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A
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X
Y
Z
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- A
- Fifth letter of a
NASDAQ
stock symbol specifying Class 'A' shares.
- A.B.O.
- See:
Accumulated Benefit Obligation
- A.C.H.
- See:
Automated Clearing House
- A.C.R.S.
- See:
Accelerated cost recovery system
- A.C.U.
- See:
Asian currency units
- A.D.R.
- See:
American Depository Receipt
- A.D.S.
- See:
American Depository Share
- A.E.X.
- See:
Amsterdam Exchange
- A.F.M.
- See:
Amman Financial Market
- A.I.B.D.
- Association of International Bond Dealers
- A.O.N.
- See:
All or none order
- A.O.S.
- See:
Automated Order System
- A.M.E.X.
- See:
American Stock Exchange
- A.P.R.
- See:
Annual Percentage Rate
- A.P.T.
- See:
Arbitrage Pricing Theory
- A.P.T.
- See:
Automated Pit Trading
- A.P.V.
- See:
Adjusted Present Value
- A.P.Y.
- See:
Annual Percentage Yield
- A.R.M.
- See:
Adjustable rate mortgage
- A.R.P.S.
- See:
Adjustable rate preferred stock
- A.R.P.S.
- See:
Auction rate preferred stock
- A.R.R.
- See:
Average rate of return
- A.S.X.
- See:
Australian Stock Exchange
- Abandonment option
- The
option of terminating an
investment earlier than originally planned.
- Abnormal returns
- The component of the
return that is not
due to
systematic influences (market wide influences). In other words,
abnormal returns are above those predicted by the
market movement alone. Related:
excess returns.
- Absolute priority
- Rule in
bankruptcy proceedings
whereby senior
creditors are required to be paid in full before junior creditors receive any payment.
- Absorbed
- Used in context of general equities. Securities are "absorbed" as long as there are corresponding
orders to
buy and sell. The
market has reached the absorption point when further assimilation is impossible without an adjustment in price. See:
sell the book.
- Accelerated cost recovery
system (A.C.R.S.)
- Schedule of
depreciation
rates allowed for tax purposes.
- Accelerated depreciation
- Any
depreciation method that
produces larger deductions for depreciation in the early years of a
asset's life.
Accelerated cost recovery system (A.C.R.S.), which is a depreciation schedule allowed for tax purposes, is one such example.
- Accounting exposure
- The change in the value of a firm's
foreign currency denominated accounts due to a change in
exchange rates.
- Accounting earnings
-
Earnings of a firm as reported on its
income statement.
- Accounting insolvency
- Total
liabilities exceed total
assets. A firm with a negative
net worth is
insolvent on the books.
- Accounting liquidity
- The ease and quickness with which
assets
can be converted to cash.
- Accounts payable
- Money owed to suppliers.
- Accounts receivable
- Money owed by customers.
-
Accounts receivable turnover
- The ratio of net credit sales to
average
accounts receivable, a measure of how quickly customers pay their bills.
- Accretion (of a discount)
- In portfolio accounting, a straight-line accumulation of
capital gains on a
discount bond in anticipation of receipt of
par at
maturity.
- Accrual bond
- A
bond on which
interest accrues, but is not paid to the
investor during the time of accrual. The amount of
accrued interest is added to the remaining
principal of the bond and is paid at
maturity.
- Accrued interest
- Mainly applies to convertible securities.
Interest that has accumulated between the most recent payment and the sale of a
bond or other fixed-income
security. At the time of sale, the buyer pays the seller the
bond's price plus "accrued interest," calculated by multiplying the
coupon rate by the fraction of the
coupon period that has elapsed since the last payment. (If a
bondholder receives $40 in
coupon payments per bond semi-annually and sells the bond one quarter of the way into the coupon period, the buyer pays the seller $10 as the latter's proportion of interest earned.)
-
Accumulated Benefit Obligation (A.B.O.)
- An approximate measure of the
liability of a pension plan in the event of a termination at the date the calculation is performed. Related:
projected benefit obligation.
- Acid-test ratio
- Also called the
quick ratio, the ratio of
current assets minus inventories, accruals, and prepaid items to
current liabilities.
- Acquiree
- A firm that is being acquired.
- Acquirer
- A firm or individual that is acquiring something.
- Acquisition
- When a firm buys another firm.
- Acquisition of assets
- A
merger or
consolidation in which an acquirer purchases the selling firm's
assets.
- Acquisition of stock
- A
merger or
consolidation in which an acquirer purchases the acquiree's
stock.
- Act of state doctrine
- This doctrine says that a nation is sovereign within its own borders and its domestic actions may not be questioned in the courts of another nation.
- Active
- A
market in which there is frequent
trading.
- Active portfolio strategy
- A strategy that uses available information and forecasting techniques to seek a better performance versus a
portfolio
that is simply diversified broadly. Related:
passive portfolio strategy.
- Actual market
- Used in context of general equities.
Firm market. Antithesis of
subject market.
- Actuals
- The physical
commodity
underlying a
futures contract.
Cash commodity, physical.
- A-D
- Refers to Advance-Decline. Measurement of the number of
issues
trading above their previous closing prices less the number trading below their previous closing prices over a particular period. As a technical measure of
market breadth, the steepness of the A-D line graphically shows whether a strong
bull or
bear market is underway.
- Additional hedge
- A protection against borrower
fallout risk in the
mortgage pipeline.
- Adjustable rate
- Mainly applies to convertible securities. Refers to
interest rate or
dividend which is adjusted periodically, usually based on a standard market rate outside the control of the bank or savings institution, such as that prevailing on
Treasury bonds or
notes. Typically, such
issues have a set floor or ceiling, called
caps and
collars which limit the adjustment.
-
Adjustable rate preferred stock (A.R.P.S.)
- Publicly
traded
issues that may be
collateralized by
mortgages and
M.B.S.s.
- Adjusted present value (A.P.V.)
- The
net present value analysis of an
asset if financed solely by
equity (present value of un-levered
cash flows), plus the
present value of any financing decisions (levered cash flows). In other words, the various
tax shields provided by the deductibility of
interest and the benefits of other
investment tax credits are calculated separately. This analysis is often used for highly leveraged transactions such as a
leveraged buy-out.
-
Administrative pricing rules
- IRS rules used to allocate income on export sales to a
foreign sales corporation.
- Advance commitment
- A promise to sell an
asset before the seller has lined up purchase of the asset. This seller can
offset
risk by
purchasing a
futures contract to approximately fix the sales price.
- Adverse selection
- A situation in which
market participation is a negative
signal.
- Affirmative covenant
- A
bond covenant that specifies
certain actions the firm must take.
- After-tax profit margin
- The ratio of
net income to
net sales.
-
After-tax real rate of return
- The after-tax rate of return minus the
inflation rate.
- Agencies
- See:
Federal agency securities.
- Agency
- Used in context of general equities. Act of buying or selling for the account and
risk of a customer. Generally, an agent, or
broker, acts as intermediary between buyer and seller, taking no financial risk personally or as a firm, and charging a commission for the service. The broker represents a customer buyer/seller to a customer seller/buyer and does not act as
principal for the firm's own
trading account. Antithesis of
principal. See:
dealer.
- Agency bank
- A form of organization commonly used by foreign banks to enter the U.S.
market. An agency bank cannot accept deposits or extend
loans in its own name; it acts as agent for the parent bank. It is also the financial institution that
issues
A.D.R.s to the general
market.
- Agency basis
- A means of compensating the
broker of a
program trade solely on the basis of
commission established through
bids submitted by various brokerage firms.
- Agency cost view
- The argument that specifies that the various
agency costs create a complex environment in which total agency costs are at a minimum with some, but less than 100%,
debt financing.
- Agency costs
- The incremental costs of having an
agent make decisions for a
principal.
-
Agency incentive arrangement
- A means of compensating the broker of a
program trade using
benchmark
prices for
issues to be traded in determining
commissions or fees.
- Agency pass-throughs
-
Mortgage pass-through securities whose
principal and
interest payments are guaranteed by government agencies, such as the
Government National Mortgage Association ("Ginnie Mae"),
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Mac") and
Federal National Mortgage Association("Fannie Mae").
- Agency problem
- Conflicts of interest among
stockholders,
bondholders, and
managers.
- Agency theory
- The analysis of
principal-agent relationships, wherein one person, an
agent, acts on behalf of another person, a
principal.
- Agent
- The decision-maker in a
principal-agent relationship.
- Aggregation
- Process in corporate
financial planning whereby the smaller investment proposals of
each of the firm's operational units are aggregated and effectively treated as a whole.
- Aggressively
- Used in context of general equities. For a customer it means working to
buy or sell one's
stock, with an emphasis on execution over price. For a
trader it means acting in a way that puts the firm's capital at higher risk through paying a higher price, selling cheaper, or making a larger
short sale or
purchase than the trader would under normal circumstances.
- Aging schedule
- A table of
accounts receivable
broken down into age categories (such as 0-30 days, 30-60 days, and 60-90 days), which is used to determine if customer payments are keeping close to schedule.
- Ahead of itself
- Used in context of general equities. Refers to equities that are
overbought or
oversold on a fundamental basis.
- "Ahead of you"
- Used for listed equity securities. At the same price but entered ahead of your
order/interest, usually referring to the
specialist's book. See:
behind,
matched orders,
priority,
stock ahead.
-
AIMR Performance Presentation Standards Implementation Committee
- The Association for Investment Management and Research (AIMR's) Performance Presentation Standards Implementation Committee is charged with the responsibility to interpret, revise and update the AIMR Performance Presentation Standards (AIMR-PPS(TM) for
portfolio performance presentations.
- All equity rate
- The
discount rate that reflects only the
business risks of a project, distinct from the effects of financing.
- All or none order (A.O.N.)
- Used in context of general equities. A
limited price order which is to be
executed in its entirety or not at all (no partial transaction), and thus is testing the strength/conviction of the counterparty. Unlike an
F.O.K. order, an A.O.N. order is not to be treated as
cancelled if not executed as soon as it is represented in the
trading crowd, but instead remains alive until executed or cancelled. The making of "all or none"
bids or
offers in
stocks is prohibited and the making of "all or none"
bids or
offers in
bonds is subject to the restrictions of Rule 61. A.O.N. orders are not shown on the
specialist's book because they can not be traded in pieces. Antithesis of
any-part-of order. See:
F.O.K. order.
- All-in cost
- Total costs, explicit and implicit.
- All-or-none underwriting
- An arrangement whereby a
security
issue is
canceled if the
underwriter is unable to re-sell
the entire issue.
- Alpha
- Measure of risk adjusted performance. An alpha is usually generated by regressing the
security or
mutual fund's
excess return on the
S&P 500 excess return. The
beta adjusts for the
risk (the slope coefficient). The alpha is the intercept. Example: Suppose the mutual fund has a return of 23% and the short-term
interest rate is 5% (excess return is 20%). During the same time the market excess return is 9%. Suppose the beta of the mutual fund is 2.0 (twice as risky as the S&P 500). The
expected return given the risk is 2x9%=18%. The actual excess return is 20%. Hence, the alpha is 2% or 200
basis points. Alpha is also know as
Jensen Index. Related:
Risk adjusted return.
- Alpha equation
- Regression usually run over 36-60 months of data: Return-Treasury bill= alpha + beta (S&P 500 - Treasury bill) + error. The alpha is the intercept. Note that the
benchmark does not necessarily have to be the
S&P 500. A
mutual fund specializing in international investment might be benchmarked to a broader world market index, such as the MSCI World Index.
-
Alternative mortgage
instruments
- Variations of
mortgage
instruments such as
adjustable-rate and variable-rate mortgages,
graduated-payment mortgages,0
reverse-annuity mortgages, and several seldom-used variations.
- Alternative order
- Used in context of general equities.
Order giving a
broker a choice between two courses of action either to
buy or sell, never both.
Execution of one course automatically eliminates the other. An example is a combination buy limit/buy
stop order, wherein the buy limit is below the current
market and the buy stop is above. If the order is for one unit of
trading when one part of the order is executed on the occurrence of one alternative, the order on the other alternative is to be treated as
cancelled. If the order is for an amount larger than one unit of trading, the number of units executed determine the amount of the alternative order to be treated as cancelled.
Either-or order.
-
American Depository Receipts
(A.D.R.s)
- Certificates issued by a U.S. depositary bank, representing foreign
shares held by the bank, usually by a branch or correspondent in the country of issue. One A.D.R. may represent a portion of a foreign share, one share or a bundle of shares of a foreign corporation. If the A.D.R.'s are "sponsored," the corporation provides financial information and other assistance to the bank and may subsidize the administration of the A.D.R.s. "Unsponsored" A.D.R.s do not receive such assistance. A.D.R.s carry the same currency, political and economic risks as the
underlying foreign share. Arbitrage keeps the prices of A.D.R.s and underlying foreign shares, adjusted for the
SDR/ordinary ration essentially equal.
American depository shares(A.D.S.s) are a similar form of certification.
- A.D.R. Fees
- Fees associated with the creating or releasing of
A.D.R.s from ordinary
shares, charged by the commercial banks with correspondent banks in the international sites.
- A.D.R. Ratio
- The number of ordinary
shares into which an
A.D.R. can be converted.
- American depository share (A.D.S.)
- Foreign stock
issued in the U.S. and registered in the
A.D.R. system.
- American option
- An
option that may be exercised at any time up to and including the
expiration date. Related:
European option
- American shares
- Securities certificates
issued in the U.S. by a
transfer agent acting on behalf of the foreign
issuer. The certificates represent claims to foreign equities.
- American Stock Exchange (A.M.E.X.)
-
Stock exchange with the third largest volume of trading in the U.S. Located at 86 Trinity Place in downtown Manhattan. The bulk of trading on A.M.E.X. consists of
index options (computer technology index, institutional index, major market index) and
shares of small to medium-size companies is predominant. Recently merged with
N.A.S.D.A.Q. See:
Curb.
- American-style option
- An
option
contract that can be
exercised at any time between the date of purchase and the
expiration date. Most
exchange-traded
options are American style.
- Amman Financial Market (A.F.M.)
- Established in 1976, the A.F.M. is the only
stock exchange in Jordan.
- Amortization
- The repayment of a
loan by installments.
- Amortization factor
- The
pool factor implied by the scheduled
amortization assuming no
prepayemts.
-
Amortizing interest rate swap
-
Swap in which the
principal or
notional amount rises (falls) as
interest rates rise (decline).
- Amsterdam Exchanges (A.E.X.)
- Exchange that comprises the A.E.X.-Effectenbeurs, the A.E.X.-Optiebeurs (formerly the
European Options Exchange or E.O.E.) and the A.E.X.-Agrarische Termijnmarkt. A.E.X.-Data Services is the operating company responsible for the dissemination of data from the Amsterdam Exchanges via its integrated Mercury 2000 system.
- AMTEL
- Used in context of general equities. In-house message system entered and displayed through Quotron A page.
- Analyst
- Employee of a brokerage or fund management house who studies companies and makes
buy-and-sell recommendations on
stocks of these companies. Most specialize in a specific
industry.
- Angels
- Individuals providing
venture capital.
- Announcement date
- Date on which particular news concerning a given company is announced to the public. Used in
event studies, which researchers use to evaluate the economic impact of events of interest.
- Annual effective yield
- See:
annual percentage yield.
-
Annual fund operating expenses
- For investment companies, the
management fee and "other expenses," including the expenses for maintaining
shareholder records, providing shareholders with financial statements, and providing custodial and accounting services. For
12b-1 funds, selling and marketing costs are also included.
- Annual percentage rate (A.P.R.)
- The
periodic rate times the number of periods in a year. For example, a 5% quarterly return has an A.P.R. of 20%.
- Annual percentage yield (A.P.Y.)
- The effective, or true,
annual rate of return. The A.P.Y. is the rate actually earned or paid in one year, taking into account the affect of
compounding. The A.P.Y. is calculated by taking one plus the periodic rate and raising it to the number of periods in a year. For example, a 1% per month rate has an A.P.Y. of 12.68% (1.01^12 -1).
- Annual rate of return
- There are many ways of calculating the annual rate of return. If the
rate of return is calculated on a monthly basis, we sometimes multiply this by 12 to express an annual rate of return. This is often called the
annual percentage rate (A.P.R.). The annual percentage yield
annual percentage yield (A.P.Y.), described above, is used to include the affect of compounding interest.
- Annual report
- Yearly record of a publicly held company's financial condition. It includes a description of the firm's operations, as well as
balance sheet,
income statement and cash flow statement information.
S.E.C. rules require that it be distributed to all
shareholders. A more detailed version is called a
10-K.
- Annualized gain
- If stock X appreciates 1.5% in one month, the annualized gain for that stock over a twelve month period is 12*1.5% = 18%.
Compounded over the twelve month period, the gain is (1.015)^12 -1 = 19.6%.
-
Annualized holding period return
- The
annual rate of return that when
compounded t times, generates the same t-period holding return as actually occurred from period 1 to period t.
- Annuity
- A regular periodic payment made by an insurance company to a policyholder for a specified period of time.
- Annuity due
- An
annuity with n payments, wherein the first payment is made at time t = 0 and the last payment is made at time t = n - 1.
- Annuity factor
-
Present value of $1 paid for each of t periods.
- Annuity in arrears
- An
annuity with a first payment one full period hence, rather than immediately.
- Anticipation
- Arrangements whereby customers who pay before the final date may be entitled to deduct a normal
rate of interest.
- Antidilutive effect
- Result of a transaction that increases
earnings per common share (e.g. by decreasing the number of
shares
outstanding).
- Any-or-all bid
- Often used in risk arbitrage.
Takeover
bid where the acquirer
offers to pay a set price for all
outstanding shares of the
target company, or any part thereof; contrasts with two tier bid.
- Any-part-of order
- Used in context of general equities. Order to
buy or sell a quantity of
stock in pieces if necessary. Antithesis of an
all-or-none order (A.O.N.).
- Appraisal ratio
- The signal-to-noise ratio of an
analyst's forecasts. The ratio of
alpha to residual
standard deviation.
- Appraisal rights
- A right of
shareholders in a
merger to demand the payment of a fair price for their
shares, as determined independently.
- Appropriation request
- Formal request for funds for capital investment project.
- Arbitrage
- The simultaneous buying and selling of a
security at two different
prices in two different
markets, resulting in
profits without
risk. Perfectly
efficient markets present no arbitrage opportunities. Perfectly
efficient markets seldom exist. However, arbitrage opportunities are often precluded because of transactions costs.
- Arbitrage Pricing Theory (A.P.T.)
- An alternative model to the
capital asset pricing model developed by Stephen Ross and based purely on
arbitrage arguments. The A.P.T. implies that there are multiple
risk factors that need to be taken into account when calculating risk adjusted performance or
alpha.
-
Arbitrage-free option-pricing models
-
Yield curve option-pricing models.
- Arbitrageur
- Often used in risk arbitrage. One who profits from the differences in price when the same, or extremely similar,
security,
currency, or
commodity is
traded on two or more
markets. He does so by simultaneously purchasing and selling these securities to take advantage of pricing differentials (spreads) created by market conditions. See:
risk arbitrage,
convertible arbitrage,
index arbitrage, and
international arbitrage.
- "Are you open "
- Used in context of general equities. "Can a new customer still participate on opposing side of the
trade from that which the first customer initiated?", thus inquiring as to whether or not any portion of that trade is still available (i.e., If asking customer on buy side, " is there
stock still available from the
block sold by the initial customer?"). See:
open.
-
Arithmetic average (mean)
rate of return
-
Arithmetic mean return.
- Arithmetic mean return
- An
average of the
subperiod returns, calculated by summing the subperiod returns and dividing by the number of subperiods.
- Arms index
- Also known as a trading index (TRIN)= (number of advancing
issues)/(number of declining issues)(Total up
volume )/(total down volume). An advance/decline
market indicator. Less than 1.0 indicates
bearish demand, while above 1.0 is
bullish. The index often is smoothed with a simple moving
average.
- Arm's length price
- The price at which a willing buyer and a willing unrelated seller would freely agree to transact.
- Adjustable rate mortgage (A.R.M.)
- A
mortgage that features predetermined adjustments of the loan
interest rate at regular intervals based on an established index. The
interest rate is adjusted at each interval to a rate equivalent to the
index value plus a predetermined
spread, or
margin, over the index, usually subject to per-interval and to life-of-loan interest rate and/or payment rate
caps.
- Around us
- Used in context of general equities. See:
away from us.
- Articles of incorporation
- Legal document establishing a corporation and its structure and purpose.
- Asian currency units (A.C.U.s)
- Dollar deposits held in Singapore or other Asian centers.
- Asian option
-
Option based on the average price of the
underlying assets during the life of the option.
- Ask
- This is the quoted ask, or the lowest price an
investor will accept to sell a
stock. Practically speaking, this is the quoted
offer at which an
investor can
buy
shares of
stock; also called the
offer price.
- Asked price
- Used in context of general equities. Price at which a
security or
commodity is
offered for sale on an
exchange or in the
O.T.C. Market.
- Asked to bid/offer
- Used in context of general equities. Usually a seller (buyer) looking to
aggressively sell (buy)
stock, usually asking for a capital commitment from an
investment bank.
- Asset
- Any possession that has value in an
exchange.
- Asset activity ratios
-
Ratios that measure how effectively the firm is managing its
assets.
- Asset allocation decision
- The decision regarding how an institution's funds should be distributed among the major
classes of assets in which it may invest.
- Asset-backed security
- A
security that is
collateralized by
loans,
leases, receivables, or installment
contracts on personal property, not real estate.
- Asset-based financing
- Methods of financing in which
lenders and equity investors look principally to the
cash flow from a particular
asset or set of assets for a
return on, and the return of, their financing.
- Asset classes
- Categories of
assets, such as
stocks,
bonds, real estate and foreign securities.
- Asset-coverage test
- A
bond indenture restriction that permits additional borrowing on if the ratio of
assets to
debt does not fall below a specified minimum.
- Asset/equity ratio
- The ratio of total
assets to
stockholder equity.
- Asset for asset swap
-
Creditors exchange the
debt of one
defaulting borrower for the debt of another defaulting borrower.
- Asset/liability management
- Also called
surplus management, the task of managing the funds of a financial institution to accomplish the two goals of a financial institution: (1) to earn an adequate
return on funds invested and (2) to maintain a comfortable surplus of
assets beyond
liabilities.
- Asset pricing model
- A model for determining the required or expected rate of
return on an
asset. Related:
Capital asset pricing model and
arbitrage pricing theory.
- Assets
- A firm's productive resources.
- Assets requirements
- A common element of a financial plan that describes projected capital spending and the proposed uses of net
working capital.
- Asset substitution
- Occurs when a firm invests in
assets that are riskier than those that the
debtholders expected.
- Asset substitution problem
- Arises when the
stockholders substitute
riskier
assets for the firm's existing assets and expropriate value from the
debtholders.
- Asset swap
- An
interest rate swap used to alter the
cash flow characteristics of an
institution's
assets in order to provide a better match with its
liabilities.
- Asset turnover
- The ratio of net sales to total
assets.
- Assignment
- The receipt of an
exercise notice by an
options
writer that requires the writer to sell (in the case of a
call) or
purchase (in the case of a
put) the
underlying security at the specified
strike price.
- Asymmetry
- A lack of equivalence between two things, such as the unequal tax
treatment of
interest expense and
dividend payments.
- Asymmetric information
- Information that is known to some people but not to other people.
- Asymmetric taxes
- A situation wherein participants in a transaction have different
0 net tax rates.
- Asymmetric volatility
- Phenomenon that
volatility is higher in down markets than in up markets.
- "At"/"for"
- Used in context of general equities. Paramount terms used to differentiate an
offering (offer
stock at) and
bid (bid for stock), respectively. In an
offering, the trading syntax followed is "Quantity-at-Price"; however, in a bid, the syntax followed is "Price-for-Quantity".
- At the bell
- Used in context of general equities. At the
opening or
close. See:
M.O.C. Order.
- At the figure
- Used in context of general equities. At the whole integer price (excluding the fraction) closest to the side of the
market (bid/ask) being discussed.
At the full.
- At the full
- Used in context of general equities.
At the figure.
- At-the-money
- An
option is at-the-money if the
strike price of the option is equal to the
market price of the
underlying security. For example, if xyz stock is trading at 54, then the xyz 54
option is at-the-money.
- At the opening order
- Used in context of general equities.
Market order or
limited price order which is to be
executed at the
opening (and corresponding price) of the
stock or not at all, and any such
order or the portion thereof not so executed is to be treated as
cancelled.
- Attribute bias
- The tendency of
stocks preferred by the
dividend discount model
to share certain
equity attributes such as low
price-earnings ratios, high
dividend yield, high
book-value ratio or membership in a particular
industry sector.
- Asymmetric volatility
- Phenomenon that
volatility is higher in down market than in up markets.
- Auction markets
- Markets in which the prevailing
price is determined through the free interaction of prospective buyers and sellers, as on the floor of the stock
exchange.
-
Auction rate preferred stock (A.R.P.S.)
- Floating rate
preferred
stock, the
dividend on which is
adjusted every seven weeks through a
Dutch auction.
- Auditor's report
- A section of an
annual report
containing the auditor's opinion about the veracity of the financial statements.
- Australian Stock Exchange (A.S.X.)
- Established in 1987 following the amalgamation of the six independent
stock exchanges operating in the Australian State capitals. The A.S.X. is the tenth largest
stock exchange
in the world on the basis of domestic
capitalization.
- Autex
- Used in context of general equities. Video communication network through which brokerage houses alert
institutional investors of their desire to transact
block business (a purchase or sale) in a given
security.
Indications transmit small, medium, and large sizes only, with occasional limits mentioned.
Supers are messages with specific size and price included. Both "indications" and "supers" can only be seen by customers (institutional subscribers to Autex). Trade recaps, advertised
block trades entered by the
dealer/subscribers, are also displayed, but can be seen by both institutions and dealers. See:
expunge,
size.
- Authorized shares
- Number of
shares authorized for
issuance by a firm's corporate charter.
- Autocorrelation
- The
correlation of a
variable with itself over successive time intervals. Sometimes called serial correlation
- Automated Clearing House (A.C.H.)
- A collection of 32 regional electronic interbank networks used to process transactions electronically with a guaranteed one-day bank
collection float.
- Automated Order System (A.O.S.)
-
Investment banks computerized order-entry system which sends single order entries to
D.O.T. (Odd-Lot) or to
investment banks
floor brokers on the
exchange. (Round lot,
G.T.C. orders)
- Automated Pit Trading (A.P.T.)
- Introduced in 1989, A.P.T. is the
L.I.F.F.E.
screen-based trading system that replicates the open outcry method of trading
on screen. A.P.T. is used to extend the trading day for the major futures
contracts as well as to provide a daytime trading environment for non-floor
trading products.
- Automatic stay
- The restricting of
liability holders from collection efforts related to
collateral seizure. Automatically imposed when a firm files for bankruptcy under Chapter 11.
- Autoquote
- Autoquote indicative prices are generated for many of the financial
options contracts traded at
LIFFE
using standard mathematical models as derived by
Black and Scholes and Cox-Ross-Rubenstein. Autoquote calculates prices for all series by processing
variables captured in real-time from other systems and trading members each time the
underlying price changes. Autoquotes indicate where a
series may
trade given the current level of the
underlying
instrument.
- Autoregressive
- Using past data or
variable of interest to predict future values of the same variable.
- Available on the way in
- Used in context of general equities.
Stock is available to new customer as
trade initiated by another customer is about to be consummated (on the
exchange floor). Usually said to an inquiring salesman. See:
open.
- Availability float
- Checks deposited by a company that have not yet been cleared.
- Average
- An
arithmetic mean return of selected
stocks intended to represent the behavior of the
market or some component of it. One good example is the widely quoted
Dow Jones
Industrial Average, which adds the current
prices of the 30 DJIA's stocks, and divides the results by a predetermined number, the divisor.
- Average accounting return
- The average project
earnings
after taxes and
depreciation divided by the average
book value of the investment during its life.
-
Average age of accounts receivable
- The weighted-average age of all of the firm's outstanding invoices.
-
Average collection period, or days' receivables
- The ratio of
accounts receivables
to sales, or the total amount of
credit extended per dollar of daily sales (average AR/sales * 365).
- Average cost of capital
- A firm's required payout to the
bondholders and to the
stockholders expressed as a percentage of capital contributed to the firm. Average cost of capital is computed by dividing the total required cost of capital by the total amount of contributed capital.
- Average life
- Also referred to as the
weighted-average life (W.A.L.). The average number of years that each dollar of unpaid
principal due on the
mortgage remains
outstanding. Average life is computed as the weighted average time to the receipt of all future
cash flows, using as the weights the dollar amounts of the principal paydowns.
- Average maturity
- The
average time to
maturity of
securities held by a
mutual fund. Changes in
interest rates have greater impact on funds with longer average life.
- Average (across-day) measures
- An estimation of price that uses the
average or representative price of a large number of
trades.
- Average rate of return (A.R.R.)
- The ratio of the average cash inflow to the amount invested.
- Average tax rate
- Taxes as a fraction of income; total taxes divided by total
taxable income.
- Away
- A
trade, quote, or
market that does not originate with the
dealer in question, e.g., "the
bid is 98-10 away from me."
- Away from the market
- Used in context of general equities. Out of line with the
inside market at this point in time, such as when a
bid on a
limit order is lower or the
offer price is higher than the current
market price for the
security; held by the
specialist for later
execution unless
F.O.K. Antithesis of
in-line.
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