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- D
-
Fifth letter of a
NASDAQ stock symbol specifying that it is a new issue, such as the result of a reverse split.
- D.C.F.
- See:
Discounted Cash Flows
- D.D.M.
- See:
Discounted Dividend Model
- D.I.S.C.
- See:
Domestic International Sales Corporation
- D.N.R. Order
- See: "Do Not Reduce Order"
- D.O.T.
- See:
Designated Order Turnaround System
- D.R.P.
- See:
Dividend Reinvestment Plan
- D.T.C.
- See:
Depository Transfer Check
- D.T.C.
- See:
Depository Trust Company
- Daily price limit
- The maximum that many commodities,
futures and options markets are allowed
to rise or fall in a day.
Exchanges usually impose a daily price limit on each
contract.
- Date of payment
- Date
dividend checks are mailed.
- Date of record
- Date on which holders of record in a firm's stock ledger are designated as the recipients of either
dividends or
stock rights.
- Dates convention
- Treating
cash flows as being received on exact dates - date 0, date 1, and so forth - as opposed to the
end-of-year convention.
- Day around order
- Used in the context of general equities.
Day order that supersedes (cancels and replaces) the previous
order by altering the size or
price limit of that previous order.
- Day order
- Used in the context of general equities. Request from a customer to either
buy or sell stock, which, if not
cancelled or
executed the day it is placed, automatically expires. All orders are day orders unless otherwise specified.
Traders often make calls before the opening to check for
renewals.
- Days in receivables
- Average collection period.
-
Days' sales in inventory ratio
- The average number of days' worth of sales that is held in
inventory.
- Days' sales outstanding
- Average collection period.
- Day trading
- Refers to establishing and liquidating the same
position or positions within one day's trading.
- De facto
- Existing in actual fact although not by official recognition.
- Dead cat bounce
- A small upmove in a
bear
market.
- Dealer
- An entity that stands ready and willing to
buy a
security for its own account (at its
bid
price) or sell from its
own account (at its
ask price). Used in the context of general equities. Individual or firm acting as a
principal in a securities transaction.
Principals are
market makers in securities, and thus
trade for their own account and
risk. Antithesis of
broker. See:
agency.
- Dealer loan
- Overnight,
collateralized
loan made to a
dealer financing his
position by borrowing from a
money market bank.
- Dealer market
- A market where
traders specializing in particular
commodities
buy and sell
assets for their own accounts.
- Dealer options
-
Over-the-counter
options, such as those offered by government and
mortgage-backed securities
dealers.
- Deal stock
- Often used in risk arbitrage.
Stock subject to
merger or
acquisition, either publicly announced or rumored.
- Debenture bond
- An unsecured
bond whose holder has
the claim of a general
creditor on all
assets of the
issuer not pledged specifically to secure other
debt. Compare
subordinated debenture bond, and
collateral trust bonds.
- Debit spread
- Applies to derivative products. Difference in the value of two
options, when the value of the one bought exceeds the value of the one sold. One buys a "debit spread". Antithesis of a
credit spread.
- Debt
- Money borrowed.
- Debt capacity
- Ability to borrow. The amount a firm can borrow up to the point where the firm value no longer increases.
- Debt displacement
- The amount of borrowing that
leasing
displaces. Firms that do a lot of leasing will be forced to cut back on borrowing.
- Debt/equity ratio
- Indicator of financial
leverage. Compares
assets provided by
creditors to assets provided by
shareholders. Determined by dividing
long-term debt by common
stockholder equity.
- Debtholder
- See:
bondholder.
- Debt instrument
- An
asset requiring fixed dollar
payments, such as a government or corporate
bond.
- Debt leverage
- The amplification of the
return earned on equity when an investment or firm is financed partially with borrowed money.
- Debt limitation
- A
bond
covenant that restricts in some way the firm's ability to incur additional indebtedness.
- Debt market
- The
market for trading
debt instruments.
- Debtor in possession
- A firm that is continuing to operate under Chapter 11
bankruptcy process.
-
Debtor-in-possession financing
- New
debt obtained by a firm during the Chapter 11
bankruptcy process.
- Debt ratio
- Total
debt divided by total
assets.
- Debt relief
- Reducing the
principal and/or
interest payments on
L.D.C. loans.
- Debt securities
- IOUs created through loan-type
transactions -
commercial paper, bank
CDs, bills,
bonds, and other
instruments.
- Debt service
-
Interest payment plus repayments of
principal to
creditors, that is, retirement of
debt.
- Debt-service coverage ratio
-
Earnings before
interest and income taxes plus one-third rental charges, divided by interest expense plus one-third rental charges plus the quantity of
principal repayments divided by one minus the tax rate.
-
Debt service parity approach
- An analysis wherein the alternatives under consideration will provide the firm with the exact same schedule of after-tax
debt payments (including both
interest and
principal).
- Debt swap
- A set of transactions (also called a debt-equity swap) in which a firm buys a country's dollar bank debt at a discount and
swaps this debt with the central bank for local currency that it can use to acquire local
equity.
- Decile rank
- Performance over time, rated on a scale of 1-10. 1 indicates that a
mutual fund's
return was in the top 10% of funds being compared, while 3 means the
return was in the top 30%. Objective Rank compares all funds in the same investment strategy category. All Rank compares all funds.
- Decision tree
- Method of representing alternative sequential decisions and the possible outcomes from these decisions.
- Declaration date
- The date on which a firm's directors meet and announce the date and amount of the next
dividend.
- Dedicated capital
- Total
par value (number of
shares
issued, multiplied by the par value of each share). Also called dedicated value.
- Dedicating a portfolio
- Related:
cash flow matching.
- Dedication strategy
- Refers to multi-period
cash flow matching.
- Deductive reasoning
- The use of general fact to provide accurate information about a specific situation.
- Deed of trust
- See:
Indenture.
- Deep-discount bond
- A
bond
issued with a very low
coupon or no
coupon and selling at a price far below
par value. When the
bond has no coupon, it is called a
zero coupon bond.
- Default
- Failure to make timely payment of
interest or
principal on a
debt security or to otherwise comply with the provisions of a
bond indenture.
- Default premium
- A differential in promised
yield that compensates the investor for the
risk inherent in purchasing a
corporate bond that entails some risk of
default.
- Default risk
- Also referred to as
credit risk (as gauged by commercial rating companies), the
risk that an
issuer of a
bond may be unable to make timely
principal and
interest payments.
- Defeasance
- Practice whereby the borrower sets aside cash or
bonds sufficient to service the borrower's
debt. Both the borrower's debt and the
offsetting cash or
bonds are removed from the
balance sheet.
- Deferred-annuities
- Tax-advantaged life insurance product.
Deferred annuities
offer deferral of taxes with the option of withdrawing one's funds in the form of life
annuity.
- Deferred call
- A provision that prohibits the company from calling the
bond before a certain date. During this period the bond is said to be
call protected.
- Deferred equity
- A common term for
convertible bonds because of their
equity component and the expectation that the
bond will ultimately be converted into
shares of
common stock.
- Deferred futures
- The most distant months of a
futures contract. A
bond that sells at a
discount and does not pay
interest for an initial period, typically from three to seven years. Compare
step-up bond and
payment-in-kind bond.
-
Deferred nominal life annuity
- A monthly
fixed-dollar payment beginning at retirement age. It is
nominal because the payment is fixed in dollar amount at any particular time, up to and including
retirement.
- Deferred taxes
- A
non-cash expense that provides a source of
free cash flow. Amount allocated during the period to cover tax liabilities that have not yet been paid.
- Deficit
- An excess of
liabilities over
assets, of losses over
profits, or of expenditure over income.
- Defined benefit plan
- A
pension plan in which the sponsor agrees to make specified dollar payments to qualifying employees. The pension obligations are effectively the
debt obligation of the plan sponsor. Related:
defined contribution plan
- Defined contribution plan
- A
pension plan in which the
sponsor is responsible only for making specified contributions into the plan on behalf of qualifying participants. Related:
defined benefit plan
- Delayed issuance pool
- Refers to
Mortgage Backed Securities (M.B.S.s) that at the time of issuance were
collateralized by seasoned loans originated prior to the MBS pool
issue date.
- Delayed opening
- Used for listed equity securities. Postponement of the start of trading in a
stock until a gross
imbalance in
buy and sell
orders is corrected. Such an imbalance is likely to follow on the heels of a significant event such as a
takeover
offer. See:
suspended trading.
- Delayed settlement/delivery
- Used in the context of general equities. Transaction in which the contract is settled in excess of five full business days.
Seller's option. See:
dividend play,
settlement.
- Deliver
- In a
futures or
forward contract , if you agree to sell in the future, you may have to
deliver the
commodity.
- Deliverable instrument
- The
asset in a
forward contract that will be
delivered in the future at an agreed-upon
price.
- Delivery
- The
tender and receipt of an actual
commodity or financial
instrument in
settlement of a
futures contract.
- Delivery date
- The date that you must fulfill the obligations of a
forward or
futures contract.
- Delivery notice
- The written notice given by the seller of his intention to make
delivery against an
open,
short
futures position on a particular date. Related:
notice day
- Delivery options
- The options available to the seller of an
interest rate
futures contract, including the
quality option, the
timing option, and the
wild card option.
Delivery options make the buyer uncertain of which
Treasury bond will be delivered or when it will be delivered.
- Delivery points
- Those points designated by
futures exchanges at which the financial
instrument or
commodity covered by a
futures contract may be delivered in fulfillment of such
contract .
- Delivery price
- The price fixed by the
Clearinghouse
at which deliveries on
futures are invoiced; also the price at which the
futures contract is settled when deliveries are made.
- Delivery versus payment
- A transaction in which the buyer's payment for
securities is due at the time of
delivery (usually to a bank acting as
agent for the buyer) upon receipt of the securities. The payment may be made by bank wire, check, or direct credit to an account.
- Delta
- Also called the
hedge ratio, the ratio of the change in price of a
call option to the change in price of the underlying stock. Applies to derivative products. Measure of the relationship between an
option price and the underlying
futures contract or stock
price. For a
call option, a delta of 0.50 means a half-point rise in
premium for every dollar that the stock goes up. As options near expiration,
in-the-money call option contracts approach a
delta of 1.0, while in the money
put options approach a delta of -1. See:
hedge ratio,
neutral hedge.
- Delta hedge
- A dynamic
hedging strategy using
options with continuous adjustment of the number of options used, as a function of the
delta of the
option.
- Delta neutral
- The value of the
portfolio is not affected by changes in the value of the
asset on which the
options are written.
- Demand deposits
- Checking accounts that pay no
interest and can be withdrawn upon demand.
- Demand line of credit
- A bank
line of credit that enables a customer to borrow on a daily or on-demand basis.
- Demand master notes
- Short-term
securities that are repayable immediately upon the holder's demand.
- Demand shock
- An event that affects the demand for goods and services in the economy.
- Dependent
- Acceptance of a
capital budgeting project contingent on the acceptance of another project.
- Depository preferred
- Mainly applies to convertible securities. Device enabling an
issuer to circumvent an arbitrary corporate limit on the number of
preferred shares
issuable.
- Depository transfer check (D.T.C.)
- Check made out directly by a local bank to a particular firm or person.
- Depository Trust Company (D.T.C.)
- D.T.C. is a user-owned
securities depository which accepts deposits of eligible securities for custody,
executes book-entry deliveries and records book-entry pledges of securities in its custody, and provides for withdrawals of securities from its custody. Used in the context of general equities. Central securities repository where
stock and
bond certificates are
exchanged. Most of these exchanges now take place electronically, and few paper certificates actually change hands. The D.T.C. is a member of the
Federal Reserve System and is owned by most of the brokerage houses on
Wall Street and the
N.Y.S.E.
- Depreciate
- To allocate the purchase cost of an
asset over its life.
- Depreciation
- A
non-cash expense that provides a source of
free cash flow. Amount allocated during the period to
amortize the cost of acquiring
long term assets over the useful life of the assets.
- Depreciation tax shield
- The value of the tax write-off on
depreciation of plant and equipment.
- Derivative instruments
- Contracts such as
options and
futures whose price is derived from the price of the
underlying financial asset.
- Derivative markets
- Markets for
derivative instruments.
- Derivative security
- A financial
security, such as an
option, or
future, whose value is derived in part from the value and characteristics of another security, the
underlying
order.
- Designated order turnaround system (D.O.T.)
- Computerized order entry system which, for example, allows for orders to
buy or sell large
baskets of stock to be transmitted immediately to the
specialist on the, where
execution will occur in no longer than 2.5 minutes, depending on the
basket size. Also used for
odd lot transactions to occur at the
prices and quantities available. See:
A.O.S.
- Detachable warrant
- A
warrant entitles the holder to buy a given number of
shares of stock at a stipulated
price. A detachable warrant is one that may be sold separately from the package it may have originally been
issued with (usually a
bond).
- Deterministic models
-
Liability-matching models that assume that the liability payments and the
asset
cash flows are known with certainty. Related: Compare
stochastic models
- Detrend
- To remove the general drift, tendency or bent of a set of statistical data as related to time. Often accomplished by
regressing a variable or a time index and perhaps time-squared and capturing the
residuals.
- Deutsche Börse AG (DBAG)
- Deutsche Börse AG (DBAG) is the operating company for the German cash
and
derivatives markets. It has four
subsidiaries: Deutsche Börse Clearing AG, Deutsche Börse Systems AG, Frankfurter Wertpapierbörse (FWB) and the derivatives market Eurex Deutschland (formerly the
Deutsche
Terminbörse DTB).
- DM
- Deutsche (German) marks.
- Deutsche Terminbörse (DTB)
- Formerly the German financial futures and options market. Merged with the
Swiss Options and Financial Futures Exchange (SOFFEX) in 1998 to form EUREX, the European derivatives exchange.
- Devaluation
- A decrease in the
spot price of the currency. Often initiated by a government announcement.
- Difference from S&P
- A
mutual fund's
return minus the change in the
Standard & Poors 500 Index for the same time period. A notation of -5.00 means the fund return was 5 percentage points less than the gain in the
S&P, while 0.00 means that the fund and the S&P had the same return.
- Differential disclosure
- The practice of reporting conflicting or markedly different information in official corporate statements including
annual and quarterly reports and the
10-Ks and
10-Qs.
- Differential swap
-
Swap between two
L.I.B.O.R. rates of interest, e.g. yen L.I.B.O.R. for dollar L.I.B.O.R. Payments are in one currency.
- Diffusion process
- A conception of the way a
stock's
price changes that assumes that the price takes on all intermediate values.
- Digits deleted
- Used in the context of general equities. Designation on securities exchange
tape meaning that because the tape has been delayed, some digits have been dropped (i.e., 26 1/2 becomes 6 1/2).
- Dilution
- Diminution in the proportion of income to which each
share is entitled.
- Dilution protection
- Mainly applies to convertible securities. Standard provision whereby the
conversion ratio is changed accordingly in the case of a
stock dividend or extraordinary distribution to avoid
dilution of a
convertible bondholder's potential
equity
position. Adjustment usually requires a
split or
stock dividend in excess of 5% or issuance of stock below
book value.
- Dilutive effect
- Result of a transaction that decreases
earnings per common share (E.P.S.).
- Dip
- Used in the context of general equities. Slight drop in
securities prices after a sustained uptrend.
Analysts often advise investors to
buy on dips, meaning buy when a
price is momentarily weak. See:
correction,
break,
crash.
- Directed brokerage
- Used in the context of general equities. Specific brokerage house requested (by an account) to be used in
executing an
order. See:
give up.
- Direct estimate method
- A method of
cash budgeting based on detailed estimates of cash receipts and cash disbursements category by category.
- Direct lease
-
Lease in which the
lessor purchases new equipment from the manufacturer and leases it to the
lessee.
- Directorship
- Used in the context of general equities.
Stock status whereby a
trader may not maintain
positions in the
security, due to an investment bank employee serving as a director on the corporation's board of directors done to avoid conflicts of interest; signified by a flashing "D" on Quotron. Contrast to
restricted.
- Direct paper
-
Commercial paper sold directly by the
issuer to
investors.
- Direct placement
- Selling a new
issue not by offering it for sale publicly, but by placing it with one of several
institutional investors.
- Direct quote
- For
foreign exchange, the number of U.S. dollars needed to buy one unit of a
foreign currency.
- Direct search market
- Buyers and sellers seek each other directly and transact directly.
-
Direct stock-purchase programs
-
Investors purchase
securities directly from the
issuer.
- Dirty float
- A system of
floating exchange rates in which the government occasionally intervenes to change the direction of the value of the country's
currency.
- Dirty price
-
Bond price including
accrued interest, i.e., the price paid by the bond buyer.
- Disbursement float
- A decrease in
book cash but no immediate change in bank cash, generated by checks written by the firm.
- Disclaimer of opinion
- An auditor's statement disclaiming any opinion regarding the company's financial condition.
- Discount
- Used in the context of general equities.
Convertible: difference between
gross parity and a given
convertible price. Most often invoked when a redemption is expected before the next
coupon payment, making it liable for
accrued interest for which he may never be compensated. Antithesis of
premium.
General: information that has already been taken into account and is built into a stock or
market.
Straight equity:
price lower than that of the last sale or
inside market.
- Discount bond
- Debt sold for less than its
principal value. If a discount bond pays no
coupon, it is called a
zero coupon bond.
- Discounted in/by market
- Used in the context of general equities. In/by the
market. Unannounced information that is widely accepted/anticipated, and hence is already taken into account in the pricing of the
security/
market (i.e., Poor earnings).
- Discounted basis
- Selling something on a discounted basis is to sell below
maturity value, so that the difference makes up all or part of the interest.
- Discounted cash flow (D.C.F.)
- Future
cash flows multiplied by
discount factors to obtain present values.
- Discounted dividend model (D.D.M.)
- A formula to estimate the
intrinsic value of a firm by figuring the present value of all expected future
dividends.
-
Discounted payback period rule
- An investment decision rule in which the
cash flows are discounted at an
interest rate and the
payback rule is applied on these
discounted cash flows.
- Discount factor
-
Present value of $1 received at a stated future date.
- Discounting
- Calculating the
present value of a future amount. The process is opposite to
compounding.
- Discount period
- The period during which a customer can deduct the discount from the net amount of the bill when making payment.
- Discount rate
- The
interest rate that the
Federal Reserve charges a bank to borrow funds when a bank is temporarily short of funds.
Collateral is necessary to borrow, and such borrowing is quite limited because the Fed views it as a privilege to be used to meet short-term
liquidity needs, and not a device to increase
earnings.
- Discount securities
- Non-interest-bearing
money market
instruments that are
issued at a
discount and redeemed at
maturity for full face value, e.g. U.S.
Treasury bills.
- Discount window
- Facility provided by the
Fed enabling member banks to borrow reserves against
collateral in the form of governments or other acceptable paper.
- Discrete compounding
-
Compounding the
time value of money for discrete time intervals.
- Discrete random variable
- A
random variable that can take only a certain specified set of discrete possible values - for example, the positive integers 1, 2, 3, . . .
- Discrete variable
-
Variable like 1,2,3.
Bond ratings are examples of discrete classifications.
- Discretionary account
- Accounts over which an individual or organization, other than the person in whose name the account is carried, exercises
trading authority or
control.
- Discretionary cash flow
-
Cash flow that is available after the funding of all positive
net present value (N.P.V.) capital investment projects; it is available for paying cash
dividends,
repurchasing common stock,
retiring
debt, and so on.
- Discriminant analysis
- A statistical process that links the probability of
default to a specified set of financial ratios.
- Disintermediation
- Withdrawal of funds from a financial institution in order to invest them directly.
- Distributed
- After a
Treasury auction, there will be many new
issues in
dealer's hands. As those issues are sold, they are said to be distributed.
- Distributions
- Payments from fund or corporate
cash flow. May include
dividends from
earnings,
capital gains from sale of
portfolio holdings and
return of capital. Fund
distributions can be made by check or by investing in additional
shares. Funds are required to distribute capital gains (if any) to
shareholders at least once per year. Some corporations offer
Dividend Reinvestment Plans (D.R.P.).
- Divergence
- When two or more
averages or indices fail to show confirming
trends.
- Diversifiable risk
- Related:
unsystematic risk.
- Diversification
- Dividing investment funds among a variety of
securities with different
risk, reward, and
correlation statistics so as to minimize
unsystematic risk.
- Dividend
- A dividend is a portion of a company's
profit paid to
common and
preferred shareholders. A
stock selling for $20 a share with an annual dividend of $1 a share
yields the
investor 5%.
- Dividend clawback
- With respect to a project financing, an arrangement under which the sponsors of a project agree to contribute as
equity any prior
dividends received from the project to the extent necessary to cover any cash deficiencies.
- Dividend clientele
- A group of
shareholders who prefer that the firm follow a particular
dividend policy. For example, such a preference is often based on comparable tax situations.
- Dividend Discount Model (D.D.M.)
- A model for valuing the
common stock of a company, based on the
present value of the expected future
dividends.
- Dividend growth model
- A model wherein
dividends are assumed to be growing at a constant rate in perpetuity. The value of the stock equals next year's dividends divided by the difference between the
required rate of return and the assumed constant
growth rate in dividends.
- Dividend limitation
- A
bond
covenant that restricts in some way the firm's ability to pay
cash dividends.
- Dividend payout ratio
- Percentage of
earnings paid out as
dividends.
- Dividend policy
- An established guide for the firm to determine the amount of money it will pay as
dividends.
- Dividend rate
- The fixed or
floating rate paid on
preferred stock based on
par value.
- Dividend Reinvestment Plan (D.R.P.)
- Automatic reinvestment of
shareholder
dividends in more
shares of a company's
stock, often without commissions. Some plans provide for the purchase of additional shares at a
discount to
market
price.
Dividend reinvestment plans allow shareholders to accumulate stock over the long term using dollar cost averaging. The D.R.P. is usually administered by the company without charges to the holder.
- Dividend rights
- A
shareholders' rights to receive per-share
dividends identical to those other shareholders receive.
- Dividends per share
-
Dividend paid for the past 12 months divided by the number of
common shares outstanding, as reported by a company. The number of
shares often is determined by a weighted average of shares outstanding over the reporting term.
- Dividend trade roll/play
- Used for listed equity securities. Method of buying and selling stocks around their
ex-dividend dates so as to collect the dividend (which is 80% tax-exempt) offset by a fully-taxable capital loss. Predicated on the 80% (as of tax reform law of 1986) tax-exempt status that some corporations receive on dividend income. Japanese insurance companies are also large
players due to a national regulation that allows policy distribution of income, excluding
capital gains only.
- Dividend yield (Funds)
-
Indicated yield represents
return on a share of a
mutual fund held over the past 12 months. Assumes fund was purchased 1 year ago. Reflects effect of sales charges (at current rates), but not redemption charges.
- Dividend yield (Stocks)
-
Indicated yield represents annual
dividends divided by current
stock
price.
-
Doctrine of sovereign immunity
- Doctrine that says a nation may not be tried in the courts of another country without its consent.
- Documented discount notes
-
Commercial paper backed by normal bank lines plus a
letter of credit from a bank stating that it will pay off the paper at
maturity if the
borrower
defaults. Such paper is also referred to as
L.O.C. paper.
- Dollar bonds
-
Municipal revenue bonds for
which quotes are given in dollar prices. Not to be confused with "U.S. Dollar"
bonds, a common term of reference in the
Eurobond market.
- Dollar duration
- The product of modified
duration and the initial
price.
- Dollar price of a bond
- Percentage of
face value at which a
bond is quoted.
- Dollar return
- The
return realized on a
portfolio for any evaluation period, including (1) the change in
market value of the portfolio and (2) any
distributions made from the portfolio during that period.
- Dollar roll
- Similar to the reverse
repurchase agreement - a simultaneous agreement to sell a
security held in a
portfolio with purchase of a similar
security at a future date at an agreed-upon price.
- Dollar safety margin
- The dollar equivalent of the
safety cushion for a
portfolio in a
contingent immunization strategy.
-
Dollar-weighted rate of return
- Also called the
internal rate of return, the
interest rate that will make the present value of the
cash flows from all the subperiods in the
evaluation period plus the
terminal market value of the
portfolio equal to the initial
market value of the
portfolio.
-
Domestic International Sales Corporation (DISC)
- A U.S. corporation that receives a tax incentive for export activities.
- Domestic market
- Part of a nation's
internal market representing the mechanisms for
issuing and
trading
securities of entities domiciled within that nation. Compare
external market and
foreign market.
- "Do Not Reduce Order" (D.N.R. Order)
- Used in the context of general equities.
Limit order to
buy,
order to sell, or a
stop limit order to sell which is not to be reduced by the amount of an ordinary
cash dividend on the
ex-dividend date. A "Do not reduce order" applies only to ordinary
cash dividends, and not
stock dividends or
rights.
- Don't know (DK, Dked)
- "Don't know the
trade." A
Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
- Double auction market
- Used for listed equity securities. Systems by which
securities are bought and sold through
brokers on the securities exchanges, as distinguished from the
O.T.C. market, where
trades are negotiated. Unlike the conventional auction with one auctioneer and many buyers, here we have many sellers and many buyers.
-
Double-declining-balance depreciation
- Method of
accelerated depreciation.
- Double dip
- Used for listed equity securities.
Dividend roll in which the "dividend capturer" already owns the stock
cum dividend and is enriching his
current yield through a second, or double dose of dividend.
- Double-dip lease
- A cross-border
lease in which the disparate rules of the
lessor's and
lessee's countries let both parties be treated as the owner of the leased equipment for tax purposes.
- Double-tax agreement
- Agreement between two countries that taxes paid abroad can be offset against domestic taxes levied on foreign dividends.
- Doubling option
- A
sinking fund provision that may allow repurchase of twice the required number of
bonds at the sinking fund
call price.
-
Dow Jones Industrial Average
- This is the best known U.S. index of stocks. It contains 30 stocks that
trade on the
New York Stock Exchange. The Dow, as it is called, is a barometer of how
shares of the largest U.S. companies are performing. There are hundreds of investment indexes around the world for
stocks,
bonds, currencies and
commodities. The Dow is a price-weighted average of 30 actively traded blue chip stocks, primarily industrials.
- Dow Theory
- Used in the context of general equities. Technical theory that a major
trend in the
stock market must be confirmed by simultaneous movement of the
Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Average to new highs or lows.
- Down-and-in option
-
Barrier option that comes into existence if
asset price hits a barrier.
- Down-and-out option
-
Barrier option that expires if
asset price hits a barrier.
- Downgrade
- A classic negative change in
ratings for a
stock, or other rated
security.
- Downtick
- Move down in a particular stock. On U.S.
stock exchanges you cannot sell the stock
short on a
downtick.
- Draft
- An unconventional order in writing - signed by a person, usually the exporter, and addressed to the importer - ordering the importer or the importer's
agent to pay, on demand (sight draft) or at a fixed future date (time draft), the amount specified on its face.
- Draw a call
- Used in the context of general equities. Provoking a customer
indication/inquiry/order by setting an attractive
market or doing large portions of the volume in a stock.
- Drop
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. Remove from
O.T.C. trading list; hence, no longer making a
market in a
security.
- Drop, the
- With the
dollar roll transaction the difference between the sale
price of a
mortgage-backed pass-through, and its re-purchase price on a future date at a predetermined price.
- Drop lock
- An arrangement whereby the
interest rate on a
floating rate note or
preferred stock becomes fixed if it falls to a specified level.
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