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- F
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Fifth letter of a
NASDAQ stock symbol specifying that it is a foreign company.
- F.A.S.B
- See:
Financial Accounting Standards Board
- F.C.I.A.
- See:
Foreign Credit Insurance Association
- F.D.I.
- See:
Foreign direct investment
- F.D.I.C.
- See:
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
- F.F.O.
- See:
Funds from operations
- F.O.K.
- See:
Fill or Kill Order
- F.R.A.
- See:
Forward rate agreement
- F.R.N.
- See:
Floating Rate Note
- F.S.C
- See:
Foreign Sales Corporation
- Face value
- See:
Par value
- Factor
- A financial institution that buys a firm's
accounts receivables and collects the
debt.
- Factor analysis
- A statistical procedure that seeks to explain a certain phenomenon, such as the
return on a
common stock, in terms of the behavior of a set of predictive
factors.
- Factoring
- Sale of a firm's
accounts receivable to a financial institution known as a
factor.
- Factor model
- A way of decomposing the forces that influence a
security's
rate of return into common and
firm-specific influences.
- Factor portfolio
- A well-diversified portfolio constructed to have a
beta of 1.0 on one
factor and a
beta of zero on any other
factors.
- Fade
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. Fill another
O.T.C.
dealer's
bid for, or
offer of,
stock.
- Fail
- A
trade is said to fail if on
settlement date either the seller fails to
deliver
securities in proper form or the buyer fails to deliver funds in proper form.
- Fair-and-equitable test
- A set of requirements for a plan of reorganization to be approved by the
bankruptcy court.
- Fair game
- An investment prospect that has a zero
risk premium.
- Fair market price
- Amount at which an
asset would change hands between two parties, both having knowledge of the relevant facts. Also referred to as
market prices.
- Fair price
- The equilibrium price for
futures contracts. Also called the
theoretical futures price, which equals the
spot price
continuously compounded at the
cost of carry rate for some time interval.
- Fair price provision
- See:appraisal rights.
- Fall Down
- Used in the context of general equities. May not be able to produce as indicated in one's advertised
market, due to getting less help from other parties (than anticipated) or due to changing market conditions.
- Fallout risk
- A type of
mortgage
pipeline risk that is generally created when the terms of
the
loan to be originated are set at
the same time the sale terms are established. The
risk is that either of the two parties, borrower or investor, fails to close and the loan "falls out" of the pipeline.
- Fama, Eugene F.
- Founder of the Efficient Markets Hypothesis. Finance professor at the University of Chicago.
-
Financial Accounting Standards Board (F.A.S.B.)
- Sets accounting standards for U.S. firms.
- FASB No. 8
- U.S. accounting standard that requires U.S. firms to translate their foreign affiliates' accounts by the
temporal method. Gains and losses from
currency fluctuations were reported in current income. It was in effect between 1975 and 1981 and became the most controversial accounting standard in the U.S. It was replaced by
FASB No. 52 in 1981.
- FASB No. 52
- The U.S. accounting standard which replaced
FASB No. 8. U.S. companies are required to translate foreign accounts by the
current rate and report the changes from currency fluctuations in a cumulative translation adjustment account in the
equity section of the
balance sheet.
- Fast market
- Used in the context of general equities. Excessively rapid
trading in a specific
security that causes a delay in the electronic updating of its last sale and
market conditions, particularly in
options.
- Feasible portfolio
- A
portfolio that an
investor can construct given the
assets available.
- Feasible set of portfolios
- The collection of all feasible
portfolios.
-
Feasible target payout ratios
-
Payout ratios that are consistent with the level of excess funds available to make cash
dividend payments.
- Federal agency securities
-
Securities
issued by corporations and
agencies created by the U.S. government, such as the
Federal Home Loan Bank Board and
Ginnie Mae.
- Federal credit agencies
-
Agencies of the federal government set up to supply
credit to various
classes of institutions and individuals, e.g. S&Ls, small business firms, students, farmers, and exporters.
-
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (F.D.I.C.)
- A federal institution that insures bank deposits.
- Federal Financing Bank
- A federal institution that lends to a wide array of federal
credit
agencies funds it obtains by borrowing from the U.S.
Treasury.
- Federal funds
- Non-interest bearing deposits held in
reserve for depository institutions at their district
Federal Reserve Bank. Also,
excess reserves lent by banks to each other.
- Federal funds market
- The
market where banks can
borrow or lend
reserves, allowing banks temporarily
short of their
required reserves to
borrow reserves from banks that have
excess reserves.
- Federal funds rate
- This is the
interest rate that banks with
excess reserves at a
Federal Reserve district bank charge other banks that need overnight loans. The
Fed Funds rate, as it is called, often points to the direction of U.S.
interest rates. Mainly applies to convertible securities. The most sensitive
indicator of the direction of
interest rates, since it is set daily by the market, unlike the
prime rate and the
discount rate.
- Federal Home Loan Banks
- The institutions that regulate and lend to
savings and loan associations. The Federal Home Loan Banks play a role analogous to that played by the
Federal Reserve Banks vis-à-vis member commercial banks.
- Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae)
- The publicly-owned, government-sponsored corporation chartered in 1938
to purchase mortgages from lenders and resell them to investors. Known by the nickname Fannie Mae, it packages mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration, but also sells some non-governmentally backed mortgages.
-
Federally related institutions
- Arms of the federal government that are exempt from
S.E.C. registration and whose
securities are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government (with the exception of the Tennessee Valley Authority).
- Federal Reserve System
- The central bank of the U.S., established in 1913, and governed by the Federal Reserve Board located in Washington, D.C. The system includes 12 Federal Reserve Banks and is authorized to regulate
monetary policy in the U.S. as well as to supervise Federal Reserve member banks, bank holding companies, international operations of U.S. banks, and U.S. operations of foreign banks.
- Fedwire
- A wire transfer system for high-value payments operated by the
Federal Reserve System.
- FHA prepayment experience
- The percentage of loans in a pool of
mortgages
outstanding at the origination anniversary, based on annual statistical historic survival rates for FHA-insured mortgages.
- Fiat money
- Nonconvertible paper money.
- Field warehouse
- Warehouse rented by a warehouse company on another firm's premises.
- Figure
- See:
Full,
Handle.
- Figuring the tail
- Calculating the
yield at which a future
money market (one available some period hence) is purchased when that future
security is created by buying an existing
instrument and financing the initial portion of its life with a
term repo.
- Fill
- The price at which an
order is
executed.
- Fill or kill order (F.O.K.)
- A
trading
order that is
canceled unless
executed within a designated time period. Used in the context of general equities. A
market or
limited price order which is to be
executed in its entirety as soon as it is represented in the
trading crowd, and, if not so executed, is to be treated as
cancelled. For purposes of this definition, a
stop is considered an execution. Equivalent to
A.O.N. and
I.O.C. simultaneously.
- Filter
- A rule that stipulates when a
security should be bought or sold according to past
price action.
- Finance
- A discipline concerned with determining value and making decisions. The finance function allocates resources, including the acquiring, investing, and managing resources.
- Financial analysts
- Also called
securities analysts and
investment analysts, professionals who analyze financial statements, interview corporate executives, and attend
trade shows, in order to write reports recommending either purchasing, selling, or holding various
stocks.
- Financial assets
- Claims on
real assets.
- Financial control
- The management of a firm's costs and expenses in order to control them in relation to budgeted amounts.
- Financial distress
- Events preceding and including
bankruptcy, such as violation of
loan
contracts.
- Financial distress costs
- Legal and administrative costs of
liquidation or reorganization. Also includes implied costs associated with impaired ability to do business (indirect costs).
- Financial engineering
- Combining or dividing existing
instruments to create new financial products.
- Financial future
- A
contract entered into now that provides for the
delivery of a specified
asset in exchange for the selling price at some specified future date.
- Financial intermediaries
- Institutions that provide the
market function of matching borrowers and
lenders or
traders.
- Financial lease
- Long-term, non-cancelable
lease.
- Financial leverage
- Use of
debt to increase the
expected return on
equity. Financial leverage is measured by the ratio of debt to debt plus equity.
-
Financial leverage clientele
- A group of investors who have a preference for investing in firms that adhere to a particular financial
leverage policy.
- Financial leverage ratios
- Related:
capitalization ratios.
- Financial market
- An organized institutional structure or mechanism for creating and exchanging
financial assets.
- Financial objectives
- Objectives of a financial nature that the firm will strive to accomplish during the period covered by its financial plan.
- Financial plan
- A financial blueprint for the financial future of a firm.
- Financial planning
- The process of evaluating the investing and financing options available to a firm. It includes attempting to make optimal decisions, projecting the consequences of these decisions for the firm in the form of a financial plan, and then comparing future performance against that plan.
- Financial press
- That portion of the media devoted to reporting financial news.
- Financial ratio
- The result of dividing one financial statement item by another. Ratios help analysts interpret financial statements by focussing on specific relationships.
- Financial risk
- The
risk that the
cash flow
of an
issuer will not be adequate to
meet its financial obligations. Also referred to as the additional risk that a firm's
stockholder bears when the firm utilizes
debt and
equity.
-
Financial times (F-T)-actuaries indices
- Used for listed equity securities. Share price indices for U.K. companies together with
earnings yield,
price earnings ratio, and
dividend yield. The denominator in the
index formula is the market capitalization at the base date, adjusted for all capital changes affecting the particular index since the base date. See:
footsie.
- Financing decisions
- Decisions concerning the
liabilities and stockholders' equity side of the firm's
balance sheet, such as the decision to
issue
bonds.
- FINEX
- The financial futures and options division of the New York Cotton Exchange
(NYCE), with a trading floor in Dublin, FINEX Europe, creating a 24-hour market in most FINEX contracts.
- Finish
- Used in the context of general equities. See:
Fill.
- Firm
- Refers to an
order to
buy or sell that can be
executed without confirmation for some fixed period. Also, a synonym for company.
-
Firm commitment underwriting
- An
undewriting in which an investment banking firm commits to buy the entire
issue and assumes all financial responsibility for any unsold
shares.
- Firm market
- Used in the context of general equities.
Prices at which a
security can actually be bought or sold in decent sizes, as compared to an
inside market with very little depth. See:
Actual market
- Firm order
- Used in the context of general equities. 1)
Order to
buy or sell for the proprietary account of the
broker-dealerfirm; 2)
buy or sell order not conditional upon the customer's confirmation.
- Firm's net value of debt
- Total firm value minus total firm
debt.
- Firm-specific risk
- See:diversifiable risk or
unsystematic risk.
- First-call
- With
collateralized mortgage obligation (C.M.O.s), the start of the
cash flow cycle for the cash flow window.
- First-In-First-Out (F.I.F.O.)
- An accounting method for valuing the cost of goods sold that uses the cost of the oldest item in
inventory first.
- First notice day
- The first day, varying by contracts and exchanges, on which notices of intent to deliver actual financial
instruments or physical
commodities against
futures are authorized.
- First-pass regression
- A time series
regression to estimate the
betas of
securities
portfolios.
- Fiscal agency agreement
- An alternative to a bond
trust deed. Unlike the trustee, the fiscal agent acts as an
agent of the borrower.
- Fiscal policy
- The use of government spending and taxing for the specific purpose of stabilizing the economy.
- Fisher effect
- A theory that
nominal interest rates in two or more countries should be equal to the required
real
rate of return to investors plus compensation for the expected amount of
inflation in each country.
- Fisher's separation theorem
- The firm's choice of investments is separate from its owner's attitudes towards investments. Also referred to as
portfolio separation theorem.
- Fitch sheet
- Used in the context of general equities. Chronological listing of
trades in a
security showing the price, size,
exchange, and time (to the second) of the trades; obtained by hitting "#M" on Quotron.
- Five Cs of credit
- Five characteristics that are used to form a judgement about a customer's creditworthiness: character, capacity,
capital,
collateral, and conditions.
- Fixed asset
- Long-lived property owned by a firm that is used by a firm in the production of its income.
Tangible fixed assets include real estate, plant, and equipment.
Intangible fixed assets include patents, trademarks, and customer recognition.
- Fixed asset turnover ratio
- The ratio of sales to
fixed assets.
- Fixed-annuities
-
Annuity contracts in which the insurance company or issuing financial institution pays a fixed dollar amount of money per period.
- Fixed-charge coverage ratio
- A measure of a firm's ability to meet its fixed-charge obligations: the ratio of (net
earnings before taxes plus
interest charges paid plus long-term
lease payments) to (interest charges paid plus long-term lease payments).
- Fixed cost
- A cost that is fixed in total for a given period of time and for given production levels.
- Fixed-dates
- In the
Euromarket the
standard periods for which
Euros are
traded (1 month out to a year out) are referred to as the
fixed dates.
- Fixed-dollar obligations
- Conventional bonds for which the
coupon
rate is set as a fixed percentage of the
par value.
- Fixed-dollar security
- A nonnegotiable
debt
security that can be
redeemed at some fixed price or according to some schedule of fixed values, e.g., bank deposits and government savings
bonds.
- Fixed-exchange rate
- A country's decision to tie the value of its
currency to another country's currency, gold (or another commodity), or a basket of currencies.
- Fixed-income equivalent
- Also called a
busted convertible,
convertible security that is trading like a straight
security because the
optioned
common stock is trading well below the
conversion price.
- Fixed-income instruments
-
Assets that pay a fixed-dollar amount, such as
bonds and
preferred stock.
- Fixed-income market
- The market for trading
bonds and
preferred stock.
- Fixed price basis
- An offering of
securities at a fixed price.
- Fixed-price tender offer
- A one-time
offer to purchase a stated number of
shares at a stated fixed price, usually a
premium to the current
market price.
- Fixed-rate loan
- A
loan where the rate paid by the borrower is fixed for the life of the loan.
- Fixed-rate payer
- In an
interest rate swap the
counterparty who pays a
fixed rate, usually in exchange for a
floating-rate payment.
- Flat
- Used in the context of general equities.
Convertibles: earning
interest on the date of payment only.
General: having neither a
short nor
long position in a
stock.
Clean.
Market: characterized by horizontal price movement, usually the result of low activity.
Equities: to
execute without
commission or markup.
- Flat benefit formula
- Method used to determine a participant's benefits in a defined benefit plan by multiplying months of service by a flat monthly benefit.
- Flat price (also clean price)
- The quoted newspaper price of a
bond that does not include accrued
interest. The price paid by purchaser is the
full price.
- Flat price risk
-
Taking a position either
long or
short that does not involve
spreading.
-
Flattening of the yield curve
- A change in the
yield curve where the
spread between the
yield on a long-term and short-term
Treasury has decreased. Compare
steepening of the yield curve and
butterfly shift.
- Flat trades
- (1) A
bond in
default
trades flat; that is, the price quoted covers both principal and unpaid,
accrued interest. (2) Any
security that
trades without accrued interest or at a price that includes accrued interest is said to
trade flat.
- Flight to quality
- The tendency of investors to move towards safer,
government bonds during periods of high economic uncertainty.
- Flip-flop note
-
Note that allows investors to switch between two different types of
debt.
- Flipside
- Used in the context of general equities. Opposite side to that which was just mentioned (buy, if sell mentioned and vice versa).
- Float
- Used in the context of general equities.
Currency:
exchange rate policy whereby the authorities do not accept an obligation to limit the range of the market rate.
Equities: number of
shares of a corporation that are
outstanding and available for trading by the public, excluding
insiders or
restricted stock on a
when issued basis. A stock's
volatility is inversely correlated to its Float.
- Floater
- Floating rate
bond.
- Floating exchange rate
- A country's decision to allow its
currency value to freely change. The currency is not constrained by central bank intervention and does not have to maintain its relationship with another currency in a narrow band. The currency value is determined by trading in the
foreign exchange market.
- Floating lien
- General
lien against a company's
assets or against a particular
class of
assets.
- Floating-rate contract
- A guaranteed investment
contract where
the
credit rating is tied to some
variable ("floating")
interest rate benchmark, such as a specific-maturity Treasury
yield.
- Floating-rate note (F.R.N.)
-
Note whose
interest payment varies with short-term
interest rates.
- Floating-rate payer
- In an
interest rate swap, the
counterparty who pays a rate based on a
reference rate, usually in exchange for a fixed-rate payment
- Floating-rate preferred
-
Preferred stock paying
dividends that vary with short-term
interest rates.
- Floating supply
- The amount of
securities believed to be available for immediate purchase, that is, in the hands of
dealers and investors wanting to sell.
- Floor broker
- Used for listed equity securities. Member of an
exchange who is an employee of a
member firm and
executes
orders, as agent, on the floor of the
exchange for clients.
- Floor picture
- Used for listed equity securities. Details of the
trading crowd for a
stock, such as the major players, their sizes, and the
outside market +/- an eighth.
- Floor planning
- Arrangement used to finance
inventory. A finance company buys the inventory, which is then held in trust for the user.
- Floor ticket
- Used for listed equity securities. Summary of a
stock or commodities
exchange
order ticket by the registered representative on receipt of a
buy or sell order from a client; gives the
floor broker the information needed to
execute a
securities transaction.
- Floor trader
- A
member who generally
trades only for his own account,
for an account controlled by him or who has such a trade made for him. Also referred to as a "local".
- Flower bond
-
Government bonds that are acceptable at
par in payment of federal estate taxes when owned by the decedent at the time of death.
- Flow-through basis
- An account for the investment
credit to show all
income statement benefits of the credit in the year of
acquisition, rather than spreading them over the life of the
asset acquired.
- Flow-through method
- The practice of reporting to
shareholders using
straight-line depreciation and using
accelerated depreciation for tax purposes and "flowing through" the lower income taxes actually paid on to financial statement prepared for shareholders.
- Focus list
- Used in the context of general equities. Investment banks published list of
buy and sell recommendations from its research department; signified by a flashing "F" on Quotron.
- Footsie
- Mainly applies to international equities.
Financial times (f-t)-actuaries 100
index: "Dow average" of London.
- For a number
- Used in the context of general equities. Implies that the quantity mentioned is not his
total but instead is only approximate, and to
open him up more will obligate one to participate.
- "For/At"
- Used in the context of general equities. Conjunctions used in an order,
market summary, or
trade recap that signify a
bid or an
offer, respectively. See:
On.
- Forced conversion
- Mainly applies to convertible securities. Occurs when a
convertible security is called in by the
issuer, usually when the
underlying
stock is selling well above the
conversion price. Thus, they assure the
bonds will be retired without requiring any cash payment. Upon conversion into
common, the carrying value of the
bonds becomes part of a corporation's
equity, thus strengthening the balance sheet and enhancing future
debt
issuing capability.
- Force majeure risk
- The
risk that there will be an interruption of operations for a prolonged period after a project finance project has been completed due to fire, flood, storm, or some other factor beyond the control of the project's sponsors.
- Foreign banking market
- That portion of domestic bank
loans supplied to foreigners for use abroad.
- Foreign bond
- A
bond
issued on the
domestic capital market of another company.
- Foreign bond market
- That portion of the
domestic bond market that represents
issues
floated by foreign companies or governments.
-
Foreign Credit Insurance Association (F.C.I.A.)
- A private U.S. consortium of insurance companies that offers
trade
credit insurance to U.S. exporters in conjunction with the U.S.
(Ex-Im Bank) Export-Import Bank.
- Foreign currency
- Foreign money.
-
Foreign currency forward contract
- Mainly applies to international equities. Agreement that obliges its parties to exchange given quantities of currencies at a pre-specified
exchange rate on a certain future date.
-
Foreign currency futures contract
- Mainly applies to international equities. Standardized and easily transferable obligation between two parties to exchange currencies at a specified rate during a specified
delivery month; standardized
contract on specified
underlying currencies, in multiples of standard amounts. Purchased and
traded on a regulated
exchange to which
margins are
posted.
- Foreign currency option
- An
option that conveys the right (but not the obligation) to
buy or sell a specified amount of foreign currency at a specified price within a specified time period.
-
Foreign currency translation
- The process of restating
foreign currency accounts of subsidiaries into the
reporting currency of the parent company in order to prepare consolidated financial statements.
- Foreign direct investment (F.D.I.)
- The acquisition abroad of physical
assets such as plant and equipment, with operating control residing in the parent corporation.
- Foreign equity market
- That portion of the
domestic equity market that represents
issues
floated by foreign companies.
- Foreign exchange
- Currency from another country.
- Foreign exchange controls
- Various forms of controls imposed by a government on the purchase/sale of
foreign currencies by residents or on the purchase/sale of local currency by nonresidents.
- Foreign exchange dealer
- A firm or individual that buys
foreign exchange from one party and then sells it to another party. The
dealer makes the difference between the buying and selling
prices, or
spread.
- Foreign exchange risk
- The
risk that a
long or
short position in a
foreign currency might have to be closed out at a loss due to an adverse movement in the
exchange rates.
- Foreign exchange swap
- An agreement to exchange stipulated amounts of one
currency for another currency at one or more future dates.
- Foreign market
- Part of a nation's internal
market, representing the mechanisms for
issuing and
trading
securities of entities domiciled outside that nation. Compare
external market and
domestic market.
- Foreign market beta
- A measure of
foreign market
risk that is derived from the
capital asset pricing model.
- Foreign Sales Corporation (F.S.C.)
- A special type of corporation created by the Tax Reform Act of 1984 that is designed to provide a tax incentive for exporting U.S.-produced goods.
- Foreign tax credit
- Home country
credit against domestic income tax. Received in return for foreign taxes paid on foreign derived
earnings.
- Forex
- See:
Foreign exchange.
- Forfaiter
- Purchaser of promises to pay
issued by importers.
- Formula basis
- A method of selling a new
issue of
common stock in which the
S.E.C. declares the
registration statement effective on the basis of a price formula rather than on a specific range.
- 48-hour rule
- The requirement that all pool information, as specified under the
PSA Uniform Practices, in a
to be announced (T.B.A.) transaction be communicated by the seller to the buyer before 3 p.m. EST on the business day 48-hours prior to the agreed upon
trade date.
- Forward
- See:
forward contract.
- Forward contract
- A
cash market transaction in which
delivery of the
commodity is deferred until after the
contract has been made. It is not standardized and is not
traded on organized
exchanges. Although the
delivery is made in the future, the price is determined at the initial
trade date.
- Forward cover
- Purchase or sale of
forward
foreign currency in order to offset a known future
cash flow.
- Forward delivery
- A transaction in which the settlement will occur on a specified date in the future at a price agreed upon on the
trade date.
- Forward differential
- Annualized percentage difference between
spot and
forward rates.
- Forward discount
- A
currency trades at a forward
discount when its
forward price is lower than its
spot price.
- Forward exchange rate
-
Exchange rate fixed today for exchanging
currency at some future date.
- Forward Fed funds
-
Fed funds
traded for future
delivery.
- Forward forward contract
- In
Eurocurrencies, a
contract under which a deposit of fixed
maturity is agreed to at a fixed price for future
delivery.
- Forward interest rate
-
Interest rate fixed today on a
loan to be made at some future date.
- Forward looking multiple
- A truncated expression for a
P/E ratio that is based on
forward (expected)
earnings rather than on trailing earnings.
- Forward market
- A market in which participants agree to
trade some
commodity,
security, or
foreign exchange at a fixed price for future
delivery.
- Forward premium
- A
currency
trades at a forward
premium when its
forward price is higher than its
spot price.
- Forward rate
- A projection of future
interest rates calculated from either the
spot rates or the
yield curve.
- Forward rate agreement (F.R.A.)
- Agreement to
borrow or lend at a specified future date at an
interest rate that is
fixed today.
- Forward sale
- A method for
hedging price
risk which involves an agreement between a
lender and an
investor to sell particular kinds of
loans at a specified price and future time.
- Forward trade
- A transaction in which the
settlement will occur on a specified date in the future at a price agreed upon the
trade date.
- Fourth market
- Direct
trading of large in
exchange-listed securities between
investors without the use of a
broker.
- Freddie Mac (Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation)
- A Congressionally chartered corporation that purchases residential
mortgages in the
secondary market from S&Ls, banks, and mortgage bankers and
securities these mortgages for sale into the
capital markets.
- Free cash flows
- Cash not required for operations or for reinvestment. Often defined as earnings before
interest (often obtained from the operating income line on the income statement) less capital expenditures less the change in
working capital.
- Free delivery
- Used in the context of general equities.
Securities industry procedure whereby
delivery of securities sold is made to the buying customer's bank without the requirement of immediate payment, thus a
credit agreement of sorts. Antithesis of
delivery vs. Payment.
- Free float
- An
exchange rate system characterized by the absence of government intervention. Also known as
clean float.
- Free on board
- Implies that distributive services like transport and handling performed on goods up to the customs frontier of the economy from which the goods are
classed as merchandise.
- Free reserves
-
Excess reserves minus member bank borrowings at the
Fed.
- Free rider
- A follower who avoids the cost and expense of finding the best course of action and by simply mimicking the behavior of a leader who made these investments.
- Free to trade
- Used in the context of general equities. Removed from any internal (restricted list) or external restrictions on trading, and hence the
trader is free to solicit interest as well.
- Frequency distribution
- The organization of data to show how often certain values or ranges of values occur.
- Fresh picture
- Used for listed equity securities. Updated
picture of a
stock or
market, usually following recent trading activity or news which has changed the previous
look.
- Fresh signal
- Used in the context of general equities. Piece of information (fundamental or
technical) leading one to believe a
stock will move in a certain manner.
- Friction costs
- Costs, both implied and direct, associated with a transaction. Such costs include time, effort, money, and associated tax effects of gathering information and making a
transaction.
- Frictions
- The "stickiness" in making
transactions; the total hassle including time, effort, money, and tax effects of gathering information and making a transaction such as buying a
stock or borrowing money.
- Front ending
- Used in the context of general equities. Trading a
partial of relatively small size in comparison to the remainder of the total order, at times without giving the opposite side (the buyer/seller of this small "partial") adequate disclosure of the extent of the latter end of the total order, and thus disadvantaging this party when this sizable latter end moves the
stock's price against his initial
buy or sell price of the smaller, "front end".
- Front fee
- The fee initially paid by the buyer upon entering a
split-fee option
contract.
- Front running
- Used in the context of general equities. Entering into
option or
futures contracts with advance knowledge of a block transaction that will influence the price of the
underlying security to capitalize on the
trade. This practice is forbidden by the
S.E.C. and should never be followed within any brokerage firm.
- Fry a bigger fish
- Used in the context of general equities. Work on a
trade of larger size than that which was just disclosed.
- Full
-
Handle.
-
Full faith-and-credit obligations
- The
security pledges for larger municipal
bond
issuers, such as states and large cities which have diverse funding sources.
- Full coupon bond
- A
bond with a
coupon equal to the going
market rate, thereby, the bond is selling at
par.
- Full-service lease
- Also called rental
lease. Lease in which the
lessor promises to maintain and insure the equipment leased.
-
Fully diluted earnings per shares
-
Earnings per share expressed as if all outstanding
convertible securities and
warrants have been exercised.
-
Fully modified pass-throughs
-
Agency pass-throughs that guarantee the timely payment of both
interest and
principal. Related:
modified pass-throughs
- Fully valued
- Used in the context of general equities. Said of a
stock that has reached a price at which
analysts think the
underlying company's
fundamental earnings power has been fully recognized by the
market.
- Full-payout lease
- See:
financial lease
- Full price
- Also called
dirty price, the price
of a
bond including
accrued interest. Related:
flat price.
- Functional currency
- As defined by
F
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