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Definitions
Financial
Definitions
A B C
D E F G H
I J K L M
N O P Q R
S T U V W
X Y Z
Keeping up with the increasing number of investment products and services in
the marketplace today can be confusing. This glossary is designed to help you
understand some of the more common investment and financial terms you may
encounter. Your financial advisor can explain these terms more completely and
discuss with you those which are relevant to your situation.
Accrued Interest - The
interest due on a bond since the last interest payment was made. The buyer of
the bond pays the market price plus accrued interest.
Acquisition -
The acquiring of control of one corporation by another. In
"unfriendly" take-over attempts, the potential buying company may
offer a price well above current market values, new securities and other
inducements to stockholders. The management of the subject company might ask
for a better price or try to join up with a third company.
ADR - American Depositary Receipt -
a security issued by a U.S. bank in place of the foreign shares held in trust
by that bank, thereby facilitating the trading of foreign shares in U.S.
markets.
American Stock Exchange (AMEX) -
The second largest stock exchange in the United States, located in the
financial district of New York City. (Formerly known as the Curb Exchange from
its origin on a Manhattan street.)
Amortization -
Accounting for expenses or charges as applicable rather than as paid. Includes
such practices as depreciation, depletion, write-off of intangibles, prepaid
expenses and deferred charges.
Annual Report - The formal
financial statement issued yearly by a corporation. The annual report shows
assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses, earnings - how the company stood at
the close of the business year, how it fared profit-wise during the year and
other information of interest to shareowners.
Arbitrage - A technique employed to
take advantage of differences in price. If, for example, ABC stock can be
bought in New York for $10 a share and sold in London at $10.50, an
arbitrageur may simultaneously purchase ABC stock here and sell the same
amount in London, making a profit of 50 cents a share, less expenses.
Arbitrage may also involve the purchase of rights to subscribe to a security,
or the purchase of a convertible security - and the sale at or about the same
time of the security obtainable through exercise of the rights or of the
security obtainable through conversion.
Assets - Everything a corporation
owns or due to it: cash, investments, money due it, materials and inventories,
which are called current assets; buildings and machinery, which are known as
fixed assets; and patents and goodwill, called intangible assets.
Assignment -
Notice to an option writer that an option holder has exercised the option and
that the writer will now be required to deliver (receive) under the terms of
the contract.
Auction Market - The system of
trading securities through brokers or agents on an exchange such as the New
York Stock Exchange. Buyers compete with other buyers while sellers compete
with other sellers for the most advantageous price.
Averages -
Various ways of measuring the trend of securities prices, one of the most
popular of which is the Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks listed on
the New York Stock Exchange. The prices of the 30 stocks are totaled and then
divided by a divisor that is intended to compensate for past stock splits and
stock dividends and that is changed from time to time. As a result, point
changes in the average have only the vaguest relationship to dollar price
changes in stocks included in the average.
Balance Sheet
- A condensed financial statement showing the nature and amount of a company's
assets, liabilities and capital on a given date. In dollar amounts the balance
sheet shows what the company owned, what it owed, and the ownership interest
in the company of its stockholders.
Basis Point - One gradation on a
100-point scale representing one percent; used especially in expressing
variations in the yields of bonds. Fixed income yields vary often and slightly
within one percent and the basis point scale easily expresses these changes in
hundredths of one percent. For example, the difference between 12.83% and
12.88% is 5 basis points.
Bear
- Someone who believes the
market will decline.
Bear Market - A declining market.
Bearer Bond - A bond that does not
have the owner's name registered on the books of the issuer. Interest and
principal, when due, are payable to the holder.
Bid and Asked - Often referred to
as a quotation or quote. The bid is the highest price anyone wants to pay for
a security at a given time, the asked is the lowest price anyone will take at
the same time.
Block - A large holding or
transaction of stock - popularly considered to be 10,000 shares or more.
Blue Chip - A company known
nationally for the quality and wide acceptance of its products or services,
and for its ability to make money and pay dividends.
Blue Sky Laws
- A popular name for laws various states have enacted to protect the
public against securities frauds. The term is believed to have originated when
a judge ruled that a particular stock had about the same value as a patch of
blue sky.
Bond - Basically an IOU or
promissory note of a corporation, usually issued in multiples of $1,000 or
$5,000, although $100 and $500 denominations are not unknown. A bond is
evidence of a debt on which the issuing company usually promises to pay the
bondholders a specified amount of interest for a specified length of time, and
to repay the loan on the expiration date. In every case a bond represents debt
- its holder is a creditor of the corporation and not a part owner as is the
shareholder.
Book Value - An accounting term.
Book value of a stock is determined from a company's records, by adding all
assets then deducting all debts and other liabilities, plus the liquidation
price of any preferred issues. The sum arrived at is divided by the number of
common shares outstanding and the result is book value per common share. Book
value of the assets of a company or a security may have little relationship to
market value.
Broker -
An agent who handles the public's orders to buy and sell securities,
commodities or other property. For this service a commission is charged.
Brokers' Loans - Money borrowed by
brokers from banks or other brokers for a variety of uses. It may be used by
specialists to help finance inventories of stock they deal in; by brokerage
firms to finance the underwriting of new issues of corporate and municipal
securities; to help finance a firm's own investments; and to help finance the
purchase of securities for customers who prefer to use the broker's credit
when they buy securities.
Bull -
One who believes the market will rise.
Bull Market - An advancing market.
Callable - A
bond issue, all or part of which may be redeemed by the issuing corporation
under specified conditions before maturity. The term also applies to preferred
shares that may be redeemed by the issuing corporation.
Capital Gain or Capital Loss -
Profit or loss from the sale of a capital asset. The capital gains provisions
of the tax law are complicated. You should consult your tax advisor for
specific information.
Capital Stock - All shares
representing ownership of a business, including preferred and common.
Capitalization - Total amount of
the various securities issued by a corporation. Capitalization may include
bonds, debentures, preferred and common stock and surplus. Bonds and
debentures are usually carried on the books of the issuing company in terms of
their par or face value. Preferred and common shares may be carried in terms
of par or stated value. Stated value may be an arbitrary figure decided upon
by the director or may represent the amount received by the company from the
sale of the securities at the time of issuance.
Cash Flow - Reported net income of
a corporation plus amounts charged off for depreciation, depletion,
amortization, and extra-ordinary charges to reserves, which are bookkeeping
deductions and not paid out in actual dollars and cents.
Cash Sale - A transaction on the
floor of the Stock Exchange that calls for delivery of the securities the same
day. In "regular way" trade, the seller is to deliver on the third
business day, except for bonds, which are the next day.
Certificate -
The actual piece of paper that is evidence of ownership of stock in a
corporation. Watermarked paper is finely engraved with delicate etchings to
discourage forgery.
Certificate of Deposit (CD) - A
money market instrument issued by banks. The time CD is characterized by its
set date of maturity and interest rate and its wide acceptance among
investors, companies and institutions as a highly negotiable short-term
investment vehicle.
Certified Funds
Specialist (CFS)- This designation is for financial planners and
investment advisors who focus more on investments using mutual funds. The CFS
designation indicates advisors who are qualified to consult with clients on
the advisability and costs of acquiring or retaining mutual funds in their
investment portfolio.
Christian Financial
Planner - A financial planner that follows financial wisdom in the
Bible for their clients. The Bible has over 2000 verses that deal with
finances on subjects such as: budgeting, planning, saving, eliminating debt,
investing and inheritance.
CFTC
- The Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, created by Congress in 1974 to regulate exchange trading
in futures.
Collateral - Securities or other
property pledged by a borrower to secure repayment of a loan.
Commercial Paper - Debt instruments
issued by companies to meet short-term financing needs.
Commission - The broker's basic fee
for purchasing or selling securities or property as an agent.
Commission Broker - An agent who
executes the public's orders for the purchase or sale of securities or
commodities.
Common Stock - Securities that
represent an ownership interest in a corporation. If the company has also
issued preferred stock, both common and preferred have ownership rights.
Common stockholders assume the greater risk, but generally exercise the
greater control and may gain the greater award in the form of dividends and
capital appreciation. The terms common stock and capital stock are often used
interchangeably when the company has no preferred stock.
Competitive Trader - A member of
the Exchange who trades in stocks on the Floor for an account in which there
is an interest. Also known as a Registered Trader.
Conglomerate -
A corporation that has diversified its operations usually by acquiring
enterprises in widely varied industries.
Consolidated Balance Sheet - A
balance sheet showing the financial condition of a corporation and its
subsidiaries.
Consolidated Tape - The ticker tape
reporting transactions in NYSE listed securities that take place on the NYSE
or any of the participating regional stock exchanges and other markets.
Similarly, transactions in AMEX listed securities, and certain other
securities listed on regional stock exchanges, are reported on a separate
tape.
Convertible
- A bond, debenture or
preferred share that may be exchanged by the owner for common stock or another
security, usually of the same company, in accordance with the terms of the
issue.
Correspondent - A securities firm,
bank or other financial organization that regularly performs services for
another in a place or market to which the other does not have direct access.
Securities firms may have correspondents in foreign countries or on exchanges
of which they are not members. Correspondents are frequently linked by private
wires. Member organizations of the NYSE with offices in New York City may also
act as correspondents for out-of-town member organizations that do not
maintain New York City offices.
Coupon Bond - Bond with interest
coupons attached. The coupons are clipped as they come due and presented by
the holder for payment of interest.
Covered Option - An option position
that is offset by an equal and opposite position in the underlying security.
Crown Financial
Ministries - A Christian ministry started by Larry Burkett and
Howard Dayton to help equip Christians become better financial stewards. They
offer help in Biblical financial management such as: budgeting, debt
elimination, saving, investing and inheritance.
Cumulative Preferred - A stock
having a provision that if one or more dividends are omitted, the omitted
dividends must be paid before dividends may be paid on the company's common
stock.
Cumulative Voting - A method of
voting for corporate directors that enables the shareholders to multiply the
number of their shares by the number of directorships being voted on and to
cast the total for one director or a selected group of directors. A 10-share
holder normally casts 10 votes for each of, say 12 nominees to the board of
directors. One thus has 120 votes. Under the cumulative voting principle, one
may do that or may cast 120 (10 x 12) votes for only one nominee, 60 for two,
40 for three, or any other distribution one chooses. Cumulative voting is
required under the corporate laws of some states and is permitted in most
others.
Current Assets - Those assets of a
company that are reasonably expected to be realized in cash, sold or consumed
during one year. These include cash, U.S. Government bonds, receivables and
money due usually within one year, and inventories.
Current Liabilities - Money owed
and payable by a company, usually within one year.
Day Order -
An order to buy or sell which, if not executed, expires at the end of trading
day on which it was entered.
Dealer - An individual or firm in
the securities business who buys and sells stocks and bonds as a principal
rather than as an agent. The dealer's profit or loss is the difference between
the price paid and the price received for the same security. The dealer's
confirmation must disclose to the customer that the principal has been acted
upon. The same individual or firm may function, at different times, either as
a broker or dealer.
Debenture
-
A promissory note backed by the general credit of a company and usually not
secured by a mortgage or lien on any specific property.
Debit Balance - In a customer's
margin account, that portion of the purchase price of stock, bonds or
commodities that is covered by credit extended by the broker to the margin
customer.
Delayed Opening - The postponement
of trading of an issue on a stock exchange beyond the normal opening of a
day's trading because of market conditions that have been judged by exchange
officials to warrant such a delay. Reasons for the delay might be an influx of
either buy or sell orders, an imbalance of buyers and sellers, or pending
corporate news that requires time for dissemination.
Depository Trust Company (DTC) - A
central securities certificate depository through which members effect
security deliveries between each other via computerized bookkeeping entries
thereby reducing the physical movement of stock certificates.
Depreciation -
Normally, charges against earnings to write off the cost, less salvage value,
of an asset over its estimated useful life. It is a bookkeeping entry and does
not represent any cash outlay nor are any funds earmarked for the purpose.
Director -
Person elected by shareholders to serve on the Board of Directors. The
directors appoint the president, vice presidents, and all other operating
officers. Directors decide, among other matters, if and when dividends shall
be paid.
Discount - The amount by which a
preferred stock or bond may sell below its par value. Also used as a verb to
mean "takes into account" as the price of the stock has discounted
the expected dividend cut.
Discretionary Account - An account
in which the customer gives the broker or someone else discretion to buy and
sell securities or commodities, including selection, timing, amount, and price
to be paid or received.
Diversification
- Spreading investments among different types of securities and various
companies in different fields.
Dividend - The payment designated
by the Board of Directors to be distributed pro rata among the shares
outstanding. On preferred shares, it is generally a fixed amount. On common
shares, the dividend varies with the fortunes of the company and the amount of
cash on hand, and may be omitted if business is poor or the directors
determine to withhold earnings to invest in plant and equipment. Sometimes a
company will pay a dividend out of past earnings even if it is not currently
operating at a profit.
Dollar Cost Averaging - A system of
buying securities at regular intervals with a fixed dollar amount. Under this
system investors buy by the dollars' worth rather than by the number of
shares. If each investment is of the same number of dollars, payments buy more
shares when the price is low and fewer when it rises. Thus temporary
downswings in price benefit investors if they continue periodic purchases in
both good times and bad and the price at which the shares are sold is more
than their average cost.
Dow Theory - A theory of market
analysis based upon the performance of the Dow Jones industrial and
transportation stock price averages. The theory says that the market is in a
basic upward trend if one of these averages advances above a previous
important high, accompanied or followed by a similar advance in the other.
When the averages both dip below previous important lows, this is regarded as
confirmation of a downward trend. The Dow Jones is one type of market index.
(See: NYSE Composite Index)
Earnings Report
- A statement - also called an income statement - issued by a company showing
its earnings or losses over a given period. The earnings report lists the
income earned, expenses and the net result. (See: Balance Sheet)
Equipment Trust Certificate - A
type of security, generally issued by a railroad, to pay for new equipment.
Title to the equipment, such as a locomotive, is held by a trustee until the
notes are paid off. An equipment trust certificate is usually secured by a
first claim on the equipment.
Equity -
The ownership interest of common and preferred stockholders in a company. Also
refers to excess of value of securities over the debit balance in a margin
account.
Ex-Dividend - A synonym for
"without dividend." The buyer of a stock selling ex-dividend does
not receive the recently declared dividend. When stocks go ex-dividend, the
stock tables include the symbol "x" following the name. (See:
Cash Sale, Net Change, Transfer)
Exercise -
Action taken by an option holder that requires the writer to perform the terms
of the contract.
Exercise Prices - The prices at
which an option may be exercised. Also called strike prices.
Expiration Date - The date the
option contract expires.
Ex-Rights - Without the rights.
Corporations raising additional money may do so by offering their stockholders
the right to subscribe to new or additional stock, usually at a discount from
the prevailing market price. The buyer of a stock selling ex-rights is not
entitled to the rights.
Extra - The short form of
"extra dividend." A dividend in the form of stock or cash in
addition to the regular or usual dividend the company has been paying.
Face Value - The value of a bond
that appears on the face of the bond, unless the value is otherwise specified
by the issuing company. Face value is ordinarily the amount the issuing
company promises to pay at maturity. Face value is not an indication of market
value. Sometimes referred to as par value.
Financial Futures
- Futures contracts based on financial instruments such as U.S. Treasury
bonds, CDs and other interest-sensitive issues, currencies and stock market
indicators.
Fiscal Year - A corporation's
accounting year. Due to the nature of their particular business, some
companies do not use the calendar year for their bookkeeping. A typical
example is the department store that finds December 31 too early a date to
close its books after the Christmas rush. For that reason many stores wind up
their accounting year January 31. Their fiscal year, therefore, runs from
February 1 of one year through January 31 of the next. The fiscal year of
other companies may run from July 1 through the following June 30. Most
companies, though, operate on a calendar year basis.
Fixed Charges - A company's fixed
expenses, such as bond interest, which it has agreed to pay whether or not
earned, and which are deducted from income before earnings on equity capital
are computed.
Flat Income Bond
- This term means that the price at which a bond is traded includes
consideration for all unpaid accruals of interest. Bonds that are in default
of interest or principal are traded flat. Income bonds that pay interest only
to the extent earned are usually traded flat. All other bonds are usually
dealt in "and interest," which means that the buyer pays to the
seller the market price plus interest accrued since the last payment date.
Floor - The huge trading area -
about the size of a football field - where stocks, bonds and options are
bought and sold on the New York Stock Exchange.
Floor Broker - A member of the
Stock Exchange who executes orders on the floor of the Exchange to buy or sell
any listed securities.
Formula Investing - An investment
technique. One formula calls for the shifting of funds from common shares to
preferred shares or bonds as a selected market indicator rises above a certain
predetermined point - and the return of funds to common share investments as
the market average declines.
Free and Open Market - A market in
which supply and demand are freely expressed in terms of price. Contrasts with
a controlled market in which supply, demand and price may all be regulated.
Fundamental Research
- Analysis of industries and companies based on such factors as sales,
assets, earnings, products or services, markets and management. As applied to
the economy, fundamental research includes consideration of gross national
product, interest rates, unemployment, inventories, savings, etc.
Funded Debt - Usually
interest-bearing bonds or debentures of a company. Could include long-term
bank loans. Does not include short-term loans, preferred or common stock.
Futures - Exchange traded contracts
specifying a future date of delivery or receipt of a certain amount of a
specific tangible or intangible product. The commodities traded in futures
markets include stock index futures, agricultural products like wheat,
soybeans and pork bellies; metals; and financial instruments. Futures are used
by business as a hedge against unfavorable price changes, and by speculators
who hope to profit from such changes.
General Mortgage Bond
- A bond that is secured by a blanket mortgage on the company's property but
may be outranked by one or more other mortgages.
Gilt-Edged -
High-grade bond issued by a company that has demonstrated its ability to earn
a comfortable profit over a period of years and pay its bondholders their
interest without interruption.
Give-Up - A term with many
different meanings. For one, a member of the Exchange on the floor may act for
a second member by executing an order for him or her with a third member. The
first member tells the third member that he or she is acting on behalf of the
second member and "gives up" the second member's name rather than
his or her own.
Gold Fix - The setting of the price
of gold by dealers (especially in a twice daily London meeting at the central
bank); the fix is the fundamental worldwide price for setting prices of gold
bullion and gold-related contracts and products.
Good Delivery - Certain basic
qualifications must be met before a security sold on the Exchange may be
delivered. The security must be in proper form to comply with the contract of
sale and to transfer title to the purchaser.
Good 'Til Canceled (GTC) or Open Order
- An order to buy or sell that remains in effect until it is either executed
or canceled.
Government Bonds - Obligations of
the U.S. Government, regarded as the highest-grade securities issues.
Growth Stock - Stock of a company
with a record of growth in earnings at a relatively rapid rate.
Hedging -
The purchase or sale of a derivative security (such as options or futures) in
order to reduce or neutralize all or some portion of the risk of holding
another security.
Holding Company
- A Corporation that owns the securities of another, in most cases with
voting control.
Hypothecation - The pledging of
securities as collateral - for example, to secure the debit balance in a
margin account.
Income Bond
- Generally income bonds promise to repay principal but to pay interest only
when earned. In some cases unpaid interest on an income bond may accumulate as
a claim against the corporation when the bond becomes due. An income bond may
also be issued in lieu of preferred stock.
Indenture -
A written agreement under which bonds and debentures are issued, setting forth
maturity date, interest rate, and other terms.
Index - A statistical yardstick
expressed in terms of percentages of a base year or years. For instance, the
NYSE Composite Index of all NYSE common stocks is based on 1965 as 50. An
index is not an average.
Institutional Investor - An
organization whose primary purpose is to invest its own assets or those held
in trust by it for others. Includes pension funds, investment companies,
insurance companies, universities and banks.
Interest - Payments borrowers pay
lenders for the use of their money. A Corporation pays interest on its bonds
to its bondholders.
Interrogation Device - A computer terminal
that provides market information - last sale price, quotes, volume, etc. - on
a screen or paper tape.
Intrinsic Value - The dollar amount
of the difference between the exercise price of an option and the current cash
value of the underlying security. Intrinsic value and time value are the two
components of an option premium, or price.
Investment -
The use of money for the purpose of making more money, to gain income or
increase capital, or both.
Investment Banker - Also known as
an underwriter. The "middleman" between the corporation issuing new
securities and the public. The usual practice is for one or more investment
bankers to buy outright from a corporation a new issue of stocks or bonds. The
group forms a syndicate to sell the securities to individuals and
institutions. Investment bankers also distribute very large blocks of stocks
or bonds - perhaps held by an estate.
Investment Company -
A Company or
trust that uses its capital to invest in other companies. There are two
principal types: the closed-end and the open-end or mutual fund. Shares in
closed-end investment companies, some of which are listed on the New York
Stock Exchange, are readily transferable in the open market and are bought and
sold like other shares. Capitalization of these companies remains the same
unless action is taken to change, which is seldom. Open-end funds sell their
own shares to investors, stand ready to buy back their old shares, and are not
listed. Open-end funds are so called because their capitalization is not
fixed; they issue more shares as people want them.
Investment Counsel
- One whose
principal business consists of acting as investment adviser and rendering
investment supervisory services.
IRA - Individual Retirement
Account. A pension plan with tax advantages. IRA permits investment through
intermediaries like mutual funds, insurance companies and banks or directly in
stocks and bonds through stockbrokers.
Issue - Any of a company's
securities, or the act of distributing such securities.
Keogh Plan
- Tax advantaged personal retirement program that can be established by
a self-employed individual.
Legal List -
A list of investments selected by various states in which certain institutions
and fiduciaries, such as insurance companies and banks, may invest. Legal
lists are often restricted to high quality securities meeting certain
specifications.
Leverage - The effect on a company
when the company has bonds, preferred stock, or both outstanding. Example: If
the earnings of a company with 1,000,000 common shares increases from
$1,000,000 to $1,500,000 - earnings per share would go up from $1 to $1.50, or
an increase of 50 percent. But if earnings of a company that had to pay
$500,000 in bond interest increased that much - earnings per common share
would jump from 50 cents to $1 a share, or 100 percent.
Liabilities - All the claims
against a corporation. Liabilities include accounts, wages, and salaries
payable; dividends declared payable; accrued taxes payable; fixed or long-term
liabilities, such as mortgage bonds, debentures and bank loans.
Limit, Limited Order, or Limited Price Order
- An order to buy or sell a stated amount of a security at a specified price,
or at a better price, if obtainable after the order is represented in the
trading crowd.
Liquidation - The process of
converting securities or other property into cash. The dissolution of a
company, with cash remaining after sale of its assets and payment of all
indebtedness being distributed to the shareholders.
Liquidity - The ability of the
market in a particular security to absorb a reasonable amount of buying or
selling at reasonable price changes. Liquidity is one of the most important
characteristics of a good market.
Listed Stock - The stock of a
company that is traded on a securities exchange.
Load - The portion of the offering
price of shares of open-end investment companies in excess of the value of the
underlying assets. Covers sales commissions and all other costs of
distribution. The load is usually incurred only on purchase, there being, in
most cases, no charge when the shares are sold (redeemed).
Locked In -
Investors are said to be locked in when they have profit on a security they
own but do not sell because their profit would immediately become subject to
the capital gains tax.
Long - Signifies ownership of
securities. "I am long 100 U.S. Steel" means the speaker owns 100
shares.
Manipulation
- An illegal operation. Buying or selling a security for the purpose of
creating false or misleading appearance of active trading or for the purpose
of raising or depressing the price to induce purchase or sale by others.
Margin - The amount paid by the
customer when using a broker's credit to buy or sell a security. Under Federal
Reserve regulations, the initial margin requirement since 1945 has ranged from
the current rate of 50 percent of the purchase price up to 100 percent.
Margin Call - A demand upon a
customer to put up money or securities with the broker. The call is made when
a purchase is made; also if a customer's account declines below a minimum
standard set by the Exchange or by the firm.
Market Order - An order to buy or
sell a stated amount of a security at the most advantageous price obtainable
after the order is represented in the trading crowd.
Market Price - The last reported
price at which the stock or bond sold, or the current quote.
Maturity - The date on which a loan
or bond comes due and is to be paid off.
Member Corporation - A securities
brokerage firm, organized as a corporation, with at least one member of the
New York Stock Exchange who is an officer or employee of the corporation.
Member Firm - A securities
brokerage firm organized as a partnership and having at least one general
partner or employee who is a member of the New York Stock Exchange.
Member Organization
- The term includes New York Stock Exchange member Firms and Member
Corporations.
Merger - Combination of two or more
corporations.
Money Market Fund - A mutual fund
whose investments are in high-yield money market instruments such as federal
securities, CDs and commercial paper. Its intent is to make such instruments,
normally purchased in large denominations by institutions, available
indirectly to individuals.
Mortgage Bond - A bond secured by a
mortgage on a property. The value of the property may or may not equal the
value of the bonds issued against it.
Municipal Bond - A bond issued by a
state or a political subdivision, such as county, city, town or village. The
term also designates bonds issued by state agencies and authorities. In
general, interest paid on municipal bonds is exempt from federal income taxes
and state and local taxes within the state of issue.
Naked Option
- An option position that is not offset by an equal and opposite position in
the underlying security.
NASD -
The National Association of Securities Dealers, an association of brokers and
dealers in the over-the-counter securities business.
NASDAQ - An automated information
network that provides brokers and dealers with price quotations on securities
traded over-the-counter. NASDAQ is an acronym for National Association of
Securities Dealers Automated Quotations.
Negotiable - Refers to a security,
title to which is transferable by delivery.
Net Asset Value - Usually used in
connection with investment companies to mean net asset value per share. An
investment company computes its assets daily, or even twice daily, by totaling
the market value of all securities owned. All liabilities are deducted, and
the balance divided by the number of share outstanding. The resulting figure
is the net asset value per share.
Net Change - The change in the
price of a security from the closing price on one day to the closing price on
the next day on which the stock is traded. The net change is ordinarily the
last figure in the newspaper stock price list. The mark +1 1/8 means up $1.125
a share from the last sale on the previous day the stock traded.
New Issue - A stock or bond sold by
a corporation for the first time. Proceeds may be used to retire outstanding
securities of the company, for new plant or equipment, for additional working
capital, or to acquire a public ownership interest in the company for private
owners.
New York Futures Exchange
(NYFE) - A subsidiary of the New York Stock Exchange devoted to
the trading of futures products.
New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) - The largest organized securities market in the United
States, founded in 1792. The Exchange itself does not buy, sell, own, or set
the prices of securities traded there. The prices are determined by public
supply and demand. The Exchange is a not-for-profit corporation of 1,366
individual members, governed by a Board of Directors consisting of 10 public
representatives, 10 Exchange members or allied members and a full-time
chairman, executive vice chairman and president.
Non-cumulative - A type of preferred
stock on which unpaid dividends do not accrue. Omitted dividends are, as a
rule, gone forever.
NYSE Composite Index - The
composite index covering price movements of all common stocks listed on the
New York Stock Exchange. It is based on the close of the market December 31,
1965 as 50.00 and is weighted according to the number of shares listed for
each issue. The index is computed continuously and printed on the ticker tape.
Point changes in the index are converted to dollars and cents so as to provide
a meaningful measure of changes in the average price of listed stocks. The
composite index is supplemented by separate indexes for four industry groups:
industrial, transportation, utility and finance.
Odd Lot - An
amount of stock less than the established 100-share unit.
Off-Board -
This term may refer to transactions over-the-counter in unlisted securities or
to a transaction of listed shares that is not executed on a national
securities exchange.
Offer -
The price at which a person is ready to sell. Opposed to bid, the price at
which one is ready to buy.
Open Interest - In options and
futures trading, the number of outstanding option contracts, at a given point
in time, which have not been exercised and have not yet reached expiration.
Option - A right to buy (call) or
sell (put) a fixed amount of a given stock at a specified price within a
limited period of time. The purchaser hopes that the stock's price will go up
(a call) or down (a put) by an amount sufficient to provide a profit when the
option is sold. If the stock price holds steady or moves in the opposite
direction, the price paid for the option is lost entirely. There are several
other types of options available to the public but these are basically
combinations of puts and calls. Individuals may write (sell) as well as
purchase options. Options are also traded on stock indexes, futures, and debt
instruments.
Overbought - An opinion as to price
levels. May refer to a security that has had a sharp rise or to the market as
a whole after a period of vigorous buying which, it may be argued, has left
prices "too high."
Oversold -
The reverse of overbought. A single security or a market which, it is
believed, has declined to an unreasonable level.
Over-The-Counter - A market for
securities made up of securities dealers who may or may not be members of a
securities exchange. The over-the-counter market is conducted over the
telephone and deals mainly with stocks of companies without sufficient shares,
stockholders, or earnings to warrant listing on an exchange. Over-the-counter
dealers may act either as principals or as brokers for customers. The
over-the-counter market is the principal market for bonds of all types.
Paper Profit
(Loss)
- An unrealized profit or loss on a security still held. Paper profits and
losses become realized only when the security is sold.
Par - In the case of a common
share, par means a dollar amount assigned to the share by the company's
charter. Par value may also be used to compute the dollar amount of common
shares on the balance sheet. Par value has little relationship to the market
value of common stock. Many companies issue no-par stock but give a stated per
share value on the balance sheet. In the case of preferred stocks it signifies
the dollar value upon which dividends are figured. With bonds, par value is
the face amount, usually $1,000.
Participating Preferred - A
preferred stock, that is entitled to its stated dividend and, also, to
additional dividends on a specified basis upon payment of dividends on the
common stock.
Passed Dividend - Omission of a
regular or scheduled dividend.
Penny Stocks - Low-priced issues,
often highly speculative, selling at less than $1 a share. Frequently used as
a term of disparagement, although some penny stocks have developed into
investment caliber issues.
Point - In the case of shares of
stock, a point means $1. If ABC shares rise 3 points, each share has risen $3.
In the case of bonds a point means $10, since a bond is quoted as a percentage
of $1,000. A bond that rises 3 points gains 3 percent in $1,000, or $30 in
value. An advance from 87 to 90 would mean an advance in dollar value from
$870 to $900. In the case of market averages, the word point means merely that
and no more. If, for example, the NYSE Composite Index rises from 90.25 to
91.25, it has risen a point. A point in this index, however, is not equivalent
to $1.
Portfolio - Holdings of securities
by an individual or institution. A portfolio may contain bonds, preferred
stocks, common stocks and other securities.
Preferred Stock - A class of stock
with a claim on the company's earnings before payment may be made on the
common stock and usually entitled to priority over common stock if the company
liquidates. Usually entitled to dividends at a specified rate - when declared
by the Board of Directors and before payment of a dividend on the common stock
- depending upon the terms of the issue.
Premium - The amount by which a
bond or preferred stock may sell above its par value. For options, the price
that the buyer pays the writer for an option contract ("option
premium" is synonymous with "the price of an option"). May
refer, also, to redemption price of a bond or preferred stock if it is higher
than face value.
Price-Earnings Ratio - A popular
way to compare stocks selling at various price levels. The PE ratio is the
price of a share of stock divided by earnings per share for a twelve-month
period. For example, a stock selling for $50 a share and earning $5 a share is
said to be selling at a price-earnings ratio of 10.
Primary Distribution - Also called
primary or public offering. The original sale of a company’s securities.
Prime Rate - The lowest interest
rate charged by commercial banks to their most credit-worthy customers; other
interest rates, such as personal, automobile, commercial and financing loans
are often pegged to the prime.
Principal
- The person for whom a broker executes an order, or dealers buying or
selling for their own accounts. The term "principal" may also refer
to a person's capital or to the face amount of a bond.
Profit-Taking
- Selling stock which has appreciated in value since purchase, in order
to realize the profit. The term is often used to explain a downturn in the
market following a period of rising prices.
Prospectus - The official selling
circular that must be given to purchasers of new securities registered with
the Securities and Exchange Commission. It highlights the much longer
Registration Statement file with the Commission.
Proxy -
Written authorization given by a shareholder to someone else to represent him
or her and vote his or her shares at a shareholders' meeting.
Proxy Statement
- Information given to stockholders in conjunction with the
solicitation of proxies.
Prudent Man Rule - An investment
standard. In some states, the law requires that a fiduciary, such as a
trustee, may invest the fund's money only in a list of securities designated
by the state - the so-called legal list. In other states, the trustee may
invest in a security if it is one that would be bought by a prudent person of
discretion and intelligence, who is seeking a reasonable income and
preservation of capital.
Quote
- The highest bid to buy and the lowest offer to sell a security in a
given market at a given time. If you ask your broker for a "quote"
on a stock, he or she may come back with something like "45 1/4 to 45
1/2." This means that $45.25 is the highest prices any buyer wanted to
pay at the time the quote was given on the floor of the Exchange and that
$45.50 was the lowest price that any seller would take at the same time.
Rally
- A brisk rise following a decline in the general price level of the
market, or in an individual stock.
Record Date -
The date on which you must be registered as a shareholder of a company in
order to receive a declared dividend or, among other things, to vote on
company affairs.
Redemption Price - The price at
which a bond may be redeemed before maturity, at the option of the issuing
company. Redemption value also applies to the price the company must pay to
call in certain types of preferred stock.
REIT -
Real Estate Investment Trust, an organization similar to an investment company
in some respects but concentrating its holdings in real estate investments.
The yield is generally liberal since REITs are required to distribute as much
as 90% of their income.
Refinancing - Same as refunding.
New securities are sold by a company and the money is used to retire existing
securities. Object may be to save interest costs, extend the maturity of the
loan, or both.
Registered Bond - A bond that is
registered on the books of the issuing company in the name of the owner. It
can be transferred only when endorsed by the registered owner.
Registered Competitive Market Maker
- Members of the New York Stock Exchange who trade on the floor for
their own or their firm's account and who have an obligation, when called upon
by an Exchange official, to narrow a quote or improve the depth of an existing
quote by their own bid or offer.
Registered Representative
- The man or woman who serves the investor customers of a
broker/dealer. In a New York Stock Exchange member organization, a Registered
Representative must meet the requirements of the Exchange as to background and
knowledge of the securities business. Also known as an Account Executive or
Customer's Broker.
Registrar -
Usually a trust company or bank charged with the responsibility of keeping
record of the owners of a corporation's securities and preventing the issuance
of more than the authorized amount.
Registration -
Before a public offering may be made of new securities by a company, the
securities must be registered under the Securities Act of 1933. A registration
statement is filed with the SEC by the issuer. It must disclose pertinent
information relating to the company's operations, securities, management and
purpose of the public offering. Before a security may be admitted to dealings
on a national securities exchange, it must be registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934. The application for registration must be filed with the
exchange and the SEC by the company issuing the securities.
Regular Way Delivery - Unless
otherwise specified, securities sold on the New York Stock Exchange are to be
delivered to the buying broker by the selling broker and payment made to the
selling broker by the buying broker on the third business day after the
transaction. Regular way delivery for bonds is the following business day.
Regulation T - The federal
regulation governing the amount of credit that may be advanced by brokers and
dealers to customers for the purchase of securities.
Regulation U - The federal
regulation governing the amount of credit that may be advanced by a bank to
its customers for the purchase of listed stocks.
Rights - When a company wants to
raise more funds by issuing additional securities, it may give its
stockholders the opportunity, ahead of others, to buy the new securities in
proportion to the number of shares each owns. The piece of paper evidencing
this privilege is called a right. Because the additional stock is usually
offered to stockholders below the current market price, rights ordinarily have
a market value of their own and are actively traded. In most cases they must
be exercised within a relatively short period. Failure to exercise or sell
rights may result in monetary loss to the holder.
Round Lot -
A unit of trading or a multiple thereof. On the NYSE the unit of trading is
generally 100 shares in stocks and $1,000 or $5,000 par value in the case of
bonds. In some inactive stocks, the unit of trading is 10 shares.
Scale Order
- An order to buy (or sell) a security, that specifies the total amount to be
bought (or sold) at specified price variations.
Scripophily - A term coined in the
mid-1970's to describe the hobby of collecting antique bonds, stocks and other
financial instruments. Values are affected by beauty of the certificate and
the issuer's role in world finance and economic development.
Seat - A traditional
figure-of-speech for a membership on an exchange.
SEC -
The Securities and Exchange Commission, established by Congress to help
protect investors. The SEC administers the Securities Act of 1933, the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Securities Act Amendments of 1975, the
Trust Indenture Act, the Investment Company Act, the Investment Advisers Act,
and the Public Utility Holding Company Act.
Secondary Distribution - Also known
as secondary offering. The redistribution of a block of stock some time after
it has been sold by the issuing company. The sale is handled off the NYSE by a
securities firm or group of firms and the shares are usually offered at a
fixed price related to the current market price of the stock. Usually the
block is a large one, such as might be involved in the settlement of an
estate. The security may be listed or unlisted.
Seller's Option
- A special transaction on the NYSE that gives the seller the right to
deliver the stock or bond at any time within a specified period, ranging from
not less than two business days to not more than 60 days.
Serial Bond - An issue that matures
in part at periodic stated intervals.
Settlement - Conclusion of a
securities transaction when a customer pays a broker/dealer for securities
purchased or delivers securities sold and receives from the broker the
proceeds of a sale.
Short Covering - Buying stock to
return stock previously borrowed to make delivery on a short sale.
Short Position - Stocks, options,
or futures contracts sold short and not covered as of a particular date. On
the NYSE, a tabulation is issued once a month listing all issues on the
Exchange in which there was a short position of 5,000 or more shares and
issues in which the short position had changed by 2,000 or more shares in the
preceding month. Short position also means the total amount of stock an
individual has sold short and has not covered, as of a particular date.
Short Sale - A transaction by a
person who believes a security will decline and sells it, though the person
does not own any. For instance: You instruct your broker to sell short 100
shares of XYZ. Your broker borrows the stock so delivery can be made to the
buyer. The money value of the shares borrowed is deposited by your broker with
the lender. Sooner or later you must cover your short sale by buying the same
amount of stock you borrowed for return to the lender. If you are able to buy
XYZ at a lower price than you sold it for, your profit is the difference
between the two prices - not counting commissions and taxes. But if you have
to pay more for the stock than the price you received, that is the amount of
your loss. Stock exchange and federal regulations govern and limit the
conditions under which a short sale may be made on a national securities
exchange. Sometimes people will sell short a stock they already own in order
to protect a paper profit. This is know as selling short against the box.
SIAC -
Securities Industry Automation Corporation, an independent organization
established by the New York and American Stock Exchanges as a jointly owned
subsidiary to provide automation, data processing, clearing and communications
services.
Sinking Fund - Money regularly set
aside by a company to redeem its bonds, debentures or preferred stock from
time to time as specified in the indenture or charter.
SIPC - Securities Investor
Protection Corporation, which provides funds for use, if necessary, to protect
customers' cash and securities that may be on deposit with a SIPC member firm
in the event the firm fails and is liquidated under the provisions of the SIPC
Act. SIPC is not a government agency. It is a non-profit membership
corporation created, however, by an act of Congress.
Specialist - A member of the New
York Stock Exchange who has two primary functions: first, to maintain an
orderly market in the securities registered to the specialist. In order to
maintain an orderly market, the Exchange expects specialists to buy or sell
for their own account, to a reasonable degree, when there is a temporary
disparity between supply and demand; second, the specialist acts as a broker's
broker. When commission brokers on the Exchange floor receive a limit order,
say, to buy at $50 a stock then selling at $60 - they cannot wait at the post
where the stock is traded to see if the price reaches the specified level.
They leave the order with a specialist, who will try to execute it in the
market if and when the stock declines to the specified price. At all times the
specialists must put their customers' interest above their own.
Speculation - The employment of
funds by a speculator. Safety of principal is a secondary factor.
Speculator - One who is willing to
assume a relatively large risk in the hope of gain.
Spin Off - The separation of a
subsidiary or division of a corporation from its parent by issuing shares in a
new corporate entity. Shareowners in the parent receive shares in the new
company in proportion to their original holding and the total value remains
approximately the same.
Split - The division of the
outstanding shares of a corporation into a larger number of shares. A 3-for-1
split by a company with 1 million shares outstanding results in 3 million
shares outstanding. Each holder of 100 shares before the 3-for-1 split would
have 300 shares, although the proportionate equity in the company would remain
the same; 100 parts of 1 million are the equivalent of 300 parts of 3 million.
Ordinarily splits must be voted by directors and approved by shareholders.
Stock Exchange - An organized
marketplace for securities featured by the centralization of supply and demand
for the transaction of orders by member brokers for institutional and
individual investors.
Stock Dividend
- A dividend paid in securities rather than in cash. The dividend may
be additional shares of the issuing company, or in shares of another company
(usually a subsidiary) held by the company.
Stockholder of Record - A
stockholder whose name is registered on the books of the issuing corporation.
Stock Index Futures - Futures
contracts based on market indexes, e.g. NYSE Composite Index Futures
Contracts.
Stock Ticker Symbols
- Every corporation whose transactions are reported on the NYSE or AMEX
ticker or on NASDAQ has been given a unique identification symbol of up to
four letters. These symbols abbreviate the complete corporate name and
facilitate trading and ticker reporting. Some of the most famous symbols are:
T(American Telephone & Telegraph), XON (Exxon), GM (General Motors), IBM
(International Business Machines), S (Sears Roebuck), and XRX (Xerox).
Stop Limit Order
- A stop order that becomes a limit order after the specified stop
price has been reached.
Stop Order - An order to buy at a
price above or sell at a price below the current market. Stop buy orders are
generally used to limit loss or protect unrealized profits on a short sale.
Stop sell orders are generally used to protect unrealized profits or limit
loss on a holding. A stop order becomes a market order when the stock sells at
or beyond the specified price and, thus, may not necessarily be executed at
that price.
Street Name - Securities held in
the name of a broker instead of a customer's name are said to be carried in
"street name." This occurs when the securities have been bought on
margin or when the customer wishes the security to be held by the broker.
Swapping -
Selling one security and buying a similar one almost at the same time to take
a loss, usually for tax purposes.
Syndicate - A group of investment
bankers who together underwrite and distribute a new issue of securities or a
large block of an outstanding issue.
Technical Research
- Analysis of the market and stocks based on supply and demand. The technician
studies price movements, volume, trends and patterns, which are revealed by
charting these factors, and attempts to assess the possible effect of current
market action on future supply and demand for securities and individual
issues.
Tender Offer -
A public offer to buy shares from existing stockholders of one public
corporation by another public corporation under specified terms good for a
certain time period. Stockholders are asked to "tender" (surrender)
their holdings for stated value, usually at a premium above current market
price, subject to the tendering of a minimum and maximum number of shares.
Third Market - Trading of stock
exchange listed securities in the over-the-counter market by non-exchange
member brokers.
Ticker - A telegraphic system that
continuously provides the last sale prices and volume of securities
transactions on exchanges. Information is either printed or displayed on a
moving tape after each trade.
Time Value -
The part of an option premium that is in excess of the intrinsic value.
Trader - Individuals who buy and
sell for their own accounts for short-term profit. Also, an employee of a
broker/dealer or financial institution who specializes in handling purchases
and sales of securities for the firm and/or its clients.
Trading Post - The structure on the
floor of the New York Stock Exchange at which stocks or options are bought and
sold.
Transfer - This term may refer to
two different operations. For one, the delivery of a stock certificate from
the seller's broker to the buyer's broker and legal change of ownership,
normally accomplished within a few days. For another, to record the change of
ownership on the books of the corporation by the transfer agent. When the
purchaser's name is recorded, dividends, notices of meetings, proxies,
financial reports and all pertinent literature sent by the issuer to its
securities holders are mailed direct to the new owner.
Transfer Agent - A transfer agent
keeps a record of the name of each registered shareowner, his or her address,
the number of shares owned, and sees that certificates presented for transfer
are properly canceled and new certificates issued in the name of the new
owner.
Treasury Stock - Stock issued by a
company but later reacquired. It may be held in the company's treasury
indefinitely, reissued to the public, or retired. Treasury stock receives no
dividends and has no vote while held by the company.
Turnover Rate - The volume of
shares traded in a year as a percentage of total shares listed on an Exchange,
outstanding for an individual issue or held in an institutional portfolio.
Underlying -
The security that one has the right to buy or sell according to the terms of
an option contract.
Unlisted Stock
- A security not listed on a stock exchange.
Up Tick - A term used to designate
a transaction made at a price higher than the preceding transaction. Also
called a "plus-tick." A "zero-plus" tick is a term used
for a transaction at the same price as the preceding trade but higher than the
preceding different price. Conversely, a down tick, or "minus" tick,
is a term used to designate a transaction made at a price lower than the
preceding trade. A plus sign, or a minus sign, is displayed throughout the day
next to the last price of each stock at the trading post on the floor of the
New York Stock Exchange.
Variable Annuity
- A life insurance policy where the annuity premium (a set amount of dollars)
is immediately turned into units of a portfolio of stocks. Upon retirement,
the policyholder is paid according to accumulated units, the dollar value of
which varies according to the performance of the stock portfolio. Its
objective is to preserve, through stock investment, the purchasing value of
the annuity which otherwise is subject to erosion through inflation.
Volume - The number of shares or
contracts traded in a security or an entire market during a given period.
Volume is usually considered on a daily basis and a daily average is computed
for longer periods.
Voting Right -
The common stockholders' right to vote their stock in affairs of a company.
Preferred stock usually has the right to vote when preferred dividends are in
default for a specified period. The right to vote may be delegated by the
stockholder to another person.
Warrant - A
certificate giving the holder the right to purchase securities at a stipulated
price within a specified time limit or perpetually. Sometimes a warrant is
offered with securities as an inducement to buy.
When Issued - A short form of
"when, as and if issued." The term indicates a conditional
transaction in a security authorized for issuance but not as yet actually
issued. All "when issued" transactions are on an "if"
basis, to be settled if and when the actual security is issued and the
exchange or National Association of Securities Dealers rules the transactions
are to be settled.
Working Control - Theoretically,
ownership of 51 percent of a company's voting stock is necessary to exercise
control. In practice - and this is particularly true in the case of a large
corporation - effective control sometimes can be exerted through ownership,
individually or by a group acting in concert, of less than 50 percent.
Writer - A person who assumes the
obligation to sell (call) or buy (put) the underlying security at an option's
exercise price.
Yield - Also
known as return. The dividends or interest paid by a company expressed as a
percentage of the current price. A stock with a current market value of $40 a
share paying dividends at the rate of $3.20 is said to return 8 percent ($3.20
$40.00). The current yield on a bond is figured the same way.
Yield To Maturity - The yield of a
bond to maturity takes into account the price discount from or premium over
the face amount. It is greater than the current yield when the bond is selling
at a discount and less than the current yield when the bond is selling at a
premium.
Zero Coupon Bond
- A bond which pays no interest but is priced, at issue, at a discount from
its redemption price.
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