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-
-
- R
-
Fifth letter of a
NASDAQ stock symbol specifying that the stock has rights.
- R.A.M.
- See:
Reverse-annuity mortgage
- R.A.P.
- See:
Regulatory accounting procedures
- R.E.I.T.
- See:
Real Estate Investment Trust
- R.E.M.I.C.
- See:
Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit
- R.O.A.
- See:
Return on assets
- R.O.E.
- See:
Return on equity
- R.O.I.
- See:
Return on investment
- R.P.P.P.
- See:
Relative purchasing power parity
- Radar alert
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Close monitoring of
trading patterns in a company's
stock by senior managers to uncover unusual buying activity that might signal a
takeover attempt. See:
shark watcher.
- Raider
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Individual or corporation
investor who "intends" to take control (often ostensibly for greenmail) of a company by buying a controlling interest in its
stock and installing new management. Raiders who accumulate 5% or more of the
outstanding
shares in the
target company must report their purchases to the
S.E.C., The exchange of listing, and the target itself. See:
takeover.
- Rally (recovery)
- An upward movement of
prices. Opposite of
reaction.
- Reverse-Annuity Mortgages (R.A.M.s)
-
Mortgages in which the bank makes a
loan for an amount equal to a percentage of the appraisal value of the home. The loan is then paid to the homeowner in the form of an
annuity.
- Random variable
- A function that assigns a real number to each and every possible outcome of a random experiment.
- Random walk
- Theory that stock price changes from day to day are at random; the changes are independent of each other and have the same probability distribution. Many believers of the random walk theory believe that it is impossible to outperform the
market consistently without taking additional risk.
- Randomized strategy
- A strategy of introducing into the decision-making process a random element that is designed to reduce the information content of the decision-maker's observed choices.
- Range
- The high and low prices, or high and low
bids and
offers recorded during a specified time.
- Range forward
- A
forward exchange rate
contract that places upper and lower bounds on the cost of
foreign exchange.
- Rate anticipation swaps
- An exchange of
bonds in a
portfolio for new bonds that will achieve the target
portfolio
duration, based on the
investor's assumptions about future changes in
interest rates.
- Rate lock
- An agreement between the
mortgage banker and the loan applicant guaranteeing a specified
interest rate for a designated period, usually 60 days.
- Rate of interest
- The rate, as a proportion of the
principal, at which
interest is computed.
- Rate of return
- Calculated as the (value now minus value when you purchased) divided by the value when you purchased. For equities, we often include
dividends with the value now. See also:
return,
annual rate of return
- Rate of return ratios
- Ratios that are designed to measure the profitability of the firm in relation to various measures of the funds invested in the firm.
- Rate risk
- In banking, the
risk that
profits may decline or losses occur because a rise in
interest rates forces up the
cost of funding
fixed-rate loans or other fixed-rate
assets.
- Ratings
- An evaluation of
credit quality Moody's, S&P, and Fitch Investors Service give to companies used by
investors and
analysts.
- Rational expectations
- The idea that people rationally anticipate the future and respond today to what they see ahead. This concept was pioneered by Nobel Laureate, Robert E. Lucas, Jr.
-
Raw material supply agreement
- As used in connection with
project financing, an agreement to furnish a specified amount per period of a specified raw material.
- Reaction
- A decline in
prices following an advance. Opposite of
rally.
- Reading the tape
- Used in the context of general equities. Judging the performance of
stocks by monitoring changes in price as they are displayed on the
ticker tape.
- Real
- Used in the context of general equities. (1)
Natural, or not profile; (2) Not
dividend roll nor
program trading related; (3) not tax-related. "Real"
indications have three major repercussions: a) pricing will be more favorable to the other side of the
trade since
Investment bank is not committing any capital; b) price pressure will be stronger if real since a
natural
buyer/seller may have information leading to his decision or more behind it, and c) an
uptick may be required for the
trader to transact if the
indication is not real and he has no
long position.
- Real assets
- Identifiable
assets, such as buildings, equipment, patents, and trademarks, as distinguished from a financial obligation.
- Real capital
- Wealth that can be represented in financial terms, such as savings account balances, financial securities, and real estate.
- Real cash flow
- A
cash flow is expressed in
real terms if the current, or date 0, purchasing power of the cash flow is given.
- Real exchange rates
-
Exchange rates that have been adjusted for the
inflation differential between two countries.
- Real interest rate
- The rate of
interest excluding the effect of expected
inflation; that is, the rate that is earned in terms of constant-purchasing-power dollars. Interest rate expressed in terms of
real goods, i.e.
nominal interest rate adjusted for expected inflation.
- Realistic on price
- Used in the context of general equities. Understands that the
size being considered requires price give, especially with illiquid
stocks. See:
takes price.
- Real market
- The
bid and
offer prices at which a
dealer could do "size." Quotes in the
brokers
market
may reflect not the real market, but pictures painted by
dealers playing
trading games.
- Real time
- A real time
stock or
bond quote is one that states a
security's most recent
offer to sell or
bid (buy). A delayed quote shows the same bid and
ask
prices 15 minutes and sometimes 20 minutes after a
trade takes place.
- Realized compound yield
-
Yield assuming that
coupon payments are invested at the going
market
interest rate at the time of their receipt and rolled over until the
bond matures.
- Realized return
- The
return that is actually earned over a given time period.
- Rebalancing
- Realigning the proportions of
assets in a
portfolio as needed.
- Rebate
- Used in the context of general equities. Negotiated
return of a portion of the interest earned by the
lender of
stock to a
short seller. When a stock is sold
short, the seller borrows stock from an owner or custodian and delivers it to the buyer. The proceeds are
delivered to the lender. The
borrower, who is short, often wants a rebate of the interest earned on the proceeds under the lender's control, especially when the stock can be borrowed from many sources. Note: the seller must pay the lender any
dividends paid out or, in the case of
bonds, interest which
accrues daily during the course of the borrow.
- Recapitalization proposal
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Plan by a
target company to restructure the firm's capitalization (debt and
equity) in a way to ward off a hostile or potential suitor.
-
Receivables balance fractions
- The percentage of a month's sales that remain uncollected (and part of
accounts receivable) at the end of succeeding months.
- Receivables turnover ratio
- Total operating revenues divided by average receivables. Used to measure how effectively a firm is managing its
accounts receivable.
- Receiver
- A
bankruptcy practitioner appointed by secured creditors in the United Kingdom to oversee the repayment of
debts.
- Reclamation
- A claim for the right to return or the right to demand the return of a
security that has been previously accepted as a result of bad
delivery or other irregularities in the delivery and settlement process.
- Record date
- (1) Date by which a
shareholder must officially own
shares in order to be entitled to
a
dividend. For example, a firm might declare a dividend on Nov 1, payable Dec 1 to holders of record Nov 15. Once a
trade is
executed an
investor becomes the "owner of record" on
settlement, which currently takes 5 business days for
securities, and one business day for
mutual funds. Stocks trade
ex-dividend the fourth day before the record date, since the seller will still be the owner of record and is thus entitled to the dividend. (2) The date that determines who is entitled to payment of
principal and
interest due to be paid on a
security. The record date for most
M.B.S.s is the last day of the month, however the last day on which they may be presented for the transfer is the last business day of the month. The record date for
C.M.O.s and
asset-backed securities vary with each
issue.
- Recourse
- Term describing a type of
loan. If a loan is with recourse, the
lender has a general claim against the parent company if the
collateral is insufficient to repay the
debt.
- Red herring
- A preliminary
prospectus containing information required by the
S.E.C.. It excludes the
offering price and the
coupon of the new
issue.
- Redeemable
- Eligible for
redemption under the terms of the
indenture.
- Redemption
- Mainly applies to convertible securities. Repayment of a
debt
security or
preferred stock
issue, at or before
maturity, at
par or at a
premium price.
- Redemption charge
- The
commission charged by a
mutual fund when redeeming
shares. For example, a 2% redemption charge (also called a "back end load") on the sale of shares valued at $1000 will result in payment of $980 (or 98% of the value) to the
investor. This charge may decrease or be eliminated as shares are held for longer time periods.
- Redemption cushion
- The percentage by which the
conversion value of a
convertible security exceeds the
redemption price (strike price).
- Redemption or call
- Right of the
issuer to force holders on a certain date to
redeem their
convertibles for cash. The objective usually is to force holders to convert into
common prior to the redemption deadline. Typically, an
issue is not
called away unless the
conversion price is 15-25% below the current level of common. An exception might be where an
issuer's tax rate is high, and the issuer could replace it with
debt securities at a lower after-tax cost.
- Reference rate
- A
benchmark interest rate (such as
LIBOR), used to specify conditions of an
interest rate swap or an
interest rate agreement.
- Refundable
- Eligible for refunding under the terms of
indenture.
- Refunded bond
- Also called a prerefunded bond, one that originally may have been
issued as a
general obligation
or revenue
bond but that is now secured by an
"escrow fund" consisting entirely of direct U.S. government obligations that are sufficient for paying the
bondholders.
- Refunding
- The
redemption of a
bond with proceeds received from
issuing lower-cost
debt obligations with ranking equal to or superior to the debt to be redeemed.
- Regional fund
- A
mutual fund that invests in a specific geographical area overseas, such as Asia or Europe.
- Regional stock exchanges
- Used for listed equity securities. Organized national securities exchanges located outside of New York city and registered with the
S.E.C. They include: Boston, Cincinnati, Intermountain (Salt Lake City - dormant, owned by COMEX), Midwest (Chicago), Pacific (Los Angeles and San Francisco), Philadelphia (Philadelphia and Miami), and Spokane (local mining & Canadian issues, non-reporting trades)
stock exchanges.
- Registered bond
- A
bond whose
issuer records ownership and
interest payments. Differs from a
bearer bond which is traded without record of ownership and whose possession is the only evidence of ownership.
- Registered representative
- A person registered with the
C.F.T.C. who is employed by, and soliciting business for, a
commission house or
futures commission merchant.
- Registered security
- Used in the context of general equities.
Securities whose owner's name is recorded on the books of the
issuer or the issuer's agent, called a
registrar.
- Registered trader
- A member of the
exchange who
executes frequent
trades for his or her own account.
- Registrar
- Financial institution appointed to record
issue and ownership of company
securities.
- Registration
- Used in the context of general equities. Process set up the Securities Exchange Acts of 1933 and 1934 whereby
securities that are to be sold to the public are reviewed by the
S.E.C.
- Registration statement
- A legal document that is filed with the
S.E.C. to register securities for
public offering. Used in the context of general equities. This document details the purpose of a proposed public offering of
securities. The statement outlines financial details, a history of the company's operations and management, and other facts of importance to potential buyers. See:
registration.
- Regression
- Usually
linear regression is used to explain and/or predict. The general form is Y = a + bX + u, where Y is the variable that we are trying to predict; X is the variable that we are using to predict Y, a is the intercept; b is the slope and u is the regression residual. The a and b are chosen in a way to minimize the squared sum of the residuals. The ability to fit or explain is measured by the
R-squared.
- Regression analysis
- A statistical technique that can be used to estimate relationships between
variables.
- Regression equation
- An equation that describes the average relationship between a
dependent variable and a set of explanatory variables.
- Regression toward the mean
- The tendency for subsequent observations of a
random variable to be closer to its
mean.
- Regular settlement
- Used in the context of general equities. Transaction in which the
stock
contract is
settled and
delivered on the fifth full business day following the date of the transaction (trade date). In Japan, regular settlement occurs three business days following the trade date, and in London, two weeks following the trade date (at times, three weeks). In France, once per month.
- Regular way settlement
- In the money and
bond
markets, the regular basis on which some
security
trades are settled is that the
delivery of the securities purchased is made against payment in
Fed funds on the day following the transaction.
- Regulation A
- The
securities regulation that exempts small
public offerings, those valued at less than $1.5MM, from most registration requirements with the
S.E.C..
- Regulation D
-
Fed regulation that currently requires member banks to hold
reserves against their net borrowings from foreign offices of other banks over a 28-day averaging period. Regulation D has been merged with
Regulation M.
- Regulation M
-
Fed regulation that currently requires member banks to hold
reserves against their net borrowings from their foreign branches over a 28-day averaging period. Reg M has also required member banks to hold
reserves against
Eurodollars lent by their foreign branches to domestic corporations for domestic purposes.
- Regulation Q
-
Fed regulation imposing
caps on the rates that banks may pay on savings and
time deposits. Currently
time deposits with a denomination of $100,000 or more are exempt from Reg Q.
-
Regulatory accounting procedures (R.A.P.)
- Accounting principals required by the
F.H.L.B. that allow
S&Ls to elect annually to defer gains and losses on the sale of
assets and
amortize these deferrals over the average life of the
asset sold.
- Regulatory pricing risk
-
Risk that arises when regulators restrict the
premium rates that insurance companies can charge.
- Regulatory surplus
- The surplus as measured using
regulatory accounting principles (R.A.P.) which may allow the non-market valuation of
assets or
liabilities and which may be materially different from
economic surplus.
- Reinvestment rate
- The rate at which an
investor assumes
interest payments made on a
debt
security can be
reinvested over the life of that security.
- Reinvestment risk
- The
risk that proceeds received in the future will have to be reinvested at a lower potential
interest rate.
- Reinvoicing center
- A central financial
subsidiary used by an
M.N.C. to reduce transaction exposure by having all home country exports billed in the home
currency and then reinvoiced to each operating affiliate in that affiliate's local currency. It can also be used as a netting center.
-
Real Estate Investment Trust (R.E.I.T.)
- Real estate investment trust, which is similar to a
closed-end mutual fund. R.E.I.T.s invest in real estate or
loans secured by real estate and
issue
shares in such investments.
-
Relative purchasing power parity (R.P.P.P.)
- Idea that the rate of change in the price level of
commodities in one country relative to the price level in another determines the rate of change of the
exchange rate between the two countries' currencies.
- Relative strength
- A
stock's price movement over the past year as compared to a
market index (like the
S&P 500). Value below 1.0 means the stock shows relative weakness in price movement (underperformed the market); a value above 1.0 means the stock shows
relative strength over the 1-year period. Equation for Relative Strength: [current stock price/year-ago stock price] divided by [current S&P 500/year-ago S&P 500]. Note this is a potentially misleading indicator of performance because it does not take
risk into account.
- Relative value
- The attractiveness measured in terms of
risk,
liquidity,
and
return of one
instrument relative to another, or for a given instrument, of one
maturity relative to another.
- Relative yield spread
- The ratio of the
yield spread to the yield level. Used for
bonds.
- Release
- Used in the context of general equities. Allow another party to a
trade to be free from any previously-made obligation concerning that trade, hence allowing them to show the
inquiry/order to a new
broker.
- Remainderman
- One who receives the
principal of a trust when it is dissolved.
- Remaining maturity
- The length of time remaining until a
bond's
maturity.
- Remaining principal balance
- The amount of
principal dollars remaining to be paid under a
mortgage as of a given point in time.
- Rembrandt market
- The
foreign market in the Netherlands.
-
Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit (R.E.M.I.C.)
- A pass-through tax entity that can hold
mortgages secured by any type of real property and can
issue multiple
classes of ownership interests to
investors in the form of pass-through certificates,
bonds, or other legal forms. A financing vehicle created under the
Tax Reform Act of 1986.
- Remote disbursement
- Technique that involves writing checks drawn on banks in remote locations so as to increase
disbursement float.
- Renewal
- Used in the context of general equities. Placement of an identical
day order to that which was not completed on the previous day.
- Rental lease
- See:
full-service lease.
- Reoffering yield
- In a purchase and sale, the
yield to maturity at which the
underwriter offers to sell the
bonds to
investors.
- Reopen an issue
- The
Treasury, when it wants to sell additional
securities, will occasionally sell more of an existing
issue (reopen it) rather than
offer a new
issue.
- Reorganization
- Creating a plan to restructure a
debtor's business and restore its financial health.
- Replacement cost
- Cost to replace a firm's
assets.
- Replacement cycle
- The frequency with which an
asset is replaced by an equivalent asset.
- Replacement value
- Current cost of replacing the firm's
assets.
- Replacement-chain problem
- Idea that future replacement decisions must be taken into account in selecting among projects.
- Replicating portfolio
- A
portfolio constructed to match an
index or
benchmark.
- Repo
- An agreement in which one party sells a
security to another party and agrees to repurchase it on a specified date for a specified price. See:
repurchase agreement.
- Report
- Used in the context of general equities. Written or oral confirmation that all or part of one's
order has been
executed, including the price and size parameters of the
trade being reported; often followed by a
fresh picture.
- Reported factor
- The
pool factor as reported by the
bond buyer for a given
amortization period.
- Reporting currency
- The
currency in which the parent firm prepares its own financial statements; that is, U.S. dollars for a U.S. company.
- Reproducible assets
- A
tangible asset with physical properties that can be reproduced, such as a building or machinery.
- Repurchase agreement
- An agreement with a
commitment by the seller (dealer) to
buy a
security back from the purchaser (customer) at a specified price at a designated future date. Also called a
repo, it represents a collateralized short-term loan, where the
collateral may be a
Treasury security,
money market
instrument, federal agency security, or
mortgage-backed security. From the purchaser (customer) perspective, the deal is reported as a
reverse Repo.
- Repurchase of stock
- Device to pay cash to firm's
shareholders that provides more preferable tax treatment for shareholders than
dividends.
Treasury stock is the name given to previously
issued stock that has been repurchased by the firm. A repurchase is achieved through either a
dutch auction, open market,
purchase, or
tender offer.
- Required reserves
- The dollar amounts, based on
reserve ratios, that banks are required to keep on deposit at a
Federal Reserve Bank.
- Required return
- The minimum
expected return you would require in order to purchase the
asset, that is, to make the
investment.
- Required yield
- Generally referring to
bonds, the
yield required by the marketplace to match available
expected returns for financial
instruments with comparable
risk.
- Research portable
- Used in the context of general equities. Service offered to clients which transmits
Investment bank research via on-line computers.
- Reserve
- An accounting entry that properly reflects contingent
liabilities.
- Reserve currency
- A
foreign currency held by a central bank or monetary authority for the purposes of exchange intervention and the settlement of inter-governmental claims.
- Reserve ratios
- Specified percentages of deposits, established by the
Federal Reserve Board, that banks must keep in a non-interest-bearing account at one of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks.
- Reserve requirements
- The percentage of different types of deposits that member banks are required to hold on deposit at the
Fed.
- Reset frequency
- The frequency with which the
floating rate changes.
- Residuals
- (1) Parts of
stock
returns not explained by the explanatory
variable (the market-index return). They measure the impact of
firm-specific events during a particular period. (2) Remainder
cash flows generated by pool
collateral and those needed to fund
bonds supported by the collateral.
- Residual assets
-
Assets that remain after sufficient assets are dedicated to meet all
senior debtholder's claims in full.
- Residual claim
- Related:
equity claim.
- Residual dividend approach
- An approach that suggests that a firm pay
dividends if and only if acceptable investment opportunities for those funds are currently unavailable.
- Residual losses
- Lost wealth of the
shareholders due to divergent behavior of the managers.
- Residual method
- A method of allocating the
purchase price for the
acquisition of another firm among the
acquired assets.
- Residual risk
- Related:
unsystematic risk.
- Residual value
- Usually refers to the value of a
lessor's property at the time the
lease expires.
- Resistance level
- A price level above which it is supposedly difficult for a
security or
market to rise. Used in the context of general equities. Price ceiling at which
technical analysts note persistent selling of a
commodity or
security. Antithesis of
support level.
- Restricted
- Used in the context of general equities. Placement on a list which dictates that the
trader may not maintain
positions, solicit business, or provide
indications in a
stock, but may serve as
broker in
agency
trades after being properly cleared. Placement on a restricted list is due to
Investment bank involvement with the company on non-public activity (i.e.,
mergers and
acquisitions defense), affiliate ownership, or
underwriting activities; signified on the Quotron by a flashing "R." A restricted list and the stocks on it should never be conveyed to anyone outside of the trading areas, much less outside of the firm. See:
grey list.
- Restricted stock
- Used in the context of general equities.
Stock which must be
traded in compliance with special
S.E.C. regulations concerning its purchase and resale. These restrictions generally result from affiliate ownership,
M&A activity, and
underwriting activity.
- Restrictive covenants
- Provisions that place constraints on the operations of
borrowers, such as restrictions on
working capital,
fixed assets, future borrowing, and payment of
dividend.
- Retail
- Individual and institutional customers as opposed to
dealers and
brokers.
- Retail credit
-
Credit granted by a firm to consumers for the
purchase of goods or services. See:
consumer credit.
- Retail investors
- Small individual
investors who commit capital for their personal account rater than on behalf of another company.
- Retained earnings
- Accounting
earnings that are retained by the firm for
reinvestment in its operations; earnings that are not paid out as
dividends.
- Retention rate
- The percentage of present
earnings held back or retained by a corporation, or one minus the
dividend payout rate. Also called the
retention ratio.
- Retire
- To extinguish a
security, as in paying off a
debt.
- Retracement
- A price movement in the opposite direction of the previous
trend.
- Return
- The change in the value of a
portfolio over an evaluation period, including any
distributions made from the
portfolio during that period.
- Return on assets (R.O.A.)
- Indicator of
profitability. Determined by dividing
net income for the past 12 months by total average
assets. Result is shown as a percentage. R.O.A. can be decomposed into return on sales (net income/sales) multiplied by asset utilization (sales/assets).
- Return on equity (ROE)
- Indicator of
profitability. Determined by dividing
net income for the past 12 months by
common
stockholder equity (adjusted for stock splits). Result is shown as a percentage. Investors use R.O.E. as a measure of how a company is using its money. R.O.E. may be decomposed into
return on assets (R.O.A.) multiplied by financial leverage (total assets/total equity).
- Return on investment (ROI)
- Generally, book income as a proportion of net
book value.
- Return on total assets
- The ratio of
earnings available to
common
stockholders to total
assets.
-
Return-to-maturity expectations
- A variant of
pure expectations theory which suggests that the
return that an
investor will realize by rolling over short-term
bonds to some investment horizon will be the same as holding a
zero-coupon bond with a
maturity that is the same as that investment horizon.
- Reuters
- International news and
quotation service based in London.
- Revaluation
- An increase in the
foreign exchange value of a currency that is pegged to other currencies or gold.
- Revenue bond
- A
bond
issued by a municipality to finance either a project or an enterprise where the
issuer pledges to the
bondholders the revenues generated by the operating projects financed, for instance, hospital revenue bonds and sewer revenue bonds.
- Revenue fund
- A fund accounting for all revenues from an enterprise financed by a
municipal revenue bond.
- Reversal
- Used in the context of general equities.
Turn,
Unwind.
For convertible reversal, selling a convertible and buying the
underlying
common, usually done by an
arbitrageur. For market reversal, change in direction in the
stock or commodity futures markets, as charted by
technical analysts in trading ranges. For options reversal,
closing the positions of each aspect of an options
spread or
combination strategy.
- Reverse price risk
- A type of
mortgage-pipeline risk that occurs when a
lender commits to sell
loans to an
investor at rates prevailing at the time of mortgage application but sets the
note rates when the
borrowers close. The lender is thus exposed to the risk of falling rates.
- Reverse repo
- In essence, refers to a
repurchase agreement. From the customer's perspective, the customer provides a
collateralized
loan to the seller.
- Reverse stock split
- A proportionate decrease in the number of
shares, but not the total value of
shares of
stock held by
shareholders. Shareholders maintain the same percentage of
equity as before the
split. For example, a 1-for-3 split would result in
stockholders owning 1 share for every 3 shares owned before the split. After the reverse split, the firm's stock price is, in this example, worth three times the pre-reverse split price. A firm generally institutes a reverse split to boost its stock's
market price. Some think this supposedly attracts investors.
- Reversing trade
- Entering the opposite side of a currently held
futures
position to
close out the position.
- Revolving credit agreement
- A legal commitment wherein a bank promises to
lend a customer up to a specified maximum amount during a specified period.
- Revolving line of credit
- A bank
line of credit on which the customer pays a
commitment fee and can take down and repay funds according to his needs. Normally the line involves a firm commitment from the bank for a period of several years.
- Reward-to-volatility ratio
- Ratio of
excess return to
portfolio
standard deviation.
- Rich
- Used in the context of general equities. Term for a
security whose price seems too high in light of its price history.
- Riding the yield curve
- Buying long-term
bonds in anticipation of
capital gains as
yields fall with the declining
maturity of the bonds.
- Right
- Privilege granted to existing
shareholders of a corporation to subscribe to
shares of a new
issue of
common stock before it is
offered to the public. Such a right, which normally has a life of two to four weeks, is freely transferable and entitles the holder to
buy the new common stock below the
public offering price. See:
warrant.
- Right here
- Used in the context of general equities.
In-line, emphasizing that this is a customer
inquiry that is ready to be executed and not distant on price. See:
Tight.
- Rights offering
- Issuance of "rights" to current
shareholders allowing them to purchase additional
shares, usually at a
discount to
market price. Shareholders who do not
exercise these rights are usually diluted by the
offering. Rights are often transferable, allowing the holder to sell them on the open
market to others who may wish to exercise them. Rights offerings are particularly common to
closed end funds, which cannot otherwise
issue additional
common stock.
- Rights-on
-
Shares
trading with
rights attached to them.
- Rings
-
Trading arenas located on the floor of an
exchange in which
traders
execute
orders. Sometimes called a
pit.
- "Ring the cash register"
- Used in the context of general equities. "Take a profit." See:
profit taking.
- Risk
- Often defined as the
standard deviation of the
return on total investment. Degree of uncertainty of return on an
asset. In context of
asset pricing theory. See:
Systematic risk
- Risk-adjusted profitability
- A
probability used to determine a "sure"
expected value (sometimes called a
certainty equivalent) that would be equivalent to the actual
risky expected value.
- Risk adjusted return
- Often we subtract from the
rate of return on an
asset a rate of return from another asset that has similar
risk. This gives an abnormal rate of return that shows how the asset performed over and above a
benchmark asset with the same risk. We can also use the
beta against the
benchmark to calculate an
alpha which is also risk adjusted preformance.
- Risk arbitrage
- Traditionally, the simultaneous purchase of
stock in a company being acquired and sale of stock of the acquirer. Modern "risk arbitrage" focuses on capturing the spreads between the
market value of an announced
takeover
target and the eventual price at which the acquirer will
buy the target's
shares.
- Risk averse
- A risk-averse
investor is one who, when faced with two investments with the same
expected return but different
risks, prefers the one with the lower risk.
- Risk classes
- Groups of projects that have approximately the same amount of
risk.
- Risk controlled arbitrage
- A self-funding, self-hedged series of transactions that generally utilize
mortgage securities (M.B.S.) as the primary
assets.
- Risk factor
- In
arbitrage pricing theory or the multibeta central
asset pricing model, the set of common
factors that impact
returns. E.g. market return,
interest rates,
inflation, and industrial production.
- Risk indexes
- Categories of
risk used to calculate
fundamental beta, including (1)
market variability, (2)
earnings variability, (3) low valuation, (4) immaturity and smallness, (5) growth orientation, and (6)
financial risk.
- Riskless rate
- The rate earned on a riskless investment, typically the rate
earned on the 90-day
U.S. Treasury Bill.
- Riskless rate of return
- The rate earned on a riskless
asset.
- Riskless arbitrage
- The simultaneous purchase and sale of the same
asset to
yield a
profit.
- Riskless or risk-free asset
- An
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