The ever increasing number of investment products and financial
services in the marketplace today can be confusing. We have put together
this glossary of financial definitions 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.
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.
Financial Definitions; L thru Q
Posted by CB Blogger
Blog, Updated at: 8:26 AM
