|
| |
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
-
-
- C
-
Fifth letter of a
NASDAQ stock symbol specifying that it is exempt from NASDAQ listing requirements for a temporary period of time.
- C.A.P.M.
- See:
Capital asset pricing model
- C.A.R.s
- See:
Certificates of Automobile Receivables
- C.A.R.D.s
- See:
Certificates of Amortized Revolving Debt
- C.B.O.E.
- See:
Chicago Board Options Exchange
- C.D.
- See:
Certificate of deposit
- C.D.N.
- See:
Canadian Dealing Network
- C.E.C.
- See:
Commodities Exchange Center
- C.E.G.
- See:
Canadian Exchange Group
- C.F.A.T.
- See:
Cash flow after taxes
- C.F.C.
- See:
Controlled foreign corporation
- C.F.T.C.
- See:
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- C.H.A.P.
- See:
Clearing House Automated Payments System
- C.H.E.S.S.
- See:
Clearing House Electronic Subregister System
- C.H.I.P.S.
- See:
Clearing House Interbank Payments System
- C.M.E.
- See:
Chicago Mercantile Exchange
- C.M.L.
- See:
Capital market line
- C.M.O.
- See:
Collateralized mortgage obligation
- C.T.A.
- See:
Cumulative Translation Adjustment
- C.U.S.I.P.
- See:
Committee on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures
- Cable
- Exchange rate between British pounds sterling and the U.S.$.
- Calendar
- List of new
issues scheduled to come to market shortly.
- Calendar effect
- The tendency of
stocks to perform differently at different times, including such anomalies as the January effect, month-of-the-year effect, day-of-the-week effect, and holiday effect.
- Calendar spread
- Applies to derivative products. Bull spread in which there is a simultaneous purchase and sale of options of the same class at different strike prices, but with the same expiration date.
- Call
- An
option that gives the right to buy the underlying
futures contract.
- Callable
- Mainly applies to convertible securities. Redeemable by the issuer before the scheduled maturity under specific conditions and at a stated price, which usually begins at a premium to par and declines annually. Bonds are usually "called" when interest rates fall so significantly that the issuer can save money by floating new bonds at lower rates.
- Call an option
- To
exercise a
call option.
- Call date
- A date before maturity, specified at issuance, when the
issuer of a
bond may retire part of the bond for a specified
call price.
- Called away
- Convertibles: redeemed before maturity.
Option: Call or put option exercised against the stockholder.
Sale: Delivery required on a short sale.
- Call money rate
- Also called the
broker loan rate , the
interest rate that banks charge
brokers to finance
margin loans to investors. The broker charges the
investor the
call money rate
plus a service charge.
- Call option
- An
option
contract that gives its holder the right (but not the obligation) to purchase a specified number of
shares of the
underlying stock at the given
strike price, on or before the
expiration date of the
contract.
- Call premium
-
Premium in price above the
par value of a
bond or share of
preferred stock that must be paid to holders to redeem the bond or share of
preferred stock before its scheduled
maturity date.
- Call price
- The price, specified at issuance, at which the
issuer of a
bond may retire part of the bond at a specified call date.
- Call protection
- A feature of some
callable
bonds that establishes an initial period when the bonds may not be called.
- Call provision
- An
embedded option granting a bond
issuer the right to
buy back all or part of the
issue prior to
maturity.
- Call risk
- The combination of
cash flow uncertainty and
reinvestment risk introduced by a
call provision.
- Call swaption
- A
swaption in which the buyer has the right to enter into a
swap as a
fixed-rate payer. The
writer therefore becomes the fixed-rate receiver/floating rate payer.
- Cancel
- Used in the context of general equities. Void an
order to
buy or sell from 1) the floor, or 2) the
trader/salesman's scope. In
Autex, the
indication still remains on record as having once been placed unless it is
expunged.
- Canadian agencies
-
agency banks established by Canadian Banks in the U.S.
- Canadian Dealing Network (C.D.N.)
- The organized
O.T.C. market of Canada. Formerly known as the Canadian Over-the counter Automated Trading System (COATS),
the C.D.N. became a subsidiary of the Toronto Stock Exchange in 1991.
- Canadian Exchange Group (C.E.G.)
- The C.E.G. is an association between the Toronto Stock Exchange, the Montreal Exchange, the Vancouver Stock Exchange, the Alberta Stock Exchange and the Winnipeg Stock Exchange for the purpose of providing Canadian market data to customers outside Canada.
- "Can get $xxx"
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. "I have a buyer who will pay $xxx for the stock "; usually a standard markdown (1/8) from $xxx is applied to this price in bidding the seller for his
stock. Antithesis of
cost me.
- "Cannot compete"
- Used in the context of general equities. Cannot accommodate customers (i.e., compete with other
market-makers) at that price level, often due to not having a
natural opposite side of the
trade.
- "Cannot complete"
- Used in the context of general equities. Inability to
finish an
order on a
principal or
agency basis given prevailing price instructions and/or
market conditions.
- Cap
- An upper limit on the
interest rate on a
floating-rate note (F.R.N.) or an
adjustable rate mortgage (A.R.M.).
- Capital
- Money invested in a firm.
- Capital account
- Net result of public and private international investment and lending activities.
- Capital allocation decision
- Allocation of invested funds between
risk-free assets and the risky
portfolio.
- Capital asset pricing model (C.A.P.M.)
- An economic theory that describes the relationship between
risk and
expected return, and serves as a model for the pricing of risky
securities. The C.A.P.M. asserts that the only risk that is priced by rational investors is
systematic risk, because that risk cannot be eliminated by diversification. The C.A.P.M. says that the
expected return of a
security or a
portfolio is equal to the rate on a risk-free security plus a risk
premium.
- Capital budget
- A firm's set of planned
capital expenditures.
- Capital budgeting
- The process of choosing the firm's
long-term capital
assets.
- Capital expenditures
- Amount used during a particular period to acquire or improve
long-term
assets such as property, plant or equipment.
- Capital flight
- The transfer of
capital abroad in response to fears of political
risk.
- Capital gain
- When a
stock is sold for a
profit, it's the difference between
the net sales price of
securities and their net cost, or original
basis. If a stock is sold below cost, the difference is a
capital loss.
- Capital gains yield
- The price change portion of a stock's
return.
- Capital lease
- A
lease obligation that has to be
capitalized on the
balance sheet.
- Capital loss
- The difference between the net cost of a
security and the net sale price, if that
security is sold at a loss.
- Capital market
- The
market for trading
long-term
debt instruments (those that mature in more than one year).
- Capital market efficiency
- Reflects the relative amount of wealth wasted in making transactions. An efficient
capital market allows the transfer of
assets with little wealth loss. See:
efficient market hypothesis.
-
Capital market imperfections view
- The view that issuing
debt is generally valuable but that the firm's optimal choice of
capital structure is a dynamic process that involves the other views of capital structure (net corporate/personal tax,
agency cost, bankruptcy cost, and pecking order), which result from considerations of
asymmetric information, asymmetric taxes, and transaction costs.
- Capital market line (C.M.L.)
- The line defined by every combination of the risk-free
asset and the
market portfolio. The line represents the extra
risk premium you get for taking an extra
risk. Defined by the
Capital Asset Pricing Model.
- Capital rationing
- Placing one or more limits on the amount of new investment undertaken by a firm, either by using a higher cost of capital, or by setting a maximum on parts of, and/or the entirety of, the
capital budget.
- Capital stock
- Stock authorized by a firm's charter and having par value, stated value, or no par value. The number and value of issued shares are usually shown, together with the number of shares authorized, in the capital accounts section of the balance sheet. See:
Common stock
- Capital structure
- The makeup of the
liabilities and
stockholders'
equity side of the
balance sheet, especially the ratio of
debt to equity and the mixture of
short and
long
maturities.
- Capital surplus
- Amounts of directly contributed
equity
capital in excess of the
par value.
- Capitalization
- The
debt and/or
equity mix that funds a firm's
assets.
- Capitalization method
- A method of constructing a
replicating portfolio in which the manager purchases a number of the largest-capitalized names in the
stock
index in proportion to their
capitalization.
- Capitalization ratios
- Also called
financial leverage ratios, these ratios compare
debt to total capitalization and thus reflect the extent to which a corporation is trading on its
equity. Capitalization ratios can be interpreted only in the context of the stability of
industry and company
earnings and
cash flow.
- Capitalization table
- A table showing the
capitalization of a firm, which typically includes the amount of
capital obtained from each source -
long-term
debt and common
equity - and the respective capitalization ratios.
- Capitalized
- Recorded in
asset accounts and then depreciated or amortized, as is appropriate for expenditures for items with useful lives greater than one year.
- Capitalized interest
-
Interest that is not immediately expensed, but rather is considered as an
asset and is then
amortized through the
income statement over time.
- Car
- A loose quantity term sometimes used to describe the amount of a
commodity
underlying one
commodity
contract; e.g., "a car of bellies." Derived from the fact that quantities of the product specified in a
contract used to correspond closely to the capacity of a railroad car.
- Certificates of Amortized Revolving Debt (C.A.R.D.s)
-
Pass-through securities backed by credit card receivables.
- Carry
- Related:net financing cost.
- Carrying costs
- Costs that increase with increases in the level of investment in
current assets.
- Carrying value
-
Book value.
-
Certificates of Automobile Receivables (C.A.R.s)
-
Pass-through securities backed by automobile receivables.
- Cash
- The value of
assets that can be converted into cash immediately, as reported by a company. Usually includes bank accounts and marketable securities, such as government
bonds and
Banker's Acceptances.
Cash equivalents on
balance sheets include
securities (e.g.,
notes) that mature within 90 days.
- Cash budget
- A forecasted summary of a firm's expected cash inflows and cash outflows as well as its expected
cash and
loan balances.
- Cash & carry
- Applies to derivative products. Combination of a
long position in a
stock/index/commodity and
short position in the
underlying future, whereby a cost of carry exists on the
long position.
- Cash and equivalents
- The value of
assets that can be converted into cash immediately, as reported by a company. Usually includes bank accounts and marketable securities, such as government
bonds and
Banker's Acceptances. Cash equivalents on
balance sheets include securities (e.g.,
notes) that mature within 90 days.
- Cash commodity
- The actual physical
commodity, as distinguished from a
futures contract.
- Cash conversion cycle
- The length of time between a firm's purchase of
inventory and the receipt of cash from
accounts receivable.
- Cash cow
- A company that pays out most of its
earnings per share to
stockholders as
dividends. Or, a
company or division of a company that generates a steady and significant amount of
free cash flow.
- Cash cycle
- In general, the time between cash disbursement and cash collection. In net
working capital management, it can be thought of as the operating cycle less the
accounts payable payment period.
- Cash deficiency agreement
- An agreement to invest
cash in a project to the extent required to cover any cash deficiency the project may experience.
- Cash delivery
- The provision of some
futures contracts that requires not
delivery of
underlying assets but
settlement according to the cash value of the asset.
- Cash discount
- An incentive offered to purchasers of a firm's product for payment within a specified time period, such as ten days.
- Cash dividend
- A
dividend paid in cash to a company's
shareholders. The amount is normally based on profitability and is taxable as income. A cash distribution may include
capital gains and
return of capital in addition to the dividend.
- Cash equivalent
- A short-term
security that is sufficiently liquid that it may be considered the financial equivalent of cash.
- Cash flow
- In investments, it represents
earnings before
depreciation,
amortization and non-cash charges. Sometimes called cash earnings.
Cash flow from operations (called
funds from operations) by real estate and other investment trusts is important because it indicates the ability to pay
dividends.
-
Cash flow after interest and taxes
-
Net income plus
depreciation.
- Cash flow coverage ratio
- The number of times that financial obligations (for
interest,
principal payments,
preferred
stock
dividends, and rental payments) are covered by
earnings before interest, taxes, rental payments, and
depreciation.
- Cash flow from operations
- A firm's net cash inflow resulting directly from its regular operations (disregarding extraordinary items such as the sale of
fixed assets or
transaction costs associated with issuing
securities), calculated as the sum of net income plus non-cash expenses that were deducted in calculating net income.
- Cash flow matching
- Also called
dedicating a portfolio, this is an alternative to
multiperiod immunization in which the manager matches the
maturity of each element in the
liability stream, working backward from the last
liability to assure all required
cash
flows.
- Cash flow per common share
-
Cash flow from operations minus
preferred stock
dividends, divided by the number of
common shares outstanding.
- Cash flow time-line
- Line depicting the operating activities and
cash flows for a firm over a particular period.
- Cash-flow break-even point
- The point below which the firm will need either to obtain additional financing or to liquidate some of its
assets to meet its fixed costs.
- Cash management bill
- Very
short
maturity bills that the
Treasury occasionally sells because its cash balances are down
and it needs money for a few days.
- Cash markets
- Also called
spot markets, these are markets that involve the immediate
delivery of a
security or instrument. Related:
Derivative markets.
- Cash offer
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Proposal, either hostile or friendly, to acquire a
target company through the payment of cash for the
stock of the target. Compare to
exchange offer.
- Cash plus convertible
- Mainly applies to convertible securities.
Convertible bond which requires cash payment upon conversion.
- Cash price
- Applies to derivative products. See:
Spot price.
- Cash ratio
- The proportion of a firm's
assets held as
cash.
- Cash sale/settlement
- Used in the context of general equities. Transaction in which the
contract is settled on the same day as the
trade date, or next day if the trade is after 2:30 p.m. E.S.T. And the parties agree to this procedure. Often settled in this way because a party is strapped for cash and cannot wait until the regular, five business day, settlement. See:
Settlement date.
- Cash settlement contracts
-
Futures contracts, such as
stock index
futures, that settle for cash, not involving the
delivery of the
underlying.
- Cash transaction
- A transaction where exchange is immediate, as contrasted to a
forward contract, which calls for future
delivery of an
asset at an agreed-upon price.
- Cash-equivalent items
- Temporary investments of currently excess cash in
short-term,
high-quality securities such as
treasury bills and
Banker's Acceptances.
- Cash-surrender value
- The amount an insurance company will pay if the policyholder ends a
whole life insurance policy.
- Cashout
- Refers to a situation where a firm runs out of
cash and cannot readily sell marketable
securities.
- CEDEL
- A centralized clearing system for
Eurobonds.
- Certainty equivalent
- An amount that would be accepted in lieu of a chance to receive a possibly higher, but uncertain, amount.
- Certificate of deposit (C.D.)
- Also called a
time deposit, this is a certificate
issued by a bank or thrift that indicates a specified sum of money has been deposited. A C.D. bears a
maturity date and a specified
interest rate, and can be issued in any denomination. The
duration can be up to five years.
- C.F.A.T.
-
Cash flow after taxes.
- Characteristic line
- The
market model applied to a single
security. i.e. a regression of security returns or the
benchmark return. The slope of the line is a security's
beta.
-
Changes in Financial Position
- Sources of funds internally provided from operations that alter a company's
cash flow
position:
depreciation,
deferred taxes, other sources, and
capital expenditures.
- Chartists
- Related:
technical analysts.
- Cheapest to deliver issue
- The acceptable Treasury
security with the highest
implied repo rate; the rate that a seller of a
futures contract can earn
by buying an
issue and then delivering it at the
settlement date.
-
Chicago Board Options Exchange (C.B.O.E.)
- A securities
exchange created in the early 1970s for the public trading of standardized
option
contracts. Locale where the trading of
stock
options,
foreign currency options, and
index options (S&P 100, 500, and
0.T.C. 250 index) is predominant.
- Chicago Mercantile Exchange (C.M.E.)
- A not-for-profit corporation owned by its members. Its primary functions are to provide a location for trading
futures and
options, collect and disseminate
market information, maintain a clearing mechanism and enforce trading rules. Applies to derivative products. A locale where the trading of
futures (O.T.C. 250 industrial
stock price index, S& P 100 and 500 index) and
futures
options (S&P 500
stock index) is predominant.
- Chinese hedge
- Mainly applies to convertible securities. Trading
hedge in which one is
short the convertible and
long the
underlying common, hoping that the convertible's
premium will
contract. Antithesis of
set up.
- Chinese wall
- Communication barrier between financiers (investment bankers) and
traders. This barrier is erected to prevent the sharing of inside information that bankers are likely to have.
- Choice market
- Mainly applies to international equities.
Locked market in London terminology.
- Churning
- Excessive
trading of a client's account in order to increase the
broker's
commissions.
- Circle
-
Underwriters, actual or potential, often seek out and "circle" investor interest in a new
issue before final pricing. The customer circled basically made a commitment to purchase the issue if it comes at an agreed-upon price. If the actual price is other than that stipulated, the customer supposedly has first
offer at the actual price.
- Circus swap
- A fixed rate
currency swap against floating U.S. dollar
L.I.B.O.R. payments.
- Claim dilution
- A reduction in the likelihood one or more of the firm's claimants will be fully repaid, including time value of money considerations.
- Claimant
- A party to an explicit or implicit
contract.
- Class
- Applies to derivative products.
Options of the same type -
put or
call - with the same
underlying security. See:
series.
- Clean
- Used in the context of general equities.
Block trade that matches
buy or sell
orders/interests, sparing the
block trader any
inventory
risk (no net
position and hence none available for additional customers).
Natural. Antithesis of
open.
- Clean opinion
- An auditor's opinion reflecting an unqualified acceptance of a company's financial statements.
- Clean price
-
Bond price excluding
accrued interest.
- Clean up
- Used in the context of general equities. Purchase/sale of all the remaining supply/demand of/for
stock, or the last piece of a
block, in a trade -- leaving a net zero
position.
- "Clean your skirts"
- Used in the context of general equities. "Make all of your obligated calls "; checking with all prior obligations in a
security. Often preceded by "subject to".
- Clear
- A
trade is settled out by the seller delivering
securities and the buyer delivering funds in proper form. A trade that does not clear is said to fail. Comparison of the details of a transaction between
broker/dealers prior to
settlement; final exchange of securities for cash on
delivery.
- Clear a position
- To eliminate a
long or
short position, leaving no ownership or obligation.
- Clearinghouse
- An adjunct to a
futures
exchange through which transactions
executed on its floor are settled by a process of matching purchases and sales. A clearing organization is also charged with the proper conduct of
delivery procedures and the adequate financing of the entire operation.
-
Clearing House Automated Payments System (C.H.A.P.S.)
- A computerized clearing system for sterling funds that began operations in 1984. It includes 14 member banks, nearly 450 participating banks, and is one of the clearing companies within the structure of the Association for Payment Clearing Services (A.P.A.C.S.).
-
Clearing House Electronic Subregister System (C.H.E.S.S.)
- C.H.E.S.S. is the automatic transfer and settlement system for the majority of
Australian Stock Exchange (A.S.X.) listed securities.
-
Clearing House Interbank Payments System (C.H.I.P.S.)
- An international wire transfer system for high-value payments operated by a group of major banks.
- Clearing member
- A member firm of a clearing house. Each clearing member must also be a member of the
exchange. Not all members of the exchange, however, are members of the clearing organization. All
trades of a non-clearing member must be registered with, and eventually settled through, a clearing member.
- Clientele effect
- The grouping of investors who have a preference that the firm follow a particular financing policy, such as the amount of
leverage it uses.
- Close a position
- Used in the context of general equities. Eliminate an investment from one's
portfolio, by either selling a
long position or covering a
short position.
- Close, the
- The period at the end of the trading session. Sometimes used to refer to closing price. Related:
Opening, the.
- Closed-end fund
- An investment company that sells
shares
like any other corporation and usually does not redeem its
shares.
A publicly
traded fund sold on
stock exchanges or
over the counter that may
trade above or below its
net asset value. Related:
Open-end fund.
- Closed-end mortgage
-
Mortgage against which no additional
debt may be
issued.
- Closely held company
- A company who has a small group of controling shareholders. In contrast,
a widely-held firm has many shareholders. It is difficult or impossible to wage
a proxy battle for any closely-held firm.
- Closing purchase
- A transaction in which the purchaser's intention is to reduce or eliminate a
short position in a
stock, or in a given
series of
options.
- Closing range
- Also known as the
range. The high and low prices, or
bids and
offers, recorded during the period
designated as the official
close. Related:
settlement price.
- Closing sale
- A transaction in which the seller's intention is to reduce or eliminate a
long position in a
stock, or a given
series of
options.
- Closing transaction
- Applies to derivative products.
Buy or sell transaction that eliminates an existing
position (selling a
long option or buying back a
short option). Antithesis of
opening transaction.
- Cluster analysis
- A statistical technique that identifies clusters of stocks whose
returns are highly
correlated within each cluster and relatively uncorrelated between clusters. Cluster analysis has identified groupings such as growth, cyclical, stable and energy stocks.
-
Coefficient of determination
- A measure of the goodness of fit of the relationship between the dependent and independent variables in a
regression analysis; for instance, the percentage of variation in the
return of an
asset explained by the
market portfolio return. Also known as
R-squared.
-
Coffee, Sugar & Cocoa Exchange (CS&CE)
- The New York-based commodity exchange trading
futures
and
options on softs. The CS&CE shares the trading floor at the
Commodities Exchange Center.
- Coinsurance effect
- Refers to the fact that the
merger of two firms decreases the probability of
default on either firm's
debt.
- Collar
- An upper and lower limit on the
interest rate on a
floating-rate note (F.R.N.) or an
adjustable rate mortgage (A.R.M.).
- Collateral
-
Asset than can be repossessed if a borrower
defaults.
- Collateral trust bonds
- A
bond in which the
issuer (often a holding company) grants investors a
lien on
stocks,
notes,
bonds, or other financial
asset as
security. Compare
mortgage bond.
-
Collateralized mortgage obligation (C.M.O.)
- A
security backed by a pool of
pass-through rates , structured so that there are several
classes of
bondholders with varying
maturities, called tranches. The
principal payments from the
underlying pool of pass-through securities are used to retire the
bonds on a
priority basis as specified in the
prospectus. Related:
mortgage pass-through security.
- Collection float
- The negative float that is created between the time when you deposit a check in your account and the time when funds are made available.
- Collection fractions
- The percentage of a given month's sales collected during the month of sale and each month following the month of sale.
- Collection policy
- Procedures followed by a firm in attempting to collect
accounts receivables.
- Collective wisdom
- The combination of all of the individual opinions about a
stock's or
security's value.
- Colt (Continuous on-line trading system)
- Computerized
O.T.C. traders-assistance system that provides for
trade entry and
position monitoring, among other functions.
- Comanger
- A bank that ranks just below a
lead manager in a
syndicated Eurocredit or international
bond
issue. Comanagers may assist the lead manger bank in the pricing and issue of the instrument.
- Combination
- Applies to derivative products. Arrangement of
options involving two
long or two
short positions with different expiration dates or
strike (exercise) prices. See:
straddle.
- Combination matching
- Also called horizon matching, a variation of
multiperiod immunization and
cash flow matching in which a
portfolio is created that is always
duration matched and also cash-matched in the first few years.
- Combination strategy
- A strategy in which a
put and
call with the same
strike price and
expiration are either both bought or both sold. Related:
straddle
- Come in
- Used in the context of general equities. Fall in price.
- Comeout, the
- Used in the context of general equities. The
opening. Antithesis of the
Close.
- Come out of the trade
- Used in the context of general equities.
Trader's resulting
position in a
security from
executing a
trade (or the expectations thereof). Antithesis of
going into the trade.
- COMEX
- A division of the New York Mercantile Exchange (N.Y.M.E.X.). Formerly known
as the Commodity Exchange, COMEX is the leading U.S. market for metals
futures and
options
trading.
- Commercial draft
- Demand for payment.
- Commercial paper
-
Short-term unsecured promissory
notes
issued by a corporation. The
maturity of
commercial paper is typically less than 270 days; the most common
maturity range is 30 to 50 days or less.
- Commercial risk
- The
risk that a foreign debtor will be unable to pay its
debts because of business events, such as
bankruptcy.
- Commission
- The fee paid to a
broker to
execute a
trade, based on number of
shares,
bonds,
options, and/or their dollar value. In 1975, deregulation led to the creation of discount brokers, who charge lower commissions than full service
brokers. Full service brokers offer advice and usually have a full staff of
analysts who follow specific industries. Discount
brokers simply
execute a client's
order -- and usually do not offer an opinion on a
stock. Also known as a
round-turn.
- Commission broker
- A
broker on the floor of an
exchange who acts as agent for a particular brokerage house and
buys and sells stocks for the brokerage house on a commission basis.
- Commission house
- A firm which
buys and sells
futures contracts for customer accounts. Related:
futures commission merchant,
omnibus account.
- Commitment
- A
trader is said to have a commitment when he assumes the obligation to accept or make
delivery on a
futures contract. Related:
Open interest.
- Commitment fee
- A fee paid to a commercial bank in return for its legal commitment to lend funds that have not yet been advanced. Often used in risk arbitrage. Payment to institutional investors in the U.K. (pension funds and life insurance companies) by the lead
underwriter of a takeover that takes place when the underwriter provides the
target company's shareholders with a cash alternative for a
target company's
shares in exchange for the bidding companies' shares. The payment is typically 0.5% for the first 30 days, 1.25% for each week thereafter and a final 0.75% acceptance payment when the takeover is completed.
-
Committee on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures (C.U.S.I.P.)
- Committee that assigns identifying numbers and codes for all securities. These "C.U.S.I.P." numbers and symbols are used when recording all
buy or sell
orders.
- Commodities Exchange Center (C.E.C.)
- The location of five New York
futures exchanges: Commodity Exchange, Inc. (COMEX), the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX), the New York Cotton Exchange, the Coffee, Sugar and Cocoa Exchange (CSC), and the New York
futures
Exchange (NYFE).
- Commodity
- A commodity is food, metal, or another physical substance that investors buy or sell, usually via
futures contracts.
-
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (C.F.T.C.)
- Applies to derivative products. Commodity futures trading commission is an agency created by Congress in 1974 to regulate
exchange trading in
futures.
- Common-base-year analysis
- The representing of accounting information over multiple years as percentages of amounts in an initial year.
- Common code
- A nine digit identification code issued jointly by
CEDEL and
Euroclear. As of January 1991 common codes replaced the earlier separate
CEDEL and
Euroclear codes.
- Common market
- An agreement between two or more countries that permits the free movement of
capital and labor as well as goods and services.
- Common shares
- In general, there are two types of shares, common and
preferred stock. The common shares usually entitle the
shareholders to vote at shareholders meetings. The common shares have a discretionary dividend.
- Common size statement
- A statement in which all items are expressed as a percentage of a base
figure, useful for purposes of analyzing trends and the changing relationship between financial statement items. For example, all items in each year's
income statement could be presented
as a percentage of net sales.
- Common stock
- These are securities that represent
equity ownership in a company.
Common shares let an
investor vote on such matters as the election of directors. They also give the holder a share in a company's profits via
dividend payments or the capital appreciation of the
security. Used in the context of general equities.) units of ownership of a public corporation with junior status to the claims of secured/unsecured creditors, bond and preferred shareholders in the event of liquidation.
- Common stock/other equity
- Value of outstanding
common shares at par, plus accumulated retained
earnings. Also called shareholders'
equity.
- Common stock equivalent
- A
convertible security that is traded like an
equity
issue because the optioned common stock is trading high.
- Common stock market
- The market for trading equities, not including
preferred stock.
- Common stock ratios
- Ratios that are designed to measure the relative claims of
stockholders to
earnings (cash flow per share), and equity (book value
per share) of a firm.
- Common-size analysis
- The representing of
balance sheet items as percentages of assets and of
income statement items as percentages of sales.
- Company-specific risk
- Related:
Unsystematic risk
- Company, the
- Used for listed equity securities and refers to over-the-counter trading. Public-traded corporation involved in the corporate repurchase of its shares.
- Comparative credit analysis
- A method of analysis in which a firm is compared to others that have a desired target
debt rating in order to infer an appropriate financial ratio target.
- Comparison universe
- The collection of money managers of similar investment style used for assessing relative performance of a portfolio manager.
- Compensating balance
- An excess balance that is left in a bank to provide indirect compensation for
loans extended or services provided.
- Competence
- Sufficient ability or fitness for ones needs. Possessing the necessary abilities to be qualified to achieve a certain goal or complete a project.
- Competition
- Intra- or intermarket rivalry between businesses trying to obtain a larger piece of the same market share.
- Competition ahead
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Situation whereby another
| |