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- O
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Fifth letter of a NASDAQ stock symbol specifying that it is the company's second class of preferred shares.
- O.A.S.
- See:
Option adjusted spread
- O.C.C.
- See:
Options Clearing Corporation
- O.I.D.
- See:
Original issue discount debt
- O.P.E.C
- See:
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
- Objective (mutual funds)
- The fund's investment strategy category as stated in the
prospectus. There are more than 20 standardized categories. E.g. Aggressive growth, balanced.
- Odd lot
- A
trading
order for less than 100
shares of
stock. Compare
round lot.
- Odd lot dealer
- A
broker who combines
odd lots of
securities from multiple
buy or sell
orders into
round lots and
executes transactions in those round lots.
- OEX index
- Applies to derivative products. Quotron symbol for the
S&P 100 index option.
- Off-balance-sheet financing
- Financing that is not shown as a
liability on a company's
balance sheet.
- Off-board
- Used for listed equity securities. Transacted away from a national securities
exchange even though the
stock itself is
listed, such as on the
N.Y.S.E., and instead of on the O.T.C. market, a
regional exchange, or in the third or fourth markets (between customers directly). After 9:30 a.m., if the stock has not opened due to the exchange's discretion,
trading can occur elsewhere, but the
trader must assume the role of a quasi-specialist in the process.
- Offer
- Indicates a willingness to sell at a given price. Related:
bid
- Offer price
- See:
offer.
- Offerings
- Often refers to
initial public offerings. When a firm goes public and makes an offering of
stock to the market.
- Offering memorandum
- A document that outlines the terms of
securities to be
offered in a
private placement.
- Offer wanted
- Used in the context of general equities. Notice by a potential buyer of a
security that he or she is
looking for supply from a potential seller of the security, often requiring a capital commitment. Antithesis of
bid wanted.
- Off-floor order
- Used for listed equity securities. 1)
Order to
buy or sell a security that originates off the floor of an
exchange; customer orders originating with
brokers, as distinguished from orders placed by floor members
trading for their own accounts.
Exchange rules require that an off-floor order be
executed before orders initiated on the floor.
Upstairs order. Antithesis of
on-floor order; 2) order not handled on the floor but instead upstairs.
- Official reserves
- Holdings of gold and
foreign currencies by official monetary institutions.
- Official statement
- A statement published by an
issuer of a new municipal
security describing itself and the
issue
-
Official unrequited transfers
- Include a variety of subsidies, military aid, voluntary cancellation of
debt, contributions to international organizations, indemnities imposed under peace treaties, technical assistance, taxes, fines, etc.
- Offset
- Elimination of a
long or
short position by making an opposite transaction. Related:
liquidation.
- Offshore finance subsidiary
- A wholly owned affiliate incorporated overseas, usually in a
tax haven country, whose function is to
issue
securities abroad for use in either the parent's domestic or foreign business.
- "O.k. to cross"
- Used for listed equity securities. "Legal to
cross the
buy and sell
orders on the
exchange floor because is not a
principal to principal transaction.".
- Old-line factoring
-
Factoring arrangement that provides collection, insurance, and finance for
accounts receivable.
- Omnibus account
- An account carried by one
futures commission merchant with another futures commission merchant in which the transactions of two or more persons are combined and carried in the name of the originating
broker, rather than designated separately. Related:
commission house.
- On
- Used in the context of general equities. Conjunction that denotes
trade
execution /indication, usually during a pre-opening look. "Looks 6 on 6000
shares at opening." See:
for/at.
- On a clean up
- Used in the context of general equities. Willingness to participate in part of a
trade if all of the
stock available is
spoken for except for the "clean up amount."
- On balance
- Used for listed equity securities. Left over after
pairing off other
market
buy and sell
orders, usually before the opening of a
stock or
market but at times at the
close (especially during
index
expirations). See:
imbalance of orders.
- On board
- Used in the context of general equities.
Long.
- 144 stock
- Used in the context of general equities.
Restricted stock.
- On-floor order
- Used for listed equity securities.
Security
order originating with a
member on the floor of an
exchange when dealing with his or her own account, versus an
upstairs order. Antithesis of
off-floor order.
- On the money
- Used in the context of general equities.
In-line, or at the same price, as the last sale.
- On the print
- Used in the context of general equities. To participate in a
block trade that has already transpired, as if that customer had been part of the trade originally; often used by a new party looking to participate in a
trade that has just happened.
- On the run
- The most recently
issued (and, therefore, typically the most
liquid)
government bond in a particular
maturity range.
- On the take
- Used in the context of general equities.
Price moving upward, due to an increased level of
buyers taking
offerings, causing those offerings to vanish and be replaced by higher ones. Antithesis of
come in,
get hit.
- One man picture
- The picture quoted by a
broker is said to be a one-man picture if both the
bid and
offered
prices come from the same source.
- On the tape
- Used in the context of general equities. 1)
Trade printed on the
ticker tape; 2) news displayed on
Reuters or the
Dow Jones news service.
- One-factor APT
- A special case of the
arbitrage pricing theory that is derived from the
one-factor model by using
diversification and
arbitrage. It shows that the
expected return on any
risky
asset is a linear function of a single
factor.
- One-way market
- (1) A
market in which only one side, the
bid or
asked, is
quoted or firm. (2) A market that is moving strongly in one direction.
-
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (O.P.E.C.)
- A cartel of oil-producing countries.
- Open
- Used in the context of general equities. Having either
buy or sell interest at the indicated price level and side of a preceding
trade. "Open on the buy/sell side," means open to customer buyers/sellers, not that he/she wants to buy/sell but rather that he wants to find buyers/sellers (meaning that he/she is a seller/buyer). Antithesis of
clean.
- Open account
- Arrangement whereby sales are made with no formal
debt
contract. The buyer signs a receipt, and the seller records the sale in the sales ledger.
- Open book
- See:
unmatched book.
- Open contracts
-
Contracts which have been bought or sold without the transaction having been completed by subsequent sale or purchase, or completed by making or taking actual
delivery of the financial
instrument or physical
commodity.
- Open depending on the floor
- Used for listed equity securities. Having room for a customer buyer or seller contingent on the results of a
trade being
executed on the floor (i.e., satisfying the
specialist book and those orders whom the
trader
opened up). See
open on the print, subject.
- Open-end fund
- Used in the context of general equities. Mutual fund that continually creates new shares on demand.
Mutual fund
shareholders
buy the funds at
net asset value and may
redeem them at any time at the prevailing
market prices. Antithesis of
closed-end fund.
- Opening transaction
- Applies to derivative products. 1)Buy or sell transaction that creates a
position out of a
flat one (writing an
option
short or buying an option long). Antithesis of
closing transaction. 2) first transaction of the day in a
stock.
- Open interest
- The total number of derivative
contracts traded that have not yet been liquidated either by an
offsetting derivative transaction or by
delivery. Related:
liquidation
- Open on the print
- Used in the context of general equities.
Block trader's term for a
block trade that has been completed with an institutional client and
printed on the
consolidated tape, but that leaves the block trader with
stock available (due to the trader having taken a
long or
short position to complete the trade) for new customers who are on the opposite side of the
market to the initiating customer.
- Open (good-til-cancelled) order
- An individual
investor can
place an
order to
buy or sell a
security.
This
open order stays active until it
is completed or the investor
cancels it. Used in the context of general equities.
G.T.C. order.
- Open position
- A net
long or
short position whose value will change with a change in
prices.
- Open repo
- A
repo with no definite term. The agreement is made on a day-to-day basis and either the
borrower or the
lender may choose to terminate. The rate paid is higher than on
overnight repo and is subject to adjustment if rates move.
- Open-end fund
- Also called a
mutual fund, an investment company that stands ready to sell new
shares to the public and to redeem its
outstanding shares on demand at a price equal to an appropriate share of the value of its
portfolio, which is computed daily at
the close of the market.
- Open-end mortgage
-
Mortgage against which additional
debts may be issued. Related:
closed-end mortgage.
- Open-market operation
- Purchase or sale of
government securities by the monetary authorities to increase or decrease the domestic
money supply.
-
Open-market purchase operation
- A systematic program of repurchasing
shares of
stock in
market transactions at current
market prices, in competition with other prospective
investors.
- Open-outcry
- The method of
trading used at
futures
exchanges, typically involving calling out the specific details of a
buy or sell
order, so that the information is available to all
traders.
- Opening
- The period at the beginning of the
trading session officially
designated by the exchange, during which all transactions are considered made "at the opening". Related:
Close
- Opening price
- The
range of
prices at which the first bids and offers were made or first transactions were completed.
- Opening purchase
- A transaction in which the purchaser's intention is to create or increase a
long position in a given
series of
options.
- Opening sale
- A transaction in which the seller's intention is to create or increase a
short position in a given
series of
options.
- Open up
- Used in the context of general equities. Disclose more information (e.g., the exact price and quantity) of one's potential interest. See:
put pants on it.
- Operating cash flow
-
Earnings before
depreciation minus taxes. It measures the cash generated from operations, not counting capital spending or
working capital requirements.
- Operating cycle
- The
average time intervening between the
acquisition of materials or services and the final cash realization from those acquisitions.
- Operating exposure
- Degree to which
exchange rate changes, in combination with price changes, will alter a company's future
operating cash flows.
- Operating profit margin
- The ratio of operating profit to net sales.
- Operating lease
- Short-term,
cancelable
lease. A type of lease in which the period of
contract is less than the life of the equipment and the
lessor pays all maintenance and servicing costs.
- Operating leverage
- Fixed operating costs, so-called because they accentuate variations in
profits.
- Operating risk
- The inherent or fundamental
risk of a firm, without regard to financial risk. The risk that is created by operating leverage. Also called
business risk.
-
Operationally efficient market
- Also called an internally
efficient market, one in which
investors can obtain transactions services that reflect the true costs associated with furnishing those services.
- Opinion shopping
- A practice prohibited by the
S.E.C. which involves attempts by a corporation to obtain reporting objectives by following questionable accounting principles with the help of an auditor willing to go along with the desired treatment.
- Opportunity cost of capital
-
Expected return that is foregone by investing in a project rather than in comparable financial
securities.
- Opportunity costs
- The difference in the performance of an actual investment and a desired investment adjusted for fixed costs and
execution costs. The performance differential is a consequence of not being able to implement all desired
trades. Most valuable alternative that is given up.
- Opportunity set
- The possible
expected return and
standard deviation pairs of all
portfolios that can be constructed from a given set of
assets.
- Optimal contract
- The
contract that balances the three types of
agency costs (contracting, monitoring, and misbehavior) against one another to minimize the total cost.
- Optimal portfolio
- An
efficient portfolio most preferred by an
investor because its
risk/reward characteristics approximate the
investor's
utility function. A
portfolio that maximizes an investor's preferences with respect to
return and
risk.
-
Optimal redemption provision
- Provision of a
bond indenture that governs the
issuer's ability to
call the
bonds for
redemption prior to their scheduled
maturity date.
-
Optimization approach to indexing
- An approach to
indexing which seeks to optimize some objective, such as to maximize the
portfolio
yield, to maximize
convexity, or to maximize
expected total returns.
- Option
- Gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to
buy or sell an
asset at a set
price on or before a given date.
Investors, not companies,
issue options. Investors who purchase
call options bet the stock will be worth more than the price set by the
option (the
strike price), plus the price they paid for the option itself. Buyers of
put options bet the stock's price will go down below the price set by the option. An option is part of a
class of securities called
derivatives, so named because these securities derive their value from the worth of an
underlying investment.
- Option-adjusted spread (O.A.S.)
- (1) The
spread over an
issuer's
spot rate curve, developed as a measure of the
yield
spread that can be used to convert dollar differences between theoretical value and
market prices. (2) The cost of the
implied call embedded in a
M.B.S., defined as additional basis-yield spread. When added to the base yield spread of an M.B.S. without an operative call produces the option-adjusted spread.
- Option elasticity
- The percentage increase in an
option's value given a 1% change in the value of the
underlying security.
- Option not to deliver
- In the
mortgage pipeline, an additional
hedge placed in tandem with the
forward or substitute sale.
- Option premium
- The
option price.
- Option price
- Also called the
option premium, the price paid by the buyer of the
options contract for the right to
buy or sell a
security at a specified price in the future.
-
Options Clearing Corporation (O.C.C.)
- Applies to derivative products. Financial institution that is the actual
issuer and guarantor of all listed
option contracts.
- Options contract
- A
contract that, in exchange for the
option price, gives the
option buyer the right, but not the obligation, to
buy (or sell) a financial
asset at the
exercise price from (or to) the
option seller within a specified time period, or on a specified date (expiration date).
- Options contract multiple
- A constant, set at $100, which when multiplied by the
cash index value gives the dollar value of the
stock index
underlying an
option. That is, dollar value of the underlying stock index = cash index value x $100 (the
options contract multiple).
- Option seller
- Also called the
option writer, the party who grants a right to
trade a
security at a given price in the future.
- Options on physicals
-
Interest rate options written on fixed-income securities, as opposed to those written on interest rate
futures contracts.
- Option writer
- See:
Option seller.
- Or better
- Used in the context of general equities.
Indication on the
order ticket of a
limit order to
buy or sell
securities at a price better than the specified
limit price if a better price can be obtained; does not imply a
not-held order, but rather puts more emphasis on
executing at the limit if available.
- Order
- Instruction to a broker/dealer to
buy, sell,
deliver, or receive
securities or
commodities which commits the
issuer of the "order" to the terms specified. See: indication, inquiry,
bid wanted,
offer wanted.
- Ordinary shares
- Mainly applies to international equities.
Shares of non-U.S. companies traded in their individual home markets. Usually cannot be delivered in the U.S. See:
A.D.R.
- Organized exchange
- A
securities marketplace wherein purchasers and sellers regularly gather to
trade securities according to the formal rules adopted by the
exchange.
- Original face value
- The
principal amount of the
mortgage as of its issue date.
-
Original issue discount debt (O.I.D. debt)
-
Debt that is initially
offered at a price below
par.
- Original margin
- The
margin needed to
cover a specific new
position. Related:
margin,
security deposit(initial)
- Original maturity
-
Maturity at
issue. For example, a five year
note has an original maturity of 5 years; one year later it has a maturity of 4 years.
- Origination
- The making of
mortgage
loans.
- Other capital
- In the balance of payments, other
capital is a
residual category that groups all the capital transactions that have not been included in direct investment,
portfolio investment, and
reserves categories. It is divided into long-term capital and short-term capital and, because of its residual status, can differ from country to country. Generally speaking, other long-term capital includes most non-negotiable
instruments of a year or more like
bank loans and
mortgages. Other short-term capital includes financial
assets of less than a year such as currency, deposits, and bills.
- Other current assets
- Value of non-cash
assets, including prepaid expenses and
accounts receivable, due within 1 year.
- Other long term liabilities
- Value of
leases, future employee benefits,
deferred taxes and other obligations not requiring
interest payments that must be paid over a period of more than 1 year.
- Other sources
- Amount of funds generated during the period from operations by sources other than
depreciation or
deferred taxes. Part of
free cash flow calculation.
- Out
- Used in the context of general equities. 1) No longer obligated to an
order, as it has already been
cancelled: 2) advertised on
Autex.
- Out of print
- Not
open on the print. See:
Clean.
- Out-of-the-money option
- A
call option is out-of-the-money if the
strike price is greater than the
market price of the
underlying security. i.e. you have the right to purchase a security at a price greater than the market price, which is not valuable. A
put option is out-of-the-money if the
strike price is less than the market price of the
underlying security.
- Out of the name
- Used in the context of general equities. No longer has an active
trading
profile/position in the stock.
- Outright rate
- Actual
forward rate expressed in dollars per currency unit, or vice versa.
- Outside market
- Used in the context of general equities. Outside the
inside market (above the lowest
offering and below the highest bid).
- Outside of you
- Used for listed equity securities. Besides the
trader being addressed, another
order bidding for or
offering
stock at the same price that the trader has put on the floor himself, represented by another
broker in the
trading crowd. However, these orders may have different
price limits (possible top or low on floor mentioned to
floor broker but not announced in the crowd). See:
matching orders.
- Outsourcing
- The practice of purchasing a significant percentage of intermediate components from outside suppliers.
- Outstanding
- Used in the context of general equities.
Stock held by
shareholders (vs. the company's treasury).
- Outstanding share capital
-
Issued share capital less the
par value of
shares that are held in the company's
treasury.
- Outstanding shares
-
Shares that are currently owned by
investors.
- Out there
- Used in the context of general equities.
Indication that buyer(s) and/or (more often) seller(s) exist in the
market due to
trading and
inquiry activity, and should be found to get their
order. "Feels like IBM is 'out there'."
- Out with
- Used in the context of general equities. Showing of an
inquiry to another
broker by a customer ("he's out with...").
- Overage
- Mainly applies to convertible securities. Difference between how much
common stock one party must sell and the other wishes to
buy for the same amount of
convertible in a
swap situation.
- Overbought
- Used in the context of general equities. Technically too high in price, and hence a technical
correction is expected. See:
Heavy. Antithesis of
oversold.
-
Overbought\oversold indicator
- An
indicator that attempts to define when
prices have moved too far and too fast in either direction and thus are vulnerable to
reaction.
- Overfunded pension plan
- A
pension plan that has a positive surplus (i.e.,
assets exceed
liabilities).
- Overhang
- Used in the context of general equities. Sizable block of
securities or
commodities
contracts that, if released on the
market, would put downward pressure on
prices; prohibits buying activity that would otherwise translate into upward price movement. Examples include
shares held in a dealer's inventory, a large institutional holding, a
secondary distribution still in
registration, and a large
commodity
position about to be
liquidated.
- Overlap the market
- Used in the context of general equities. Create a
crossed market by expressing a willingness to sell on the
bid side of the
market and
buy on the
offer side.
- Overlay strategy
- A strategy of using
futures for
asset allocation by
pension sponsors to avoid disrupting the activities of
money managers.
- Overnight delivery risk
- A
risk brought about because differences in time zones between settlement centers require that payment or
delivery on one side of a transaction be made without knowing until the next day whether the funds have been received in an account on the other side. Particularly apparent where delivery takes place in Europe for payment in dollars in New York.
- Overnight repo
- A
repurchase agreement with a term of one day.
- Overperform
- When a
security is expected to appreciate at a rate faster than the overall
market.
- Overreaction hypothesis
- The supposition that
investors overreact to unanticipated news, resulting in exaggerated movement in
stock
prices followed by corrections.
- Overreaching
- Used in the context of general equities. Creating artificial volume in a stock through activity not generated by normal/natural buyers and sellers in the
market.
- Oversold
- Used in the context of general equities. Technically too low in price, and hence a technical
correction is expected. Antithesis of
overbought.
- Overshooting
- The tendency of a pool of
M.B.S.s to reflect an especially high rate of
prepayments the first time it crosses the threshold for refinancing, especially if two or more years have passed since the date of
issue without the
weighted average coupon of the pool having crossed the refinancing threshold.
- Oversubscribed issue
-
Investors are not able to
buy all of the shares or
bonds they want, so
underwriters must allocate the shares or bonds among investors. This occurs when a new
issue is underpriced or in great demand because of growth prospects.
- Oversubscription privilege
- In a
rights issue, arrangement by which
shareholders are given the right to apply for any
shares that are not taken up.
- Over-the-counter (O.T.C.)
- A decentralized
market (as opposed to an exchange market) where geographically dispersed
dealers are linked together by telephones and computer screens. The market is for
securities not
listed on a
stock or
bond
exchange. The
N.A.S.D.A.Q. market is an O.T.C. market for U.S. stocks. Antithesis of
listed.
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