation. The C corporation pays federal and state income taxes on earnings. When the earnings are distributed to the shareholders as dividends, this income is subject to another round of taxation (shareholder's income). Essentially, the C corporations' earnings are taxed twice. In contrast, the S corporation's earnings are taxed only once.

Corporate acquisition
The acquisition of one firm by another firm.

Corporate bonds
Debtobligationsissued by corporations.

Corporate charter
A legal document creating a corporation.

Corporate equivalent yield
A comparison of the after-tax yield of government bonds selling at a discount and corporate bonds selling at par.

Corporate finance
One of the three areas of the discipline of finance. It deals with the operation of the firm (both the investment decision and the financing decision) from the firm's point of view.

Corporate financial management
The application of financial principles within a corporation to create and maintain value through decision-making and proper resource management.

Corporate financial planning
Financial planning conducted by a firm that encompasses preparation of both long-and short-termfinancial plans.

Corporate financing committee
A committee of the NASD that reviews underwriters'SEC-required documents to ensure that proposed markups are fair and in the publicinterest.

Corporate income fund (CIF)
A unit investment trust featuring a fixed portfolio of high-gradesecurities and other investments, usually with monthly distribution of income.

Corporate processing float
The time that elapses between receipt of payment from a customer and the deposit of the customer's check in the firm's bank account; the time required to process customer payments.

Corporate repurchase
Activebuying by a corporation of its own stock in the marketplace. Reasons for repurchase include putting idle cash to use, raising EPS, creating support for a stock price, increasing internal control (shark repellant), or stock for ESOP or pension plans. Repurchase is subject to rules, such as that buying must be on a zero minus or a minus tick, after the opening and before 3:30 p.m.

Corporate tax view
The argument that double (corporate and individual) taxation of equity returns makes debt a cheaper financing method.

Corporate taxable equivalent
Rate of return required on a par bond to produce the same after-tax yield to maturity that the quoted premium or discount bond would generate.

Corporate Trust
The function of servicing and maintaining records for debt securities issued by a corporation.

Corporation
A legal entity that is separate and distinct from its owners. A corporation is allowed to own assets, incur liabilities, and sell securities, among other things.

Corpus
See: Principal

Correction
Reverse movement, usually downward, in the price of an individual stock, bond, commodity, or index. If prices have been rising on the market as a whole, and then fall dramatically, this is known as a correction within an upward trend. Antithesis of a technical rally. See: Dip, break.

Correlation
Statistical measure of the degree to which the movements of two variables (stock/option/convertible prices or returns) are related. See: Correlation coefficient.

Correlation coefficient
A standardized statistical measure of the dependence of two random variables, defined as the covariance divided by the product of the standard deviations of two variables.

Correlation Dimension
An estimate of the Fractal Dimension which measures the probability that two points chosen at random will be within a certain distance of each other, and examines how this probability changes as the distance is increased. White noise will fill its space since its components are uncorrelated, and its correlation dimension is equal to whatever dimension it is placed in. A dependent system will be held together by its correlations and retain its dimension whatever embedding dimension it is placed in, as long as it is greater than its fractal dimension.

Correlation Integral
The probability that two points are within a certain distance from one another. Used in the calculation of the correlation dimension.

Correspondent
A financial organization that performs services (acts as an intermediary) in a market for another organization that does not have access to that market.

Correspondent bank
Bank that accepts deposits of, and performs services for, another bank (called a respondent bank); in most cases, the two banks are in different cities.

Cosigner
A term referring to a person, other than the principal borrower, who signs for a loan. The cosigner(s) assumes equal liability for the loan.

Cost
The opposite of revenue. An expense that reflects the price of purchasing goods, services and financial instruments. A cash cost means that cash is given up today to the purchase. Also, the purchase price of an investment, which is compared to the sale proceeds to determine capital gain or loss.

Cost accounting
A branch of accounting that provides information to help the management of a firm evaluate production costs and efficiency.

Cost and Freight (CFR)
Seller is responsible for the payment of freight to carry goods to a named destination, as agreed with the buyer. This should be used with ocean shipments only, as the point where risk and responsibility pass from seller to buyer is the rail of the carrying vessel.

Cost basis
The original price of an asset, used to determine capital gains.

Cost-benefit ratio
The net present value of an investment divided by the investment's initial cost. Also called the profitability index.

Cost of capital
The required return for a capital budgeting project.

Cost of carry
Out-of-pocket costs incurred while an investor has an investment position. Examples include interest on long positions in margin account, dividend lost on short margin positions, and incidental expenses. Related: Net financing cost.

Cost-of-carry market
Applies to derivative products. Futures contractstrade in a "cost-of-carry market" where the underlyingcommodity can be stored, insured, and converted into the future easily and inexpensively. Arbitrageurs, because of the ease of switching from the spot commodity to futures, will keep these markets in line with prevailing interest rates.

Cost company arrangement
Arrangement whereby the shareholders of a project receive output free of charge but agree to pay all operating and financing charges of the project.

Cost of equity
The required rate of return for an investment of 100% equity.

Cost of funds
Interest rate associated with borrowingmoney.

Cost of goods sold
The total cost of buyingraw materials, and paying for all the factors that go into producing finished goods.

Cost of lease financing
A lease'sinternal rate of return.

Cost of limited partner capital
The discount rate that equates the after-tax inflows with outflows for capital raised from limited partners.

Cost Insurance and Freight (CIF)
Seller is responsible for the payment of freight to carry goods to a named destination, as agreed with the buyer. The seller is also responsible for providing cargo insurance at minimum coverage against the buyer's risk of loss or damage to the goods during transport. This term should be used with ocean shipments only, as the point where risk and responsibility pass from seller to buyer is the rail of the carrying vessel.

"Cost me"
Refers to over-the-counter trading. "The price I must pay to obtain the securities you wish to buy is [$]". Usually, a standard markup is then applied for resale to this buyer. Antithesis of can get.

Cost-plus contract
A contract in which the selling price is based on the total cost of production plus a fixed percentage or fixed amount.

Cost-push inflation
Inflation caused by rising prices, usually from increased raw material or labor costs that push up the costs of production. Related: Demand-pull inflation.

Cost records
The records maintained by an investor of the prices at which securitiestransactions are made, so that capital gains can be computed.

Cost Recovery Period
The number of years it takes to fully depreciate a capital asset. This time period is based on classification of the depreciable life of an asset.

Council of Economic Advisers
A group of economists appointed by the President of the United States to provide economic counsel and help prepare the president's budget presentation to Congress.

Countercyclical stocks
Stocks whose price tends to rise when the economy is in recession or the market is bearish, and vice versa.

Counterpart items
In the balance of payments, counterpart items are analogous to unrequited transfers in the current account. They arise through the double-entry system in balance of payments accounting and refer to adjustments in reserves owing to monetization or demonetization of gold, allocation or cancellation of SDRs, and revaluation of the various components of total reserves.

Counterparties
The parties on either side of an interest rate swap or a currency, equity or commodity swap, or to an options or futures position.

Counterparty
The other participant, including intermediaries, in a swap or contract.

Counterparty risk
The risk that the other party to an agreement will default. In an options contract, the risk to the optionbuyer that the option writer will not buy or sell the underlying as agreed.

Counterpurchase
Exchange of goods between two parties under two distinct contracts expressed in monetary terms.

Countertrade
See: barter

Country allocations
The percentages of a fund's net assetsdistributed to securities of various countries. These percentages serve as an indicator of a fund's diversification and its vulnerability to fluctuations in foreign financial markets or currencyexchange rates.

Country beta
Covariance of a national economy's rate of return and the rate of return of the world economy divided by the variance of the world economy.

Country diversification
Investment of a global or international portfolio'sassets in securities of various countries.

Country economic risk
Developments in a national economy that can affect the outcome of an international financial transaction.

Country financial risk
Centers around the ability of a national economy to generate enough foreign exchange to meet payments of interest and principal on its foreign debt.

Country risk
The general level of political, financial, and economic uncertainty in a country which impacts the value of the country's bonds and equities. See:Sovereign risk.

Country selection
A type of active international management that measures the contribution to performance attributable to investing in the better-performing stock markets of the world.

Coupon
The contractual interest obligation a bond or debenture issuer covenants to pay to its debtholders.

Coupon bond
A bond featuring coupons that must be presented to the issuer in order to receive interest payments.

Coupon-equivalent rate
See: Equivalent bond yield

Coupon equivalent yield
True interestcost expressed on the basis of a 365-day year.

Coupon pass
Canvassing by the desk of primary dealers to determine the inventory and maturities of their Treasury securities. The desk then decides whether to buy or sell certain issues (coupons) in order to add or withdraw reserves.

Coupon payments
A bond'sinterest payments.

Coupon rate
In bonds, notes, or other fixed income securities, the stated percentage rate of interest, usually paid twice a year.

Covariance
A statistical measure of the degree to which random variables move together. A positive covariance implies that one variable is above (below) its mean value when the other variable is above (below) its mean value.

Covenant
An agreed action to be undertaken (Positive) or not done (Negative). A breach of a covenant is a default.

Cover
The amount above UNITY of a debt service ratio.

Coverage
See: Fixed-charge coverage

Coverage initiated
Usually refers to the fact that analysts begin following a particular security. This usually happens when there is enough trading in it to warrant attention by the investment community.

Coverage ratios
Ratios used to test the adequacy of cash flows generated through earnings for purposes of meeting debt and leaseobligations, including the interest coverage ratio and the fixed-charge coverage ratio.

Covered
A written option is considered to be covered if the writer also has an opposing market position on a share-for-share basis in the underlying security. That is, a short call is covered if the underlying stock is owned, and a short put is covered (for margin purposes) if the underlying stock is also short in the account. In addition, a short call is covered if the account is also long another call on the same security, with a striking price equal to or less than the striking price of the short call. A short put is covered if there is also a long put in the account with a striking price equal to or greater than the striking price of the short put.

Covered call
A shortcall optionposition in which the writer owns the number of shares of the underlying stock represented by the option contracts. Covered calls generally limit the risk the writer takes because the stock does not have to be bought at the market price, if the holder of that option decides to exercise it.

Covered call writing strategy
A strategy that involves writing a call option on securities that the investor owns. See: Covered or hedge option strategies.

Covered foreign currency loan
A loandenominated in a currency other than that of the borrower's home country, for which repayment terms are prearranged through the use of a forward currency contract.

Covered interest arbitrage
Occurs when a portfolio managerinvests dollars in an instrumentdenominated in a foreign currency and hedges the resulting foreign exchange risk by selling the proceeds of the investment forward for dollars.

Covered Interest Rate Parity
The principle that the yields from interest-bearing foreign and domestic investments should be equal when the currencymarket is used to predetermine the domestic currency payoff from a foreign investment.

Covered or hedge option strategies
Strategies that involve a position in an option as well as a position in the underlying stock, designed so that one position will help offset any unfavorable price movement in the other, including covered call writing and protective putbuying. Related: Naked strategies

Covered option
Optionposition that is offset by an equal and opposite position in the underlying security. Antithesis of naked option.

Covered position
Use of an option in a tradingstrategy in the underlyingasset which is already owned.

Covered put
A put optionposition in which the option writer also is short the corresponding stock or has deposited, in a cash account, cash or cash equivalents equal to the exercise price of the option. This limits the option writer'srisk because money or stock is already set aside. In the event that the holder of the put option decides to exercise the option, the writer's risk is more limited than it would be on an uncovered or naked put option.

Covered straddle
An option strategy in which one call and one put with the same strike price and expiration are written against 100 shares of the underlying stock. In actually, this is not a "covered" strategy because assignment on the short put would require purchase of stock on margin. This method is also known as a covered combination.

Covered straddle write
The term used to describe the strategy in which an investor owns the underlying security and also writes a straddle on that security. This is not really a covered position.

Covered writer
An investor who writes options only on stock that he or she owns, so that option premiums may be collected.

Covering
Using forward currency contracts to predetermine the domestic currency amount of an expected future foreign receipt or payment. Also, the buying back ('covering') of a short position.

CPI
A measure of inflation. See: Consumer Price Index.

Cramdown
The ability of the bankruptcy court to confirm a plan of reorganization over the objections of some classes of creditors.

Cram-down deal
A merger in which stockholders are forced to accept undesirable terms, such as junk bonds instead of cash or equity, due to the absence of any better alternatives.

Crash
Dramatic loss in market value. The last great crash was in 1929. Some refer to October 1987 as a crash but the market return for the entire year of 1987 was positive.

Crawling peg
An automatic system for revising the exchange rate. It involves establishing a par value around which the rate can vary up to a given percent. The par value is revised regularly according to a formula determined by the authorities.

Credible signal
A signal that provides accurate information; a signal that can distinguish among senders.

Credit
Moneyloaned.

Credit analysis
Evaluating information on companies and bondissues in order to estimate the ability of the issuer to live up to its future contractualobligations. Related: Default risk.

Credit balance
The surplus in a cashaccount with a broker after purchases have been paid for, plus the extra cash from the sale of securities.

Credit bureau
An agency that researches the credit history of consumers so that creditors can make decisions about granting of loans.

Credit card
Any card, plate or coupon book that may be used repeatedly to borrowmoney or buy goods and services on credit.

Credit enhancement
The purchase of the financialguarantee of a large insurance company to raise funds. In the context of project financing, the issuance of a guarantee or additional collateral to reinforce the credit strength of a project financing. Also, the reduction of counterparty risk on a swap transaction through such measures as bilateral netting.

Credit history
A record of how a person has borrowed and repaid debt.

Credit insurance
Insurance against abnormal losses due to unpaid accounts receivable.

Credit linked security
A note whose cash flow depends upon a credit event or credit measure of a referenced entity or asset such as default, credit spread, or rating change. The manager would purchase such a note to hedge against possible down grades, or loandefaults that would guarantee payment into the portfolio of the manager even if moneys on referenced assets are reduced.

Credit period
The length of time for which a firm's customer is granted credit.

Credit Policy Delay
The period between the sale of goods for a credit and the payment for those goods. This lag is determined largely by the selling firm's credit policy.

Credit Rating Agencies
Firms that compile information on and issuepubliccredit ratings for a large number of companies.

Credit Standards
The guidelines a company follows to determine whether a credit applicant is creditworthy.

Credit Terms
The conditions under which credit will be extended to a customer. The components of credit terms are: cash discount, credit period, net period.

Creditworthiness
The condition in which the risk of default on a debtobligation by that entity is deemed low.

Credit quality
A measure of a bondissuer's ability to repay interest and principal in a timely manner. Rating agencies assign letter designations such as AAA, AA, and so forth. The lower the rating, the higher the probability of default.

Credit rating
An evaluation of an individual's or company's ability to repay obligations or its likelihood of not defaulting See: Creditworthiness.

Credit risk
The risk that an issuer of debt securities or a borrower may default on its obligations, or that the payment may not be made on a negotiable instrument. Related: Default risk.

Credit scoring
A statistical technique that combines several financial characteristics to form a single score to represent a customer's creditworthiness.

Credit spread
Applies to derivative products. Difference in the value of two options, when the value of the one sold exceeds the value of the one bought. One sells a "credit spread." Antithesis of a debit spread Related: Quality spread.

Credit union
A not-for-profit institution that is operated as a cooperative and offers financial services such as low-interestloans to its members.

Credit watch
A warning by a bond ratingfirm indicating that a company'scredit rating may change after the current review is concluded.

Crediting rate
The interest rate offered on an investment type insurance policy.

Creditor
Lender of money.

Creditor's committee
A group representing firms that have claims on a company facing bankruptcy or extreme financial difficulty.

Creditworthiness
Eligibility of an individual or firm to borrowmoney.

Creeping expropriation
The act of a government squeezing a project by taxes, regulation, access, or changes in law.

Creeping tender offer
The process by which a group attempting to circumvent certain provisions of the Williams Act gradually acquires shares of a target company in the open market.

CREST
CREST is CrestCo's real-time settlement system for UK and Irish shares and other corporate securities. CrestCo has provided settlement systems for government bonds and money market instruments in the UK since 1990.

Crisp Sets
The fuzzy set term for traditional set theory. That is, an object either belongs to a set, or does not.

Critical Levels
Values of control parameters where the nature of a nonlinear dynamic system changes. The system can bifurcate, or make the transition from stable to turbulent behavior. An example is the straw that breaks the camel's back.

Cross
Securitiestransaction in which the same broker acts as agent for both sides of the trade; a legal practice only if the broker first offers the securities publicly at a price higher than the bid.

Cross-border factoring
Concluding a transaction by a network of factors across borders. The exporter's factor can contact correspondent factors in other countries to handle the collection of accounts receivable.

Cross-border risk
Describes the volatility of returns on international investments caused by events associated with a particular country as opposed to events associated solely with a particular economic or financial agent.

Cross-Collateral
An agreement among project participants to poolcollateral, to allow recourse to each other's collateral.

Cross-default
A provision under which default on one debtobligation triggers default on another debt obligation.

Cross hedging
Applies to derivative products. Hedging with a futures contract that is different from the underlying being hedged. Use of a hedging instrument different from the security being hedged. Hedging instruments are usually selected to have the highest price correlation to the underlying.

Cross-holdings
The holding by one corporation of shares in another firm. One needs to allow for cross-holdings when aggregatingcapitalizations of firms. Ignoring cross-holdings leads to double-counting.

Cross rates
The exchange rate between two currencies expressed as the ratio of two foreign exchange rates that are both expressed in terms of a third currency. Foreign exchange rate between two currencies other than the US dollar, the currency in which most exchanges are usually quoted.

Cross-sectional analysis
Assessment of relationships among a cross-section of firms, countries, or some other variable at one particular time.

Cross-Sectional Ratio Analysis
A method of analysis that compares a firm's ratios with some chosen industrybenchmark. The benchmark usually chosen is the average ratio value for all firms in an industry for the time period under study.

Cross-sectional approach
A statistical methodology applied to a set of firms at a particular time.

Cross-share holdings
Often used in risk arbitrage. Corporations' or governments' equity share ownership in another corporation's shares.

Cross-border bonds
Bonds that firmsissue in the international market.

Crossed market
In the context of general equities, happens when the inside market consists of a highest bidprice that is higher than the lowest offer price. See: Overlap the market.

Crossed trade
The prohibited practice of offsettingbuy and sell orders without recording the trade on the exchange, thus not allowing other traders to take advantage of a more favorable price.

Crossover rate
The return at which two alternative projects have the same net present value.

Crowd trading
Used for listed equity securities. Group of exchange members with a defined area of function tending to congregate around a trading post pending execution of orders. Includes specialists, floor traders, odd-lotdealers, and other brokers as well as smaller groups with specialized functions. See: Priority.

Crowding out
Heavy federal borrowing that drives interest rates up and prevents businesses and consumers from borrowing when they would like to.

Crown jewel
A particularly profitable or otherwise particularly valuable corporate unit or asset of a firm. Often used in risk arbitrage. The most desirable entities within a diversified corporation as measured by asset value, earning power, and business prospects; in takeover attempts, these entities typically are the main objective of the acquirer and may be sold by a takeover target to make the rest of the company less attractive. See: Scorched earth policy.

Crown Law
A law derived from English law (ie. England, Ireland, Canada, PNG, Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, India, Malaysia).

Cum dividend
With dividend; said of a stock whose buyer is eligible to receive a declared dividend. Stocks are usually "cum dividend" for trades made on or before the third trading day preceding the record date, when the register of eligible holders is closed for that dividend period. Antithesis of ex-dividend.

Cum rights
With rights.

Cumulative abnormal return (CAR)
Sum of the differences between the expected return on a stock (systematic risk multiplied by the realized market return) and the actual return often used to evaluate the impact of news on a stock price.

Cumulative dividend feature
A requirement that any missed preferred or preference stockdividends be paid in full before any dividend payment on common shares is made.

Cumulative preferred stock
Preferred stock whose dividendsaccrue, should the issuer not make timely dividend payments. Related: Non-cumulative preferred stock.

Cumulative probability distribution
A function that shows the probability that the random variable will attain a value less than or equal to each value that the random variable can take on.

Cumulative total return
The actual performance of a fund over a particular period.

Cumulative Translation Adjustment (CTA) account
An entry in a translated balance sheet in which gains and/or losses from translation have been accumulated over a period of years. The C.T.A. account is required under the FASB No. 52 rule.

Cumulative voting
A system of voting for directors of a corporation in which shareholder's total number of votes is equal to the number of shares held times the number of candidates.

The Curb
Another name for the American Stock Exchange (AMEX).

Cure
To make good a default.

Currency
Money.

Currency appreciation
An increase in the value of one currency relative to another currency. Appreciation occurs when, because of a change in exchange rates, a unit of one currency buys more units of another currency.

Currency arbitrage
Taking advantage of divergences in exchange rates in different money markets by buying a currency in one market and selling it in another market.

Currency basket
The value of a portfolio of specific amounts of individual currencies, used as the basis for setting the market value of another currency. It is also referred to as a currency cocktail.

Currency Board
Entity charged with maintaining the value of a local currency with respect to some other specified currency.

Currency call option
Contract that gives the holder the right to purchase a specific currency at a specified price (exchange rate) within a specific period of time.

Currency Carry Trade
A carry trade where you borrow and pay interest in order to buy something else that has higher interest. For currencies, it might be that you borrow in Yen (where the interest rate might be low) and use the proceeds to purchase U.S. dollar long term debt. While the trade might produce a positive return, it is risky in two dimensions. First, U.S. rates could increase diminishing the value of the bond you purchased. Second, the exchange rate could take an unfavorable move effectively increasing your borrowing costs. Related: Carry Trade.

Currency depreciation
A decline in the value of one currency relative to another currency. Depreciation occurs when, because of a change in exchange rates, a unit of one currency buys fewer units of another currency.

Currency devaluation
A deliberate downward adjustment in the official exchange rates established, or pegged, by a government against a specified standard, such as another currency or gold.

Currency diversification
Using more than one currency as an investing or financingstrategy. Exposure to a diversified currency portfolio typically entails less exchange rate risk than if all the portfolio exposure were in a single foreign currency.

Currency Exchange Risk
Uncertainty about the rate at which revenues or costs denominated in one currency can be converted into another currency.

Currency futures contract
Contract specifying a standard volume of a particular currency to be exchanged on a specific settlement date.

Currency future
A financial future contract for the delivery of a specified foreign currency.

Currency hedge
Applies mainly to international equities. Hedging technique to guard against foreign exchange fluctuations (i.e., short Euro l00 mm when holding a long position of Euro l00 mm in stocks).

Currency in circulation
Paper money, coins, and demand deposits that constitute all the money circulating in the economy.

Currency no longer issued
Old and new series gold and silver certificates, Federal Reserve notes, national banknotes, and 1890 Series Treasury notes.

Currency put option
Contract that gives the holder the right to sell a particular currency at a specified price (exchange rate) within a specified period of time.

Currency option
An option to buy or sell a foreign currency.

Currency overvaluation
Applies mainly to international equities: (1) consideration that a currency is overvalued if private demand for the currency at the going exchange rate is less than total private supply (i.e., central banks are buying up the difference, supporting the value of the currency through foreign exchange intervention); (2) currency value exceeding purchasing power parity.

Currency revaluation
A deliberate upward adjustment in the official exchange rate established, or pegged, by government against a specified standard, such as another currency or gold.

Currency risk
Related: Exchange rate risk

Currency selection
Asset allocation in which the investor chooses among investmentsdenominated in different currencies.

Currency swap
An agreement to swap a series of specified payment obligationsdenominated in one currency for a series of specified payment obligations denominated in a different currency. Usually fixed for fixed.

Current account
Net flow of goods, services, and unilateral transactions (gifts) between countries.

Current account balance
The difference between the nation's total exports of goods, services and transfers and its total imports of them. Current account balance calculations exclude transactions in financial assets and liabilities.

Current assets
Value of cash, accounts receivable, inventories, marketable securities and other assets that could be converted to cash in less than 1 year.

Current coupon
A bond selling at or close to par, that is, a bond with a coupon close to the yields currently offered on new bonds of a similar maturity and credit risk.

Current Coupon Bond
Bonds on which the coupon is set approximately equal to the bonds'yield to maturity at the time of their issuance.

Current-coupon issues
Related: Benchmark issues

Current dollar
Refers to the use of actual or real prices and costs. Escalation or inflation effects are included.

Current income
Regular series of cash flows that is routinely received from investments in the form of dividends, interest, and other income sources.

Current income bonds
Bonds paying semiannual interest to holders. Interest is not included in the accrued discount.

Current issue
In Treasury securities, the most recently auctionedissue. Trading is more active in current issues than in off-the-run issues. Also known as on-the-run issue.

Current liabilities
Amount owed for salaries, interest, accounts payable and other debts due within 1 year.

Current market value
The value of a client's portfolio at today's market price, as listed in a brokerage statement.

Current maturity
Current time to maturity on an outstandingdebt instrument.

Current/noncurrent method
The translation of all of a foreign subsidiary'scurrent assets and liabilities into home currency at the current exchange rate while noncurrent assets and liabilities are translated at the historical exchange rate; that is, the rate in effect at the time the asset was acquired or the liability incurred.

Current order
In the context of periodic repayment schedules, the next periodic principal repayment.

Current production rate
The highest interest rate permissible on current Government National Mortgage Association,mortgage-backed securities.

Current rate method
The translation of all foreign currencybalance sheet and income statement items at the current exchange rate.

Current ratio
Indicator of short-term debt-paying ability. Determined by dividing current assets by current liabilities. The higher the ratio, the more liquid the company.

Currency risk sharing
An agreement by the parties to a transaction to share the currency risk associated with the transaction. The arrangement involves a customized hedgecontract embedded in the underlying transaction.

Current yield
For bonds or notes, the coupon rate divided by the market price of the bond.

Cushion
In the context of project financing, the extra amount of netcash flow remaining after expected debt service.

Cushion bonds
High-coupon bonds trading at a premium that tend to fall in price much less than comparable bonds when interest rates rise (hence the cushion effect), because of their high coupons.

Cushion theory
The theory that a stock with many short positions taken in it will rise, because these positions must be covered by the stock.

CUSIP number
Unique number given to a security to distinguish it from other stocks and registered bonds. See: Committee on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures.

Custodial fees
Fees charged by an institution that holds securities in safekeeping for an investor.

Custodian
Either (1) a bank, agent, trust company, or other organization responsible for safeguarding financial assets, or (2) the individual who oversees the mutual fundassets of a minor's custodial account.

Custodian bank
Applies mainly to international equities. Bank or other financial institution that keeps custody of stock certificates and other assets of a mutual fund, individual, or corporate client. See: Depository Trust Company (DTC)

Customary payout ratios
A range of payout ratios that is typical according to an analysis of comparable firms.

"Customer picking prices"
Customer is firm on price and has set the price at which to transact.

Customer's loan consent
Agreement signed by a margin customer that allows a broker to borrowmargin securities up to the level of the customer's debit balance to help cover other customers' short positions.

Customers' net debit balance
The total amount of credit given by NYSEmember firms to finance customers purchasing securities.

Customized benchmarks
A benchmark that is designed to meet a client's requirements and long-term objectives.

Customs Broker
An individual or firm licensed by customs authorities to enter and clear imported goods through customs. The broker represents the importer in dealings with the customs authorities.

Customs union
An agreement by two or more countries to erect a common external tariff and to abolish restrictions on trade among members.

Cut Off Date
The date prescribed in the unclaimed property law in most states for determining the items of property that must be turned over to the state. See: Escheat.

Cutoff point
The lowest rate of return acceptable on investments.

Cycles
A full orbital period.

Cyclical stock
Stock that tends to rise quickly when the economy turns up and fall quickly when the economy turns down. Examples are housing, automobiles, and paper.

Cyclical unemployment
Unemployment caused by a low level of aggregate demand associated with recession in the business cycle.

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Financial Glossary: D

D
Fifth letter of a NASDAQ stock symbol specifying that it is a new issue, such as the result of a reverse split.

D/A
See: Documents Against Acceptance

DCF
See: Discounted Cash Flows

DSCR
See: Debt-service coverage ratio

DDM
The ISO 4217 currency code for former East Germany Ostmark.

DDM
See: Discounted Dividend Model

DE
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for GERMANY.

DEM
The ISO 4217 currency code for Deutschemark.

DEQ
Abbreviation for the Incoterm "Delivered Ex Quay."

DES
Abbreviation for "Delivered Ex Ship."

DISC
See: Domestic International Sales Corporation

DITM
See: Deep in the money

DJ
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for DJIBOUTI.

DJF
The ISO 4217 currency code for Djibouti Franc.

DK
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for DENMARK.

DKK
The ISO 4217 currency code for Danish Krone.

DM
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for DOMINICA.

DNR Order
See: Do Not Reduce Order

DO
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.

DOP
The ISO 4217 currency code for Dominican Republic Peso.

DOT
See: Designated Order Turnaround System

DOTM
See: Deep out of the money

D/P
Abbreviation for Documents Against Payment.

DRP
See: Dividend Reinvestment Plan

DTC
See: Depository Transfer Check

DTC
See: Depository Trust Company

DTCC
See: Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation

DZ
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ALGERIA.

DZD
The ISO 4217 currency code for Algerian Dinar.

Daily price limit
The level within many commodity, futures, and options markets are allowed to rise or fall in a day. Exchanges usually impose a daily price limit on each contract.

Daisy chain
Manipulation of the market by traders to create the illusion of activevolume to attract investors.

Date of issue
Used in the context of bonds to refer to the date on which a bond is issued and when interest beings to accrue to the bondholder. Used in the context of stocks to refer to the date trading begins on a new stockissued to the public.

Date of payment
Date dividendchecks are mailed.

Date of record
Date on which holders of record in a firm's stock ledger are designated as the recipients of either dividends or stock rights.

Dated date
The date one uses to calculate accrued interest on various debt instruments, specifically bonds.

Dates convention
Treating cash flows as being received on exact dates-date 0, date 1, and so forth-as opposed to the end-of-year convention.

Dating
Credit extension beyond normal terms of a credit supplier.

Dawn raid
A term of British origin used to describe the purchase of all available shares of a target company at the market'sopen by a raider. A dawn raid is a surprise technique that allows the raider to gain a substantial share of the target company before the target company knows what is happening.

Day around order
A day order that supersedes (cancels and replaces) the previous order by altering its size or price limit.

Day of deposit to day of withdrawal account
A bank account that pays interest according to the number of days that the money is actually on deposit.

Day loan
A loan from a bank to a broker prior to the delivery of securities. Upon the delivery of the securities, a day loan becomes a regular brokercall loan for which securities serve as collateral.

Day order
In the context of general equities, request from a customer to either buy or sell stock, that, if not canceled or executed the day it is placed, expires automatically. All orders are day orders unless otherwise specified. Traders often make calls before the opening to check for renewals.

Day trade
Also known as a "daylight trade." The purchase and sale or the short sale and cover of the same security in a margin account on the same day.

Day trading
Establishing and liquidating the same position or positions within one day's trading.

Days in receivables
Average collection period.

Days' sales in inventory ratio
The average number of days' worth of sales that is held in inventory.

Days' sales outstanding
Average collection period.

De facto
Existing in actual fact although not by official recognition.

Dead cat bounce
A small upmove in a bearmarket.

Deal flow
In investment banking, the rate at which new deals are referred to a brokerage firm.

Deal stock
Stock subject to merger or acquisition, either publicly announced or rumored.

Dealing desk (Trading desk)
Personnel at an international bank who trade spot and forward foreign exchange.

Dealer
An entity that stands ready and willing to buy a security for its own account (at its bidprice) or sell from its own account (at its ask price). Individual or firm acting as a principal in a securitiestransaction. Principals are market makers in securities, and thus trade for their own account and risk. Antithesis of broker. See: Agency.

Dealer loan
Overnight, collateralizedloan from a money market bank made to a dealer financing his position by borrowing.

Dealer market
Where traders specializing in particular commoditiesbuy and sell assets for their own accounts.

Dealer options
Over-the-counteroptions, such as those offered by government and mortgage-backed securitiesdealers.

Dealer's spread
See: markdown; underwriting spread.

Dear money
British term for tight money.

Death-backed bonds
Bonds backed by loans of a policyholder against a life insurance policy. The policyholder will repay the loans while alive or with the benefits from the insurance policy upon death.

Death play
A stock strategy that buysstock on the belief that a key executive will die, the company will be dissolved, and shares will command a higher price at their private market value.

Death Spiral Convertible
Used by companies that are in such bad shape, that there is no other way to get financing. This instrument is similar to a convertible bond, but convertible at a discount to the share price at issuance and for a fixed dollar amount rather than a specific number of shares. The further the stock falls, the more shares you get. Popular in the mid to late 1990s. Also known as toxic convertibles or floorless convertibles.

Death Valley Curve
In venture capital, refers to the period before a new company starts generating revenues, when it is difficult for the company to raise money.

Debenture
Any debtobligation backed strictly by the borrower's integrity, e.g. an unsecured bond. A debenture is documented in an indenture.

Debenture bond
An unsecured bond whose holder has the claim of a general creditor on all assets of the issuer not pledged specifically to secure other debt. Compare subordinated debenture bond and collateral trust bonds.

Debenture stock
A type of stock that makes fixed payments at scheduled intervals of time. Debenture stock differs from a debenture in that it has the status of equity, not debt, in liquidation.

Debit
An expense, or money paid out from an account. A debit transaction is one which the net cost is greater than the net sale proceeds. See also Credit.

Debit balance
The amount that is owed to a broker by a margin customer for loans the customer uses to buysecurities.

Debit card
A card that resembles a credit card but which debits a transaction account (checking account) with the transfers occurring contemporaneously with the customer's purchases. A debit card may be machine readable, allowing for the activation of an automated teller machine or other automated payments equipment.

Debit spread
Applies to derivative products. Difference in the value of two options, when the value of the option bought exceeds the value of the one sold. One buys a "debit spread." Antithesis of a credit spread.

Debt
Money borrowed.

Debt bomb
A default on debt and obligations by a major financial_institution that disrupts the stability of the economic system.

Debt capacity
Ability to borrow. The amount a firm can borrow up to the point where the firm value no longer increases.

Debt ceiling
See: Debt limit

Debt displacement
The amount of borrowing that leasing displaces. Firms that do a lot of leasing are curtailed in their debt capacity.

Debt/equity ratio
Indicator of financial leverage. Compares assets provided by creditors to assets provided by shareholders. Determined by dividing long-term debt by common stockholder equity.

Debt-for-equity swap
A swap agreement to exchange equity/returns for debt returns or the converse over a prearranged length of time.

Debt instrument
An asset requiring fixed dollar payments, such as a government or corporate bond.

Debt leverage
Amplification of the return earned on equity when an investment or firm is financed partially with borrowedmoney.

Debt limit
The maximum amount that a municipality can borrow.

Debt limitation
A bond covenant that restricts the firm's ability to incur additional indebtedness in some way.

Debt market
The market for tradingdebt instruments.

Debt outstanding subject to limitation
Obligations incurred by the Treasury subject to the statutory limit set by Congress. Until World War 1, a specific amount of debt was authorized for each separate security issue. Beginning with the Second Liberty Loan Act of 1917, the nature of the limitation was modified until, in 1941, it developed into an overall limit on the outstanding Federal debt. The statuatory limit may change from year to year.

Debt ratio
Total debt divided by total assets.

Debt relief
Reducing the principal and/or interest payments on Less developed country loans.

Debt retirement
The complete repayment of debt. See: Sinking fund.

Debt securities
IOUs created through loan-type transactions-commercial paper, bank CDs, bills, bonds, and other instruments.

Debt service
Interest payment plus repayments of principal to creditors (retirement of debt).

Debt service coverage
The ratio of cash flow available to the borrower to the annual interest and principal payments on a loan or other debt.

Debt-service coverage ratio
Earnings before interest and income taxes, divided by interest expense plus the quantity of principal repayments divided by one minus the tax rate.

Debt service parity approach
Payment alternatives that provide the firm with the exact same schedule of after-tax debt payments (including both interest and principal).

Debt swap
A set of transactions in which a firmbuys a country's dollar bank debt at a discount and swaps this debt with the central bank for local currency that it can use to acquire local equity. Also called a debt-equity swap.

Debtholder
See: Bondholder

Debtor
Borrower of money.

Debtor in possession
A firm that continues to operate under the Chapter 11bankruptcy process.

Debtor-in-possession financing
New debt obtained by a firm during the Chapter 11bankruptcy process, Federal Bankruptcy Rule 4001 (c)(1). This financing is unique because it is secured, that is, it has priority over existing debt, equity and other claims.

Decile rank
Performance over time, rated on a scale of 1-10. 1 indicates that a mutual fund'sreturn is in the top 10% of funds being compared; while 3 means the return is in the top 30%.

Decimal trading
The quotation and trading of stock or bond prices in decimals, as opposed to the quotation of prices in fractions.

Decimalization
The quotation and trading of stock or bond prices in decimals, as opposed to fractions such as eighths.

Decision Break-Point Analysis
A type of sensitivity analysis that indicates the value at which a key variable will result in a negative NPV for an investment project.

Decision tree
Schematic way of representing alternative sequential decisions and the possible outcomes from these decisions.

Declaration date
The date on which a firm'sdirectors meet and announce the date and amount of the next dividend.

Declaration
The Board of Directors motion to authorize dividend payments.

Dedicated capital
Total par value (number of sharesissued, multiplied by the par value of each share). Also called dedicated value.

Dedicating a portfolio
Related: Cash flow matching

Dedication strategy
Refers to multiperiod cash-flow matching.

Deductible
An amount or period which must be deducted before an insurance payout or settlement is calculated.

Deductible contribution
Amount paid into an IRA, an employer-sponsored retirement plan, or other type of retirement plan for a particular tax year that is a deduction from income for tax purposes.

Deduction
An expense that is allowable as a reduction of gross taxable income by the IRS e.g., charity donations.

Deductive reasoning
Using known facts to draw a conclusion about a specific situation.

Deed of trust
See: Indenture

Deep-discount bond
A bondissued with a very low coupon or no coupon that sells at a price far below par value. A bond that has no coupon is called a zero-coupon bond.

Deep in the money
A call option with an exercise price substantially below the underlying stock's market price. Also put option with an exercise price substantially above the underlying stock's market price. Often substantially below is defined as more than one strike price below (for calls)/above (for puts) the current value of the underlying security.

Deep out of the money
A call option with an exercise price substantially above the market price. Also put option with an exercise price substantially below the underlying stock's market price. Often substantially below is defined as more than one strike price below (for calls)/above (for puts) the current value of the underlying security.

Default
The failure to make timely payment of interest or principal on a debt security or to otherwise comply with the provisions of a bond indenture. A breach of a covenant. In context of project financing, a technical default signals a project parameter is outside defined or agreed limits or a legal matter is not yet resolved.

Default interest
A higher interest rate payable after default.

Default premium
A differential in promised yield that compensates the investor for the risk inherent in purchasing a corporate bond that entails some risk of default. Often the premium is measured as the yield over and above a government bond yield of similar coupon and maturity.

Default risk
The risk that an issuer of a bond may be unable to make timely principal and interest payments. Also referred to as credit risk (as gauged by commercial rating companies).

Defeasance
The setting aside by a borrower of cash or bonds sufficient to service the borrower's debt. Both the borrower's debt and the offsetting cash or bonds are removed from the balance sheet. In securities trading, where a clearing house becomes counterparty to each side of a trade, after the trade has been agreed. This is necessary to facilitate netting, and reduce counterparty risk exposure. The term has become popular recently, because of the growth of central counterparty clearing services in European cash equities markets.

Defensive securities
Low-risk stocks or bonds that will provide a predictable and safe return on an investor'smoney.

Deferred account
A type of account that delays taxes on that account until some later date. An example is an IRA account.

Deferred annuities
Tax-advantaged life insurance products. Deferred annuitiesoffer deferral of taxes with the option of withdrawing one's funds in the form of a life annuity.

Deferred call
A provision that prohibits the company from calling the bond before a certain date. During this period the bond is said to be call protected.

Deferred charge
An expenditure treated as an asset that carries forward until it becomes pertinent to the business at hand, e.g., the underwriting fees on a corporate bond issue, which the corporation capitalizes as a deferred charge and then amortizes over the life of the bond issue.

Deferred compensation
An amount that has been earned but is not actually paid until a later date, typically through a payment plan, pension, or stock option plan.

Deferred equity
A common term for convertible bonds, which recognizes their equity component and the expectation that the bond will ultimately be converted into shares of common stock.

Deferred futures
The most distant months of a futures contract.

Deferred interest bond
A bond that pays interest at a later date, usually in one lump sum, effectively reinvesting interest earned over the life of the bond. See: Zero coupon bond.

Deferred nominal life annuity
A monthly fixed-dollar payment beginning at retirement age. It is nominal because the payment is fixed in a dollar amount at any particular time, up to and including retirement.

Deferred payment annuity
An annuity that stipulates payments be made to the annuitant at a later date, such as when the annuitant reaches a certain age.

Deferred tax expense
A non-cash expense that provides a source of free cash flow. Amount allocated during the period to cover tax liabilities that have not yet been paid.

Deficiency
The amount by which a project's cash flow is not adequate to meet debt service.

Deficiency Agreement
An agreement that calls on the sponsor or another party to provide the shortfall when cash flow, working capital, or revenues are below agreed levels or are insufficient to meet debt service.

Deficiency letter
Notification from the SEC to a prospective issuer of securities that revisions or additions need to be made to the preliminary prospectus.

Deficit
An excess of liabilities over assets, of losses over profits, or of expenditure over income.

Deficit spending
When government spending overwhelms government revenue resulting in government borrowing.

Defined asset fund
A unit investment trust consisting of a fixed portfolio of securities, including blue chips, REITs, or high-yielding stocks on a major exchange such as the NYSE or FTSE.

Defined benefit plan
A pension plan obliging the sponsor to make specified dollar payments to qualifying employees at retirement. The pension obligations are effectively the debt obligation of the plan sponsor. Related: Defined contribution plan

Defined contribution plan
A pension plan whose sponsor is responsible only for making specified contributions into the plan on behalf of qualifying participants. Related: Defined benefit plan

Defined event
The definition applicable to the trigger of a loss in an insurance policy, particularly political risk insurance.

Deflation
Decline in the prices of goods and services. Antithesis of inflation.

Deflator
A statistical factor used to convert current dollar purchasing power into inflation-adjusted purchasing power. Enables the comparison of prices while accounting for inflation in two different time periods.

Delayed issuance pool
Refers to mortgage backed securities (MBS) that at the time of issuance were collateralized by seasoned loans originated prior to the MBS pool issue date.

Delayed opening
Postponement of the start of trading in a stock until correction of a gross imbalance in buy and sell orders. Such an imbalance is likely to follow on the heels of a significant event such as a takeover offer. See: Suspended trading.

Delayed settlement/delivery
In the context of general equities, transaction in which a contract is settled in excess of five full business days. Seller's option. See: Dividend play, settlement.

Delinquency
Failure to make a payment on a debt or obligation by the specified due date.

Delisting
Removal of a company's security from listing on an exchange because the firm has not abided by specific regulations.

Deliver
The sale of a futures or forward contract may require the seller to deliver the commodity during the delivery month, if the short position is not offset prior to that time.

Deliverable bills
The Treasury bills that fulfill a set of guidelines set forth by the exchange on which the bills are traded.

Deliverable instrument
The asset in a forward contract that will be delivered in the future at an agreed-upon price.

Delivered at Frontier (DAF)
Seller must supply the goods at his or her own risk and expense delivered to a named place (usually a border location) by a specified time. The buyer is responsible for the importation. This is normally is used with rail, truck, or multi-modal shipments.

Delivered Duty Paid (DDP)
Seller must supply the goods at his or her own risk and expense to a named place in the country of importation. The seller is responsible for importation, payment of duty, and on carriage to the location agreed upon with the buyer.

Delivered Duty Unpaid (DDU)
Seller fulfills the contractobligations when the goods have arrived at a named place in the importing country. The seller bears all the costs and risk except for import duties and other customs clearance costs.

Delivered Ex Ship (DES)
Seller fulfills the contractobligations when the goods have been made available to the buyer on board a ship at the named port of destination. The seller must bear all costs and risks associated in bringing the goods to the named port of destination. The buyer is responsible for all costs necessary to unload the goods and clear them through customs. Unloading costs are included the ocean freight charged by most ship lines. The DES is most often used for charter shipments.

Delivered Ex Quay (DEQ)
Seller fulfills the contractobligations to deliver when the goods are made available to the buyer at the wharf of the destination port. A DEQ can further specify "Duty Paid" or "Duty Unpaid." If "Duty Paid" is specified, the seller is responsible for all risks and costs, including duty, to the wharf of the destination port. If "Duty Unpaid" is specified, the buyer is to clear the goods and pay duty. Since unloading costs are included in the ocean freight charged by most ship lines. This is most often used for charter shipments.

Delivery
The tender and receipt of an actual commodity or financial instrument in settlement of a futures contract.

Delivery date
Date by which a seller must fulfill the obligations of a forward or futures contract.

Delivery notice
The written notice given by the seller of its intention to make delivery against an open, shortfutures position on a particular date. Related: Notice day.

Delivery options
The options available to the seller of an interest ratefutures contract, including the quality option, the timing option, and the wild card option. Delivery options mean that the buyer is uncertain of which Treasury bond will be delivered or when it will be delivered.

Delivery points
Locations designated by futures exchanges at which the financial instrument or commodity covered by a futures contract may be delivered in fulfillment of such a contract.

Delivery price
The price fixed by the clearinghouse at which deliveries on futures are invoiced; also the price at which the futures contract is settled when deliveries are made.

Delivery versus payment
A in which the buyer's payment for securities is due at transaction the time of delivery (usually to a bank acting as agent for the buyer) upon receipt of the securities. The payment may be made by bank wire, check, or direct credit to an account.

Delphi technique
Collection of independent opinions without group discussion by the analysts providing the opinions; used for various sorts of evaluations (such as country risk assessment).

Dependent variable
Term used in regression analysis to represent the element or condition that is dependent on values of one or more other independent variables.

Delta
The ratio of the change in price of an option to the change in price of the underlying asset. Also called the hedge ratio. Applies to derivative products. For a call option on a stock, a delta of 0.50 means that for every $1.00 that the stock goes up, the option price rises by $0.50. As options near expiration, in-the-money call option contracts approach a delta of 1.0, while in-the-moneyput options approach a delta of -1. See: hedge ratio, neutral hedge. Call deltas range from 0.00 to +1.00; put deltas range from 0.00 to -1.00. If the call delta is 0.69, the put delta is -0.31 (call delta minus 1 equals put delta; 0.69 -1 =-0.31).

Delta cross-hedge
A futures hedge that has both maturity and currency mismatches with an underlying exposure.

Delta hedge
A dynamic hedgingstrategy using options that calls for constant adjustment of the number of options used, as a function of the delta of the option.

Delta neutral
Describes value of a portfolio not affected by changes in the value of the asset on which the options are written.

Delta Spread
A ratio spread that is established as a neutral position by utilizing the deltas of the options involved. The neutral ratio is determined by dividing the delta of the purchased option by the delta of the written option. See also Ratio Spread and Delta.

Demand deposits
Checking accounts that pay no interest and from which funds can be withdrawn upon demand.

Demand line of credit
A bank line of credit that enables a customer to borrow on a daily or on-demand basis.

Demand loan
A loan which can be called by the lender at any time and carries no set maturity date.

Demand master notes
Short-termsecurities that are repayable immediately upon the holder's demand.

Demand-pull inflation
A theory of inflation or price increases resulting from so-called excess demand. Related: Cost-push inflation.

Demand shock
An event that affects the demand for goods and services in an economy.

Denomination
Corresponds to the face value of currencyunits, coins, and securities. An international transaction may be denominated in US dollars, for example, or in British pounds.

Dependent
Acceptance of a capital budgeting project contingent on the acceptance of another project.

Deposit insurance
See: FDIC: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Depositary
An agent appointed for a Tender or Exchange Offer who accepts certificates from shareholders, processes them and assures that the appropriate cash or new securities are properly remitted to the tendering party.

Depository institution
A financial institution that obtains its funds mainly through deposits from the public. This includes commercial banks, savings and loan associations, savings banks and credit unions.

Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act
The 1980 federal legislation that ended the regulation of the banking industry.

Depository preferred
Device enabling an issuer to circumvent an arbitrary corporate limit on the number of preferred sharesissuable. Applies mainly to convertible securities.

Depository receipt
See: ADR American Depository Receipt

Depository transfer check (DTC)
Check made out directly by a local bank to a particular firm or person.

Depository Trust Company (DTC)
DTC is the world's largest central securities depository. It accepts deposits of over 2 million equity and debt securities issues (valued at $23 trillion) from over 65 countries for custody, executesbook-entrydeliveries (valued at over $116 trillion in 2000) records book-entry pledges of those securities, and processes related income distributions.. DTC is a member of the Federal Reserve System and is owned by The Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC), which is in turn owned primarily by most of the major banks, broker-dealers, and exchanges on Wall Street.

Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC)
The Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC), through its subsidiaries, provides post-trade clearance, settlement, custody and information services for equities, corporate and municipal debt, money market instruments, American depositary receipts, exchange-traded funds, unitinvestment trusts, mutual funds, insurance products and other securities. The National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) subsidiary, which acts as a central counterparty (CCP), provides trade guarantee, netting and risk management services for equity and debt transactions from all U.S. stock exchanges and markets. The Depository Trust Company(DTC) subsidiary has custody of and provides asset servicing for millions of securities issues of issuers from the U.S. and over 60 other countries. DTC serves as a major clearinghouse for institutional post-trade settlement. DTCC's two subsidiary businesses have Standard and Poors' highest rating: AAA.

Depreciate
To allocate the purchase cost of an asset over its life.

Depreciated cost
In terms of economics: The measure of capital consumption during production, e.g., machine and equipment wear.
In terms of finance: The process of amortization of fixed assets (equipment) to spread the cost over the depreciable life of the assets.

Depreciation
A non-cash expense (also known as non-cash charge) that provides a source of free cash flow. Amount allocated during the period to amortize the cost of acquiring long-term assets over the useful life of the assets. To be clear, this is an accounting expense not a real expense that demands cash. The sum of depreciation expenses of prior years leads to the balance sheet item Accumulated Depreciation.

Depreciation tax shield
The value of the tax write-off on depreciation of plant and equipment.

Depressed market
Market in which supply overwhelms demand, leading to weak and lower prices.

Depressed price
In the context of stocks, stock whose market price is low in comparison to stocks in its sector.

Depression
Period when excess aggregate supply overwhelms aggregate demand, resulting in falling prices, unemployment problems, and economic contraction.

Deregulation
The reduction of government's role in controlling markets, which lead to freer markets, and presumably a more efficient marketplace.

Derivative
A financial contract whose value is based on, or "derived" from, a traditional security (such as a stock or bond), an asset (such as a commodity), or a market index.

Derivative instruments
Contracts such as options and futures whose price is derived from the price of an underlying financial asset.

Derivative markets
Markets for derivative instruments.

Derivative security
A financial security such as an option or future whose value is derived in part from the value and characteristics of another security, the underlyingasset.

Descending tops
A chart pattern which in which each successive peak in a security's price is lower than the preceding peak over a period of time. Antithesis of ascending tops.

Descriptor
A variable describing assets, used as an element of a risk index. For example, a volatility riskindex, distinguishing high volatility assets from low volatility assets, could consist of several descriptors based on short term volatility, long term volatility, systematic and residual volatility, etc.

Design risk
The risk associated with the impact on project cash flow from deficiencies in design or engineering. Also known as engineering risk.

Designated order turnaround system (DOT)
Computerized order entry system that allows orders to buy or sell large baskets of stock to be transmitted immediately to the specialist on the exchange, where execution will occur quickly, depending on the basket size. Also used for odd-lot transactions to occur at the prices and quantities available. See: AOS.

Desk
The New York Federal Reserve Bank's trading desk (or securities department) where all transactions of the Federal Reserve System are executed in the money market or the government securitiesmarket.

Detachable warrant
A warrant entitles the holder to buy a given number of shares of stock at a stipulated price. A detachable warrant is one that may be sold separately from the package it may have originally been issued with (usually a bond).

Determinism
Fully ordained in advance. A deterministic chaos system is one that gives random looking results, even though the results are generated from a system of equations.

Deterministic models
Liability-matching models that assume that the liability payments and the assetcash flows are known with certainty. Related: Stochastic models.

Detrend
To remove the general drift, tendency, or bent of a set of statistical data as related to time. Often accomplished by regressing a variable or a time index and perhaps the square of the time index and capturing the residuals. A stochastic detrend would be to subtract a moving-average (say for five years) from the value of the variable. Deutsche Börse Germany's major securities market, including the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.

Deutsche Terminbörse (DTB)
Formerly the German financial futures and options market. Merged with the Swiss Options and Financial Futures Exchange (SOFFEX) in 1998 to form EUREX, the European derivatives exchange.

Deutsche Börse AG (DBAG)
Deutsche Börse AG (DBAG) is the operating company for the German cash and derivatives markets. It has four subsidiaries: Deutsche Börse Clearing AG, Deutsche Börse Systems AG, Frankfurter Wertpapierbörse (FWB), and the derivatives market, EUREX Deutschland (formerly the Deutsche Terminbörse ).

Devaluation
A decrease in the spot price of a currency. Often initiated by a government announcement.

Diagonal spread
An optionsstrategy requiring a long and a short position in the same class of option at different strike prices and different expiration dates. For example, buying an XYZ April 50 call and selling an XYZ July 55 call. See: Calendar spread; vertical spread.

Dialing and smiling
See: Cold calling

Dialing for dollars
A term used to describe the practice of cold calling, but which has negative implications as it is frequently applied to salespeople selling speculative or fraudulent investments.

Diamonds
Units of interest in the diamonds trust, a unit investment trust that serves as an index to the Dow Jones Industrial Average in that its holdings consist of the 30 component stocks of the Dow.

Diff
Short version of Euro rate differential, which is a Chicago Mercantile Exchange Futurescontract that is founded on the interest ratespread between the U.S. dollar and the British pound, the German mark, or the Japanese yen.

Difference check
The difference in interest payments that is paid to a swapcounterparty to close out a deal.

Difference from S&P
A mutual fund'sreturnminus the change in the Standard & Poor's 500 index for the same time period. A notation of -5.00 means the fund return is 5 percentage points less than the gain in the S&P, while 0.00 means that the fund and the S&P have the same return.

Differential
A small charge added to the purchase price and subtracted from the selling price by the dealer for odd-lot quantities.

Differential disclosure
The practice of reporting conflicting or markedly different information in official corporate statements including annual and quarterly reports and 10-Ks and 10-Qs.

Differential swap
Swap between two LIBORrates of interest, e.g., yen LIBOR for dollar LIBOR Payments are in one currency.

Diffusion process
A conception of the way a stock'sprice changes that assumes that the price takes on all intermediate values.

Digits deleted
Designation on securities exchange tape meaning that because the tape has been delayed, some digits have been dropped (e.g., 26 1/2 becomes 6 1/2).

Dilution
Diminution in the proportion of income to which each share is entitled.

Dilution protection
Standard provision that changes the conversion ratio in the case of a stock dividend or extraordinary distribution to avoid dilution of a convertible bondholder's potential equityposition. Adjustment usually requires a split or stock dividend in excess of 5% or issuance of stock below book value.

Dilutive effect
Result of a transaction that decreases earnings per common share (EPS).

Dip
Slight drop in securities prices after a sustained uptrend. Analysts often advise investors to buy on dips, meaning to buy when a price is momentarily weak. See: Correction, break, crash.

Direct Claim
A financial claim issued by a deficitunit to acquire funds for investment in real assets.

Direct costs of financial distress
Costs such as fees or penalties incurred as a result of bankruptcy or liquidation proceedings.

Direct deposit
A method of payment which electronically credits your checking or savings account.

Direct deposit service
A service that electronically transfers all or part of any recurring payment—including dividends, paychecks, pensions, and Social Security payments—directly to a shareholder's account.

Direct estimate method
A method of cash budgeting based on detailed estimates of cash receipts and cash disbursements category by category.

Direct Exchange Rate
The home currency price of one unit of a foreign currency.

Discount Interest
Interest at a beginning of the loan. For example if you take out a one-year loan of $100 at a discount interest rate of 10%, you would receive $90 at the outset.

Direct investment
The purchase of a controlling interest in a company or at least enough interest to have enough influence to direct the course of the company.

Direct lease
Contract in which a lessor purchases new equipment from the manufacturer and leases it to the lessee.

Direct overhead
A fraction of overhead costs devoted to the manufacturing sector of a firm to cover expenses such as rent and utilities.

Direct paper
Commercial paper sold directly by the issuer to investors.

Direct participation program
An investment program enabling investors to directly participate in the cash flow and tax benefits of the partnership invested in by the investor, typically a form of passive investment.

Direct placement
Selling a new issue not by offering it for sale publicly, but by placing it with one of several institutional investors. Also known as a private placement.

Direct Purchase Plan
A plan that enables interested first-time individual investors to purchase a company'sstock directly from the company or without the direct intervention of a broker. The administrator also ensures the safekeeping of the shares by registering them directly on the books of the company. Eliminates the need for shareholders to hold on to physical certificates.

Direct quote
For foreign exchange, the number of US dollars needed to buy one unit of a foreign currency.

Direct Registration System
A system, sometimes referred to as DRS, that allows electronic direct registration of securities in an investor's name on the books for the transfer agent or issuer, and allows shares to be transferred between a transfer agent and broker electronically. DRS provides investors with a different way of holding their securities in certificate or street form. Under DRS, investors can elect to have their securities registered directly on the issuer's records in book-entry form. An investor electing to hold a security in a DRS book-entry position will receive a statement from the issuer or its transfer agent verifying ownership of the security. The investor can subsequently transfer electronically the DRS book-entry position to their bank or broker/dealer.

Direct rollover
Movement of tax-deferred retirement plan money from one qualified plan or custodian to another. No immediate tax liabilities or penalties are incurred, but there is an IRS reporting requirement.

Direct search market
Buyers and sellers seek each other directly and transact directly.

Direct stock-purchase programs
Investors purchase securities directly from the issuer.

Direct terms
The price of a unit of foreign currency in domestic currency terms, such as $.9850/Euro for a US resident. See: Indirect terms.

Director
See: Board of directors.

Director Exception
A proxy or ballot that withholds its votes from one or more, but not all, individuals on the slate of nominated directors.

Directors' Duties
In the context of corporate governance, Directors' Duties refers to stated responsibilities of the company'sBoard of Directors. These provisions allow directors to consider constituencies other than shareholders when considering a merger. These constituencies may include, for example, employees, host communities, or suppliers. This provision provides boards of directors with legal basis for rejecting a takeover that would have been beneficial to shareholders. A majority of states have Directors Duties Laws.

Directorship
Used in the context of general equities. Stock status whereby a trader may not maintain positions in the security, due to an investment bank employee serving as a director on the corporation'sBoard of Directors done to avoid conflicts of interest; signified by a flashing "D" on Quotron. Contrast to restricted.

Dirty float
A system of floating exchange rates in which a government may intervene to change the direction of the value of the country's currency.

Dirty price
Bond price including accrued interest, i.e., the price paid by the bond buyer.

Dirty stock
A stock that fails to fulfill prerequisites to attain good delivery status.

Disability income insurance
An insurance policy that insures a worker in the event of an occupational mishap resulting in disability. Insurance benefits compensate the injured worker for lost pay.

Disbursement float
A decrease in book cash but no immediate change in bank cash, generated by checks written by the firm.

Discharge of bankruptcy
The termination of bankruptcy proceedings, resulting in cancellation of the debtor'sobligations.

Discharge of lien
An order terminating a lien on property.

Disclaimer of opinion
An auditor's statement that does not express any opinion regarding the company's financial condition.

Disclosure
A company's release of all information pertaining to the company's business activity, regardless of how that information may influence investors.

Discontinued operations
Divisions of a business that have been sold or written off and that no longer are maintained by the business.

Discount
Convertible: Difference between gross parity and a given convertible price. Most often invoked when a redemption is expected before the next coupon payment, making it liable for accrued interest. Antithesis of premium.
General: Information that has already been taken into account and is built into a stock or market.
Straight equity: Price lower than that of the last sale or inside market.

Discount Arbitrage
A riskless arbitrage in which a discount option is purchased and an opposite position is taken in the underlying security. The arbitrageur may either buy a call at a discount and simultaneously sell the underlying security (basic call arbitrage) or may buy a put at a discount and simultaneously buy the underlying security (basic put arbitrage). See also Discount.

Discount bond
Debt sold for less than its principal value. If a discount bond pays no coupon, it is called a zero coupon bond.

Discount broker
A brokerage house featuring relatively low commission rates in comparison to a full-service broker.

Discount factor
Present value of $1 received at a stated future date.

Discount payment
The difference between the face value and the price paid for a security.

Discount period
The period during which a customer can deduct the discount from the net amount of the bill when making payment.

Discount rate
The interest rate that the Federal Reserve charges a bank to borrow funds when a bank is temporarily short of funds. Collateral is necessary to borrow, and such borrowing is quite limited because the Fed views it as a privilege to be used to meet short-term liquidity needs, and not a device to increase earnings. In context of NPV or PV calculations, the discount rate is the annual percentage applied. In the context of project financing, the discount rate is often the all-in interest rate or the interest rate plus margin.

Discount securities
Non-interest-bearing money marketinstruments that are issued at a discount and redeemed at maturity for full face value, e.g., US Treasury bills.

Discount window
Facility provided by the Fed enabling member banks to borrow reserves against collateral in the form of government securities or other acceptable paper.

Discount yield
The yield or annual interest rate on a security sold to an investor at a discount. A bond that is sold at $4875 that matures to $5000 has a discount of $125. To calculate the discount yield: (discount divided by the face value of the security) multiplied by the (number of days in the year divided by the number of days to maturity).

Discounted basis
To sell a debt instrument below maturity value, so that the difference makes up all or part of the interest.

Discounted cash flow (DCF)
Future cash flows multiplied by discount factors to obtain present values.

Discounted dividend model (DDM)
A formula to estimate the intrinsic value of a firm by figuring the present value of all expected future dividends.

Discounted payback
The length of time needed to recoup the present value of an investment.

Discounted payback period rule
An investment decision rule in which cash flows are discounted at an interest rate and then one determines how long it takes for the sum of the discounted cash flows to equal the initial investment.

Discounted in/by market
Unannounced information that is widely accepted or anticipated, and hence is already taken into account in the pricing of the security/market (e.g., poor earnings).

Discounting
Calculating the present value of a future amount. Discounting is opposite to compounding.

Discounting the news
An adjustment of a stock's price as speculatorsbid the price up or down in anticipation of news about the company, whether good or bad.

Discrepancy
Any deviation from the conditions stipulated in a letters of credit. Discrepancies void letter of credit protection.

Discrete compounding
Compounding the time value of money for separate time intervals.

Discrete random variable
A random variable that can take only a certain specified set of individual possible values-for example, the positive integers 1, 2, 3, . . . For example, stock prices are discrete random variables, because they can only take on certain values, such as $10.00, $10.01 and $10.02 and not $10.005, since stocks have a minimum tick size of $0.01. By way of contrast, stock returns are continuous not discrete random variables, since a stock's return could be any number.

Discrete variable
Variable like 1, 2, 3. Bond ratings are examples of discrete classifications.

Discretion
Freedom given to the floor broker by an investor to use his judgment regarding the execution of an order. Discretion can be limited, as in the case of a limit order that gives the floor broker some distance from the stated limit price to use his judgment in executing the order. Discretion can also be unlimited, as in the case of a market-not-held order. See also: Market Not Held Order.

Discretionary account
Account over which an individual or organization, other than the person in whose name the account is carried, exercisestrading authority or control.

Discretionary cash flow
Cash flow that is available after the funding of all positive net present value (NPV)capital investment projects; it is available for paying cash dividends, repurchasing common stock, retiringdebt, and so on.

Discretionary income
The amount of income a consumer has available after purchasing essentials such as food and shelter.

Discretionary order
A type of buy order or sell order that gives the broker the freedom and power to make the execution at any time and price that is seen fit and reasonable, given the investor's goals.

Discretionary Proposition
A proposal on a proxy card that brokers can cast in favor of management if they have not yet heard from the beneficial holder ten days before the annual meeting. See: Ten-Day Rule

Discretionary reserves
Balance sheet accounts representing temporary accumulations of earnings from the current year or the recent past.

Discretionary trust
In the context of mutual funds, refers to a mutual fund or unit trust whose management decides on the best way to use the assets without restriction to a specific type of security.
In the context of trusts, refers to a personal trust in which a trustee has the power of decision as to how much income or principal each beneficiary receives.

Discriminate analysis
A statistical process that links the probability of default to a specified set of financial ratios.

Dishonor
A refusal to pay.

Disinflation
A decrease in the rate of inflation.

Disintermediation
Withdrawal of funds from a financial_institution in order to invest them directly.

Disinvestment
A reduction in capital investment reflected by a decrease in capital goods and a company's decision not to replace depleted capital goods.

Disorderly Market
A characterization of market conditions whereby there is excessive volatility at a time when there is no news. The volatility is often caused by order imbalances. In some markets, shorts trying to cover can cause disorderly conditions. If disorderly conditions arise, sometimes trading is halted.

Disposable income
The amount of personal income an individual has after taxes and government fees, which can be spent on necessities, or non-essentials, or be saved.

Distress sale
The selling of assets under adverse conditions, e.g., an investor may have to sell securities to cover a margin call.

Distressed securities A security of a firm that has declared or is about to declare bankruptcy. In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that focuses on securities of companies that have declared bankruptcy and may be undergoing reorganization. Investment holdings can include bonds as well as stock in these firms.

Distributed
New Treasury issues in dealers' hands are said to be distributed.

Distributing syndicate
A syndicate consisting of a number of brokerage firms or investment bankers that work together to sell and disperse a large lot of securities.

Distribution
Selling a large lot of a security in such a way that the security price is not heavily influenced.

Distribution area
An established price range in which a stock has been trading for a significant amount of time. See: Accumulation area.

Distribution Cost Advantage
A source of competitive advantage that depends on the efficient delivery of a product or service to customers.

Distribution by coupon
Classification of a portfolio'ssecurities according to coupon rate—the interest rate that an issuer promises to pay, expressed as an annual percentage of face value.

Distribution by credit quality
Classification of a portfolio'ssecurities according to credit rating.

Distribution by issuer
Classification of a portfolio's holdings by type of issuer or type of instrument.

Distribution by maturity
An indicator of interest raterisk. In general, the higher the concentration of longer-maturityissues, the more a portfolio'sshare price will fluctuate in response to changes in interest rates.

Distribution period
The few days between the Board of Directors'declaration of a stock dividend (declaration date) and the date of record, or the date an individual must own shares to be entitled to a dividend.

Distribution plan
A mutual fund's plan to charge distributioncosts such as advertising to the investors of the fund.

Distribution schedule
The frequency (monthly, quarterly, semiannually, or annually) of a mutual fund's scheduled distributions of dividends or capital gains.

Distribution stock
A small amount of a specific stock that forms part of a larger block of stock that is sold small amount by small amount so as not to disrupt the stock's market price.

Distributions
Payments from fund or corporate cash flow. May include dividends from earnings, capital gains from sale of portfolio holdings and return of capital. Fund distributions can be made by check or by investing in additional shares. Funds are required to distribute realized capital gains (if any) to shareholders at least once per year if they are not to be taxed by the fund itself. Some corporations offer Dividend Reinvestment Plans (DRP).

Divergence
When two or more averages or indexes fail to show confirming trends.

Diversifiable risk
Related: Unsystematic risk

Diversification
Dividing investment funds among a variety of securities with different risk, reward, and correlation statistics so as to minimize unsystematic risk.

Diversified investment company
An investment vehicle such as a mutual fund that invests in an assortment of securities.

Divestiture
A complete asset or investment disposal such as outright sale or liquidation.

Dividend
A portion of a company'sprofit paid to common and preferred shareholders. A stock selling for $20 a share with an annual dividend of $1 a shareyields the investor 5%.

Dividend Discount Return
The rate of return which equates the present value of future expected dividends with the current market price of a security.

Dividend in arrears
Accumulated dividends on cumulative preferred stock that are deemed payable to the current holder.

Dividend capture
See: Dividend rollover plan

Dividend clawback
An arrangement under which sponsors of a project agree to contribute as equity any prior dividends received from the project to the extent necessary to cover any cash deficiencies.

Dividend clientele
A group of shareholders who prefer that the firm follow a particular dividend policy. Such a preference may be based on comparable tax situations.

Dividend Disbursing Agent
A commercial bank or financial_institution that disburses dividend to the securityholders. Usually a Transfer Agent is also the Dividend Disbursing Agent.

Dividend Discount Model (DDM)
A method to value the common stock of a company that is based on the present value of the expected future dividends.

Dividend distribution
See: Dividend income

Dividend growth model
An approach that assumes dividends grow at a constant rate in perpetuity. The value of the stock equals next year's dividends divided by the difference between the required rate of return and the assumed constant growth rate in dividends.

Dividend income
Distribution of earnings to shareholders that may be in the form of cash, stock, or property. Mutual fund dividends are paid out of income, usually on a quarterly basis, from interest generated by a fund's investments. Also known as a dividend distribution.

Dividend limitation
A bond convenant that restricts in some way the firm's ability to pay cash dividends.

Dividend Order
A letter or form signed by the shareholder instructing a corporation to issue and forward dividend and/or interest payments to a specific person or entity other than the registered owner, such as a bank or broker.

Dividend payout ratio
Percentage of earnings paid out as dividends.

Dividend policy
Standards by which a firm determines the amount of money it will pay as dividends.

Dividend rate
The fixed or floating rate paid on preferred stock based on par value.

Dividend record
S&P publication stating companies' payment histories and corporate policies.

Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRP)
Plan which provides for automatic reinvestment of shareholderdividends in more shares of a company'sstock, often without commissions. Some plans provide for the purchase of additional shares at a discount to marketprice. Dividend reinvestment plans allow shareholders to accumulate stock over the long term using dollar cost averaging. The DRP is usually administered by the company without charges to the holder.

Dividend requirement
The annual earnings minimum required for payment of dividends on a preferred stock.

Dividend rights
A shareholder's rights to receive per-share dividends identical to those other shareholders receive.

Dividend rollover plan
An investment strategy that entails the purchasing before and selling after of a stock right before its ex-dividend date in order to collect the dividends paid out by the stock and capture a tradeprofit.

Dividend trade roll/play
Used for listed equity securities. Method of buying and selling stocks around their ex-dividend dates so as to collect the dividend (which is 80% tax-exempt) offset by a fully-taxable capital loss. Predicated on the 80% current exemption that some corporations receive on dividend income.

Dividend yield (Funds)
Indicated yield represents return on a share of a mutual fund held over the past 12 months. Assumes fund was purchased a year ago. Reflects effect of sales charges (at current rates), but not redemption charges.

Dividend yield (Stocks)
Indicated yield represents annual dividends divided by current stockprice.

Dividends payable
The declareddividend dollar amount that a company is obligated to pay.

Dividends per share
Dividend paid for the past 12 months divided by the number of common sharesoutstanding, as reported by a company. The number of shares often is determined by a weighted average of shares outstanding over the reporting term.

Dividends-received deduction
A corporate tax deduction on income allowed by company A that is in ownership of shares of company B and receives dividends on the shares of company B.

Divisor
Used in construction of stock indices. Suppose there 10 stocks in an index, each worth $10 and the index is at 100. Now suppose that one of the stocks must be replaced with another stock that is worth $20. If no adjustment is made to the divisor, the total value of the index would be110 after the swapping. yet there should be no increase in value because nothing has happened other than switching the two constituents. The solution is to change the divisor; in this case from 1.00 to 1.10. Note that the value of the index, 110/1.1, is now exactly 100 - which is where it was prior to the swap.

Direct foreign investment (DFI)
Investment in real assets (such as land, buildings, or plants) outside one's own country.

Direct Loan Program
Fixed-rate loans offered by the Ex-Im Bank directly to the foreign buyer to purchase US capital equipment and services.

DM
Deutsche marks, the former currency of Germany.

Do Not Increase (DNI)
A restriction that an investor places on a good til' canceled order to prevent an order increase in the case of a stock dividend or stock split.

Do Not Reduce Order (DNR Order)
Limit order to buy or to sell, or a stop limit order to sell that is not to be reduced by the amount of an ordinary cash dividend on the ex-dividend date. A "do not reduce order" applies only to ordinary cash dividends, and not stock dividends or rights.

Doctrine of sovereign immunity
Principle that a nation may not be tried in another country without its consent.

Documentary Collection
A service provided by banks to sellers in obtaining payments. This service is usually transacted by the seller's bank through the buyer's bank, with the latter presenting the shipping documents to the buyer in exchange for payment or for signing a promissory note like instrument called a time draft.

Documentary collections
Trade transactions handled on a draft basis.

Documented discount notes
Commercial paper backed by normal bank lines of credit plus a letter of credit from a bank stating that it will pay off the paper at maturity if the borrowerdefaults. Such paper is also referred to as L.O.C. paper. Also known as Bankers' Acceptances.

Documents against acceptance
Shipping documents held by the buyer's bank until the buyer has accepted (signed) the draft.

Documents against payment
Shipping documents that are released to the buyer once the buyer has paid for the draft.

Dogs of the Dow
The 10 stocks of the 30 on the Dow Jones Industrial Average with the most depressed prices and consequently the highest yields. The investorbuying these stocks speculates that they will bounce back over a one-year period.

Dollar bears
Traders who capitalize on a falling dollar by buying other foreign currencies directly.

Dollar bonds
Municipal revenue bonds for which quotes are given in dollar prices. Not to be confused with "US Dollar" bonds, a common term of reference in the Eurobond market.

Dollar cost averaging
See: Constant dollar plan

Dollar drain
The impact of importing from foreign countries more than exporting to them. The money required to finance the import purchases removes dollars from the importing nation.

Dollar duration
The product of modified duration and the initial price.

Dollar price of a bond
Percentage of face value at which a bond is quoted.

Dollar return
The return realized on a portfolio for any evaluation period, including (1) the change in market value of the portfolio and (2) any distributions made from the portfolio during that period.

Dollar roll
Similar to the reverse repurchase agreement-a simultaneous agreement to sell a security held in a portfolio with purchase of a similar security at a future date at an agreed-upon price.

Dollar safety margin
The dollar equivalent of the safety cushion for a portfolio in a contingent immunizationstrategy.

Dollar shortage
Results when a nation importing US goods cannot pay for them without the aid of the United States.

Dollar-weighted rate of return
Also called the internal rate of return; the interest rate that makes the present value of the cash flows from all the subperiods in an evaluation period plus the terminal market value of the portfolio equal to the initial market value of the portfolio.

Domestic bonds
Bonds issued and traded within the internal market of a country and denominated in the currency of that country.

Domestic corporation
A corporation that is conducting business and is based in the country in which it is established, as opposed to a foreign corporation.

Domestic International Sales Corporation (DISC)
A U.S. corporation that receives a tax incentive for export activities.

Domestic market
A nation's internal market representing the mechanisms for issuing and tradingsecurities of entities domiciled within that nation. Compare external market and foreign market.

Domestic series
Nonmarketable interest and noninterest-bearing securitiesissued periodically by the Treasury to the Resolution Funding Corporation (RFC) for investment of funds authorized under section 21B of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act.

Donor
One who gives property or assets to someone else through the vehicle of a trust.

Don't fight the tape
Phrase advising not to trade against the markettrend. If stock prices are rising, do not sell.

Don't know (DK, DKed)
"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. Also, an unscrupulous claim made by one party denying that the trade had been agreed to and made after the trade goes adversely against that party.

Double auction market
Systems by which listed securities are bought and sold through brokers on the securities exchanges, as distinguished from the OTC market, where trades are negotiated. Unlike the conventional auction with one auctioneer and many buyers, double auction markets consist of many sellers and many buyers.

Double auction system
A market consisting of many sellers and many buyers, as opposed to a conventional auction with one market maker and many buyers.

Double-barreled
Describes backing of the principal and interest of a smaller municipal revenue bond by a larger municipal entity.

Double bottom
A term used in technical analysis to refer to the drop of a stock's price, a rebound, and then a drop back to the same level as the original drop.

Double-declining-balance depreciation method (DDB)
An accounting methodology in which the depreciation rate used is double the rate used under the straight-line method. In addition, the rate is applied to the full purchase cost of the asset, whereas under the straight-line method the rate is applied to the cost net of salvage value.

Double-declining-balance depreciation
Method of accelerated depreciation.

Double dip
Used for listed equity securities. Dividend roll in which the "dividend capturer" already owns the stockcum dividend. Also used when tax depreciation is accessed in two countries concurrently.

Double-dip lease
A cross-border lease in which the different rules of the lessor's and lessee's countries let both parties be treated as the owner of the leased equipment for tax purposes.

Double-entry bookkeeping
Accounting method that records each transaction as both a credit and a debit in different accounts.

Double-tax agreement
Agreement between two countries that taxes paid abroad can be offset against domestic taxes levied on foreign dividends.

Double taxation
Government taxation of the same money twice; specifically, earnings taxed first at the corporate level and then again as dividends at the stockholder level.

Double top
A term used in technical analysis to refer to the rise of a stock's price, a drop, and then a rise back to the same level as the original rise.

Double up
A stockbuyingstrategy that doubles the risk when the price moves in the opposite direction from the direction the investor hoped for. For example, an investor with confidence in ABC buys 1000 shares at $100 and another 1000 shares when the price declines to $90.

Double witching day
The last trading day before expiry of options and futures on the same underlying asset, resulting in a variety of arbitragestrategies to close out positions.

Doubling option
A sinking fund provision that may allow repurchase of twice the required number of bonds at the sinking fund call price.

Dovish
Refers to the tone of language used to describe a situation and the associated implications for actions. For example, if the Federal Reserve bank refers to inflation in a dovish tone, it is unlikely that they would take agressive actions. Similarly, a CEO might use dovish language to describe an important event facing the firm. This indicates that the firm is unlikely to take strong actions. Dovish sometimes means conciliatory. Opposite of hawkish.

Dow dividend theory
See: Dogs of the Dow.

Dow Jones Industrial Average
The best known U.S. index of stocks. A price-weighted average of 30 actively traded blue-chip stocks, primarily industrials including stocks that trade on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow, as it is called, is a barometer of how shares of the largest US companies are performing. There are hundreds of investmentindexes around the world for stocks, bonds, currencies, and commodities.

Dow Theory
Used in the context of general equities. Technical theory that a major trend in the stock market must be confirmed by simultaneous movement of the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Average to new highs or lows.

Down round
Refers to a round of venture capital financing that is raised at a lower firm valuation than the previous round.

Down volume
When a stock decreases in value on a particular day, the volume in that stock is considered down volume. Related: Up volume.

Down-and-in option
Barrier option (or knock-in option) that causes a plain-vanilla call or put option to come into existence if the underlying asset price falls to a predetermined price level (the barrier price).

Down-and-out option
Barrier option (or knock-out option) that initially is a plain vanilla option, but which ceases to exist if the underlying security falls to a predetermined level (the barrier price).

Downgrade
A negative change in ratings for a stock, or other rated security.

Downside Protection
Generally used in connection with covered call writing, this is the cushion against loss, in case of a price decline by the underlying security, that is afforded by the written call option. Alternatively, it may be expressed in terms of the distance the stock could fall before the total position becomes a loss (an amount equal to the option premium), or it can be expressed as percentage of the current stock price.

Downside risk
The risk that a security will decline in value including the implications of risk.

Downsizing
A company's reduction in the number of employees, number of bureaucratic levels, and overall size in an attempt to increase efficiency and profitability.

Downstream
The transfer of corporate activity from the larger parent to the smaller subsidiary.

Downtick
A trade in a particular stock at a price lower than the trade immediately preceding it. On U.S. stock exchanges, you cannot sell a stock short on a downtick.

Downturn
The transition point between a rising, expanding economy to a falling, contracting one.

Draining reserves
Federal Reserve System's course of action to tighten the money supply by (1) raising a bank's minimum reserve requirements, (2) selling bonds in the openmarket, (3) raising the rate at which banks borrow from the Fed, or (4) through draw-downs.

Draft
An unconventional order in writing-signed by a person, usually the exporter, and addressed to the importer-ordering the importer or the importer's agent to pay, on demand (sight draft) or at a fixed future date (time draft) the amount specified on the face of the draft.

Draw a call
In the context of general equities, provoking a customer indication/inquiry/order by calling them up or doing large amount of the volume in a stock.

Drawback
A tax or duty rebate on imported goods that are exported at a later date.

Drawdown
The state in which the borrower obtains some of the project financing, usually progressively according to construction expenditures plus IDC.

Drawee
The party who is directed to pay as specified in a draft.

Drawer
The party initiating a draft.

Drayage
A trucking company freight charge for the pick up or delivery of an ocean container.

Dressing up a portfolio
Money managers'strategy to make transactions for the sole purpose of making a portfolio look good to the investor near the end of a reporting period. See: Window dressing

Drip feed
The continual investment of capital in a small and growing company as the company needs it, rather than investing a lump sum at the company's inception.

Drive-by VC
A type of venture capitalist. In the usual model, the venture capitalist (VC) is involved in management and monitoring of the startup. A drive-by VC invests in a portfolio of startups and is often quick to exit.

Drop
Refers to over-the-counter trading. Remove from OTCtradinglist; hence, no longer making a market in a security.

Drop, The
In a dollar rolltransaction, the difference between the sale price of a mortgage-backed pass-through, and its repurchase price on a future date at a predetermined price.

Drop-dead day
The date on which a deadline is final, with no exceptions.

Drop-dead fee
A term of British origin referring to fee that must be paid if a deal falls through because of financing issues.

Drop lock
The fixing of the interest rate on a floating-rate note or preferred stock if it falls to a specified level.

Dual banking
Describes United States custom in which a bank is chartered by the state or federal government.

Dual-currency issues
Eurobonds that pay couponinterest in one currency but pay the principal in a different currency.

Dual listing
Listing of a security on more than one exchange, thus increasing the competition for bid and offerprices, the liquidity of the securities, and the length of time the stock can be traded daily (if listed on both the east and west coasts.) See: Listed security.

Dual-purpose fund
A closed-end fund consisting of two classes of shares. The two classes are preferred shares, on which shareholders receive all the dividends and interest from the portfolio, and common shares, on which shareholders receive all the capital gains.

Dual syndicate equity offering
An international equity placement that splits the offering into two branches - domestic and foreign - and each grantee is handled by a separate lead manager.

Dual trading
The custom of a trader on the commoditiesmarket to deal for its own account and the investor'saccount at the same time.

Due bill
An instrument evidencing the obligation of a seller to deliver securities sold to the buyer. Occasionally used in the bill market.

Due date
Date on which a debt must be paid.

Due diligence
An internal audit of a target firm by an acquiring firm. Offers are often made contingent upon resolution of the due diligence process.

Due diligence meeting
Meeting legally required to be held by an underwriter to enable brokers to question a new issuer about an upcoming issue.

Due-on-sale clause
A mortgagecontract clause stipulating that the borrower pay off the full remaining principal on a mortgage if the mortgaged property is sold before the mortgage is paid off.

Dumping
Used in the context of general equities. Offering large amounts of stock with little or no concern for price or market effect.

Duplicate Proxy
A second proxy received on an account. If the second proxy bears a more recent date than the first proxy, and has a different voting pattern, the second proxy will override the first.

Duplicative portfolio
Mainly applies to derivative products. Basket of stocks that imitates the price movement of another set of securities (e.g., S&P 500 index).

Dupont system of financial control
Highlights the fact that return on assets (ROA) can be expressed in terms of the profit margin and asset turnover.

Durable merchandise
Goods that have a relatively lengthy life (television sets, radios, etc.).

Duration drift
Change in duration attributable to the passage of time.

Duration
A common gauge of the price sensitivity of a fixed income asset or portfolio to a change in interest rates.

Duration matching strategy
An immunization technique that matches assetduration with the duration of the liabilities.

Dutch auction
Auction in which the lowest price necessary to sell the entire offering becomes the price at which all securities offered are sold. This technique has been used in Treasury auctions. Often used in risk arbitrage. Auction system in which the price of an item (stock) is gradually lowered until it meets a responsive bid (government T-bills) or offer (corporate repurchase) and is sold. In a corporate repurchase, a range of prices is set by the company within which shareholders are invited to tender their shares. The tender offer is open for a specific period of time (i.e., 20 days), and the quantity of stock to be purchased is stated as well, subject to proration if more shares are tendered than can be legally purchased under the stated terms (often an additional amount equal to 20% of outstanding shares can be purchased). The price paid is that at which the amount stated to be purchased can be sold. Compare to double auction system.

Dutch Auction Preferred Stock
A form of adjustable-ratepreferred stock in which the dividend is ascertained in a Dutch Auction process by corporate bidders every seven weeks.

Duty
A tax on imports, exports, or consumption goods.

Dwarfs
Fannie Maeissuedmortgage-backed securities pools that have an original maturity of 15 years.

Dynamic
For option strategies, describing analyses made during the course of changing security prices and during the passage of time. This is as opposed to an analysis made at expiration of the options used in the strategy. A dynamic break-even point is one that changes as time passes. A dynamic follow-up action is one that will change as either the security price changes or the option price changes or time passes.

Dynamic asset allocation
An asset allocation strategy in which the asset mix is quantitatively shifted in response to changing market conditions, as in a portfolio insurancestrategy, for example.

Dynamic hedging
A strategy that involves rebalancinghedgepositions as market conditions change; a strategy that seeks to insure the value of a portfolio using a syntheticput option.

Dynamical Noise
When the output of a dynamical system becomes corrupted with noise, and the noisy value is used as input during the next iteration. Also called System Noise. See: Observational Noise.

Dynamical Systems
A system of equations where the output of one equation is part of the input for another. A simple version of a dynamical system is linear simultaneous equations. Non-linear simultaneous equations are nonlinear dynamical systems.

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Financial Glossary: E

E
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying that an issue has not met the reporting date for the company's SEC regulatory filing requirements.

EAFE index
See: European Australian and Far East index

EASD
See: European Association of Securities Dealers

EBIAT
See: Earnings Before Interest after Taxes

EBIT
See: Earnings Before Interest and Taxes

EBITD
See: Earnings Before Interest, Taxes and Depreciation

EBITDA
See: Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization

EBRD
See: European Bank for Reconstruction and Development

EBT
See: Earnings Before Taxes

EC
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ECUADOR.

ECA
See: Export Credit Agency

EDC
See: Export Development Corp.

ECGD
See: Export Credit Guarantee Department

ECN
Electronic Communications Network. Defined under Rule 11Ac1- 1(a)(8) under the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

ECS
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Ecuadorian Sucre.

EDGAR Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval System
The system through which companies electronically file reports and registration statements with the SEC. This requires converting the paper or word-processing document to be filed into a universal ASCII format, a process known as EDGAR-izing the document. The filings can then be accessed by the public through the SEC's Web site on the Internet.

EEK
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Estonian Kroon.

EFIC
See: Export Finance Insurance Corp.

EFTPOS
Acronynm for Electronic Funds Transfer at Point of Sale. Payment is transferred usually from a checking account at the point of sale.

EG
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for EGYPT.

EGP
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Egyptian Pound.

ECU
See: European Currency Unit

EDI
See: Electronic Data Interchange

EE
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ESTONIA.

EH
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for WESTERN SAHARA.

EM
See: Effective margin

EMS
See: European Monetary System

EOE
See: European Options Exchange

EOQ
See: Economic Order Quantity

ER
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ERITREA.

ERM
See: Exchange Rate Mechanism

ES
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SPAIN.

ESOP
See: Employee Stock Ownership Plan

ESP
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Spanish Peseta.

ET
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ETHIOPIA.

ETB
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Ethiopian Birr.

ETF
See Exchange Traded Fund.

EU
See: European Union

EUR
The ISO 4217 currency code for Euro.

EUREX
The European derivatives exchange formed in 1998 by a merger of the Deutsche Terminbörse (DTB) and the Swiss Options and Financial Futures Exchange (SOFFEX).

EXDEC
See: Shipper's Export Declaration.

Each way
A broker'scommission from his or her involvement on both the purchase and the sale side of a security.

Early distribution
See: Premature distribution

Early Exercise (assignment)
The exercise or assignment of an option contract before its expiration date.

Early withdrawal
See: Premature distribution

Early withdrawal penalty
Penalty paid by the holder of a fixed-term investment penalizing an investor who withdraws money before the agreed-upon maturity date.

Earn-out
Refers to an additional payment in a merger or acquisition that is not part of the original acquisition cost, which is based on the acquiredcompany's future earnings relative to a level determined by the merger agreement.

Earned income
Compensation earned from employment, which includes wages, salary, tips, and compensation.

Earned income credit
A tax credit for taxpayers with children.

Earned surplus
See: Retained earnings

Earnest money
Money given to a seller by a buyer to demonstrate the buyer's good faith. If the deal falls through, the deposit is usually forfeited.

Earning asset
An asset that generates income, e.g., income from rental property.

Earning power
Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) divided by total assets.

Earnings
Net income for the company during a period.

Earnings before interest after taxes (EBIAT)
A financial measure defined as revenues less cost of goods sold and selling, general and administrative expenses. In other words, operating and nonoperating profit before the deduction of interest plus cashincome taxes. Equivalent to EBIT minus cash taxes.

Earnings before interest and, taxes (EBIT)
A financial measure defined as revenues less cost of goods sold and selling, general, and administrative expenses. In other words, operating and nonoperating profit before the deduction of interest and income taxes.

Earnings before interest, taxes, and depreciation (EBITD)
A financial measure defined as revenues less cost of goods sold and selling, general, and administrative expenses. In other words, operating and nonoperating profit before the deduction of interest and income taxes. Depreciationexpenses are not included in the costs.

Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA)
A financial measure defined as revenues less cost of goods sold and selling, general, and administrative expenses. In other words, operating and nonoperating profit before the deduction of interest and income taxes. Depreciation and amortization expenses are not included in the costs.

Earnings before taxes (EBT)
A financial measure defined as revenues less cost of goods sold and selling, general, and administrative expenses. In other words, operating and nonoperating profit before the deduction of income taxes.

Earnings momentum
An increase in the earnings per share growth rate from one reporting period to the next.

Earnings per share (EPS)
A company'sprofit divided by its number of common outstanding shares. If a company earning $2 million in one year had 2 million common shares of stockoutstanding, its EPS would be $1 per share. In calculating EPS, the company often uses a weighted average of shares outstanding over the reporting term. The one-year (historical or trailing) EPS growth rate is calculated as the percentage change in earnings per share. The prospective EPS growth rate is calculated as the percentage change in this year's earnings and the consensus forecast earnings for next year.

Earnings-price ratio
See: Earnings yield

Earnings response coefficient
A measure of relation of stock returns to earnings surprises around the time of corporate earnings announcements.

Earnings retention ratio
Plowback rate.

Earnings surprises
Positive or negative differences from the consensus forecast of earnings by institutions such as First Call or IBES. Negative earnings surprises generally have a greater adverse effect on stockprices than a reciprocal positive earnings surprise.

Earnings yield
The ratio of earnings per share, after allowing for tax and interest payments on fixed interest debt, to the current share price. The inverse of the price-earnings ratio. It is the total twelve months earnings divided by number of outstandingshares, divided by the recent price, multiplied by 100. The end result is shown in percentage terms. We often look at earnings yield because this avoids the problem of zero earnings in the denominator of the price-earning ratio.

Easy money
See: Tight money

Eating stock
When an underwriter can't find buyers for a stock and therefore has to buy them for his own account.

ECN
See: Emerging company marketplace

Eclectic paradigm
A theory that posits three types of advantages benefiting a multinational corporation: ownership-specific, location-specific, and market internalization advantages.

Econometrics
The quantitative science of modelling the economy. Econometric models help explain and predict variables of interest.

Economic assumptions
General market environment a firm expects to operate in over the life of a financial plan.

Economic defeasance
See: In-substance defeasance

Economic dependence
When the costs and/or revenues of one project depend on those of another.

Economic earnings
The real flow of cash that a firm could pay out forever in the absence of any change in the firm's productive capacity.

Economic exposure
The extent to which the value of a firm will change because of an exchange rate change.

Economic growth
An increase in the nation's capacity to produce goods and services. Usually refers to real GDP growth.

Economic growth rate
The annual percentage rate of change in the Gross National Product.

Economic income
Cash flow plus change in present value.

Economic indicators
The key statistics of the economy that reveal the direction the economy is heading in; for example, the unemployment rate and the inflation rate.

Economic Life
The time period over which an asset'sNPV is maximized. Economic life can be less than absolute physical life for reasons of technological obsolescence, physical deterioration, or product life cycle.

Economic order quantity (EOQ)
The order quantity that minimizes total inventory costs.

Economic rents
Profits in excess of the competitive level.

Economic risk
In project financing, the risk that the project's output will not be salable at a price that will cover the project's operating and maintenance costs and its debt service requirements.

Economic shock
Events that impact the economy which originate from outside it. They are unexpected and unpredictable (e.g., Hurricane Andrew in 1991, the rise in oil prices by OPEC).

Economic surplus
For any entity, the difference between the market value of all its assets and the market value of its liabilities.

Economic union
An agreement between two or more countries that allows the free movement of capital, labor, and all goods and services, and involves the harmonization and unification of social, fiscal, and monetary policies.

Economic value added (EVA)
A method of performance evaluation that adjusts accounting performance for investors' required return on investment. Suppose a division produces a 12% return on capital invested. Given the risk of the division's business line, if investors would usually require 14% on capital invested for this level of risk, the division destroyed shareholder value by the EVA metric. This Stern-Stewart has a trade mark on this term.

Economics
The study of the economy. See also: Macroeconomics; microeconomics; Keynesian economics, monetarism, and supply-side economics.

Economies of scale
Achievement of lower average cost per unit through increased production.

Economies of scale
The decrease in the marginal cost of production as a firm's extent of operations expands.

Economies of scope
Scope economies exist whenever the same investment can support multiple profitable activities less expensively in combination than separately.

Economies of vertical integration
Produced by achieving lower operating costs by owning all components of production and sometimes sales outlets rather than contracting with companies in the outside marketplace.

EDGAR (Electronic Data Gathering and Retrieval)
The Securities & Exchange Commission uses Electronic Data Gathering and Retrieval to transmit company documents such as 10-Ks, 10-Qs, quarterly reports, and other SEC filings, to investors.

Edge Act corporation
Corporationchartered by the Federal Reserve to engage in international banking. The Board of Governors acts on applications to establish Edge Act corporations and also examines the corporations and their subsidiaries. Named after Senator Walter Edge of New Jersey, who sponsored the original legislation to permit formation of such organizations. See also: agreement corporation.

Edge corporations
Specialized banking institutions, authorized and chartered by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors in the U.S., that are allowed to engage in transactions of a foreign or international character. They are not subject to restrictions on interstate banking. Foreign banks operating in the U.S. are permitted to organize and own an edge corporation.

Education IRA
A type of individual retirement account enabling the contribution of up to $500 per year tax free for each child up to the age of 18 by the parents in the family.

Effective annual interest rate
An annual measure of the time value of money that fully reflects the effects of compounding.

Effective annual yield
Annualizedinterest rate on a security computed using compound interest techniques.

Effective call price
The strike price in a marketredemption provision plus the accrued interest to the redemption date.

Effective convexity
The convexity of a bond calculated using cash flows that change with yields.

Effective date
In an interest rate swap, the date the swap begins accruing interest.

Effective debt
The total debt owed by a firm to its creditors.

Effective duration
The duration calculated using the approximate duration formula for a bond with an embedded option, reflecting the expected change in the cash flow caused by the option. Measures the responsiveness of a bond's price - taking into account that expected cash flows will change as interest rates change due to the embedded option.

Effective Interest Rate
The annual rate at which an investment grows in value when interest is credited more often than once a year.

Effective margin (EM)
Used with SAT performance measures, the amount equal to the net earned spread, or margin of income, on assets in excess of financing costs for a given interest rate and prepayment rate scenario.

Effective net worth
Net worth plus subordinated debt.

Effective rate
A measure of the time value of money that fully reflects the effects of compounding.

Effective sale
A sale based on the most recent round-lot price, which determines the price of the next odd lot. The difference created between the last round-lot price and the odd-lot price is referred to as the odd-lot differential.

Effective spread
The gross underwritingspread adjusted for the impact that a common stockoffering's announcement has on the firm's share price.

Effective tax rate
The net rate a taxpayer pays on income that includes all forms of taxes. It is calculated by dividing the total tax paid by taxable income.

Effective yield
Yield or return on a short-terminvestment after adjustment for the change in exchange rates over the period of concern.

Efficiency
The degree and speed with which a market accurately incorporates information into prices.

Efficient capital market
A market in which new information is very quickly reflected accurately in share prices.

Efficient diversification
The organizing principle of portfolio theory, which maintains that any risk-averseinvestor will search for the highest expected return for any particular level of portfoliorisk.

Efficient frontier
The combinations of securitiesportfolios that maximize expected return for any level of expected risk, or that minimizes expected risk for any level of expected return. Pioneered by Harry Markowitz.

Efficient market
Market in which prices correctly reflect all relevant information.

Efficient Market Hypothesis
States that all relevant information is fully and immediately reflected in a security'smarket price, thereby assuming that an investor will obtain an equilibriumrate of return. In other words, an investor should not expect to earn an abnormal return (above the market return) through either technical analysis or fundamental analysis. Three forms of efficient market hypothesis exist: weak form (stockprices reflect all past information in prices), semistrong form (stock prices reflect all past and current publicly available information), and strong form (stock prices reflect all relevant information, including information not yet disclosed to the general public, such as insider information).

Efficient markets theory (EMT)
Principle that all assets are correctly priced by the market, and that there are no bargains.

Efficient portfolio
A portfolio that provides the greatest expected return for a given level of risk (i.e., standard deviation), or, equivalently, the lowest risk for a given expected return.

Efficient set
Graph representing a set of portfolios that maximize expected return at each level of portfolio risk.

Efficient surface
In meanvarianceskewness analysis, the set of portfolios that result from investor's preference for higher means, lower variance and higher (positive) skewness. The efficient surface is analogous (in three dimensions, mean, variance and skewness) to the efficient frontier (in two dimensions, mean and variance).

Eighth[-ed]
Historical term used in the context of general equities. A specialist or another broker is bidding higher or offering lower than we are, often topping or undercutting us by an eighth.

Either/or facility
An agreement permitting a bank customer to borrow either domestic dollars from the bank's head office or Eurodollars from one of its foreign branches.

Either-or order
Used in the context of general equities. See: Alternative order.

Either-way market
In the interbankEurodollar deposit market, an either-way market is one in which the bid and offered rates are identical.

Elasticity of demand
The degree of buyers' responsiveness to price changes. Elasticity is measured as the percent change in quantity divided by the percent change in price. A large value (greater than 1) of elasticity indicates sensitivity of demand to price, e.g., luxury goods, where a rise in price causes a decrease in demand. Goods with a small value of elasticity (less than 1) have a demand that is insensitive to price, e.g., food, where a rise in price has little or no effect on the quantity demanded by buyers.

Elasticity of supply
The degree of producers' responsiveness to price changes. Elasticity is measured as the percent change in quantity divided by the percent change in price. A large value (greater than 1) of elasticity indicates sensitivity of supply to price, e.g., luxury goods, where a rise in price causes an increase in supply. Goods with a small value of elasticity (less than 1) have a supply that is insensitive to price, e.g., food, where a rise in price has little or no effect on the amount that producers supply.

Elasticity of an option
Percentage change in the value of an option given a 1% change in the value of the option's underlyingstock. Related: delta.

Elect
The conversion of a conditional order into a market order.

Election Period
The period of time during which the holder can elect to extend and extendible bond, or to retract a retractable bond.

Electronic data interchange (EDI)
The direct exchange of information electronically, from one firm's computer to another firm's computer in a structured format.

Electronic depository transfers
The transfer of funds between bank accounts through the Automated Clearing House (ACH) system.

Electronic funds transfer (EFT)
Transfer of funds electronically rather than by check or cash. The Federal Reserve's Fedwire and automated clearninghouse services are EFT systems.

Electronic Funds Transfer Systems
A variety of systems and technologies for transferring funds (money) electronically rather than by check. Includes Fedwire, automated clearringhouses (ACHs) and other automated systems.

Electronic Queriable Carrier
A transporter of goods which allows tracking of goods in transit electronically using a waybill number such as United Parcel, Federal Express, etc.

Elephants
A term used to refer to large institutional investors.

Eleven bond index
An index based on the averageyield of 11 municipal bonds that mature in 20 years and carry an average AA rating. The eleven bonds used to calculate the index are also found in the 20 bond index, which serves as a benchmark in tracking municipal bondyields.

Eligible bankers' acceptances
In the BA market, an acceptance may be referred to as eligible because it is acceptable by the Fed as collateral at the discount window and/or because the accepting bank can sell it without incurring a reserve requirement.

Elliott Wave Theory
Technical market timingstrategy that predicts price movements on the basis of historical price wave patterns and their underlying psychological motives. Robert Prechter is a famous Elliott Wave theorist.

Elves
A term the host uses to refer to guests on the PBS television show, "Wall Street Week", who are technical analysts attempting to predict the direction of stock prices over the next six months.

Embedded option
An option that is part of the structure of a bond that gives either the bondholder or the issuer the right to take some action against the other party, as opposed to a bare option, which trades separately from any underlying security.

Emergency fund
A reserve of cash kept available to meet the costs of any unexpected financial emergencies.

Emergency Home Finance Act of 1970
The federal legislation creating the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, a partially government-run program initiated to stimulate the development of a secondary mortgage market and expand mortgages available to veterans and other groups.

Emerging Company Marketplace (ECM)
A service once offered by the American Stock Exchange to help small growth companies fulfill special listing requirements. The service is no longer available.

Emerging markets
The financial markets of developing economies.

Emerging Markets Free index (EMF)
A Morgan Stanley Capital Internationalindex created to track stock markets in selected emerging markets that are open to foreign investment like Argentina, Chile, Jordan, Malaysia, Mexico, Philippines, and Thailand.

Emerging markets fund
A mutual fund that invests primarily in countries with developing economies (that is, those that are becoming industrialized). Emerging markets funds tend to be more volatile than domestic stock funds due to currency fluctuation and political instability. Consequently, fund prices can fluctuate dramatically.

Employee contribution
An employee's own deposit to a companyretirement plan.

Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)
The law that regulates the operation of private pensions and benefit plans.

Employee stock fund
A firm-sponsored program that enables employees to purchase shares of the firm's common stock on a preferential basis.

Employee stock ownership plan (ESOP)
A company contributes to a trust fund that buys stock on behalf of employees.

Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP)
A plan usually linked to a corporation's payroll deduction system allowing employees to purchase shares at a discount from current market value.

Employer matching contribution
The amount, if any, a company contributes on an employee's behalf to the employee's retirement account, usually tied to the employee's own contribution.

Employment rate
The percentage of the labor force that is employed. The employment rate is one of the economic indicators that economists examine to help understand the state of the economy. See also: Unemployment rate.

Empty head and pure heart test
Securities and Exchange Commission rule that allows only the bidder of a tender offer to trade in the stock while possessing inside information.

Encumbered
A property owned by one party on which a second party reserves the right to make a valid claim, e.g., a bank's holding of a home mortgageencumbers property.

End-of-year convention
Treating cash flows as if they occur at the end of a year as opposed to the date convention. Under the end-of-year convention, the present is time 0, the end of year 1 occurs one year hence; and so on.

Endogenous uncertainty
Describes factors within the control of the firm, such as a decision to reveal information about price or input costs. Converse of exogenous.

Endogenous variable
A value determined within the context of a model. Related: Exogenous variable.

Endorse
Transferring asset ownership by signing the back of the asset'scertificate.

Endowment
Gift of money or property to a specified institution for a specified purpose.

Endowment funds
Investment funds established for the support of institutions such as colleges, private schools, museums, hospitals, and foundations. The investment income may be used for the operation of the institution and for capital expenditures.

Energy mutual fund
Mutual fund investing in energy stocks only, e.g., oil and gas companies.

Engineering risk
The risk associated with the impact on a project's cash flows from deficiencies in design or engineering. Also known as design risk.

Enhanced indexing
Also called indexing-plus, an indexingstrategy whose objective is to exceed or replicate the total return performance of some predetermined index.

Enhancement
An innovation that has a positive impact on one or more of a firm's existing products.

Enterprise
A business firm.

Enterprise Value
The market capitalization of a firm'sequity plus the market value of the firm's debt. Often the value of assets that are non-core are excluded from the final calculation.

Entrepreneur
A person starting a new company who takes on the risks associated with starting the enterprise, which may require venture capital to cover start-up costs.

Entropy
The level of disorder in a system.

Environmental fund
A mutual fund that invests strictly in stocks of companies that are environmentally friendly and/or have the goal of environmental betterment. The investors are trying to support and profit from opportunities related to the environmental movement.

Environmental risk
The risk associated with economic or administrative consequences of slow or catastrophic environmental pollution.

EPS
See: Earnings per share

Equal dollar swap
Selling common stock/convertibles in one company and reinvesting the proceeds in as many shares of (1) another type of securityissued by the company, or (2) another security of the same type but of another company -- as can be bought with the proceeds of the sale. See: Equal shares swap.

Equal percentage contribution rule (EPCoR)
Principle that each assetcontributes the same proportion to the equilibriumportfolio rate premium and risk.

Equal shares swap
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Selling the underlying common and reinvesting the proceeds in as much of the convertible as can be converted into the number of shares of common just sold. See equal dollar swap.

Equalizing dividend
Special dividends received by investors of a firm for income the investor lost because the firm altered the dividends payment schedule.

Equilibrium
The stable state of the system. See: Attractor.

Equilibrium exchange rate
Exchange rate at which demand for a currency is equal to the supply of the currency in the economy.

Equilibrium market price of risk
The slope of the capital market line (CML). Since the CML represents the expected return offered to compensate for a perceived level of risk, each point on the line is a balanced market condition, or equilibrium. The slope of the line determines the additional expected return needed to compensate for a unit change in risk. The equation of the CML is defined by the capital asset pricing model.

Equilibrium price
The price at which the supply of goods matches demand.

Equilibrium rate of interest
The interest rate that clears the market. Also called the trade-clearing interest rate.

Equipment leasing partnership
A limited partnership that receives income and tax benefits such as depreciation costs by purchasing equipment and leasing it to other parties.

Equipment trust certificates
Certificatesissued by a trust that is formed to purchase an asset and lease it to a lessee. When the last of the certificates has been repaid, title and ownership of the asset transfers to the lessee.

Equitable owner
The beneficiary of a property held in a trust.

Equity
Ownership interest in a firm. Also, the residual dollar value of a futurestrading account, assuming its liquidation is at the going trade price. In real estate, dollar difference between what a property could be sold for and debts claimed against it. In a brokerage account, equity equals the value of the account'ssecurities minus any debit balance in a margin account. Equity is also shorthand for stock marketinvestments.

Equity cap
An agreement in which one party, for an up-front premium, agrees to pay the other at specific time periods if a designated stock marketbenchmark tops a predetermined level.

Equity carve out
Usually occurs when a company decides to IPO one of their subsidiaries or divisions. The company usually only offers a minority share to the equity market. Also known as carve out.

Equity claim
Also called a residual claim; a claim to a share of earnings after debtobligations have been satisfied.

Equity collar
The simultaneous purchase of an equity floor and sale of an equity cap.

Equity contribution agreement
An agreement to contribute equity to a project under certain specified conditions.

Equity floor
An agreement in which one party agrees to pay the other at specific time periods if a specific stock marketbenchmark falls below a predetermined level.

Equity funding
An investment consisting of a life insurance policy and a mutual fund. The insurance policy is paid by the collateral value of fund shares, giving the investor the advantages of insurance protection with the growth potential of a mutual fund.

Equity kicker
Stockwarrantsissued attached to a new debt, preferred or common stock issue to improve the salability of the issue.

Equity-linked Eurobonds
A Eurobond including a convertibility option or warrant.

Equity-linked policies
Related: Variable life

Equity market
Related: stock market

Equity multiplier
Total assets divided by total commonstockholders' equity; the total assets per dollar of stockholders' equity.

Equity options
Securities that give the holder the right (but not the obligation) to buy or sell a specified number of shares of stock, at a specified price for a certain (limited) time period. Typically one option equals 100 shares of stock.

Equity REIT
A Real Estate Investment Trust that assumes ownership status in the property it invests in enabling investors of the REIT to earn dividends on rental income from the property and appreciation in property resale. Antithesis of a Mortgage REIT.

Equity swap
A swap in which the cash flows exchanged are based on the total return on some stock marketindex and an interest rate (either a fixed rate or floating rate). Related: Interest rate swap.

Equityholders
Stockholders; those holding shares of the firm'sequity.

Equivalent annual annuity
The amount per year for some number of years that has a present value equal to a given amount.

Equivalent annual benefit
The annual annuity with the same value as the net present value of an investment project.

Equivalent annual cash flow
Annuity with the same net present value as the company's proposed investment.

Equivalent annual cost
The cost per year of owning an asset over its entire life.

Equivalent bond yield
Effective annual yield on a short-term, noninterest-bearing security calculated for comparison to yields quoted on coupon securities.

Equivalent loan
Given the after-tax stream associated with a lease, the maximum amount of conventional debt that the same period-by-period after-tax debt service stream is capable of supporting.

Equivalent taxable yield
The yield that must be offered on a taxable bondissue to give the same after-tax yield as a tax-exempt issue.

Erosion
A negative impact on one or more of a firm's existing assets.

Escalator clause
Provision in a contract allowing cost increases to be passed on. In an employment contract, for example an escalator clause may call for wage increases in line with inflation.

Escheat
Reversion of monies or securities to the state in which the securityholder was last known to reside, when no claim by the securityholder has been made after a certain period of time fixed by state law. This is known as the holding period or cut-off date.

Escheat Period
The period of elapsed time required by applicable state law for property to be presumed abandoned.

Escheatment
The process of turning over unclaimed or abandoned property to a state authority. Escheatment laws require mutual funds to turn over uncashed or returned check dollars and/or client account fund shares if the owner cannot be located within a length of time determined by each state.

Escrow
Property or money held by a third party until the agreed upon obligations of a contract are met.

Escrow receipt
A document provided by a bank in optionstrading to guarantee that the underlying security is on deposit and available for potential delivery.

Escrowed to Maturity (ETM)
Holding of the proceeds from a new bondissue to pay off an existing bondissue at its maturation date.

Essential purpose (or function) bond
See: Public purpose bond

Estate planning
The preparation of a plan to carry out an individual's wishes as to the administration and disposition of his/her property before or after his/her death.

Estate tax
A federal or state tax imposed on an individual's assets inherited by heirs.

Estimated tax
Tax to be paid quarterly on income that is not subject to withholding tax, including self-employed income, investment income, alimony, rent, and capital gains.

Ethical fund
See: Social conscious mutual fund.

Ethics
Standards of conduct or moral judgment.

Euclidean Geometry
The Plane geometry learned in high school, based upon a few ideal, smooth, symmetric shapes.

Euro
Originally, the term for a deposit made outside one's home country but denominated in the home country currency. This terminology is confusing now since the new European Currency unit, also called the Euro, was introduced on January 1, 1999.

Euro CDs
CDsissued by a U.S. bank branch or foreign bank located outside the U.S. Almost all Euro CDs are issued in London.

Eurodollar obligations
Certificates of deposit issued in U.S. dollars by foreign banks and foreign branches of U.S. banks.

Euro lines
Lines of credit granted by banks (foreign or foreign branches of U.S. banks) for Eurocurrencies.

Euro straight
A fixed-rate couponEurobond.

Eurobank
A bank that regularly accepts foreign currency-denominated deposits and makes foreign currency loans.

Eurobond
A bond that is (1) underwritten by an international syndicate, (2) issued simultaneously to investors in a number of countries, and (3) issued outside the jurisdiction of any single country. Eurobonds are often bearer bonds.

Euroclear
The Euroclear group is the world's largest settlement system for domestic and international securities transactions, covering both bonds and equities for financial institutions located in over 80 countries.

Euro-commercial paper
Short-termnotes with maturities up to 360 days that are issued by companies in international money markets.

Eurocredit market
Comprises banks that accept deposits and provide loans in large denominations and in a variety of currencies. The banks that constitute this market are the same banks that constitute the Eurocurrencymarket; the difference is that Eurocredit loans are longer-term than so-called Eurocurrency loans.

Eurocredits
Intermediate-termloans of Eurocurrencies made by banking syndicates to corporate and government borrowers.

Eurocurrency
Instrument issued outside your country, but denominated in your currency. A Eurodollar is a Certificate of Deposit in U.S. dollars issued in some other country (though mainly traded in London). A Euroyen is a CD issued in yen outside Japan.

Eurocurrency deposit
A short-term fixed-rate time depositdenominated in a currency other than the local currency (e.g., U.S. dollars deposited in a London bank).

Eurocurrency market
The money market for borrowing and lendingcurrencies that are held in the form of deposits in banks located outside the countries where the currencies are issued as legal tender.

Eurodollar
Refers to a certificate of deposit in U.S. dollars in a bank that is not located in the U.S. Most of the Eurodollar deposits are in London banks, but Eurodeposits may be anywhere other than the U.S. Similarly, a Euroyen or EuroDM deposit represents a CD in yen or DM outside Japan and Germany, respectively.

Eurodollar bonds
Eurobondsdenominated in U.S.dollars.

Eurodollar certificate of deposit
A certificate of deposit paying interest and principal in dollars, but issued by a bank outside the United States, usually in Europe.

Euroequity issues
Securities sold in the Euromarket. That is, securities initially sold to investors simultaneously in several national markets by an international syndicate. Related: External market.

Euro-medium term note (Euro-MTN)
A nonunderwrittenEuronoteissued directly to the market. Euro-MTNs are offered continuously rather than all at once as a bond issue is. Most Euro-MTN maturities are under five years.

Euro.NM
Created on March 1, 1996, Euro.NM is a pan- network of regulated markets dedicated to growth companies, regardless of their sector of activity or country of origin. Euro.NM member exchanges and their respective new markets consist of the Paris Stock Exchange (Le Nouveau Marché), the Deutsche Börse AG (Neuer Markt),  the Amsterdam Exchanges (NMAX), and the Brussels Stock Exchange (Euro.NM Belgium).

Euro-note
Short- to medium-term debt instrument sold in the Eurocurrency market.

Euroyen bonds
Eurobondsdenominated in Japanese yen.

European, Australia, and Far East index (EAFE index)
Stock index, computed by Morgan Stanley Capital International.

European Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation (EASDAQ)
European equivalent of Nasdaq.

European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
Bank targeted at Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.

European Central Bank (ECB)
Bank created to monitor the monetary policy of the countries that have converted to the Euro from their local currencies. The original 11 countries are: Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, and Spain.

European Currency Unit (ECU)
An index of foreign exchange consisting of European currencies, originally devised in 1979. Also see Euro.

European exchange rate mechanism (ERM)
The system that countries in the European Union once used to pay exchange rates within bands around an ERM central value.

European Exercise
A feature of an option that stipulates that the option may only be exercised at its expiration. Therefore, there can be no early assignment with this type of option. Most index options are European-style exercise.

European Monetary System (EMS)
A system adopted by European Community members with the aim of promoting stability by limiting exchange-rate fluctuations. The system was originated in 1979 by the nine members of the European Community (EC). The EMS comprised three principal elements: the European Currency Unit (ECU), the monetary unit used in EC transactions; the Exchange Rate Mechanism, ERM, whereby those member states taking part agreed to maintain currency fluctuations within certain agreed limits; and the European Monetary Cooperation Fund, which issues the ECU and oversees the ERM. The 1992 Maastricht Treaty provided for the move to Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), including a European Monetary Institute to coordinate the economic and monetary policy of the EU, a European Central Bank (ECB) to govern these policies, and the presentation of a single European currency.

European option
Option that may be exercised only at the expiration date. Related: American option.

European Options Exchange (EOE)
Now AEX-Optiebeurs. See: Amsterdam Exchanges (AEX).

European-style exercise
A method of exercisingoptions contracts in which the buyer can only exercise the contract on the last day before expiration.

European-style option
An option contract that can be exercised only on the expiration date.

European terms
A foreign exchange quotation that states the foreign currency price of one U.S. dollar. Opposite of direct quote.

European Union (EU)
An economic association of European countries founded by the Treaty of Rome in 1957 as a common market for six nations. It was known as the European Community until January 1, 1994 and currently comprises 15 European countries. Its goals are a single market for goods and services without any economic barriers, and a common currency with one monetary authority.

Evaluation period
The time interval over which funds assess a money manager's performance.

Even lot
See: Round lot

Evening up
Buying or selling to offset an existing market position.

Event anomalies
Occurrences such as earnings surprises or stock splits that seem to present opportunity to generate abnormal returns for those trading on the news.

Event driven
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that combines many different types of hedge fund investing such as merger arbitrage, distressed securities and high yield investing, in conjunction with an important "event" that is supposed to unlock firm value (like a merger announcement, earnings announcement, or a regulator decision).

Event risk
The risk that the ability of an issuer to make interest and principal payments will change because of rare, discontinuous, and very large, unanticipated changes in the market environment such as (1) a natural or industrial accident or some regulatory change or (2) a takeover, or corporate restructuring.

Event study
A statistical study that examines how the release of information affects prices at a particular time.

Events of default
Contractually specified events that allow lenders to demand immediate repayment of a debt.

Evergreen
A contract that rolls over after each agreed (short-term) period until cancelled by one party.

Evergreen credit
Revolving credit without maturity.

Evergreen funding
A British term referring to the gradual injection of capital into a new or existing enterprise.

Ex Works (EXW)
A transaction in which the seller's only responsibility is to make the ordered goods available to the buyer at the seller's premises. The buyer bears the cost and risk in transporting the goods from the seller's premises to destination. Since this includes pre- carriage and export clearance in the seller's country, EXW is not a very practical Incoterm for U.S. exports.

Ex-all
The sale of a security without the privileges associated with the security such as dividends, voting rights, or warrants.

Ex ante return
The expected return or anticipation return of an asset or portfolio.

Ex ante value
The forecasted price or value.

Exception
A proxy which does not authorize the proxy committee to act on its behalf concerning any other business, adjournments or substitutions.

Exceptional Return
Residual return plus benchmarktiming return. For a given asset with beta equal to one, if its residual return is 2%, and the benchmarkportfolio exceeds its consensus expected returns by 1%, then the asset's exceptional return is 3%.

Excess accumulation
The amount of a required minimum distribution that an IRA holder fails to remove from an IRA in a timely manner. Excess accumulations are subject to a 50% IRS penalty tax.

Excess contribution
The amount by which an IRAcontribution exceeds the allowable limits. If an excess contribution is not properly corrected, a 6% IRS penalty applies.

Excess reserves
Amount of reserves held by an institution in excess of its reserve requirement and required clearing balance. Also see reserves.

Exchange Ratio
The number of new shares in an acquiringfirm that are given for each outstanding share of an acquired firm.

Exchange Traded Fund
Similar to an index mutual fund, these tracking stocks trade continuously. Two popular ETFs are the Standard and Poor's depositary receipt (SPDR) launched in 1993 and the NASDAQ-100 Index Tracking Stock (QQQ) which was launched in 1999. These vehicles are popular for hedging as well as investment.

Ex-dividend
This literally means "without dividend." The buyer of shares when they are quoted ex-dividend is not entitled to receive a declared dividend. It is the interval between the record date and the payment date during which the stock trades without its dividend-the buyer of a stock selling ex-dividend does not receive the recently declared dividend. Antithesis of cum dividend (with dividend).

Ex-dividend date
The first day of trading when the buyer of a stock is no longer entitled to the most recently announced dividend payment ( i.e. the trade will settle the day after the record date, too late for the buyer to appear on the shareholder record and receive the dividend.) The date set by the NYSE (and generally followed on other U.S. exchanges) is currently two business days before the record date. A stock that has gone ex-dividend is denoted by an x in newspaper listings on that date.

Executor
An individual or trust institution nominated in a will and appointed by a court to settle the estate of a deceased person.

Ex-legal
A municipal bond offered without a law firm'slegal opinion. A majority of bonds are issued with legal opinions.

Expatriate
An employee who is a U.S. citizen living and working in a foreign country.

Ex-pit transaction
The closing out of a futures position off the exchange floor. Effected when two hedgers, one long and one short, make a private deal in the cash market, and no longer need their (equal and opposite) futures contracts to hedge. The hedgers contact the exchange and request the contracts be nullified without making a trade on the floor. This must be done (1) to ensure neither contract results in delivery/the requirement to deliver; (2) to properly reflect open interest; and (3) to eliminate the uncertainty of the fill price should a trade actually be done to offset the positions. Extremely rare. Also known as an EFP transaction, an exchange-for-physicals transaction or an against-actuals transaction.

Ex post return
Related: Holding-period return

Ex-rights
Shares of stock that are trading without rights attached.

Ex-rights date
The date on which a share of common stock with rights on it begins tradingex-rights.

Expropriation
The taking over of a company or project by the state, implying compensation will be paid. Nationalization.

Ex-warrants
Describes a stock sale during the time in which the buyer of the stock is not entitled to the warrant accompanying the stock.

Exact interest
Interest paid based on the basis of a 365-day/year schedule by a bank or other financial_institution as opposed to a 360-day basis (ordinary interest). Difference can be material when large principal sums of money are involved.

Exact matching
A bondportfolio managementstrategy that involves finding the lowest cost portfolio generating cash inflows exactly equal to cash outflows that are being financed by investment.

Except for opinion
An auditor's opinion reflecting the fact that the auditor is unable to audit certain areas of the company's operations because of restrictions imposed by management or other conditions beyond the auditor's control.

Expected rate of inflation
The public's expectations for inflation. These expectations determine how large an effect a given policy action by the Fed will have on economic activity.

Excess kurtosis
Kurtosis measures the "fatness" of the tails of a distribution. Positive excess kurtosis means that distribution has fatter tails than a normal distribution. Fat tails means there is a higher than normal probability of big positive and negative returns realizations. When calculating kurtosis, a result of +3.00 indicates the absence of kurtosis (distribution is mesokurtic). For simplicity in its interpretation, some statisticians adjust this result to zero (i.e. kurtosis minus 3 equals zero), and then any reading other than zero is referred to as excess kurtosis. Negative numbers indicate a platykurtic distribution; positive numbers indicate a leptokurtic distribution.

Excess margin
Equity present in an individual's account above the legal minimum required for a margin account or the maintenance requirement at a brokerage firm.

Excess profits tax
Additional federal taxes placed on the earnings of a business, used only in time of national emergency such as war.

Excess reserves
Actual reserves that exceed required reserves.

Excess return on the market portfolio
Difference between the return on the market portfolio and the riskless rate.

Excess returns
Difference between an asset's return and the riskless rate. Sometimes confused with abnormal returns, returns in excess of those required by some asset pricing model.

Exchange
A marketplace in which shares, options and futures on stocks, bonds, commodities, and indexes are traded. Principal U.S. stock exchanges are: New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), American Stock Exchange (AMEX), and National Association of Securities Dealers Automatic Quotation System (Nasdaq).

Exchange, The
A nickname for the New York Stock Exchange. Also known as the Big Board, where more than 2000 common and preferredstocks are traded. The exchange is the oldest in the United States, founded in 1792, and the largest. It is located on Wall Street in New York City.

Exchange of assets
Acquisition of another company by purchase of its assets in exchange for cash or stock.

Exchange controls
Government restrictions on the purchase of foreign currencies by domestic citizens or on the purchase of the local domestic currency by foreigners.

Exchange distribution
A sale on an exchangefloor of a large block of stock in a single transaction. A brokerbunches a large number of buy orders and sells the block all at once. The broker receives a special commission from the seller.

Exchange fund (also known as swap fund)
Investment vehicle introduced in 1999 that appeals to wealthy investors with large holdings in a single stock who want to diversify without paying capital gains taxes. These funds allow investors to exchange their stock for shares in a diversified portfolio of stocks in a tax-free transaction.

Exchange members
See: Member firm; seat

Exchange offer
An offer by a firm to give one security, such as a bond or preferred stock, in exchange for another security, such as shares of common stock.

Exchange privilege
A mutual fundshareholder's right to switch from one fund to another within one fund family, usually at no additional charge.

Exchange rate
The price of one country's currency expressed in another country's currency.

Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM)
The methodology by which members of the EMS maintain their currencyexchange rates within an agreed-upon range with respect to other member countries.

Exchange rate risk
Also called currency risk; the risk that an investment's value will change because of currency exchange rates.

Exchange risk
The variability of a firm's value that results from unexpected exchange rate changes, or the extent to which the present value of a firm is expected to change as a result of a given currency'sappreciation or depreciation.

Exchange of stock
Acquisition of another company by purchase of its stock in exchange for cash or shares.

Exchange Traded Funds (ETF)
Also known as ETF. A basket of stocks similar to an index mutual fund. However, there are a number of important differences between ETFs and mutual funds. The ETF can be traded within the day, they can be shorted, purchased on margin and there even exists options on some ETFs.

Exchangeable
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Means the issuer, if so stated, may substitute a convertible debenture for an existing convertible preferred with identical terms. Most often used when a corporation has an immediate need for equitycapital and a low tax rate, and expects either or both conditions to change. This would make the debenture less attractive if the interest tax-deductibility is lost.

Exchangeable instrument
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Bond or preferred stock that may be exchangeable into the common stock of a different publiccorporation.

Exchangeable Security
Investment instrument that grants its holder the right to exchange it for the common stock of a firm other than the issuer of the instrument.

Excise tax
Federal or state tax placed on the sale or manufacture of a commodity, typically a luxury item e.g., alcohol.

Exclusionary self-tender
A firm'soffer to buy a given amount of its own stock while excluding targeted stockholders.

Exclusive
In the context of general equities, having sole possession of the customer order/indication; not in competition with other dealers.

Execution
The process of completing an order to buy or sell securities. Once a trade is executed, it is reported by a Confirmation Report; settlement (payment and transfer of ownership) occurs in the U.S. between one (mutual funds) and three (stocks) days after an order is executed. The time varies greatly across countries. In France, for example settlements are only once per month.

Execution costs
The difference between the execution price of a security and the price that would have existed in the absence of a trade, which can be further divided into market impact costs and market timing costs.

Exempt List
Sophisticated investors, usually institutional investors, who are considered informed enough that new issues can be marketed to them without a prospectus. This exemption reduces the cost of private placements.

Exempt securities
Instruments exempt from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 or the margin requirements of the SEC Act of 1934. Such securities include government bonds, agencies, munis, commercial paper, and private placements.

Exemption
Direct reductions from gross income allowed by the IRS.

Exercise
To implement the right of the holder of an option to buy (in the case of a call) or sell (in the case of a put) the underlying security.

Exercise limit
Cap on the number of option contracts of any one class of contract that can be exercised within a five-day period contract. There are no restrictions on exercise for the last 10 trading days before expiry. A stock option'sexercise limit varies with the volume of the underlying stock.

Exercise notice
A broker's notification from a client who wants to exercise a right to buy or sell (depending on the type of contract) the underlying security of the optioncontract.

Exercise price
The price at which the security underlying an options contract may be bought or sold.

Exercise settlement amount
The difference between the exercise price of the option and the exercise settlement value of the index on the day an exercise notice is tendered, multiplied by the index multiplier.

Exercise value
The value of an in-the-money option if it was exercised today (before the expiration date). For a call option, this is the difference between the current asset price and the stike price. For a put option, it is the difference between the strike price and the current asset price.

Exercising the option
The act of buying or selling the underlying asset via the option contract.

Exhaust price
The low price at which a broker must liquidate a client's holding in a stock purchased in a margin account in order to meet a margin call when the client cannot meet the call.

Exim bank
See: Export-Import Bank

Exit fee
See: Back-end load

Exogenous
Describes facts outside the control of the firm. Converse of endogenous.

Exogenous variable
A variable whose value is determined outside the model in which it is used. Related: Endogenous variable

Exotic option
Refers to options that are more complex than simple put or call options. For example, a Caput is a call option on a put option. Exotic options trade over-the-counter.

Expansion
Phase of the business cycle as it climbs from a trough toward a peak.

Expectations hypothesis theories
Theories of the term structure of interest rates, which include the pure expectations theory; the liquidity theory of the term structure, and the preferred habitat theory. These theories hold that each forward rate equals the expected future interest rate for the relevant period. These three theories differ, however, on whether other factors also affect forward rates, and how.

Expectations theory of forward exchange rates
A theory of foreign exchange rates that states that the expected future spot foreign exchange ratet periods from now equals the current t-period forward exchange rate.

Expected dividend yield
Total amount of dividends received during the life of a futures contract or total dividends received for holding a particular stock one year. See: Current yield.

Expected future cash flows
Projected future cash flows associated with an asset.

Expected future return
The return that is expected to be earned on an asset in the future. Also called the expected return.

Expected return
The expected return on a riskyasset, given a probability distribution for the possible rates of return. Expected return equals some risk-free rate (generally the prevailing U.S. Treasurynote or bond rate) plus a risk premium (the difference between the historic market return, based upon a well diversified index such as the S&P 500 and the historic U.S. Treasury bond) multiplied by the asset'sbeta. The conditional expected return varies through time as a function of current market information.

Expected return-beta relationship
Implication of the CAPM that securityrisk premiums will be proportional to beta.

Expected return on investment
The return one can expect to earn on an investment. See: Capital asset pricing model.

Expected Spot Rate
The exchange rate between two currencies that is anticipated to prevail in the spot market on a given future date. It differs from the current spot rate primarily by the extent to which inflation expectations in the two currencies differ.

Expected value
The weighted average of a probability distribution. Also known as the mean value.

Expected value of perfect information
The expected value if the future uncertain outcomes could be known minus the expected value with no additional information.

Expense ratio
The percentage of the assets that are spent to run a mutual fund (as of the last annual statement). This includes expenses such as management and advisory fees, overhead costs, and 12b-1 (distribution and advertising) fees. The expense ratio does not include brokerage costs for trading the portfolio, although these are reported as a percentage of assets to the SEC by the funds in a Statement of Additional Information (SAI). The SAI is available to shareholders on request. Neither the expense ratio nor the SAI includes the transactions costs of spreads, normally incurred in unlisted securities and foreign stocks. These two costs can add significantly to the reported expenses of a fund. The expense ratio is often termed an Operating Expense Ratio (OER).

Expensed
Charged to an expense account, fully reducing reported profit of that year, as is appropriate for expenditures for items with useful lives under one year.

Experience rating
A technique insurance companies use to determine the correct price of a policypremium.

Expiration
The time an option contract lapses.

Expiration cycle
The recurring cycle of expiry months for which options on a particular security can be available. Basic options are placed in one of three cycles; Cycle 1 (the January/April/July/October, or the first month of each quarter); Cycle 2 (the second month of each quarter); or Cycle 3 (the third month of each quarter).
At any one time, a basic option has contracts with three expiration dates outstanding. For example, in mid-February, options trading on cycle 3 will have March, June and September expiries available. Late in March, after the March options expire, a December contract will be added, thus offering June, September and December expiries.
Higher-volume equity options, index options, and LEAPS can trade on other cycles, such as Cycle 4, Cycle 5 or Cycle 6. Cycle 4, for example, offers options in the two nearest months plus two months from Cycle 3. For example, in mid-April, there would be April, May, June and September expires available. A month later, there would be May, June, September and December expiries available for trading.

Expiration date
The last day (in the case of American-style) or the only day (in the case of European-style) on which an option may be exercised. For stock options, this date is the Saturday immediately following the third Friday of the expiration month; brokerage firms may set an earlier deadline for notification of an option holder's intention to exercise. If Friday is a holiday, the last trading day will be the preceding Thursday.

Expiration time
The time of day by which all exercise notices must be received on the expiration date. Technically, the expiration time is currently 11:59AM on the expiration date, but public holders of option contracts must indicate their desire to exercise no later than 5:30PM on the business day preceding the expiration date. The times are Eastern Time. See also Expiration Date.

Explicit Bankruptcy Costs
Specific costs incurred during the bankruptcy process such as legal fees, court costs, consultants' fees, and document preparation expenses.

Explicit tax
A tax specifically collected by a government; includes income, withholding, property, sales, and value-added taxes and tariffs.

Exploding term sheet
Venture capital jargon. Often a proposed term sheet might explode or be null and void in a fixed period set to negotiate the final contract.

Export Commodity Control List
A listing administered by the U.S. Department of Commerce of items requiring validated export licenses for shipment to some or all countries.

Export Credit Agency
An agency established by a country to finance its nation's goods, investment, and services, often offers political risk insurance.

Export Credit Guarantee
Guarantee from the UK Export Credit Agency.

Export Development Corp.
Canada's Export Credit Agency.

Export Finance Insurance Corp.
Australia's Export Credit Agency.

Export-import Bank (Ex-IM Bank)
The U.S. federal government agency that extends trade credits to U.S. companies to facilitate the financing of U.S. exports.

Export financing interest
Interest income derived from goods manufactured in the U.S. and sold outside the U.S. as long as not more than 50% of the value is imported into the U.S.

Export License
Permission from the exporter's government to export specific merchandise to a particular country.

Export management company
A foreign or domestic company that acts as a sales agent and distributor for domestic exporters in international markets.

Export Management Consultant (EMC)
A company serving as the export department of other firms. Normally, EMC's work on a commission basis and do not take title to the goods they export. Also see: Export Trading Company.

Export Trading Company (ETC)
A company serving as the export department of other firms. They usually take title, risk and responsibility for the goods they export.

Exports
Goods or services sold to parties in foreign countries.

Exposure netting
Offsetting exposures in one currency with exposures in the same or another currency, when exchange rates are expected to move in such a way that losses or gains on the first exposed position should be offset by gains or losses on the second currency exposure.

Expost average rate of return
The historical mean percentage an asset has yielded.

Expropriation
The official seizure by a government of private property. Any government has the right to seize such property, according to international law, if prompt and adequate compensation is given.

Expunge
Used in the context of general equities. Remove any trace of an Autoindication's existence at any time. See: Cancel.

Extendable bond
Bond whose maturity can be extended at the option of the holder (investor).

Extendable notes
Note with maturity that can be extended by mutual agreement between the issuer and investors.

Extension
Voluntary arrangements to restructure a firm'sdebt, under which the payment date is postponed.

Extension date
The day on which the first option either expires or is extended.

Extension swap
Extending maturity through a swap, e.g. selling a 2-year note and buying one with a slightly longer current maturity.

External efficiency
Related: Pricing efficiency

External finance
Funding that is not generated by a firm's operations: new borrowing or a stockissue.

External funds
Funds originating from a source outside the corporation to increase cash flow and to aid in expansion efforts, e.g., bank loan or bondoffering.

External market
Also referred to as the international market, the offshore market, or, more popularly, the Euromarket. A mechanism for tradingsecurities that at issuance (1) are offered simultaneously to investors in a number of countries and (2) are issued outside the jurisdiction of any single country. Related: Internal market.

Extinguish
Retire or pay off debt.

Extra Dividend
A temporary increase in a firm's dividends beyond the normal level.

Extraordinary call
Early redemption of a revenue bond because the revenue source paying the interest on the bond has been eliminated or has disappeared.

Extraordinary item
An unusual and unexpected one-time event that must be explained to shareholders in an annual or quarterly report, e.g., write down for a discontinued operation, employee fraud, a lawsuit, or other one-time events. Results are often presented with and without these items. The logic of excluding these items is that investors have a better notion of future performance if one-time events are excluded. Differs from an unusual item in that extraordinary items are (1) material; (2) non-recurring; and (3) outside the ordinary nature of the business.

Extra or special dividends
A one-time or special dividend that is paid in addition to a firm's established or expected quarterlydividend.

Extraordinary positive value
A positive net present value.

Extrapolative statistical models
Models that apply a formula to historical data and project results for a future period. Such models include the simple linear trend model, the simple exponential model, and the simple autoregressive model.

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Financial Glossary: F

F
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying that the issues is a foreign company.

FAC
See: Federal Advisory Council

FAS
Abbreviation for the Incoterm Free Alongside Ship.

FASB
See: Financial Accounting Standards Board

FCA
Abbreviation for the Free Carrier

FCIA
See: Foreign Credit Insurance Association

FCM
See: Futures commission merchant

FDI
See: Foreign direct investment

FDIC
See: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

FFO
See: Funds from operations

FIRREA
See: Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989

FI
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for FINLAND.

FIM
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Finnish Markka.

FJ
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for FIJI.

FJD
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Fijian Dollar.

FK
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for FALKLAND ISLANDS (MALVINAS).

FKP
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Falkland Islands Pound.

FO
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for FAROE ISLANDS.

FOK
See: Fill or kill order

FM
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MICRONESIA, FEDERATED STATES OF.

FPA
Abbreviation for the insurance term Free of Particular Average

FR
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for FRANCE.

FRA
See: Forward rate agreement

FRF
The ISO 4217 currency code for the French Franc.

FRN
See: Floating-rate note

FSC
See: Foreign Sales Corporation

FX Rate
See:Foreign exchange rate

Face-amount certificate
A debt securityissued by face amount. The holder makes payments periodically to the issues, and the issuer promises to pay the purchaser the face value at maturity or the surrendered value if the security is presented by the maturity specified in the certificate.

Face value
See: Par value

Facilitation
The process of providing a market for a security. Normally, this refers to bids and offers made for large blocks of securities, such as those traded by institutions. Listed options may be used to offset part of the risk assumed by the trader who is facilitation the large block order. See also: Hedge ratio.

Factor
A financial institution that buys a firm'saccounts receivable and collects the accounts.

Factor analysis
A statistical procedure that seeks to explain a certain phenomenon, such as the return on a common stock, in terms of the behavior of a set of predictive factors.

Factor model
A way of decomposing the forces that influence a security'srate of return into common and firm-specific influences.

Factor portfolio
A well-diversified portfolio constructed to have a beta of 1.0 on one factor and a beta of zero on any other factors.

Factor Return
The return attributable to a particular common factor. We decompose assetreturns into a common factor component, based on the asset's exposures to common factors times the factor returns, and a specific return.

Factoring
Sale of a firm'saccounts receivable to a financial institution known as a factor.

Fade
Refers to over-the-counter trading. Fill another OTCdealer's bid for or offer of stock.

Fail
A deal is said to fail if on the settlement date either the seller does not deliversecurities in proper form or the buyer does not to deliver funds in proper form.

Fair-and-equitable test
A set of requirements for a plan of reorganization to be approved by the bankruptcy court.

Fair game
An investment prospect that has a zero risk premium.

Fair market price
Amount at which an asset would change hands between two parties, that both have knowledge of the relevant facts. Also referred to as market price.

Fair price
The equilibrium price for futures contracts. Also called the theoretical futures price, which equals the spot pricecontinuously compounded at the cost of carry rate for some time interval. In the context of corporate goverance, Fair-Price provisions limit the range of prices a bidder can pay in two-tier offers. They typically require a bidder to pay to all shareholders the highest price paid to any during a specified period of time before the commencement of a tender offer and do not apply if the deal is approved by the board of directors or a supermajority of the target's shareholders. The goal of this provision is to prevent pressure on the target's shareholders to tender their shares in the front end of a two-tiered tender offer, and they have the result of making such and acquisition more expensive. A majority of states have fair price laws.

Fair price provision
See:Appraisal rights

Fair rate of return
The rate of return that state governments allow a publicutility to earn on its investments and expenditures. Utilities then use these profits to pay investors and provide service upgrades to their customers.

Fair value
In the context of futures, the equilibrium price for futures contracts. Also called the theoretical futures price, which equals the spot pricecontinuously compounded at the cost of carry rate for some time interval. More generally, fair value for any asset simply refers to the perception that it is neither underpriced (too cheap) nor overpriced (too expensive).

Fairness opinion
An investment banker's professional opinion as to the price an acquiringfirm's is offering in a takeover or merger.

Fall Down
In the context of general equities, may not be able to produce as indicated in one's advertised market, due to less help (than anticipated) from other parties or due to changing market conditions.

Fall out of bed
A sudden drop in a stock's price resulting from failed or poor business deals gone bad or falling through.

Fallen angels
Bonds that at the time of issue were considered investment grade but that have dropped below that rating over time.

Fallout risk
A type of mortgage pipeline risk that is generally created when the terms of the loan to be originated are set at the same time the sale terms are established. The risk is that either of the two parties, borrower or investor, fails to close and the loan "falls out" of the pipeline.

Fama, Eugene F.
Finance professor at the University of Chicago. Developer of the Efficient Markets Hypothesis.

Family of funds
Different mutual funds offered by one investment company.

Far month
Used in the context of option or futures to refer to the trading month of the contract that is farthest away. Antithesis of nearest month.

Farther out; farther in
Used in the context of options to refer to the relative length of optioncontractmaturities.

FASB No. 8
U.S. accounting standard that requires US firms to translate their foreign affiliates' accounts by the temporal method; that is reporting gains and losses from currencyfluctuations in current income. It was in effect between 1975 and 1981 and became the most controversial accounting standard in the US It was replaced by FASB No. 52 in 1981.

FASB No. 52
The US accounting standard that replaced FASB No. 8. US companies are required to translate foreign accounts in terms of the current rate and report the changes from currencyfluctuations in a cumulative translation adjustment account in the equity section of the balance sheet.

Fast market
Excessively rapid trading in a specific security that causes a delay in the electronic updating of its last sale and market conditions, particularly in options.

Favorable Balance of Trade
The value of a nation's exports in excess of the value of its imports.

Favorable trade balance
Condition that total exports of a nation exceed total imports, creating a net export.

Feasible portfolio
A portfolio that an investor can construct, given the assets available.

Feasible set of portfolios
The collection of all feasible portfolios.

Feasible target payout ratios
Payout ratios that are consistent with the level of excess funds available to make cash dividend payments.

FED Pass
A Federal Reserve action adding more reserves to the banking system, increasing the money available for lending, and making credit easier to attain.

Federal Advisory Council (FAC)
Advisory group made up of one representative (in most cases a banker) from each of the 12 Federal Reserve districts. Established by the Federal REserve Act, the council meets periodically with the Board of Governors to discuss business and financial conditions and make recommendations.

Federal agency bond
Fixed-income securityissued by a government agency such as FNMA.

Federal agency securities
Securitiesissued by corporations and agencies created by the US government, such as the Federal Home Loan Bank Board and Ginnie Mae.

Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (Farmer Mac)
A federal agency chartered in 1988 to provide a secondary market for farm mortgageloans.

Federal credit agencies
Agencies of the federal government set up to supply credit to various classes or institutions and individuals, e.g., S&Ls, small business firms, students, farmers, and exporters.

Federal deficit (surplus)
When federal government expenditures are exceeded by federal government revenue.

Federal Farm Credit Bank
An institution created by the government with the purpose of uniting the financing activities of the Federal Land Banks, the Federal Intermediate Credit Banks, and the banks for cooperatives. See: Federal Farm Credit System.

Federal Farm Credit System
A system chartered in 1971 through the farm credit act providing farmers with credit services through a Federal Land Bank, a Federal Intermediate Credit Bank, and a bank for cooperatives. See: Federal Farm Credit Bank.

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
A federal institution that insures bank deposits.

Federal Financing Bank
A federal institution that lends to a wide array of federal credit agencies funds it obtains by borrowing from the US Treasury.

Federal funds
Noninterest-bearing deposits held in reserve for depository institutions at their district Federal Reserve Bank. Also, excess reserves lent by banks to each other.

Federal funds market
The market in which banks can borrow or lendreserves, allowing banks temporarily short of their required reserves to borrow reserves from banks that have excess reserves.

Federal funds rate
The interest rate that banks with excess reserves at a Federal Reserve district bank charge other banks that need overnight loans. The Fed funds rate, as it is called, often points to the direction of US interest rates. The most sensitive indicator of the direction of interest rates, since it is set daily by the market, unlike the prime rate and the discount rate.

Federal gift tax
A federal tax imposed on assets conveyed as gifts to individuals.

Federal Home Loan Banks
The institutions that regulate and lend to savings and loan associations. The Federal Home Loan Banks play a role analogous to that played by the Federal Reserve Banks vis-à-vis member commercial banks.

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC)
See: Freddie Mac

Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
Federally sponsored agency chartered in 1934 whose stock is currently owned by savings institutions across the United States. The agency buys residential mortgages that meet certain requirements, sells these mortgages in packages, and insures the lenders against loss.

Federal Housing Finance Board (FHFB)
US government agency chartered in 1989 to assume the responsibilities formerly held by the Federal Home Loan Bank system.

Federal Intermediate Credit Bank
A bank sponsored by the federal government to provide funds to institutions making loans to farmers.

Federal intrafund transactions
Intrabudgetary transactions in which payments and receipts both occur within the same federal fund group.

Federal Land Bank
A bank administered under the US Farm Credit Administration that provides long-termmortgagecredit to farmers for agriculture-related expenditures.

Federal margin call
A broker's demand upon a customer for cash, or securities needed to satisfy the required Regulation T down payment for a purchase or short sale of securities.

Federal Maritime Commission (FMC)
A U.S. government agency that regulates and administers the shipping industry. This agency also grants freight forwarder licenses.

Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae)
A publicly owned, government-sponsoredcorporationchartered in 1938 to purchase mortgages from lenders and resell them to investors. Known by the nickname Fannie Mae, it packages mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration, but also sells some nongovernment-backed mortgages.

Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
The body that is responsible for setting the interest rates and credit policies of the Federal Reserve System.

Federal Reserve Act of 1913
Federal legislation that established the Federal Reserve System.

Federal Reserve Bank
One of the 12 member banks constituting the Federal Reserve System that is responsible for overseeing the commercial and savings banks of its region to ensure their compliance with regulation.

Federal Reserve District (Reserve district or district)
One of the twelve geographic regions served by a Federal Reserve Bank.

Federal Reserve Board (FRB)
The seven-member governing body of the Federal Reserve System, which is responsible for setting reserve requirements, and the discount rate, and making other key economic decisions.

Federal Reserve float
Float is checkbook money that appears on the books of both the check writer (the payor) and the check receiver (the payee) while a check is being processed. Federal Reserve float is float present during the Federal Reserve's check collection process. To promote efficiency in the payments system and provide certainly about the date that deposited funds will become available to the receiving depository institutions (and the payee), the Federal Reserve credits the reserve accounts of banks that deposit check according to a fixed schedule. However, processing certain checks and collecting funds from the banks on which these checks are written may take more time than the schedule allows. Therefore, the accounts of some banks may be credited before the Federal Reserve is able to collect payment from other banks, resulting in Federal Reserve float.

Federal Reserve notes
Issues by the US government to the public through the Federal Reserve Banks and their member banks. They represent money owed by the government to the public. Currently, the item "Federal Reserve notes amounts outstanding" consists of new series issues. The Federal Reserve note is the only class of currency currently issued.

Federal Reserve System
The monetary authority of the US, established in 1913, and governed by the Federal Reserve Board located in Washington, D.C. The system includes 12 Federal Reserve Banks and is authorized to regulatemonetary policy in the US as well as to supervise Federal Reserve member banks, bank holding companies, international operations of US banks, and US operations of foreign banks.

Federal Savings and Loan Association
An institution chartered by the federal government whose primary function is to collect savings deposits and to provide mortgageloans.

Federally related institutions
Arms of the federal government exempt from SEC registration whose securities are backed by the full faith and credit of the US government (with the exception of the Tennessee Valley Authority).

Fedwire
A wire transfer system for high-value payments operated by the Federal Reserve System.

Fee
A fixed amount or a percentage of an underwriting or principal.

Fee table
Schedule found in a mutual fund'sprospectus that discloses and expense illustrates the expenses and fees a shareholder will incur.

Fee-and-commission compensation
See: Fee-based compensation

Fee-based compensation
Payment to a financial adviser of a set hourly rate, or an agreed-upon percentage of assets under management, for a financial plan. When the plan is implemented, the adviser may also receive commission on some or all of the investment products purchased, which would be fee-and-commission compensation.

Fee-only compensation
Payment to a financial adviser of a set hourly rate, or an agreed-upon percentage of assets under management, for a financial plan.

Feedback Systems
An equation where the output becomes the input in the next iteration. This is much like a public address system where the microphone is placed next to the speakers generating feedback as the signal is looped through the PA system.

FHA prepayment experience
The percentage of loans in a pool of mortgagesoutstanding at the origination anniversary, based on annual statistical historic survival rates for FHA-insured mortgages.

Fiat money
Nonconvertible paper moneyy.

FICO
See: Financing corporation

Fictitious credit
A margin account'scredit balance. Fictitious credit exists after the proceeds from a short sale are accounted for with respect to the margin requirement. The proceeds from the short sale are reflected as a credit, but must stay in the account to serve as security for the loan of securities made in a short sale, and are therefore inaccessible to the client for withdrawal.

Fidelity bond
See: Blanket fidelity bond

Fiduciary
One who must act for the benefit of another party.

Fiduciary out
A provision that permits the Board of Directors to terminate a proposed merger if a better deal arises with another party.

Field warehouse
Warehouse rented by a company on another firm's premises.

FIFO
See: First in, first out

Figure
Refers to details about price including the bid and offer. See: Handle

Figuring the tail
Calculating the yield at which a future money market (one available some period hence) is purchased when that future security is created by buying an existing instrument and financing the initial portion of its life with a term repo.

Fill
The price at which an order is executed.

Fill or kill order (FOK)
A tradingorder that is canceled unless executed within a designated time period. A market or limited price order that is to be executed in its entirety as soon as it is represented in the trading crowd, and, if not so executed, is to be treated as canceled. For purposes of this definition, a stop is considered an execution. Equivalent to AON and IOC simultaneously.

Filter
A rule that stipulates when a security should be bought or sold according to its price action.

Final Take
In the context of project financing, the final participation.

Finance
A discipline concerned with determining value and making decisions. The finance function allocates resources, including the acquiring, investing, and managing of resources.

Finance charge
The total cost of credit a customer must pay on a consumer loan, including interest.

Finance company
A company whose business and primary function is to make loans to individuals, while not receiving deposits like a bank.

Finance Lease
An agreement where the leaser receives lease payments to cover its ownership costs. The lessee is responsible for maintenance, insurance, and taxes. Some finance leases are conditional sales or hire purchase agreements.

Financial Accounting Standar