| A |
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying Class A shares. |
| AAA+ Bank |
Refers to banks that are rated AAA by IBCA, Moodys Investor
Service and Standard & Poors. |
| AAII |
See: American Association of Individual Investors |
| 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. |
| 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. |
| ABO |
See: Accumulated Benefit Obligation |
| Above par |
See: Par. |
| ABS |
See: Automated Bond System |
| 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. |
| Abstract of title |
An abbreviated summary of the documents to prove ownership of
land. Contrast with epitome which consists of copies of the
title deeds. |
| Abusive tax shelter |
A limited partnership that the IRS judges to be claiming tax
deductions illegally. |
| ACAT |
See: Automated Customer Account Transfer |
| Accelerated cost recovery system (ACRS) |
Schedule of depreciation rates allowed for tax purposes. |
| 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. |
| Acceleration clause |
A clause included in a term loan or security document permitting
a lender to require repayment of the sums loaned earlier than
the agreed repayment date. The clause may also permit a lender
to convert a term loan to a demand facility, while not actually
making demand for payment. |
| 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. |
| 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. |
| Accounting Standards Board |
The board responsible for issuing Financial Reporting Standards
(FRS) set up to establish and improve standards of financial
accounting and reporting. See www.asb.org.uk. |
| 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. |
| Accrue |
To accumulate. For example, interest accrued is that interest
which has fallen due but which is unpaid. |
| 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. |
| ACES |
See: Advance Computerized Execution System |
| ACH |
See: Automated Clearing House |
| 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. |
| ACRS |
See: Accelerated cost recovery system |
| 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. |
| Acting in concert |
Investors working together and performing identical actions to
attain the same investment goal. |
| 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. |
| ACU |
See: Asian currency units |
| AD |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ANDORRA. |
| 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 |
In proportion to the value. Most often encountered in connection
with stamp duty where the rate of duty varies according to the
value of the interest transferred. |
| Ad valorem tax |
A type of tax calculated based on percentage of gross or stated
value. For example, VAT. |
| ADB |
See: Adjusted Debit Balance |
| ADB |
See: Asian Development Bank |
| 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. |
| Administration |
A corporate insolvency procedure under the Insolvency Act 1986
involving the appointment of an administrator over a company.
The procedure is designed to enable the company to survive, to
facilitate an arrangement of creditors or to secure a more
advantageous realisation of its assets than would arise if the
company were put into liquidation. An administration order
prohibits the company’s creditors taking legal proceedings. The
exercise of a right to forfeit by a landlord is not currently
prohibited. |
| Administrative pricing rules |
IRS rules used to allocate income on export sales to a foreign
sales corporation. |
| Adoption |
The procedure by which a local highways authority takes over the
maintenance of a road as a public highway. This is to be
distinguished from dedication which creates rights of way over
the road. Title to the subsoil remains with the owner. |
| ADR |
See: American Depositary Receipt |
| ADS |
See: American Depositary Share |
| 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 possession |
A means by which a trespasser may acquire title to land by
virtue of long (12 years) occupation. The possession must be
other than by consent and must be inconsistent with the true
owner’s title. |
| 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. |
| 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 |
| AF |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AFGHANISTAN. |
| AFA |
The ISO 4217 currency code for Afghan Afghani. |
| 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. |
| AFM |
See: Amman Financial Market |
| 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. |
| AG |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ANTIGUA AND
BARBUDAAG. |
| AGA |
Pronounced ‘arga’. See authorised guarantee agreement. |
| 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 |
In a syndicated loan one of the participating banks will act as
agent for the others in order to facilitate the day-to-day
running of the loan. The agent will monitor the performance of
the loan on behalf of the other banks and will be the point of
contact for the borrower. The loan will be drawn down by the
borrower via the agent who will also collect interest and
receive repayments of principal for distribution to syndicate
banks. The agent’s function will be purely administrative and
any waiver of the terms of the loan will usually be taken on the
basis of the consent of the majority of syndicate banks. |
| 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. |
| Agricultural Credits Act Charge |
A specific type of floating charge granted by an individual or
group of individuals over agricultural assets, for example
livestock. |
| 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. |
| AI |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ANGUILLAAI. |
| AIBD |
Association of International Bond Dealers |
| 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. |
| AL |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ALBANIA. |
| Alien corporation |
A company incorporated under the laws of a foreign country
regardless of where the company conducts its operations. |
| Alienation clause |
The provisions of a lease which regulate the right of the tenant
to assign, underlet or charge the leasehold title. |
| ALL |
The ISO 4217 currency code for Albanian Lek. |
| 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 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 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 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. |
| All-in cost |
Total costs, explicit and implicit. |
| All-in-rate |
Rate used in charging customers for accepting banker's
acceptances, consisting of the discount interest rate plus the
commission. |
| Allocational efficiency |
The effectiveness with which a market channels capital toward
its most productive uses. |
| Allocation-of-income rules |
US tax provisions that define how income and deductions are to
be allocated between domestic source and foreign source income. |
| All-or-none underwriting |
An arrangement whereby a securityissue is cancelled if the
underwriter is unable to resell the entire issue. |
| 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. |
| ALT |
Alternative Trading System. This term is defined under section
301 of the U.S. Securities Act. |
| 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. |
| AM |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ARMENIA. |
| AMD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for Armenian Dram. |
| 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 is capable of being exercised at any time during
the life of the option, ie exercise is not conditional on other
events. |
| 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. |
| AMEX |
See: American Stock Exchange |
| 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. |
| Amortisation |
The repayment of a loan over time. Note where the rate of
amortisation is such that the full loan will not be repaid over
the term of the loan, a single payment of the outstanding
balance will be required at the end of the term. |
| Amortising loan |
A loan under which the principal amount outstanding is reduced
by agreed payments over the period of the loan. |
| 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. |
| AMPS |
See: Auction Market Preferred Stock |
| 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. |
| AN |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for NETHERLANDS
ANTILLES. |
| 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. |
| Anchor tenant |
The tenant who has the strongest covenant within a development.
Also, a tenant that attracts customers to a retail development,
for example a supermarket or large high street store. |
| 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. |
| ANG |
The ISO 4217 currency code for Netherlands Antilles Guilder. |
| 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). |
| 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. |
| 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. |
| 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). |
| 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 |
| 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. |
| APR |
See: Annual Percentage Rate |
| APS |
Auction Preferred Stock. A type of Dutch Auction Preferred Stock
(Goldman Sachs product). |
| APT |
See: Arbitrage Pricing Theory |
| APT |
See: Automated Pit Trading |
| APUT |
Authorised Property Unit Trust. An investment product introduced
in the early 1990s intended to afford investors the opportunity
to invest in property. Broadly based, APUTs are an attempt to
overcome the illiquid nature of the property market by creating
smaller units of investment in a broad range of properties. |
| APV |
See: Adjusted Present Value |
| APY |
See: Annual Percentage Yield |
| AQ |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ANTARCTICA. |
| AR |
See: Auto-Regressive |
| AR |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ARGENTINA. |
| 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 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. |
| Arbitrage-free option-pricing models |
Yield curve option-pricing models. |
| 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. |
| ARCH |
See: Auto-Regressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity |
| 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 |
See: Adjustable-rate mortgage |
| Arm’s length transaction |
A transaction conducted between unconnected parties. |
| 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. |
| 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. |
| Around us |
Used in context of general equities. See: Away from you. |
| ARPS |
See: Adjustable-rate preferred stock |
| ARPS |
See: Auction rate preferred stock |
| ARR |
See: Average rate of return |
| 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. |
| ARS |
The ISO 4217 currency code for Argentinian Peso. |
| 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. |
| AS |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AMERICAN SAMOA. |
| ASB |
See Accounting Standards Board. |
| 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. |
| ASE |
See: Athens Stock Exchange. |
| 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. |
| 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. |
| 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 classes |
Categories of assets, such as stocks, bonds, real estate, and
foreign securities. |
| Asset Depreciation Range System |
A range of depreciable lives the IRS allows for particular
classes of assets. |
| Asset for asset swap |
Creditors exchange the debt of one defaultingborrower for the
debt of another defaulting borrower. |
| 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. |
| Asset/equity ratio |
The ratio of total assets to stockholder equity. |
| 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-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-coverage test |
A bond indenture restriction that permits additional borrowing
if the ratio of assets to debt does not fall below a specified
minimum. |
| Assets |
A firm's productive resources. |
| Assets requirements |
A common element of a financial plan that describes projected
capital spending and the proposed uses of net working capital. |
| Assets-in-place |
Property in which a firm has already invested. |
| Assignation of rent |
The Scottish equivalent of a rent assignment. |
| 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. |
| Assured shorthold tenancy |
One form of residential tenancy created by the Housing Act 1988.
The landlord is automatically guaranteed possession of the
property at the end of the term granted, without having to show
good reason why possession should be recovered. The formality to
serve notice prior to the grant in relation to an assured
shorthold tenancy (which formerly invalidated many of them) has
been abolished in relation to tenancies granted after February
1997. A tenant under an assured shorthold tenancy has the right
to refer the level of rent increase to the Rent Assessment
Committee if it is in excess of the open market rental. |
| Assured tenancy |
A form of residential tenancy introduced by the Housing Act 1988
under which there are no restrictions on the rent payable, but
the landlord is not entitled to possession of the property at
the end of the term as of right. Possession must be granted if
certain mandatory grounds apply. If the landlord can show that
discretionary grounds for possession apply the court has the
discretion whether or not to order possession |
| AST |
See assured shorthold tenancy. |
| ASX |
See: Australian Stock Exchange |
| 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 |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AUSTRIA. |
| 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 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. |
| Athens Stock Exchange |
Greece's only major securities market. Greek language only. |
| Athens Stock Exchange (ASE) |
Greece's principal stock exchange. |
| ATP |
See: Arbitrage Trading Program |
| ATS |
The ISO 4217 currency code for Austrian Schilling. |
| 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. |
| Attornment |
The recognition by a tenant of a person as its landlord or by a
landlord of a person as its tenant. Especially relevant in
relation to a lender which has taken possession of property
occupied by tenants whose tenancies were granted after the date
of the lender’s charge without the lender’s consent. Without
attornment the tenancies do not bind the lender’s interest,
permitting it to obtain vacant possession. |
| 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. |
| AU |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AUSTRALIA. |
| 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. |
| AUD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for Australian Dollar currency. |
| 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. |
| Authorised capital |
The amount at par value of the shares a company is entitled to
issue, whether or not they have been issued to shareholders. See
also issued capital. |
| Authorised guarantee agreement |
A concept introduced by the Landlord and Tenant (Covenants) Act
1995. A landlord may as a condition of granting licence to
assign require a tenant to enter into an authorised guarantee
agreement of the obligations of the person to whom the lease is
assigned. By so doing, the tenant retains a liability for the
due performance of the terms of the lease whilst it is vested in
the assignee. The provisions of the 1995 Act require that the
tenant’s liability under the authorised guarantee agreement
ceases on a further lawful (ie with consent) assignment by the
assignee |
| 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 (across-day) measures |
An estimation of price that uses the average or representative
price of a large number of trades. |
| Average accounting return |
The average project earnings after taxes and depreciation
divided by the averagebook value of the investment during its
life. |
| 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. |
| AW |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for ARUBA. |
| 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. |
| AWG |
The ISO 4217 currency code for Aruban Guilder. |
| Axe to grind |
Used in context of general equities. Involvement in a security,
whether through a position, order, or inquiry. |
| AZ |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for AZERBAIJAN. |
| AZM |
The ISO 4217 currency code for Azerbaijani Manat. |