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- T
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Fifth letter of a
NASDAQ stock symbol specifying that the stock has warrants or rights.
- T.A.A.
- See:
Tactical asset allocation
- T.A.B.s
- See:
Tax anticipation bill
- T.A.N.s
- See:
Tax Anticipation Notes
- T.B.A.
- See:
To be announced
-
T-period
holding-period return
- The percentage
return over the T-year period an
investment lasts.
- Tactical Asset
Allocation (T.A.A.)
- Portfolio strategy that allows active departures from the normal asset mix based upon rigorous
objective measures of value. Often called
active management. It involves forecasting asset
returns,
volatilities and
correlations. The forecasted
variables may be functions of fundamental variables, economic variables or even technical variables.
- Tail
- (1) The difference between the average price in
Treasury
auctions and the stopout price. (2) A future
money market
instrument (one available some period hence) created by buying an existing instrument and financing the initial portion of its life with a
term repo. (3) The extreme ends under a
probability curve. (4) The odd amount in a
M.B.S. pool.
- Take
- (1) A
dealer or customer who agrees to
buy at another dealer's
offered price is said to take that offer. (2) Also,
Euro bankers speak of taking deposits rather than buying money.
- Take a position
- To
buy or
sell short; that is, to have some amount that is owned or owed on an
asset or
derivative security.
- Take a powder
- Used in the context of general equities. Temporarily
cancel an
order or
indication in a
stock by a customer, while unrepresented interest still exists. See:
back on the shelf,
sidelines.
- Take a swing
- Used in the context of general equities.
Execute a
trade at a price which the
trader feels is more
rich/risky than he would normally accept, in order to gain
market share within the institutional arena.
- "Take it down"
- Used in the context of general equities. Lower the
offering price or
hit others'
bids to such an extent as to lower the
inside market.
- "Take me along"
- Used in the context of general equities. "Allow me to participate in the side of the
trade just referenced."
- Take-or-pay contract
- A
contract that obligates the purchaser to take any product that is
offered (and pay the cash purchase price) or pay a specified amount if he/she refuses to take the product.
- Take-out
- A cash
surplus generated by the sale of one block of
securities and the purchase of another, e.g. selling a block of
bonds at 99
and buying another block at 95. Also, a
bid made to a seller of a security that is designed (and generally agreed) to take him out of the market.
- Takeover
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Change in the controlling interest of a corporation, either through a friendly
acquisition or an unfriendly, hostile,
bid. A hostile
takeover (aiming to replace existing management) is usually attempted through a public
tender offer. General term referring to transfer of control of a firm from one group of
shareholders to another group of shareholders.
- Takes a call
- Used in the context of general equities. Requires a
call to an account in order for the
trade to be completed. See:
show me.
- Takes price
- Used in the context of general equities. Requires some price movement or concession on behalf of the initiating party before the
trade can be consummated. See:
price give.
- Take the offer
- Used in the context of general equities.
Buy
stock by accepting a
floor broker's (listed) or
dealer's (O.T.C.)
Offer at an agreed-upon volume. Antithesis of
hit the bid.
- Take-up fee
- A fee paid to an
underwriter in connection with an underwritten
rights
offering or an underwritten
forced conversion. Represents compensation for each share of
common stock the underwriter obtains and must resell upon the
exercise of rights or
conversion of bonds.
- Taking a view
- A London expression for forming an opinion as to where
market prices are headed and acting on it.
- Taking delivery
- Refers to the buyer's actually assuming possession from the seller of the
assets agreed upon in a
forward contract or a
futures contract.
- Tandem programs
- Under
Ginnie Mae, mortgage funds provided at below-market rates to residential
M.B.S. buyers with FHA Section 203 and 235 loans and to developers of multifamily projects with Section 236 loans initially and later with Section 221(d)(4) loans.
- Tax Anticipation Notes (T.A.N.s)
- Tax anticipation notes are
issued by states or
municipalities to finance current operations in anticipation of future tax receipts.
- Tangible asset
- An
asset whose value depends on particular physical properties. These include
reproducible assets such as buildings or machinery and
non-reproducible assets such as land, a mine, or a work of art. Also called
real assets. Related:
Intangible asset
- Tape
- Used in the context of general equities. 1) Service that reports prices and size of transactions on major
exchanges --
ticker tape. 2)
Dow Jones and other news wires. See:
consolidated tape.
- Target cash balance
- Optimal amount of
cash for a firm to hold, considering the trade-off between the
opportunity costs of holding too much cash and the
trading costs of holding too little cash.
- Target company
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Firm that has been chosen as attractive for
takeover by a potential acquirer. The acquirer may
buy up to 5% of the target's
stock without public disclosure, but it must report all transactions and supply other information to the
S.E.C., the
exchange the target company is listed on, and the target company itself once the 5% threshold is hit. See:
raider.
- Targeted repurchase
- The firm
buys back its own
stock from a potential acquirer, usually at a substantial
premium, to forestall a
takeover attempt. Related:
Greenmail
- Target firm
- A firm that is the object of a
takeover by another firm.
- Target payout ratio
- A firm's long-run
dividend-to-earnings ratio. The firm's policy is to attempt to pay out a certain percentage of
earnings, but it pays a stated dollar dividend and adjusts it to the target as base-line increases in
earnings occur.
- Target zone arrangement
- A monetary system under which countries pledge to maintain their
exchange rates within a specific
margin around agreed-upon, fixed central
exchange rates.
- Taxable acquisition
- A
merger or
consolidation that is not a tax-fee
acquisition. The selling
shareholders are treated as having sold their
shares.
- Taxable income
- Gross income less a set of deductions.
- Taxable transaction
- Any transaction that is not tax-free to the parties involved, such as a taxable
acquisition.
- Tax anticipation bills (T.A.B.s)
- Special bills that the
Treasury occasionally
issues that mature on corporate quarterly income tax dates and can be used at face value by corporations to pay their tax
liabilities.
- Tax books
- Set of books kept by a firm's management for the IRS that follows IRS rules. The
stockholder's books follow
Financial Accounting Standards Board rules.
- Tax clawback agreement
- An agreement to contribute as
equity to a project the value of all previously realized project-related tax benefits not already clawed back. Exercised to the extent required to cover any cash deficiency of the project.
- Tax deferral option
- The feature of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code that the
capital gains tax on an
asset is payable only when the gain is realized by selling the asset.
-
Tax-deferred
retirement plans
- Employer-sponsored and other plans that allow contributions and earnings to be made and accumulate tax-free until they are paid out as benefits.
- Tax differential view (of dividend policy)
- The view that
shareholders prefer
capital gains over
dividends, and hence low
payout ratios, because capital gains are effectively taxed at lower rates than dividends.
- Tax-exempt sector
- The
municipal bond
market where state and local governments raise funds. Bonds
issued in this sector are exempt from federal income taxes.
- Tax free acquisition
- A
merger or consolidation in which 1) the
acquirer's tax basis on each
asset whose ownership is transferred in the transaction is generally the same as the
acquiree's, and 2) each seller who receives only
stock does not have to pay any tax on the gain he realizes until the
shares are sold.
- Tax haven
- A nation with a moderate level of taxation and/or liberal tax incentives for undertaking specific activities such as exporting or investing.
- Tax Reform Act of 1986
- A 1986 law involving a major overhaul of the U.S. tax code.
- Tax shield
- The reduction in income taxes that results from taking an allowable deduction from taxable income.
- Tax selling
- Used in the context of general equities. Unloading of
long positions in
stock for tax purposes, usually to use these capital losses to
offset previously earned
profit. See:
wash sale.
- Tax swap
-
Swapping two similar
bonds to receive a tax benefit.
- Tax-timing option
- The option to sell an
asset and claim a loss for tax purposes or not sell the asset and defer the
capital gains tax.
- To be announced (T.B.A.)
- A
contract for the purchase or sale of a
M.B.S. to be delivered at an agreed-upon future date but does not include a specified pool number and number of pools or precise amount to be
delivered.
- Technical analysis
-
Security analysis that seeks to detect and interpret patterns in past
security
prices.
- Technical analysts
- Also called
chartists or technicians,
analysts who use mechanical rules to detect changes in the supply of and demand for a
stock and capitalize on the expected change.
-
Technical condition
of a market
- Demand and supply factors affecting price, in particular the
net position, either
long or
short, of the
dealer community.
- Technical descriptors
-
Variables that are used to describe the
market on a technical basis.
- Technical insolvency
-
Default on a legal obligation of the firm. For example, technical insolvency occurs when a firm doesn't pay a bill on time.
- Technical rally
- Used in the context of general equities. Short rise in
securities or commodities
futures prices within a general declining trend. Such a rally may result because
investors are
bargain hunting or because
analysts have noticed a particular
support level at which securities usually bounce up. Antithesis of
correction.
- Technician
- Related:
technical analysts
- TED spread
- Difference between
U.S. Treasury bill rate and
Eurodollar rate; used by some
traders as a measure of investor/trader anxiety or credit quality.
- Teenyo
- 1/16 or .0625 of one full point in price.
Steenth.
- Temporal method
- Under this currency translation method, the choice of
exchange rate depends on the
underlying method of valuation.
Assets and
liabilities
valued at
historical cost (market cost) are translated at the historical (current market) rate.
- Tender
- To
offer for
delivery against
futures.
- Tender offer
- General
offer made publicly and directly to a firm's
shareholders to
buy their
stock at a price well above the current
market price.
- Tender offer premium
- The
premium offered above the current
market price in a
tender offer.
- 10-K
-
Annual report required by the
S.E.C. each year. Provides a comprehensive overview of a company's state of business. Must be filed within 90 days after fiscal year end. A 10-Q report is filed quarterly.
- 10-Q
-
Quarterly report required by the
S.E.C. each quarter. Provides a comprehensive overview of a company's state of business.
- Tenor
-
Maturity of a
loan.
- Term bonds
- Often referred to as bullet-maturity
bonds or simply bullet bonds, bonds whose
principal is payable at
maturity. Related:
serial bonds
- Term Fed Funds
-
Fed Funds sold for a period of time longer than overnight.
- Term insurance
- Provides a death benefit only, no build-up of cash value.
- Term life insurance
- A
contract that provides a death benefit but no cash build-up or investment component. The
premium remains constant only for a specified term of years, and the policy is usually renewable at the end of each term.
- Term loan
- A bank
loan, typically with a
floating interest rate, for a specified amount that matures in between one and ten years and requires a specified repayment schedule.
- Term premiums
- Excess of the
yields to maturity on long-term
bonds over those of short-term bonds.
- Term repo
- A
repurchase agreement with a term of more than one day.
-
Term structure
of interest rates
- Relationship between
interest rates on
bonds of different
maturities usually depicted in the form of a graph often called a
yield curve.
Harvey shows that inverted term structures (long rates below short rates) have preceded every recession over the past 30 years.
- Term to maturity
- The time remaining on a
bond's life, or the date on which the
debt will cease to exist and the
borrower will have completely paid off the amount borrowed. See:
Maturity.
- Term trust
- A
closed-end fund that has a fixed termination or
maturity date.
- Terminal value
- The value of a
bond at
maturity, typically its
par value, or the value of an
asset (or an entire firm) on some specified future valuation date.
- Terms of sale
- Conditions on which a firm proposes to sell its goods or services for cash or credit.
- Terms of trade
- The weighted average of a nation's export prices relative to its import prices.
- Theoretical
futures price
- Also called the
fair price, the equilibrium
futures price.
- Theoretical spot rate
curve
- A curve derived from theoretical considerations as applied to the
yields of actually
traded Treasury debt securities because there are no
zero-coupon Treasury
debt
issues with a
maturity greater than one year. Like the
yield curve, this is a graphical depiction of the
term structure of interest rates.
- Theoretical value
- Applies to derivative products. Mathematically determined value of a
derivative instrument as dictated by a pricing model such as the
Black-Scholes model.
- Theta
- Also called time decay, the ratio of the change in an
option price to the decrease in
time to expiration.
- Thin market
- A
market in which trading
volume is low and in which consequently
bid and
asked quotes are wide and the
liquidity of the
instrument
traded is low. Condition of very little
stock to
buy or sell. Illiquid.
- Thinly traded
- Infrequently
traded.
- Third market
-
Exchange-listed
securities
trading in the
O.T.C. market.
- Three-phase DDM
- A version of the
dividend discount model which applies a different expected
dividend rate depending on a company's life-cycle phase,
growth phase,
transition phase, or
maturity phase.
- Threshold for refinancing
- The point when the
weighted average coupon of an
M.B.S. is at a level to induce homeowners to
prepay the mortgage in order to refinance to a lower-rate mortgage, generally reached when the
weighted average coupon of the M.B.S. is 2% or more above currently available mortgage rates.
- Throughput agreement
- An agreement to put a specified amount of product per period through a particular facility. For example, an agreement to ship a specified amount of crude oil per period through a particular pipeline.
- Tick
- Refers to the minimum change in price a
security can have, either up or down. Related:
point.
- Ticker tape
- Used in the context of general equities. Computerized device that relays to
investors around the world the
stock symbol and the latest price and volume on
securities as they are
traded.
- Tick indicator
- A
market indicator based on the number of
stocks whose last
trade was an
uptick or a
downtick. Used as an indicator of market sentiment or psychology to try to predict the market's
trend.
- Tick-test rules
-
S.E.C.-imposed
restrictions on when a
short sale may be
executed, intended to prevent
investors from destabilizing the price of a
stock when the
market price is falling. A short sale can be made only when either (1) the sale price of the particular
stock is higher than the last
trade price (referred to as an
uptick trade) or (2) if there is no change in the last
trade price of the particular stock, the previous trade price must be higher than the trade price that preceded it (referred to as a
zero uptick).
- Tight market
- A tight market, as opposed to a
thin market, is one in which
volume is large, trading is active and highly competitive, and consequently
spreads between
bid and
ask prices are narrow.
- Tight
- Used in the context of general equities.
In-line or extremely close (+/- 1/8) to the
inside market or last sale in a stock.
On the money.
- Tiki
- Used for listed equity securities. Tick of
Dow Jones Industrial component
issues.
- Tilted portfolio
- An
indexing strategy that is linked to active management through the emphasis of a particular
industry sector, selected performance
factors such as
earnings momentum,
dividend yield,
price-earnings ratio, or selected economic factors
such as
interest rates and
inflation.
- Time decay
- Related:
theta.
- Time deposit
- Interest-bearing deposit at a
savings institution that has a specific
maturity. Related:
certificate of deposit.
- Time draft
- Demand for payment at a stated future date.
- Time order
- Used in the context of general equities.
Order which becomes a
market or
limited price order or is
cancelled at a specific time.
- Time premium
- Also called
time value, the amount by which the
option price exceeds its
intrinsic value. The value of an option beyond its current
exercise value
representing the optionholder's control until
expiration, the risk of the
underlying asset, and the
riskless return.
-
Times-interest-earned ratio
-
Earnings before
interest and tax, divided by
interest payments.
- Time to maturity
- The time remaining until a financial
contract expires. Also called
time until expiration.
- Time until expiration
- The time remaining until a financial
contract expires. Also called
time to maturity.
- Time value
- Applies to derivative products. Portion of an
option price that is in excess of the
intrinsic value, due to the amount of
volatility in the stock; sometime referred to as
premium. Time value is positively related to the length of time remaining till expiration?
- Time value of an option
- The portion of an option's
premium that is based on the amount of time remaining until the
expiration date of the
option contract, and that the
underlying components that determine the value of the
option may change during that time. Time value is generally equal to the difference between the premium and the
intrinsic value. Related:
in-the-money.
- Time value of money
- The idea that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar in the future, because the dollar received today can earn
interest up until the time the future dollar is received.
-
Time-weighted
rate of return
- Related:
Geometric mean
return.
- Timing option
- For a
Treasury Bond or
note
futures contract, the seller's choice of when in the
delivery month to deliver.
- Tired
- Used in the context of general equities. Has been strong for a while and will probably fall due to increased supply at current price level (due to
profit taking,
technical analysis, etc.).
Heavy.
- Tobin's Q
-
Market value of
assets divided by
replacement value of assets. A Tobin's Q ratio greater than 1 indicates the firm has done well with its investment decisions.
- Toehold purchase
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Accumulation by an
acquirer of less than 5% of the
shares of a
target company. Once 5% is acquired, the acquirer must file with the
S.E.C. and other agencies to explain his intentions and notify the acquiree. See:
Rule 13d.
- Tolling agreement
- An agreement to put a specified amount of raw material per period through a particular processing facility. For example, an agreement to process a specified
amount of alumina into aluminum at a particular aluminum plant.
- Tom next
- In the interbank
market in
Eurodollar deposits and
the foreign exchange market, the value (delivery) date on a Tom next transaction is the next business day. Refers to "tomorrow next."
- Tombstone
- Advertisement listing the
underwriters to a
security
issue.
- Top
- Used in the context of general equities. Indicating the higher price one is willing to pay for a
stock in his
order; implies a
not held order.
-
Top-down
equity management style
- A management style that begins with an assessment of the overall economic environment and makes a general
asset allocation decision regarding various sectors of the financial markets and various industries. The
bottom-up manager, in contrast, selects the specific securities within the favored sectors.
- Top heavy
- Used in the context of general equities. At a price level where supply is exceeding demand. See:
resistance level.
- Topping out
- Used in the context of general equities. Term denoting a
market or a
security that is at the end of a period of rising
prices and can now be expected to stay on a plateau or even to decline.
- T.S.E. 100 (Toronto Stock Exchange 100 index)
- Canadian form of a
Dow Jones Industrial index.
- Total
- Used in the context of general equities. Complete amount of
buy or sell interest, versus having
more behind it. See:
partial.
- Total asset turnover
- The ratio of net sales to total
assets.
- Total debt to equity
ratio
- A capitalization ratio comparing
current liabilities plus long-term
debt to
sharesholders'
equity.
- Total dollar return
- The dollar
return on a nondollar
investment, which includes the sum of any
dividend/interest income,
capital gains or losses, and currency gains or losses on the investment. See also:
total
return.
- Total return
- In performance measurement, the actual rate of
return realized over some
evaluation period. In fixed income analysis, the potential return that considers all three sources of return
(coupon interest,
interest on coupon interest, and any capital gain/loss) over some investment horizon.
- Total revenue
- Total sales and other revenue for the period shown. Known as "turnover" in the UK.
- Touch, the
- Mainly applies to international equities.
Inside market in London terminology.
- Tough on price
- Used in the context of general equities.
Firm price mentality at which one wishes to transact stock, often at a
discount/premium that is not available at the time.
- Tracking error
- In an
indexing strategy, the standard deviation of the difference between the performance of the
benchmark and the
replicating portfolio.
- Tracking stock
- Best defined with an example. Suppose Company 'A' purchases a business from Company
'B' and pays 'B' with 1 million shares of 'A's stock. In the agreement, there is a provision
that 'B' cannot sell the 1 million shares for 60-days. In addition, the agreement prohibits
'B' from hedging by purchasing put options on 'A's shares or short-selling 'A's shares.
'B' is worried that the market may fall in the next 60 days. 'B' could hedge by
purchasing put options or selling the futures on the S&P 500. However, it is possible
that 'A's business is much more cyclical that the S&P 500. One solution to this problem
is to find a tracking stock. This is a stock that has high
correlation with 'A' let us
call it Company 'C'.
The solution is the sell short or buying
protective put options on this tracking stock 'C'. This
protects 'B' from fluctuations in the price of 'A's stock over the next 60 days.
However, the degree of the protection is related to the
correlation of 'A' and
'C's stock. It is extremely unlikely that the protection is perfect.
- Trade
- A verbal (or electronic) transaction involving one party buying a
security from another party. Once a
trade is consummated, it is considered "done" or final. Settlement occurs 1-5 business days later.
- Trade acceptance
- Written demand that has been accepted by an industrial company to pay a given sum at a future date. Related:
banker's acceptance.
- Trade away
- Used in the context of general equities.
Trade
execution by another
broker/dealer.
- Trade credit
-
Credit granted by a firm to another firm for the purchase of goods or services.
- Trade date
- In an
interest rate swap, the date that the
counterparties commit to the swap. Also, the date on which a
trade occurs. Trades generally settle (are paid for) 1-5 business days after a
trade date. With
stocks, settlement is generally 3 business days after the trade. For
equities, the day on which a
security or a
commodity future
trade actually takes place. The
settlement date usually follows the trade date by five business days, but varies depending on the transaction and method of
delivery used.
- Trade debt
-
Accounts payable.
- Trade draft
- A draft addressed to a commercial enterprise. See:
draft.
- Trade flat
- Used in the context of general equities. For convertibles,
trade without
accrued interest,
preferred stock always "trades flat" as do
bonds on which
interest is in default or is in doubt. For general, trade in and out of a
position at the same price, neither making a profit nor taking a loss.
- "Trade me out"
- Used for listed equity securities. Work out of one's
long position (usually created by committing firm
principal to complete a
trade block trade) by selling stock. Antithesis of "buy them back."
- Trade on the wire
- Used in the context of general equities.
Aggressive
trading posture of immediately giving a
bid or
offer to a salesman without checking the floor conditions (listed),
dealer depth (O.T.C.) or customer interest.
- Trade on top of
-
Trade at a narrow or no spread in basis points relative to some other
bond yield, usually
Treasury bonds.
- Trade house
- A firm which deals in actual
commodities.
- Traders
- Persons who
take positions in
securities and their
derivatives with the objective of making
profits. Traders can make
markets by
trading the flow. When they do that, their objective is to earn the
bid/ask
spread. Traders can also be of the sort who take
proprietary
positions whereby they seek to profit from the directional movement of prices or
spread
positions.
- Trades by appointment
- Used in the context of general equities. Very difficult to
trade due the stock's illiquidity.
- Trading
-
Buying and selling
securities.
- Trading costs
- Costs of
buying and selling marketable securities and borrowing. Trading costs include
commissions, slippage, and the
bid/ask
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