| Accreted
Interest - The difference between par value of
a zero coupon security and purchase price. Also
called original issue discount. Yearly accreted
interest is the amount of accreted interest
"earned" each year that you hold a zero
coupon investment.
Accrued Interest
- The amount of interest that the buyer owes
the seller on transactions involving fixed income
securities, such as most bonds and notes.
ACH - Automated
Clearing House - A method of transferring funds.
Member banks wire instructions to the Automated
Clearing House which then wires to the appropriate
receiving bank.
Advanced Option -
Multiple option strategy. See Spread Order,
Straddle, Strangle, Buy/Write, Sell/Write, and
Unwind.
Agency Security -
Any of the bills, notes, and bonds issued by
agencies of the federal government.
All or None (AON) -
A type of order where the client wants the entire
order executed or none of it.
American Depository
Receipt (ADR) - A share of stock that is issued by
an American bank and is backed by foreign
securities on deposit.
American Stock
Exchange (AMEX) - Located at 86 Trinity Place, New
York, NY; a major stock and option exchange.
Amortization - An
accounting term indicating the appointment of an
incurred expense over the life of an asset. For
example, if a three-year magazine subscription (an
expense) is paid in year one, it should be
"amortized" (or "spread out")
over the three-year life of the subscription (the
asset).
Annual Report - A
formal presentation of the corporation’s
financial statements that is sent to its
registered stockholders. If shares are registered
in the nominee name (in the care of the brokerage
firm), the proxy department has to obtain copies
of the report and mail them to the beneficial
owners (clients).
Annuity - A
contract with an insurance company in which the
individual makes either lump-sum or periodic
payments to the insurance company and in return
receives a lifetime income (usually guaranteed).
AON - See All or
None.
Arbitration - A
method of settling a dispute by utilizing an
impartial individual or individuals. All exchanges
and securities associations have adopted a Code of
Arbitration through which all disputes between
firms, employees and firms, and firms and clearing
corporations are settled.
Ask (Asked Price) -
The lowest round lot price at which a broker will
offer for sale a security on an exchange or
over-the-counter market.
As-of - A term used
to describe any trade processed not on the actual
trade date, but "as of" the actual trade
date.
Asset - Goods
available to pay debts. Anything owned by an
individual or corporation.
Assign - Action of
the option holder (buyer) requiring the option
seller (writer) to complete the terms of the
option contract. The writer would be required to
either buy stock from the holder or deliver stock
to the holder.
At-the-Money -
Refers to options in which the underlying stock is
trading at the same price as the option strike
price.
Auction - The
issuance of new Treasury bills, notes, and bonds
at stated intervals by the Federal Reserve.
Auction Market - A
market where buyers and sellers enter simultaneous
bids and offers such as the New York Stock
Exchange.
Average - Also
known as an index, a mathematical computation that
indicates the value of a number of securities as a
group. The three most popular averages are the Dow
Jones Industrial Average (DJI), Standard &
Poor’s (S&P) 500, and the New York Stock
Exchange Composite. The average, which may be
market-weighted, share-weighted, or
price-weighted, indicates performance.
Average Life - The
estimate of maturity for a pool of mortgage-backed
securities.
Return
to Top
Baby
Bond - Bond with a face value of less than $1,000.
Balance Sheet - An
accounting statement reflecting the firm’s
financial condition in terms of assets,
liabilities, and net worth (ownership). In a
balance sheet, Assets = Liabilities + Net Worth
Basis Points - A
relationship between a bond’s price and a yield
subdivided into hundredths. One hundred basis
points equals 1 percent interest yield.
Basis Price - A
method of pricing municipal bonds, T bills, and
certain other instruments. It is an expression of
yield to maturity.
Bear Market - A
market in which prices are generally declining.
Bearer
Stocks/Shares - Securities for which no register
of ownership is kept by the company. A bearer
certificate has an intrinsic value. Dividends are
not received automatically from the company but
must be claimed by removing and returning
"coupons" attached to the certificate.
Beneficial Owner -
The owner of a security who is entitled to all the
benefits associated with ownership. Customers’
securities are often registered in the name of the
brokerage firm or central depository rather than
in the name of the customer. Even so, the customer
remains the real or beneficial owner.
Bid - The highest
price anyone has declared that they want to pay
for a security at a given time.
Blue Chip - A term
used to describe the common stocks of corporations
with the strongest of reputations. (In poker, the
blue chip is usually assigned the highest money
value.)
Bond - A debt
instrument; a security that represents the debt of
a corporation, a municipality of the federal
government, or any other entity. A bond is usually
long-term in nature (10 to 30 years).
Bond Fund - Type of
mutual fund that invests in bond and preferred
stocks with the idea of providing a stable income
with a minimum of risk.
Book Entry -
Electronic record of ownership of Treasury and
agency securities, as opposed to receipt of a
security’s certificate.
Book Value - A
value computed by subtracting the total
liabilities from the value of all assets on the
balance sheet, then dividing by the number of
common shares. This is an accounting term that has
no relation to the securities market value.
Breadth of the
Market - A measurement of the number of issues
that advance or decline on a particular trading
day.
Breakpoint - A
purchase of shares in an open-end investment
company mutual fund that is large enough to
entitle the buyer to a lower sales charge. A
series of breakpoints is established by the fund,
at each of which the charge is reduced.
Broker - (1) An
individual who buys or sells securities for
customers (a stockbroker). (2) On an exchange, one
who executes public orders on an agency basis (a
floor broker or commission house broker). (3) As a
slang term, a firm that executes orders for others
(a brokerage firm).
Brokerage Firm - A
partnership or corporation that is in business to
provide security services for a general
marketplace.
Bull Market - A
market in which prices are generally rising.
Bullish - Term used
to describe rising security prices.
Business Day - A
day on which the exchanges are open for business.
Buy-In - When the
seller of a security fails to deliver the
security, the buyer purchases the security on the
open market and charges any loss to the seller’s
account.
Buy/Write - An
advanced option order that combines the purchase
of an equity and the sale of a call option on the
same underlying security.
Buyer’s Option
(Contract) - A settlement that calls for delivery
and payment according to the number of days
specified by the buyer.
Buying Power - In a
margin account, the maximum dollar amount of
securities that the client can purchase or sell
short without having to deposit additional funds.
Return
to Top
Call
(Option) - An option that permits the owner to buy
a contracted amount of underlying security at a
set price (strike or exercise) for a predetermined
period of time (up to the expiration date).
Call Date - The
date on which and after which selected issues of
Treasury bonds can be redeemed before maturity.
Call Protection -
The degree of security that an investor has
against a bond being redeemed. Practically, the
number of years between today and the call date.
Call Spread -
Client buys a call and sells a call on the same
security but with different expiration dates,
different exercise prices, or both.
Callable - A
securities feature that allows the issuer to
retire the issue when desired. Should the issue be
called, the issuer usually pays a premium.
Callable Bonds -
Treasury bonds that can be redeemed by Uncle Sam
five years before maturity.
Capital Gain - A
trading profit. Trading gains that occur in one
year or less are short-term capital gains; those
that occur in periods longer than one year are
long-term capital gains. Short-term and long-term
capital gains are treated differently for tax
purposes.
Capital Loss - A
trading loss. Losses are long- or short-term as
are gains. See Capital Gain.
Capital Stock - The
common and preferred stock of a company.
Capitalization -
The total dollar value of all common stock,
preferred stock, and bonds issued by a
corporation.
Cash Account - A
customer account in which all securities purchased
must be paid for in full.
Cash Dividend -
Dividends that corporations pay on a per-share
basis to stockholders from their earnings.
Cash Flow - Amount
of total payments, interest and occasionally
principal received as current income from Treasury
and agency securities.
Cash Transaction -
A settlement on the same day as the trade date.
Cashiering
Department - Brokerage firm department that is
responsible for receiving and delivering
securities and money to and from other firms and
clients.
CBOE - See Chicago
Board Options Exchange.
CBT - See Chicago
Board of Trade.
CD - See
Certificate of Deposit.
Certificate - The
physical document evidencing ownership (a share of
stock) or debt (a bond).
Certificate of
Deposit (CD) - A negotiable certificate that
evidences a time deposit of funds with a bank.
Chicago Board
Options Exchange (CBOE) - Listed option trading
was originated by this marketplace on April 26,
1973.
Chicago Board of
Trade (CBT) - A major commodity exchange located
141 East Jackson Boulevard, Chicago IL.
Class - Options of
the same type — all calls or all puts on the
same security.
Clearing
Corporations - A central reception and
distribution center operated for its members who
are made up of various brokerage firms. Many offer
automated systems that expedite comparison
procedures. Among these are NSCC (National
Securities Clearing Corp.) and OCC (Options
Clearing Corporation).
Clearing House
Comparison (CHC) - A form used to submit trades to
NSCC that have missed the normal entry methods.
Such trades enter the system on the third business
day of the trade cycle.
Cliffing - A
strategy for arranging bonds so that they all
mature in the same year.
Close - Price of
the last transaction of a security on a particular
trading day.
Closed End Fund - A
fund whose offering of shares is closed. That is,
once the initial offering is completed, the fund
stops offering its shares. The value of the shares
is then determined by supply and demand, rather
than by calculation of net asset value.
Closing Transaction
- The transaction executed to close an option
contract. The holder would sell to close while the
writer would buy to close.
Collateral - An
asset pledged to support a loan.
Collateral Trust
Bond - A debt instrument issued by one corporation
and backed by the securities of another
corporation.
Combination - A
position long or short different types of options
on the same stock with different strike prices
and/or expiration dates.
Combination Order -
In listed options trading, an order to
simultaneously buy a call and sell a put or to buy
a put and sell a call on the same underlying
security. Also called a Combo Order.
Commercial Paper -
A short-term debt instrument issued by
corporations. Its rate of interest is set at
issuance and can be realized only if held to
maturity.
Commission - The
amount charged by a firm on an agency transaction.
Commission House
Broker - A floor broker who is employed by a
brokerage house to execute orders on the exchange
floor for the firm and its customers.
Common Stock - A
security, issued in shares, that represents
ownership of a corporation. Common stockholders
may vote for the management and receive dividends
after all other obligations of the corporation are
satisfied.
Comparison - The
process by which two contra brokerage firms in a
trade agree to the terms of the transaction.
Comparison can be either through a clearing
corporation or on a trade-for-trade basis (that
is, ex the clearing corporation).
Competitive Tender
- A method of purchasing new issues of Treasury
bills, notes, and bonds in which the investor
specifies the yield, and accordingly the price, he
or she requires to purchase the security.
Concession - The
fee paid to certain dealers who are members of the
selling group of a securities underwriting
syndicate.
Confirmation - A
trade notice, issued to customers of brokerage
firms, that serves as written notice of the trade,
giving price, security description, settlement
money, trade and settlement dates, plus other
pertinent information.
Consent to Loan
Agreement - An agreement margin customers must
sign to authorize the brokerage firm to lend the
customer’s securities to itself or other firms.
Consideration - The
money value of a transaction (number of shares
multiplied by the price) before adding commission.
Constant-Dollar
Investment - Securities such as savings accounts
and money market funds that do not fluctuate in
price.
Contractual Plan -
A type of accumulation plan in which an investor
in mutual funds makes a firm commitment to invest
a given amount of money over a given time.
Control Persons - A
director, officer or other affiliate of the issuer
or a stockholder who owns at least 10% of any
class of outstanding stock.
Control Securities
- Securities owned by one of those parties
mentioned in Control Person
Conversion Premium
- Refers
to the percentage above parity at which the
convertible security is trading. Conversion
Premium is calculated as follows:
(Convertible
Price - Conversion Value)
Conversion
Value
Conversion Ratio -
Issue price of the convertible divided by the
conversion price.
Conversion Value or
Parity - Number of common shares per convertible
(conversion ratio) multiplied by the current price
of the common stock.
Convertible Issue
(Bond) - A securities feature that permits the
issue holder to convert to another issue, usually
common stock. This privilege can be used only
once. The preferred stock or bond holder can
convert from that issue to another, but not back.
Convertible
Preferred Stock - A preferred stock that may be
converted into common stock of the same company at
specific prices or rates.
Convertible Zero -
As it applies to the Treasury sector, a stripped
Treasury zero that converts into a current income
obligation five years before maturity.
Convexity - Measure
of the curvature of the price-yield relationship
of a fixed-income security. Any fixed-income
security with known cash flows has positive
convexity.
Cooling-Off Period
- The period, usually 20 days, between the filing
of the registration statement on a new issue with
the SEC and the effective date of the offering.
Co-Partnership
Account - An account in which the individuals may
act on behalf of the partnership as a whole.
Corporation - A
business organization under the law with certain
rights and responsibilities in which the worth is
divided into shares of stock.
Corporate
Resolution - A document stating that the
corporation’s board of directors has authorized
a particular individual to act on behalf of the
corporation. This document is necessary when the
corporation opens a cash or margin account.
Coupon - (1) On
Bearer Stocks, the detachable part of the
certificate exchangeable for dividends. (2)
Denotes the rate of interest on a fixed interest
security - a 10% coupon pays interest of 10% a
year on the nominal value of the stock.
Coupon Yield - Also
called nominal yield. A bond’s coupon payment
divided by par value.
Cover - The total
net profit a company has available for
distribution as dividend, divided by the amount
actually paid gives the number of times that the
dividend is covered.
Covered Call - A
call option that is sold against stock owned by
the writer of the call.
Covered Put - A put
option that is sold by the owner of a put of the
same class with an equal or longer expiration date
and an equal or higher exercise price.
Credit Agreement -
Outlines the conditions of credit arrangement
between the broker and customer concerning a
margin account.
Credit Balance -
The funds available to a client in a cash or
margin account. In a short sale, this balance
represents the customer’s liability.
Cumulative
Preferred - A preferred stock feature that
entitles the holder to the later payment of
dividends that were not paid when due. The
dividends are, in this sense,
"cumulative." The dividends accumulate
and must be paid (along with present dividends)
before common stockholders may receive any
dividends.
Current Income -
Cash-in-hand payments received from interest and
dividends.
Current Maturity -
The number of years until a bond matures,
regardless of its original maturity when issued.
Current Yield - A
bond’s coupon payment divided by its market
price.
CUSIP (The
Committee on Uniform Security Identification
Procedure) - An inter-industry security coding
service. Each type of security has its own unique
CUSIP number.
Custodian - The
person or institution responsible for protecting
the property of another.
Customer (Account)
Statement - Sometimes referred to as month-end
statement. This is a statement of the customer’s
positions and activity. It must be sent out
quarterly, but if there is monthly activity in the
account, it is sent out monthly.
Return
to Top
Dated
Date - The first day that interest starts to
accrue on newly issued bonds.
Day Order - An
order that, if not executed on the day it is
entered, expires at the close of that day’s
trading.
Day Trade - The
buying and selling of the same security on the
same day.
DBO - See Delivery
Balance Order.
Dealer - A firm
that functions as a market maker and that, as
such, positions the security to buy and sell
versus the public and/or brokerage community.
Debenture Bond - A
debt that is issued by a corporation and that is
backed or secured by the good name of the issuing
company.
Debit Balance - The
amount of loan in a margin account.
Deed of Trust - The
trust agreement drawn up when a corporation plans
to issue bonds or other debt securities. It
includes such items as assets, interest payments,
maturity dates, etc. Also, see indenture.
Default - An
issuer’s failure to pay accreted interest when a
zero coupon issue matures. Treasury securities are
considered default-free.
Deferred Annuity -
An annuity plan in which payments are to be made
at some set date in the future.
Delivery Balance
Order (DBO) - An order issued by the clearing
corporation to any firm that, after the day’s
trades are netted, has delivery or sale position
remaining. The order defines what is to be
delivered to whom.
Delivery Versus
Payment (DVP) - Settlement of security
transactions used by institutional customers.
Certificates are delivered to a bank designated by
the customer whereupon the bank makes payment on
delivery.
Depository - A
central location for keeping securities on
deposit.
Depository Trust
Company (DTC) - A corporation, owned by banks and
brokerage firms, that holds securities, arranges
for their receipt and delivery, and arranges for
the payments in settlement.
Derivative Zeros -
Zero coupon bonds created by stripping coupon and
principal payments from a U.S. Treasury Security.
Designated Order
Turnaround (DOT) - An order routing and execution
reporting system of the NYSE.
Diagonal Spread - A
spread of the same class of options but with
different exercise prices and different expiration
dates.
Differential - The
fraction of a point added to the purchase price or
subtracted from the sale price of odd lot orders.
The charge represents compensation to the
dealer/specialist for executing the odd lot order.
Director - A
corporate board member elected by stockholders.
Discount - When the
market price of a newly issued security is lower
than the issue price.
Discretionary
Account - A client account in which the account
executive is permitted to buy and sell securities
for the client without the client’s prior
permission. The opening of such an account
requires the special permission of the firm’s
management.
District Business
Conduct Committee (DBCC) - Part of the NASD that
investigates, reviews, and renders a verdict on
customer complaints or other industry
improprieties.
Dividends - A
portion of a corporation’s assets paid to
stockholders on a per-share basis. Preferred stock
is supposed to pay a regular and prescribed
dividend amount. Common stock pays varying amounts
when declared.
Dollar Cost
Averaging - An investment method used in mutual
funds by which clients invest the same dollar
amount periodically. Because mutual funds permit
the buying of fractional shares, all of the
investor’s payment is used in the acquisition of
fund shares.
Dollar-Denominated
- Foreign securities that pay interest and
principal in U.S. dollars.
Double Taxation -
Corporations pay taxes on revenue before paying
dividends. The dividends, in the hands of the
stockholder, are taxed again as ordinary income.
Hence "double" taxation.
Downstairs Trader -
A trader who operates on the floor of an exchange
and who "trades" positions against the
public market. See also Upstairs Trader.
Downtick - A listed
equity trade whose price is lower than that of the
last different sale.
DNR (Do Not Reduce)
- An instruction that informs the order handling
personnel not to reduce the price of the order by
the amount of dividends, if and when paid by the
corporation. DNR is placed on buy limit, sell stop
and sell stop limit GTC orders.
Due Diligence
Meeting - The last meeting between corporate
officials and underwriters prior to the issuance
of the security. At the meeting, the content of
the prospectus is discussed, and relevant parts of
the underwriting are put into place.
Return
to Top
Earnings
Per Share (EPS) - Net income divided by the number
of shares of common stock outstanding.
Earnings Report - A
corporate financial statement that reports and
nets out all earning and expenses to a profit or
loss. It is therefore sometimes referred to as the
profit and loss (P&L) statement.
EE Savings Bond - A
zero coupon bond issued directly by the Treasury
in par values ranging from $5 to $10,000.
Purchased at half of par, EE savings bonds mature
in 12 years and are eligible for extended
maturity.
Effective Date -
The first date after the cooling-off period of a
new issue that the security can be offered.
Endorsement -
Signature on the back of a stock certificate of
the person whose name appears on the face of the
same. Makes the certificate negotiable.
Equipment Trust
Bonds - Debt instruments that are issued by some
corporations that are backed by "rolling
stock" (such as airplanes or locomotives and
freight cars).
Equity - The
portion in an account that reflects the
customer’s ownership interest.
Eurobonds - A
long-term loan issued in a currency other than
that of the country or market in which it is
issued. Interest is paid without the deduction of
tax.
Eurodollar CDs -
Certificates of deposit held in U.S. dollars by
European, British, and Eastern depository
institutions and available to U.S. investors.
Excess Equity -
Equity in a margin account above that which is
required by Regulation T.
Ex-Dividend Date -
The first day on which the purchaser of the
security is not entitled to the dividend. It is
also the day that the price of the security drops
to the next highest fraction of the dividend
amount.
Execution Broker
($2.00 Broker) - Broker who owns memberships on
various exchanges and executes trades on the
exchanges for other brokers — execution only
services on listed exchanges. The name of the
clearing broker is "given up" when each
trade is executed to industry clearance facilities
and the trade is reported back to the introducing
firm for the customer and street side processing.
The charge for this service used to be $2.00 —
thus the name "$2.00 Broker."
Executor - A person
appointed by the last will of the deceased to
carry out the provisions of the will.
Exercise Price -
The price per share the holder or owner of a call
option would pay to buy the stock from the writer
or the price the holder would receive should he
sell the stock to the writer when exercising an
option. See also Strike Price.
Expiration - The
day on which an option contract becomes void.
Expiration Month -
The month in which an option or futures contract
ceases to exist (expires).
Ex-Rights Date -
The date after which stocks are traded without
subscription rights.
Extended Maturity -
A provision whereby a bond continues to pay
interest beyond its stated maturity.
Ex-Warrants Date -
The date after which stocks are traded without
buyers being entitled to warrants which are to be
distributed.
Return
to Top
Face Value - The
debt (or loan) amount that appears on the face of
the certificate and that the issuer must pay at
maturity.
Factor - A decimal
between 0 and 1 that represents the amount of
mortgages remaining in a pool of mortgage-backed
securities.
Factor Book - A
tabular presentation that shows relevant
information about factors, value of remaining
mortgages, and interest rates on mortgage-backed
securities.
Factor Table - A
table used to compute the outstanding principal on
Pass-Throughs — Ginnie Maes, Freddie Macs and
Fannie Maes.
Fannie Mae -
Nickname for the Federal National Mortgage
Association and the mortgage-backed securities it
issues.
Farmer Mac -
Nickname for the Federal Agricultural Corporation
and the securities it issues.
Federal Farm Credit
System - Established by Congress to provide credit
to farms and farm-related enterprises. The FFCS is
also an issuer of agency securities.
Federal Reserve
Board - The government agency that regulates
credit.
Federal Reserve
System - The nation’s central monetary authority
and the Treasury Department’s agent for selling
new issues of Treasury bills, notes, and bonds.
FHA - Abbreviation
for the Federal Housing Administration. The FHA is
also an issuer of agency securities.
FHA Experience - An
estimate of the average life of a pool of
mortgage-backed securities in relation to
experience tables developed by the Federal Housing
Administration.
Fiduciary - A
person legally appointed in the P&S
department.
Fill or Kill (FOK)
- An order that requires execution of the entire
quantity immediately. If not, the order is
canceled.
Final Dividend -
The dividend paid by a company at the end of its
financial year, recommended by the directors but
authorized by the shareholders at the company’s
annual general meeting.
Financing
Corporation - An agency created to assist the
S&L industry by retailing securities to the
public. Also the nickname for its securities.
Fiscal Agent - The
authority who is responsible for issuing new
securities of federal agencies.
Fiscal Year - The
twelve-month period during which a business
maintains its financial records. Since this cycle
does not have to coincide with the calendar year,
it is known as the fiscal year.
Fixed Annuity -
Insurance company guarantees dollar amount of
payments to the annuitant for the period covered
under the contract.
Flat - A bond
trading without accrued interest is said to be
trading "flat."
Floor Broker - An
exchange member who, as such, is permitted to
conduct business on the exchange floor.
Flotation - The
occasion on which a company’s shares are offered
on the market for the first time.
Flower Bond - A
specially identified series of Treasury bonds
accepted at full par in payment of estate taxes.
FOK - See Fill Or
Kill.
Fourth Market -
Trading directly between institutional investors
on a system named Instinet.
Freddie Mac -
Nickname for the Federal Home Mortgage Association
and the mortgage-backed securities it issues.
Free Stock -
Loanable securities; that is, securities that can
be used for loan or hypothecation. These
securities are stock in a margin account that
represents the debit balance.
Frozen Account - An
account in which all purchases must be paid for in
cash in advance for a period of 90 days because of
failure to make timely or proper payment in the
past.
FT Index - Refers
to the Financial Times Industrial Ordinary Share
Index, also known as the "30 Share
Index." This started in 1935 at 100, and is
based on the prices of 30 leading industrial and
commercial shares. They are chosen to be
representative of British industry, rather than of
the Exchange. Government stocks, banks and
insurance companies are not included. The Index is
calculated hourly during the day with a
"closing index" at 4:30 p.m.
FT-SE 100 Share
Index - Popularly known as "Footsie"; an
index of 100 leading UK shares listed on the
London Stock Exchange providing a minute-by-minute
picture of how share prices are moving. It started
on January 3, 1984 with the base number of 1,000.
Also forms the basis of a contract in the London
Traded Options Market (LTOM) and the London
International Financial Futures Exchange (LIFFE).
FT-SE Eurotrack 200
Index - Denominated in ECUs, this comprises the
stocks of the FT-SE 100 Index plus the
constituents of the FT-SE Eurotrack 100 Index. The
UK component is weighted to ensure that the 200
Index closely tracks the major benchmark indices.
It started on Monday, February 25, 1991 with a
base value of 1,000 as at close of business on
Friday, October 26, 1990.
Full Trading
Authorization - Owner of the account gives power
to another person to buy, sell and make
withdrawals from the account.
Fully Disclosed -
All customer accounts of the Introducing Broker
are introduced to another Broker/Dealer who clears
the customers’ trades. This second broker is
called a Clearing Broker. The names and addresses
of the customer accounts are "fully
disclosed" to the Clearing Broker whose name
is also disclosed to the customers on the
statements and confirmations. The Clearing Broker
does all the bookkeeping involved in settling the
trades and keeping the customer accounts in proper
form.
Fully Paid -
Applied to new issues, when the total amount
payable in relation to the new shares has been
paid to the company.
Fund Exchange -
Ability to shift a mutual fund investment from one
fund to another sponsored by the same mutual fund
family.
Fund Family - An
investment management company that offers several
types of mutual funds.
Return
to Top
Gearing
- A company's debts expressed as a percentage of
its equity capital. High gearing means debts are
high in relation to equity capital.
General Obligation
(GO) Bond - A municipal bond whose issuer's
ability to pay back principal and interest is
based on its full taxing power.
Ginnie Mae -
Nickname for the Government National Mortgage
Association and the mortgage-backed securities it
issues.
GNMA - See
Government National Mortgage Association.
Good Delivery -
Securities delivered to the broker from the seller
that are properly endorsed and in proper order to
be delivered to the buyer.
Good-Til-Canceled
(open) Order (GTC) - An order that does not expire
at the end of the day it is entered. Instead, it
remains in force until it is either executed or
canceled. Ameritrade cancels all GTC orders at the
end of the next month after the order has been
placed.
Government Bond -
Debt security issued by the U.S. Government.
Government National
Mortgage Association (GNMA) - A government
corporation that provides primary mortgages
through bond issuances. Its securities are called
Ginnie Maes.
Growth Stock -
Stock of a company in a new industry or of a
company participating in an emerging industry.
GTC - See Good-til-Canceled
(Open) Order.
Guardian - Someone
who manages securities in a minor’s account or
someone who handles the affairs of an incompetent
person.
Return
to Top
Hedge
- To reduce the risk in one security by taking an
offsetting position in a related security.
HH Savings Bonds -
A savings bond that pays semiannual coupon
interest, unlike EE savings bonds.
House Maintenance
Call - Demand to the customer for additional funds
from the brokerage firm because the equity in the
customer’s margin account has fallen below the
minimum amount allowed by the firm.
House Requirement -
The minimum amount of equity brokerage firms
require margin clients to maintain in the account.
Hypothecation - A
brokerage firm’s pledging of margin securities
at a bank to secure the funds necessary to carry
an account’s debit balance.
Return
to Top
Immediate-or-Cancel
(IOC) - An instruction on an order that requires
execution of as many lots as can be filled
immediately, and the rest canceled.
Income Bonds -
Bonds issued when the ability of the issuing
company to pay interest is questioned. They are
speculative instruments that pay high rates of
interest.
Income Stream - A
strategy of arranging bonds so that they produce a
consistent series of payments.
Indenture - The
terms of a corporate bond. Also known as deed of
trust, it appears on the face of the bond
certificate.
Industrial Revenue
(ID Revenue, ID Revs, or Industrial Rev) Bond - A
form of municipal bond whose issuer's ability to
pay interest and principal is based on revenue
earned from an industrial complex.
Insider - Person
with nonpublic information on a corporation.
Directors, officers and stockholders owning more
than 10% of any one class of stock are usually
considered insiders.
Insider Dealing -
The purchase or sale of shares by someone who
possesses "inside" information about the
company; i.e., information on the company’s
performance and prospects which has not yet been
made available to the market as a whole and which,
if available, might affect the share price.
Interest Rate Risk
- The prospect that Treasury and agency securities
will decline in price if economy-wide interest
rates rise.
Interim Dividend -
A dividend declared part way through a company's
financial year, authorized solely by the
directors.
Intermediate-Term
Bonds - Those maturing five to ten years after
original issue.
In-The-Money - Used
to describe options that the holder would profit
from exercising. Call options are in-the-money
when the underlying security's value is greater
than the option's strike price. Put options are
in-the-money when the underlying security's value
is less than the option's strike price.
Investment Banker -
See underwriter.
Investment Trust -
Company whose sole business consists of buying,
selling and holding shares.
IRA - Individual
Retirement Accounts - a tax-deferred retirement
plan created by the U.S. government.
Issue - (1) The
process by which a new security is brought to
market. (2) Any security.
Issue Date - Month
and day that a security is initially issued.
Issued Stock -
Stock sold to the public.
Return
to Top
Joint
Account - An account with two or more individuals
acting as co-owners.
Joint Tenants with
Rights of Survivorship (JTWROS) - A joint account
which allows the remaining tenant(s) to retain the
deceased tenant’s interest in the account.
Return
to Top
Keogh
Plan - Tax-deferred retirement plan for a
self-employed and unincorporated person or a
person who has earned extra income aside from
regular employment through personal services.
Return
to Top
Legal
Transfer - A type of transfer that requires legal
documentation in addition to the normal forms.
Usually in the name of a deceased person, a trust,
or other third party.
Letter of
Renunciation - This applies to a rights issue and
is the form attached to an Allotment Letter which
is completed should the original holder wish to
pass his entitlement to someone else or to
renounce his rights absolutely.
Liability - Any
claim against the corporation, including accounts
payable, salaries payable, and bonds.
Limit - In relation
to dealing instructions, a restriction set on an
order to buy or sell, specifying the minimum
selling or maximum buying price.
Limit Order - Sets
the highest price the customer is willing to pay
for a buy order, or the lowest price the customer
is willing to accept for a sell order. Buy orders
may be executed at or below the limit price, but
never higher. Sell orders may be executed at or
above the limit price, but never lower.
Limited Tax Bond -
A municipal bond whose ability to pay back
principal and interest is based on special tax.
Limited Trading
Authorization - An account in which the customer
gives the power to buy and sell only in his
account to another person.
Liquidation - (1)
Closing out a position. (2) An action taken by the
margin department when a client hasn’t paid for
a purchase.
Liquidity - The
characteristic of a market that enables investors
to buy and sell securities easily.
Listed Options - An
option that trades on a national option exchange.
Listed Securities -
Securities that trade on a national exchange.
Listed Stock -
Stock that has qualified for trading on an
exchange.
Load - The sales
charge on the purchase of the shares of some
open-end mutual funds.
Loan Consent
Agreement - An agreement whereby the customer
gives the brokerage firm permission to lend his
securities.
Loan Market Value -
Value of securities in customer’s account.
Loan Stock - Stock
bearing a fixed rate of interest. Unlike a
Debenture, loan stocks may be unsecured.
Loan Value - The
amount of money, expressed as a percentage of
market value, that the customer may borrow from
the firm.
Long Position - (1)
In a customer’s account, securities that are
either fully paid for (a cash account) or
partially paid for (a margin account). (2) Any
position on the firm’s security records that has
a debit balance.
Long-Term Bonds -
Bonds that mature in more than ten years.
Return
to Top
Maintenance
Call - See House Maintenance Call.
Make a Market -
Refers to brokerage firms that buy and sell a
particular over-the-counter stock for their own
accounts at their own risk.
Management Company
- The group of individuals responsible for
managing a mutual fund's portfolio.
Margin - Purchasing
Treasury and agency securities with money borrowed
from a bank or brokerage.
Margin Account - An
account in which the firm lends the customer money
on purchases or securities on short sales.
Customers must have enough equity in the account
to pay for purchases by the third business day
after trade or meet obligations that may be
incurred immediately.
Margin Call - A
demand upon a customer to deposit money or
securities with the broker when the value of the
securities purchased on margin falls.
Margin Department -
The department of a brokerage firm that computes
the balance their clients need to keep in order to
avoid maintenance and margin calls.
Margin Requirement
- The percentage of investment that may be
financed using borrowed capital.
Mark-to-Market -
Process by which security position values are
brought up to their current value. The customer
may request the excess equity, or the firm may
call for the deposit of additional funds. Either
request is a "mark" to the market.
Market Maker -
Another term for dealer or specialist. In the
interest of maintaining orderly trading, a market
maker stands ready to trade against the public and
therefore to make a market in an issue.
Market Not Held -
Type of market order usually for a sizable amount
of stock that gives the floor broker discretion
with respect to price and/or timing on execution.
Market Order - An
order to be executed at the current market price.
Buy market orders accept the current offer, and
sell market orders accept the current bid.
Marry a Put - Form
of hedging done by buying the stock and buying a
put on the same day.
Maturity - The date
on which a loan becomes due and payable — when
bonds and other debt instruments must be repaid.
Member - An
individual who owns a membership (a seat) on an
exchange.
Member Firm - A
partnership or corporation that owns a membership
on an exchange.
Merger - The
combination of two or more companies into one
through the exchange of stock.
Mini-refunding -
Auctions of Treasury securities occurring in
March, June, September, and December.
Minimum Maintenance
- Established by the exchanges’ margin rules,
the level to which the equity in an account may
fall before the client must deposit additional
equity. It is expressed as a percentage
relationship between debit balance and equity or
between market value and equity.
Minus Tick - An
execution price below the previous sale.
Money Market Fund -
A type of mutual fund that specializes in
securities of the money market, such as T bills
and commercial paper.
Money Market
Instruments - Short-term debt instruments (such as
U.S. Treasury bills, commercial paper, and
banker's acceptances) that reflect current
interest rates and that, because of their short
life, do not respond to interest rate changes as
longer-term instruments do.
Mortgage-Backed
Securities - A collection of mortgages bundled
into a single security and retailed to private or
institutional investors as a single security.
Mortgage Bond - A
debt instrument issued by a corporation and
secured by real estate owned by the corporation
(such as factories or office buildings).
Muni - Short for
municipal bond.
Municipal Bond - A
long-term debt instrument issued by a state or
local government. It usually carries a fixed rate
of interest, which is paid semiannually.
Municipal Note - A
short-term debt instrument of a state or local
government. Most popular are revenue, bond, and
tax anticipation notes.
Municipal
Securities Rule Making Board (MSRB) - Establishes
rules and regulations to be followed in the
trading, dealings and customer relationships
concerned in municipal securities.
Mutual Fund - A
pooling of many investors’ money for specific
investment purposes. The fund is managed by a
management company, which is responsible for
adhering to the purpose of the fund.
Return
to Top
Naked
Call - Occurs when an investor sells a call(s)
without owning the underlying securities and is
not selling to close out a position.
NASD (National
Association of Security Dealers) - A
self-regulating authority whose jurisdiction
includes the over-the-counter market.
NASDAQ (National
Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quote
System) - A communication network used to store
and access quotations for qualified
over-the-counter securities.
National
Association of Security Dealers (NASD) - A
self-regulating authority whose jurisdiction
includes the over-the-counter market.
National
Association of Security Dealers Automated
Quotation Service (NASDAQ) - A communication
network used to store and access quotations for
qualified over-the-counter securities.
National Securities
Clearing Corporation (NSCC) - A major clearing
corporation offering many services to the
brokerage community, including comparison of NYSE,
AMEX, and over-the-counter transactions.
Negotiable - A
feature of a security that enables the owner to
transfer ownership or title. A non-negotiable
instrument has no value.
Net Asset Value (NAV)
- The dollar value of an open-end fund divided by
the number of outstanding fund shares. In an
open-end fund quote, the NAV is the bid side; the
offer side is the NAV plus the sales charge.
New Issue - A
company coming to the market for the first time or
issuing additional shares.
New Shares - Shares
newly issued by a company; these shares can
usually be transferred on Renounceable Documents.
New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) - Located at 11 Wall Street, New
York, New York, a primary market for buying and
selling the securities of major corporations.
Nil Paid - A new
issue of shares, usually as the result of a rights
issue on which no payment has yet been made.
No-Load Fund - An
open-end fund that does not impose a sales charge
on customers who buy their shares.
Nominal Yield - The
interest rate stated on the face of the bond.
Nominee Name - Name
in which a security is registered and held in
trust on behalf of the beneficial owner.
Noncallable - A
note or bond that cannot be called prior to
maturity. Many Treasury and most agency securities
are noncallable.
Noncompetitive
Tender - A method of purchasing Treasury bills,
notes, and bonds directly from the Federal Reserve
at the average price during an auction of new
securities.
Noncumulative
Preferred Stock - A type of preferred stock that
does not pay back dividends to its holders.
Not Held (NH) - An
indication on an order that the execution does not
depend on time; the broker or trader should take
whatever time is necessary to ensure a good
execution.
Note - The general
name for a Treasury or agency security with an
initial maturity of fewer than 10 years.
NSCC (National
Securities Clearing Corporation) - A major
clearing corporation offering many services to the
brokerage community, including comparison of NYSE,
AMEX, and over-the-counter transactions.
NYSE Maintenance
Requirement - This is the minimum amount of equity
that the margin customer must have in his account.
However, since the house requirements are usually
higher, it is the house maintenance that is used.
Return
to Top
OCC
(Options Clearing Corporation) - A clearing
corporation owned jointly by the exchanges dealing
in listed options. OCC is the central or main
clearing corporation for listed options. Options
traded on any SEC-regulated exchange can be
settled through OCC.
OCC Prospectus - A
prospectus published by the OCC and available to
option traders upon request. It contains
information on trading options and the risks
involved.
Odd Lot - A
quantity of securities that is smaller than the
standard unit of trading, which is usually 100
shares.
Offer - The price
at which the market maker will sell shares to
investors.
Offer for Sale - A
method of bringing a company to the market. The
public can apply for shares directly at a fixed
price. A prospectus containing details of the sale
must be printed in a national newspaper.
Offer Price - The
price at which the market maker will sell shares
to investors.
Open-End Fund - A
mutual fund that makes a continuous offering of
its shares and stands ready to buy its shares upon
surrender by the shareholders. The share value is
determined by net asset value of the fund.
Open-End Management
Company - A management company that is constantly
issuing new shares.
Opening Transaction
- Refers to a customer either buying or selling an
option contract to open a new position.
Option - A contract
that entitles the buyer to buy (call) or sell
(put) a predetermined quantity of an underlying
securities for a specific period of time at a
preestablished price.
Option Adjustments
- Changes made in the terms of an option contract
on ex-dividend date when the underlying stock pays
a cash or stock dividend or when there is a stock
split, etc.
Option Agreement -
The agreement the customer must sign to trade
options in which the customer agrees to abide by
the rules of the listed option exchanges.
Option Class - The
group of options, put or call, with the same
underlying security.
Option Series - The
group of options having the same strike price,
expiration date, and unit of trading on the same
underlying stock.
Options Clearing
Corporation (OCC) - A clearing corporation owned
jointly by the exchanges dealing in listed
options. OCC is the central or main clearing
corporation for listed options. Options traded on
any SEC-regulated exchange can be settled through
OCC.
Order Book Official
(OBO) - An employee of certain exchanges who
executes limit orders on behalf of the membership.
Order Department -
The department within a brokerage firm that is
responsible for sending the customers’ orders to
the proper market for execution.
Ordinary Shares -
The most common form of share. Holders receive
dividends which vary in amount in accordance with
the profitability of the company and
recommendations of the directors. The holders are
the owners of the company. Also known as Common
Stock.
Original Issue
Zeros - Zero-coupon securities originally issued
by a corporation, government, or governmental
subdivision as zeros. A zero-coupon security not
created by severing interest and principal
payments from a preexisting bond.
OTC Bulletin Board
- An electronic service that provides selected
quotes on over-the-counter stocks.
OTC Options -
Options created by OTC firms.
Out-of-the-Money -
Options with no intrinsic value such as a call
when the market price is below the strike price of
the call or a put when the market price is above
the strike price of the put.
Over-The-Counter
Market (OTC) - Comprised of a network of telephone
and telecommunication systems over which unlisted
securities and other issues trade.
Return
to Top
Pacific
Clearing Corporation (PCC) - The clearing
corporation of the Pacific Stock Exchange.
Pacific Stock
Exchange (PSE) - This exchange operates in San
Francisco and Los Angeles.
Par - Face value;
the nominal value of a security.
Par Value - A value
that a corporation assigns to its security for
bookkeeping purposes.
Participating
Preferred - Preferred stock whose holders may
"participate" with the common
shareholders in any dividends paid over and above
those normally paid to common and preferred
stockholders.
Pass-Through
Security - Instrument representing an interest in
a pool of mortgages. Pass-throughs pay interest
and principal on a monthly basis.
Penny Stocks -
Extremely low-priced securities that trade over
the counter.
PEPS (Personal
Equity Plans) - These allow investment in a number
of shares and carry various tax benefits,
including the receipt of dividends without paying
income tax on the income and sales free from
capital gains tax on the profit.
PERQS - Performance
Equity-Linked Redemption Quarterly Pay Securities,
a service mark of Morgan Stanley. PERQs are
intermediate equity-linked debt instruments
representing either senior or subordinated debt of
the issuer. Unlike conventional debt, the
maturity date is not fixed, but rather dependent
on the price of common stock to which the security
is "linked". These debt PERQs are
not to be confudsed with Preferred stock PERQs -
Preferred Exchangeable Redemption Cumulative
Securities.
Phantom Interest -
The yearly accreted interest that a zero-coupon
security is presumed to pay each year you hold it
even though payment of interest isn’t made until
the zero matures.
Philadelphia Stock
Exchange (PHLX) - An equities and options exchange
located in Philadelphia.
PIKs -
Payment-in-kind bonds.
PINES - Public
Income Notes, represent
general, unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of
a company that are sold to the general public in
small amounts usually $25, trade on the stock
exchanges, pay fixed specified quarterly interest
payments, are redeemable at par plus accrued
interest at the option of the company after a
specified period (generally 5 years), and mature
in 30 to 50 years. PINES trade flat on the markets
(the price does not include accrued interest in
the trading price). PINES rank equally with the
company's other unsecured and unsubordinated debt.
Pink Sheets - Daily
publication providing dealer names and quotes on
penny stocks. It is actually printed on pink
paper.
Plus-Tick Rule -
SEC rule that states that no short sale may be
made when the last trade on the security was a
minus tick.
Point - A price
movement of one full increment. For example, a
stock rises one point when its price goes from 23
to 24.
Portfolio - The
different securities owned in an account of
client.
Position Limits -
The maximum number of option contracts that may be
held on the same side of the market for a
particular security. The number may vary depending
on the security.
Preemptive Right -
A right, sometimes required by the issuer's
corporate charter, by which current owners must be
given the opportunity to maintain their percentage
ownership if additional shares of the same class
are issued. Additional shares of the soon-to-be
issued security are offered to current owners in
proportion to their holders before the issue can
be offered to others. Usually one right is issued
for each outstanding share. The rights are used to
subscribe to the additional shares at a
predetermined cash amount.
Preference Shares -
These are normally fixed-income shares whose
holders have the right to receive dividends before
ordinary shareholders but after debenture and loan
stockholders have received their interest.
Preferred Stock -
Stock that represents ownership in the issuing
corporation and that has prior claim on dividends.
In the case of bankruptcy, preferred stock has a
claim on assets ahead of common stockholders. Preferred
stock is junior to the issuing entity's debt
obligations but senior to common stock in the
payment of dividends and the liquidation of
assets. The dividend can be fixed or floating and
is usually stated as a percentage of par value.
Preferred stock usually has no voting rights and
frequently has a mandatory or optional redemption
provision. The
expected dividend is part of the issue’s
description.
Premium - (1) If
the market price of a new security is higher than
the issue price, the difference is the premium. If
it is lower, the difference is called the
Discount. (2) The cost of purchasing or selling a
traded option.
Premium Bond - A
note or bond selling at a price above par.
Price/Earnings
Ratio - The current share price divided by the
last published earnings per share, where earnings
per share is net profit divided by the number of
ordinary shares.
Price Spread - A
spread in which the two options have the same
expiration date but have different exercise or
strike price.
Primary Dealer -
Any of 40 firms recognized by the Treasury
Department as eligible to bid on Treasury and
agency securities when they are initially issued
and to make a market for secondary buyers.
Primary Market -
(1) The initial offering of certain debt issues.
(2) The main exchanges for equity trading.
Principal - A
brokerage firm when it acts as a dealer and marks
up a purchase price or marks down a sale price
when reporting the execution.
Private Company - A
company which is not a public company and does not
offer its shares to the general public.
Private Placement -
An issue that is offered to a single or a few
investors as opposed to being publicly offered.
Privatization -
Conversion of a state run company to public
limited company status often accompanied by a sale
of its shares to the public.
Probate Price - The
price used to assess the value of shares for
inheritance tax purposes. Calculated on the
"quarter up" principle. That is, instead
of taking the Mid Price in the Official List, the
difference between the two prices (bid and offer)
given under "quotation" is divided by
four, and the result added to the lower of the two
prices.
Prospectus - A
document that explains the terms of a new security
offering — the officers, the outside public
accounting firms, the legal opinion, and so on.
Must be given to any customer who purchases new
corporate and certain muni issues.
Proxy - A form and
a process for voting via the mail, permitting
stockholders to vote on key corporate issues
without having to attend the actual meeting.
Proxy Fight - An
attempt by a dissident group to take over the
management of a corporation. The group sends
proxies electing them to the board; the current
management sends proxies favoring them. The
shareholders cast their votes by selecting one
proxy or the other.
Public Limited
Company (PLC) - A public company limited by shares
and having a share capital, and which may offer
shares for purchase by the general public. Only
PLC’s may qualify for listing or trading on the
USM on the London Stock Exchange.
Public Market - The
listed exchanges through which zero-coupon
investments can be purchased and sold.
Public Offering
Date - The first day the new issue is offered to
the public, on or shortly after the effective
date.
Purchase Price -
The amount paid to purchase a Treasury or agency
obligation.
Put - An option
that permits the owner to sell a standard amount
of an underlying security at a set price for a
predetermined period.
Return
to Top
Quarterly
Refunding - Auctions of Treasury notes and bonds
occurring in May, August, November, and February.
QUICS - Quarterly
Income Capital Securities created by Lehman
Brothers. These are subordinated debentures
with interest payments that can be deferred at the
issuer's option, usually for up to five
years. Usually sold
in small denominations (generally $25 per bond),
paying quarterly interest.
QUIDS
- Quarterly Income Debt Securities created by
Goldman Sachs & Co. These are junior
subordinated debentures with interest payments
that can be deferred at the issuer's option,
usually for up to five years. They have been
issued in exchange for a company's preferred
stock. Interest is deductible for corporate
income tax purposes while preferred stock
dividends are not. Usually
sold
in small denominations (generally $25 per bond),
paying quarterly interest.
Quotation - The
current bid price and the current ask price of a
security.
Quote - The highest
bid and lowest offer on a given security at a
particular time.
Return
to Top
Range
- The high and low prices for the day for a
security.
Rating - The
alphabetical designation attesting to the
investment quality of a bond. Treasury and agency
securities are AAA-rated, said to be
"investment grade."
RATS (Registered
Certificates of Accrual on Treasury Securities) -
Another trade name for derivative zeros backed by
U.S. Treasury obligations.
Receiver's
Certificate - A certificate issued when a company
is in financial trouble. Its purpose is to provide
the company with funds to complete processing
cycles so that more money can be obtained through
its liquidation.
Record Date - The
day that an individual must be the owner of record
to be entitled to an upcoming dividend.
Red Herring - The
preliminary prospectus. The name comes from the
advisory that is printed on the face of the
prospectus in red ink.
Redemption - The
retiring of a debt instrument by paying cash.
Redemption Date -
The date on which a security (usually a fixed
interest stock), is due to be repaid by the issuer
at its full face value. The year is included in
the title of the security; the actual redemption
date is that on which the last interest is due to
be paid.
Redemption Notice -
A notice that a corporation or a municipality is
calling or redeeming a certain issue of bonds.
Refunding - The
retiring of a debt instrument by issuing a new
debt instrument.
Reg T Excess - In a
margin account, the amount by which the loan value
exceeds the debit balance.
Registered Bond - A
bond on which the owner's name appears on the
certificate.
Registered Form -
The recording of a security's ownership on the
issuer's central ledger. Anyone delivering the
security must prove that he or she is, in fact,
the person to whom the securities is registered.
Registered to
Principal Only - A feature of a bond whose
ownership is recorded on a central ledger and
whose interest payments are made only when coupons
are detached and cashed in. Payments are not
automatically sent to the owner.
Registered Trader -
A member of an exchange who is responsible for
adding "liquidity" to the marketplace by
purchasing or selling assigned securities from his
or her inventory. Also known as competitive market
makers or option principal members.
Registrar - A
commercial bank or trust company that controls the
issuance of securities.
Registration
Statement - Document filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) explaining an impending
issue and pertinent data about the issuer. Based
on the information provided, the SEC either
permits or prevents the issue from being offered.
Regular Way -
Settlement on the 3rd business day following the
trade date.
Regular Way
Contract - The first contract sheet received from
NSCC that contains compared, uncompared, and
advisory data.
Regular Way
Delivery - A type of settlement calling for
delivery on the third business day after trade
dates for stocks, corporate bonds, municipals. For
government bonds and options, delivery is the
first business day after trade.
Regulation A - A
regulation governing the issuance of new
securities.
Regulation T (Reg
T) - A federal regulation that governs the lending
of money by brokerage firms to its customers.
Reinvestment
Opportunity - Ability to reinvest interest and
principal paid by income securities.
Reinvestment Rate -
Rate of interest earned by reinvesting interest
payments rather than consuming them as current
income.
Reinvestment Risk -
The prospect that securities will not be able to
pay higher rates of interest when general interest
rates rise or retain previous levels of interest
when general interest rates fall.
Renounceable
Documents - Temporary evidence of ownership, of
which there are four main types. When a company
offers shares to the public, it sends an Allotment
Letter to the successful applicants; if it makes a
rights issue, it sends a Provisional Allotment
Letter to its shareholders, or in the case of a
capitalization issue, a Renounceable Certificate.
All of these are in effect bearer securities and
are valuable. Each includes full instructions on
what the holder should do if he wishes to have the
newly-issued shares registered in his name or if
he wishes to renounce them in favor of somebody
else.
Repurchase
Agreement (Repo) - An agreement used to finance
certain government and money market inventory
positions. The brokerage firm sells securities to
the financing organization with the agreement that
the firm will repurchase them in the short-term
future.
Restricted Account
- As defined by Regulation T, a margin account in
which the debit balance exceeds the loan value.
Restricted
Securities - Unregistered securities acquired in a
transaction that does not involve a public
offering.
Retention
Requirement - The amount that must be retained in
a restricted margin account if anything is to be
withdrawn.
Revenue
Anticipation Note (RAN) - A short-term debt
instrument that is issued by municipalities and
that is to be paid off by future (anticipated)
revenue.
Revenue Bond - A
municipal bond whose issuer’s ability to pay
interest and principal is based on revenue earned
from a specific project.
Right - A
certificate showing that the stockholder has the
privilege of purchasing new securities in
proportion to the number of shares he owns before
the general public.
Rights Issue - An
invitation to existing shareholders to purchase
additional shares in the company
Rights Offering -
An offering that gives each shareholder a chance
to exercise his preemptive rights.
Rights Arbitrage -
The simultaneous purchase and sale of different
securities in anticipation of a merger or tender
offer.
RNS (Regulatory
News Service) - A service operated by the
Exchange, in its role as competent authority for
listing, which ensures that price-sensitive
information from listed and USM companies is
collected and then disseminated to all RNS
subscribers at the same time.
Roth IRA - An
individual retirement fund. Contributions are not
tax deductible, but withdrawals are tax exempt if
an individual has been in the plan at least five
years and is at least 59-1/2. Income limits and
additional rules apply.
Round Lot - A
standard trading unit. In common stocks, 100
shares make up a round lot. A round lot of bonds
in the over-the-counter market is 5 bonds.
Rule 144 - Rule
that governs the sale of control and restricted
securities.
Rules of Fair
Practice - Part of the NASD rules that govern the
dealings of firms with the public.
Return
to Top
Sales
Charge - The amount added to the net asset value
of a mutual fund to determine the offering price.
Sallie Mae -
Nickname for the Student Loan Marketing
Association and the securities it issues.
Same-Day
Substitution - The buying of one security and the
selling of another security, usually of equal
value, on the same day.
Secondary Market -
The market in which securities are traded after
the initial (or primary) offering. Gauged by the
number of issues traded. The over-the-counter
market is the largest secondary market.
Securities -
General name for all stocks and shares of all
types. In common usage, stocks are fixed interest
securities and shares are the rest, though
strictly speaking, the distinction is that stocks
are denominated in money terms.
Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) - The federal agency
responsible for the enforcement of laws governing
the securities industry.
Securities Industry
Automated Corporation (SIAC) - The computer
facility and trade processing company for NYSE,
AMEX, NSCC, and PCC.
Securities Investor
Protection Corporation (SIPC) - Non-profit
organization consisting of members of the
securities industry who support it on an
assessment basis. If a member should fail, that
member’s customers are protected up to a maximum
of $500,000, including up to $100,000 in cash.
Segregation - The
isolation of securities that the firm may not use
for hypothecation or loan. The securities, which
must be "locked up" by the firm,
represent fully paid-for securities or the portion
of a margin account in excess of loanable
securities.
Sell/Write - An
advanced option order that combines the short
selling of an equity and the selling of a put
option on the same underlying stock.
Seller's Option - A
settlement that calls for delivery and payment
according to the number of days specified by the
seller.
Sell-Out - Occurs
when a contract brokerage firm's client incurs a
margin or maintenance call and does not settle the
balance by settlement date. The firm then sells
the securities at the best price available and the
buyer is held liable for the price and costs.
Serial Bonds - An
issue of bonds that matures over a period of
years.
Serial Maturity -
Type of bond maturity in which part of the issue
matures at different times until the whole issue
has matured.
Series - Refers to
options with the same underlying security, same
expiration date, same exercise price and the same
type.
Settled Inventory -
The portion of a trader's position that the firm
has paid for and maintains. This is the portion
that must be financed.
Settlement Date -
The day when a transaction is to be completed. On
this day, the buyer is to pay and the seller is to
deliver. Settlement is normally 3 business days on
listed equities and 1 business day on listed
options.
Settlement Date
Inventory - The total of all positions in a
security on settlement date, including fault,
transfer, fails and elsewhere.
SFA (The Securities
and Futures Authority, previously known as The
Securities Association) - The Self-Regulating
Organization responsible for regulating the
conduct of brokers and dealers in securities,
options and futures, including most member firms
of the Exchange.
Short Account -
Account in which the customer has sold short
securities. Before a customer may sell short, a
margin account must be opened.
Short Exempt - A
phrase used to describe a short sale that is
exempt from the short sale rules. For example,
buying a convertible preferred, submitting
conversion instructions, and selling the common
stock before the stock is received.
Short Position -
(1) A position in a customer’s account in which
the customer either owes the firm securities or
has some other obligation to meet. (2) Any
position on the firm’s security records having a
credit balance.
Short Sale - The
sale of securities that are not owned or that are
not intended for delivery. The short seller
"borrows" the stock to make delivery
with the intent to buy it back at a later date at
a lower price.
Short-Term Bonds -
Those maturing within five years.
Size - The number
of shares available in a quote. For example, if
the quote and size on a stock is 9-3/8 to 9-1/2
3x5, it means that the bid is 9-3/8, the offer is
9-1/2, 300 shares are bid, and 500 shares are
offered.
Specialist - A
member of certain SEC-regulated exchanges who must
make a market in assigned securities. Specialists
also act as two-dollar brokers in executing orders
entrusted to them.
Spin Off - Giving
stock dividend in another CUSIP, usually a
subsidiary.
Split Fund - A
mutual fund or unit trust that contains Treasury
securities and other types of investments.
Spread - The
difference between the bid and offer sides of a
quote.
Spread Order - An
advanced option order that combines the purchase
and sale of two puts or two calls on the same
underlying security.
SRO
(Self-Regulating Organization) - An organization
recognized by the SIB and responsible for
monitoring the conduct of business by, and capital
adequacy of, investment firms.
Stock - A security
that represents ownership in a corporation and
that is issued in "shares".
Stock Ahead -
Refers to a limit order that has not been executed
because of other orders at the same limit that
were entered earlier.
Stock Dividends - A
dividend paid by corporations from retained
earnings in the form of stock. The corporation
declares the dividend as a percentage of shares
outstanding.
Stock Power - A
form that may be endorsed in lieu of endorsing the
back of the stock certificate.
Stock Record - A
ledger on which all security movements and
positions are recorded. The record is usually in
two formats: One shows movements of the security
the previous day and the other shows the current
security positions.
Stock Splits - The
exchange of existing shares of stock for more
newly issued shares from the same corporation.
Since the number of shares outstanding increase,
the price per share goes down. Splits do not
increase or decrease the capitalization of the
company, just redistributes it over more shares.
The effect is the adjustment to the trading price.
Stockholder’s
Equity - Company’s net worth. Total liabilities
are subtracted from the total assets to arrive at
this figure.
Stop Limit Order -
This order is similar to a stop order, but it
becomes a limit order instead of a market order
when the price is reached or passed. Buy stop
limit orders are entered above the current market;
sell stops are extended below it.
Stop Order A
memorandum order that becomes a market order when
the price is reached or passed. Buy stops are
entered above the current market price; sell stops
are entered below it.
Straddle -
Simultaneous long or short positions of puts and
calls having the same underlying security and same
strike price.
Strangle - An
option strategy that refers to writing a call and
a put with different strike prices on the same
underlying security.
Street Name - A
form of registration in which securities are
registered in the name of a brokerage firm, bank,
or depository; it is acceptable as good delivery.
Strike (Exercise)
Price - The price at which an option can be
exercised. For example, the owner of a call ABC
April 40 can call in (buy) 100 shares of ABC at
40; the strike price is 40.
Subject Quote - A
quote given to indicate the current market status
but is not to be taken as a firm ask or bid.
Subordinated
Debenture - A debenture whose claim to interest
and principal of the corporation comes after those
of regular debentures and other debt securities.
Subscription Right
- A stockholder's right to maintain his
proportionate ownership in the company by being
given the opportunity to buy newly issued stock
before the general public.
Supplemental
Contract - A contract issued by the clearing
corporation that includes the total of the regular
way contract, adjustments made through advisories,
and adds by seller processing.
Return
to Top
Takeover
- The acquisition of control over a corporation by
another company, which normally ousts the current
management. The takeover can occur by means of a
proxy fight or the acquisition of a controlling
quantity of common stock.
TALISMAN - The
Exchange's computerized settlement system.
Target Fund - A
mutual fund containing bonds that mature in a
single year, giving the entire fund a terminal
maturity in that year.
Tax Anticipation
Bill - Short-term security similar to a T bill
that is accepted at par in payment of corporate
federal taxes.
Tax Anticipation
Note - A municipal note issued in anticipation of
revenues from a future tax.
Tax Exempt Bonds -
Municipal securities (whose interest is free from
federal income tax).
Tenants In Common -
A joint account in which the death of one of the
owners would cause his/her share of the account to
be retained by his/her estate.
Tender Offer - The
offer made by one company or individual for shares
of another company. The offer may be in the form
of cash or securities.
Term Maturity -
Bonds of an issue all mature on the same date.
Term Structure of
Interest Rates - A graph representing the yield to
maturity of Treasury securities at identified
years of maturity.
TIGRs - Acronym for
Treasury Investment Growth Receipt, a Merrill
Lynch service mark for its zero coupon U.S.
Treasury bond product of the 1980's.
Trade Confirmation
- Written verification and information concerning
a transaction that is sent to the customer on or
before the first business day following the trade
date.
Trade Date - The
day a trade occurs.
Traded Options -
Transferable Options with the right to buy and
sell a standardized amount of a security at a
fixed price within a specified period.
Trading
Authorization - Written permission for one to
trade in another’s account.
Transfer - The
process by which securities are reregistered to
new owners. The old securities are canceled and
new ones issued to the new registrants.
Transfer Agent - A
commercial bank that retains the names and
addresses of registered securities owners and that
reregisters traded securities to the name of the
new owners.
Treasury Bills -
Obligations issued by the Department of the
Treasury maturing in 13, 26, or 52 weeks.
Treasury Bond -
Long-term (10 to 30 years), fixed interest
government debt security.
Treasury Direct -
The program through which investors may purchase
new issues of Treasury bills, notes, and bonds
directly from the Federal Reserve.
Treasury Note -
Medium-term (1 to 10 years), fixed interest
government debt security.
TRUPs - A Salomon
Smith Barney acronym for a Trust Preferred
Security.
Trust Indenture -
Written agreement between a corporation and its
debt issue holders stating interest rates,
maturity dates, collateral, etc.
Trust
Preferred Securities
- Trust preferreds represent most of the new
preferred offerings coming to the market today.
Trust preferreds are a hybrid security consisting
of a preferred stock issued by a special trust and
debt securities issued by the company. The special
trust is a subsidiary of the company set up solely
for the purpose of selling and administrating the
trust preferreds. The trust sells their preferred
securities to investors, in denominations ranging
from $25 upward, and then uses the proceeds from
the sale of the preferred stock to buy debt
securities (debentures, etc.) from the company
setting up the trust. The interest payments from
the debt securities are used to fund the preferred
stock's distributions. When the debt securities
mature and are paid off, the trust in turn uses
those funds to pay off the trust preferred
securities which mature at the same time. Trust
preferreds are subject to redemption, generally at
the issue or liquidation preference price, and
generally in five years from the date of issue.
Redemption of the securities, on or after the
specified optional redemption date, is optional
for the trust but the call for redemption is
mandatory for the holder of the securities. The
advantage of this hybrid arrangement to the
company is that the interest paid on the debt
securities is deductible from their income taxes
while normal preferred dividends would not be
deductible.
Two-Dollar Broker -
An exchange member who executes orders from other
member firms and charges a fee for each execution.
Type - Refers to an
option being either a put or a call.
Return
to Top
Underlying
- The security on which options are being bought
or sold.
Underlying Security
- The security on which options are being bought
or sold.
Underwriter
(Investment Banker) - In a municipal underwriting,
a brokerage firm or bank that acts as a conduit by
taking the new issue from the municipality and
reselling it. In a corporate offering, the
underwriter must be a brokerage firm.
Underwriting - The
process by which investment bankers bring new
issues to the market.
Underwriting
Manager - (1) In a negotiated underwriting, the
investment banker whose client is the corporation
wanting to bring out a new issue. (2) In a
competitive underwriting, the lead firm in a group
that is competing with other group(s) for a new
issue.
Uniform Gift to
Minors Accounts (UGMA) - A method of securities
ownership whereby parents or other relatives may
contribute cash or securities to children.
Portions of returns generated by the securities
are taxed at the children’s tax bracket instead
of parents’ presumably higher bracket.
Uniform Practice
Code - Part of the NASD rules that govern the
dealing of firms with each other.
Unit - At issuance,
a "package" of securities, such as a
bond and warrant, which become separable at a
later date.
Unit Investment
Trust - An investment company organized under a
trust indenture that sells interest in its
portfolio in terms of redeemable securities.
Unit Trust -
Similar to a mutual fund. A portfolio of
securities, including mortgage-backed securities,
offered by a brokerage or mutual fund.
Unlisted Securities
Market (USM) - The Exchange's market for
medium-sized companies which do not qualify for,
or do not wish to have a full listing.
Unlisted Security -
(1) A security which has not been admitted to the
Stock Exchange's Daily Official List. Usually the
issuer will be an unlisted company, but not
always; it is not uncommon for a company to apply
for its Ordinary Shares to be listed but not its
loan stocks, or vice versa. (2) A security traded
on the USM.
Unwind - An
advanced option order that is used with the
intention of closing an existing Buy/Write or
Sell/Write position.
Uptick - A listed
equity trade at a price that is higher than that
of the last sale.
U.S. Treasury Bill
(T Bill) - The shortest-term instrument issued by
the federal government. The maturities of these
discounted issues do not exceed one year at
issuance, with three-month (90-day) or six-month
(180-day) paper being very common.
U.S. Treasury Bond
(T Bond) - The longest-term debt of the federal
government, issued in coupon form for period of 10
to 30 years.
Return
to Top
Volatility
- Relative measure of a security's price movement
during a specific time.
Voting Trust - The
deposit of shares with a trustee to gain long-term
corporate control.
Return
to Top
Warrant
- A security that allows the owner to purchase the
issuing corporation's stock for a certain price
over stated period. That period could be 10 or 20
years, and the price of the conversion is much
higher than the current price of stock issue. A
warrant is usually issued with another security,
such as one warranty plus one bond, both of which
form on unit.
Weighted Average
Maturity - The arithmetic mean of maturities of
securities held by a mutual fund.
White Knight - A
company that rescues another in financial
difficulty, especially one which saves a company
from an unwelcome takeover bid.
Work-Out Quote -
Subject quote in which the trader estimates the
price at which he thinks the security can be
bought or sold if given time to find a market.
Writer - Seller of
an option contract to open.
Return
to Top
Yellow
Sheets - Wholesale quote sheet for corporate bonds
used by dealers.
Yield - The rate of
return on an investment. There are as many
computations as there are different yields, such
as current yield and yield to maturity.
Yield Curve - A
graph linking the term structure of interest rates
and showing the general pattern of yields to
maturity on Treasury obligations.
Yield Elbow - The
point on the yield curve that indicates the year
at which the economy's highest interest rates
occur.
Yield to Call - The
percentage a bond will yield to the date at which
it is eligible to be redeemed by its issuer.
Yield to Maturity -
The total percentage yield a bond will produce if
held for its full term of maturity.
Return
to Top
Zero
Coupon CD - A certificate of deposit that pays
interest only upon maturity.
Zero-Minus Tick - A
stock trade at a price equal to the preceding
trade but lower than the last different price.
Zero-Plus Tick -
Term given to a sale made at the same price as the
trade that preceded it providing that the previous
trade was above the price of the sale it
proceeded.
Return
to Top |