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Z- Cable
- Exchange rate between British pounds sterling and the U.S.$.
- Calendar
- List of new issues
scheduled to
come to market shortly.
- Calendar
effect
- The tendency of stocks
to perform
differently at different times, including such anomalies
as the
January effect, month-of-the-year effect, day-of-the-week
effect,
and holiday effect.
- Call
- An
option
that gives the right to
buy the underlying futures
contract.
- Callable
- A
financial security such as a bond with a call
option attached to it, i.e., the issuer has the right
to call the
security.
- Call an option
- To
exercise
a
call option.
- Call date
- A
date before maturity, specified at issuance, when the
issuer
of a
bond
may retire part of the bond for
a specified call price.
- Call money rate
- Also called the broker
loan
rate , the interest
rate that
banks charge brokers to finance margin
loans to investors. The broker charges the
investor
the
call money rate
plus a service charge.
- Call
option
- An option
contract
that gives its holder the
right (but not the obligation) to purchase a specified
number of
shares
of the underlying stock at
the given strike price, on or before the
expiration date
of the
contract.
- Call premium
- Premium
in price above the
par value
of a
bond
or share of
preferred stock
that must
be paid to holders to redeem the bond or share of preferred
stock
before its scheduled maturity date.
- Call
price
- The
price, specified at issuance, at which the
issuer
of a
bond
may retire part of the bond at a
specified call date.
- Call protection
- A
feature of some callable bonds that establishes an
initial
period when the bonds may not be called.
- Call provision
- An embedded option
granting a bond issuer the right to buy back all or
part of the
issue prior to maturity.
- Call risk
- The combination of cash flow
uncertainty and reinvestment
risk introduced by a call
provision.
- Call swaption
- A
swaption in which the buyer has the right to enter
into a swap
as a fixed-rate payer.
The writer
therefore becomes the
fixed-rate receiver/floating rate payer.
- Canadian
agencies
- Agency banks established by Canadian banks in the U.S.
- Cap
- An upper limit on the interest
rate on a (FRN)
floating-rate note.
- Capital
- Money
invested in a firm.
- Capital
account
- Net
result of public and private international investment
and
lending activities.
- Capital
allocation decision
- Allocation of invested funds between risk-free assets
versus the risky portfolio.
- Capital
asset pricing model (CAPM)
- An
economic theory that describes the relationship between
risk and expected
return, and serves as a model for the pricing of risky
securities.
The CAPM asserts that the only risk that is priced
by rational
investors is systematic risk, because that risk cannot
be eliminated
by diversification. The CAPM says that the
expected return
of a
security
or a
portfolio
is equal to the rate on
a risk-free security plus a risk premium.
- Capital budget
- A firm's set of planned capital expenditures.
- Capital budgeting
- The
process of choosing the firm's long-term
capital assets.
- Capital
expenditures
- Amount
used during a particular period to acquire or improve
long-term assets
such as
property, plant or equipment.
- Capital
flight
- The transfer of capital
abroad in
response to fears of political risk.
- Capital
gain
- When
a stock is sold for a profit, it's the difference between
the net sales price of securities and their net cost,
or original
basis.
If a stock is sold below cost,
the difference is a capital
loss.
- Capital gains yield
- The
price change portion of a stock's return.
- Capitalization
- The debt
and/or
equity
mix that fund a firm's
assets.
- Capitalization method
- A
method of constructing a replicating
portfolio
in which the manager
purchases a number of the largest-capitalized names
in the index
stock in proportion to their capitalization.
- Capitalization ratios
- Also
called financial leverage ratios, these ratios compare
debt
to total capitalization and thus reflect the extent
to which a
corporation is trading on its equity.
Capitalization ratios can be interpreted only in the context of the stability of industry and company earnings and cash
flow.
- Capitalization table
- A
table showing the capitalization of a firm, which typically
includes the amount of capital
obtained from
each source - long-term debt
and
common equity
- and the respective
capitalization ratios.
- Capitalized
- Recorded
in asset
accounts and
then depreciated or amortized, as is appropriate for
expenditures for
items with useful lives greater than one year.
- Capitalized interest
- Interest
that is not
immediately expensed, but rather is considered as an
asset and is
then amortized through the income statement over time.
- Capital lease
- A lease
obligation that has to be
capitalized on the balance
sheet.
- Capital loss
- The
difference between the net cost of a security
and the net sale price, if that security
is sold at a loss.
- Capital market
- The
market for trading long-term debt
instruments (those that mature in more than one year).
- Capital market efficiency
- Reflects
the relative amount of wealth wasted in making transactions.
An efficient capital market allows the transfer of
assets with little
wealth loss. See: efficient
market hypothesis.
- Capital
market imperfections view
- The view that issuing debt
is generally valuable
but that the firm's optimal choice of capital
structure
is a dynamic process that involves the other
views of capital structure (net corporate/personal tax, agency cost, bankruptcy cost, and pecking order), which result from considerations of asymmetric information,
asymmetric taxes, and transaction costs.
- Capital
market line (CML)
- The
line defined by every combination of the risk-free
asset
and the
market portfolio.
- Capital rationing
- Placing
one or more limits on the amount of new investment
undertaken by a firm, either by using a higher cost
of capital, or
by setting a maximum on parts of, and/or the entirety
of, the
capital budget.
- Capital structure
- The
makeup of the liabilities and stockholders' equity
side of the
balance sheet,
especially the
ratio of debt to equity and the mixture of short and long maturities.
- Capital surplus
- Amounts of directly contributed equity capital in excess of the par value.
- Car
- A
loose quantity term sometimes used to describe a the
amount of
a commodity underlying one commodity contract; e.g.,
``a car of bellies.''
Derived from the fact that quantities of the product
specified in a
contract
used to correspond closely
to the capacity of a railroad car.
- CARDs
- Certificates
of Amortized Revolving Debt. Pass-through securities
backed by credit card receivables.
- Carring
costs
- Costs
that increase with increases in the level of investment
in
current assets.
- Carry
- Related:net
financing
cost.
- Carrying value
- Book value.
- CARs
- Certificates
of Automobile Receivables. Pass-through securities
backed by automobile receivables.
- Cash
- The
value of assets that can be converted into cash immediately,
as reported by a company. Usually includes bank accounts
and
marketable securities, such as government bonds and
Banker's Acceptances.
Cash equivalents on balance
sheets
include securities (e.g., notes) that mature within
90
days.
- Cash and carry
- Purchase
of a security and simultaneous sale of a future, with
the
balance being financed with a loan or
repo.
- Cash and equivalents
- The
value of assets that can be converted into cash immediately,
as reported by a company. Usually includes bank accounts
and
marketable securities, such as government bonds and
Banker's Acceptances.
Cash equivalents on balance
sheets include securities (e.g., notes) that mature within 90 days.
- Cash budget
- A
forecasted summary of a firm's expected cash inflows
and cash
outflows as well as its expected cash
and
loan balances.
- Cash commodity
- The actual physical commodity,
as distinguished from a futures
contract.
- Cash
conversion cycle
- The
length of time between a firm's purchase of
inventory
and the receipt of cash
from accounts receivable.
- Cash cow
- A
company that pays out all
earnings per share
to
stockholders as dividends.
Or, a
company or division of a company that generates a steady
and
significant amount of free
cash
flow.
- Cash cycle
- In
general, the time between cash disbursement and cash
collection.
In net working capital
management, it can be thought of as the operating cycle
less the
accounts payable payment period.
- Cash
deficiency agreement
- An agreement to invest cash
in a project to the
extent required to cover any cash deficiency the project
may
experience.
- Cash delivery
- The
provision of some futures
contracts
that requires not delivery of underlying assets
but settlement
according to the
cash value of the asset.
- Cash
discount
- An
incentive offered to purchasers of a firm's product
for payment
within a specified time period, such as ten days.
- Cash dividend
- A dividend
paid in cash to a
company's shareholders. The amount is normally based
on profitability
and is taxable as income. A cash distribution may include
capital gains
and
return
of capital in addition to
the dividend.
- Cash equivalent
- A
short-term security that is sufficiently liquid that
it may be
considered the financial equivalent of cash.
- Cash-equivalent items
- Temporary
investments of currently excess cash in short-term,
high-quality investment media such as
treasury bills
and
Banker's Acceptances.
- Cash flow
- In
investments, it represents
earnings
before
depreciation
, amortization
and non-cash charges. Sometimes called cash earnings.
Cash flow
from operations
(called funds
from
operations
) by real estate and other investment trusts is
important because it indicates the ability to pay dividends.
- Cash flow after interest and taxes
- Net income
plus
depreciation.
- Cash-flow break-even point
- The
point below which the firm will need either to obtain
additional
financing or to liquidate some of its assets to meet its fixed costs.
- Cash flow coverage ratio
- The
number of times that financial obligations
(for interest,
principal
payments, preferred
stock dividends,
and rental
payments) are covered by earnings
before interest, taxes, rental payments, and
depreciation.
- Cash flow from operations
- A
firm's net cash inflow resulting directly from its
regular
operations (disregarding extraordinary items such as
the sale of
fixed assets
or
transaction costs
associated with issuing securities), calculated as
the sum of net
income plus non-cash expenses that were deducted in
calculating net
income.
- Cash flow matching
- Also
called dedicating a portfolio, this is an alternative
to
multiperiod
immunization
in which the manager matches the maturity of each
element in the liability
stream,
working backward from the last liability to assure
all required cash
flows.
- Cash flow per common share
- Cash
flow from operations minus preferred
stock dividends,
divided by the number of common shares outstanding.
- Cash flow time-line
- Line
depicting the operating activities and cash flows for
a
firm over a particular period.
- Cash
management bill
- Very short maturity bills that the Treasury
occasionally sells because its cash balances are down
and it needs money for a few days.
- Cash
markets
- Also
called spot markets, these are markets that involve
the
immediate delivery
of a
security
or instrument.
Related: derivative
markets.
- Cash offer
- A
public equity
issue that is
sold to all interested investors.
- Cashout
- Refers
to a situation where a firm runs out of
cash
and cannot readily sell marketable
securities.
- Cash ratio
- The
proportion of a firm's
assets held as cash.
- Cash settlement contracts
- Futures contracts,
such as stock index futures, that settle for cash,
not involving the
delivery
of the
underlying.
- Cash-surrender value
- An
amount the insurance company will pay if the policyholder
ends a whole
life
insurance policy.
- Cash
transaction
- A
transaction where exchange is immediate, as contrasted
to a
forward contract,
which
calls for future delivery of an asset at an agreed-upon price.
- CBOE
- Chicago
Board Options Exchange. A securities exchange created
in
the early 1970s for the public trading of standardized
option contracts.
- CEDEL
- A
centralized clearing system for
eurobonds.
- Certainty equivalent
- An
amount that would be accepted in lieu of a chance at
a
possible higher, but uncertain, amount.
- Certificate
of deposit (CD)
- Also
called a time deposit, this is a certificate issued
by a
bank or thrift that indicates a specified sum of money
has been
deposited. A CD bears a maturity
date and a specified interest
rate, and can be issued in any denomination. The
duration can be up to five years.
- CFAT
- Cash
flow after taxes.
- CFTC
- The
Commodity Futures Trading Commission is the federal
agency
created by Congress to regulate futures
trading. The Commodity Exchange Act of 1974 became
effective April 21,
1975. Previously, futures trading had been regulated
by the Commodity
Exchange Authority of the USDA.
- Changes
in Financial Position
- Sources
of funds internally provided from operations that alter
a company's cash flow
position:
depreciation, deferred taxes, other sources, and
capital expenditures.
- Characteristic line
- The
market model
applied
to a single security.
The slope of
the line is a security's beta.
- Chartists
- Related: technical
analysts.
- Cheapest
to deliver issue
- The acceptable Treasury security
with the highest implied repo rate; the rate that a
seller of a
futures contract
can earn
by buying an issue
and then delivering
it at the settlement date.
- Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME)
- A
not-for-profit corporation owned by its members. Its
primary
functions are to provide a location for trading
futures
and
options,
collect and disseminate
market information, maintain a clearing mechanism and
enforce trading
rules.
- Chinese wall
- Communication
barrier between financiers (investment bankers) and
traders.
This barrier is erected to
prevent the sharing of inside information that bankers
are likely to
have.
- Churning
- Excessive
trading
of a client's \
account in order to increase the broker's commissions.
- Circle
- Underwriters,
actual or
potential, often seek out and ``circle'' investor interest
in a new
issue before final pricing. The customer circled basically
made a
commitment to purchase the issue if it comes at an
agreed-upon price.
In the latter case, if the price is other than that
stipulated, the
customer supposedly has first offer at the actual price.
- Circus swap
- A fixed rate currency swap
against
floating U.S. dollar LIBOR
payments.
- Claimant
- A
party to an explicit or implicit
contract.
- Claim dilution
- A
reduction in the likelihood one or more of the firm's
claimants
will be fully repaid, including time value of money considerations.
- Clean opinion
- An
auditor's opinion reflecting an unqualified acceptance
of a
company's financial statements.
- Clean
price
- Bond price excluding accrued
interest.
- Clear
- A
trade
is carried out by the
seller delivering securities and the buyer delivering
funds in proper
form. A trade that does not clear is said to fail.
- Clear a position
- To
eliminate a long
or
short
position, leaving no ownership
or obligation.
- Clearinghouse
- An
adjunct to a futures
exchange through which transactions executed its floor
are settled
by a process of matching purchases and sales. A clearing
organization
is also charged with the proper conduct of
delivery
procedures and the
adequate financing of the entire operation.
- Clearing House Automated Payments System (CHAPS)
- A
computerized clearing system for sterling funds that
began operations in 1984. It includes
14 member banks, nearly 450 participating banks, and
is one of the
clearing companies within the structure of the Association
for
Payment Clearing Services (APACS).
- Clearing
House Interbank Payments System (CHIPS)
- An
international wire transfer system for high-value payments
operated
by a group of major banks.
- Clearing
member
- A
member firm of a clearing house. Each clearing
member must also be a member of the exchange. Not all
members of the
exchange, however, are members of the clearing organization.
All
trades of a non-clearing member must be registered
with, and
eventually settled through, a clearing member.
- Clientele effect
- The
grouping of investors who have a preference that the
firm follow a particular financing policy, such as
the amount of
leverage it uses.
- Closed-end fund
- An investment company that sells shares
like any other corporation and usually does not redeem
its shares.
A publicly traded fund sold on stock
exchanges
or over the counter that may trade
above or below its net
asset value.
Related: Open-end
fund.
- Closed-end mortgage
- Mortgage
against which no
additional debt may be issued.
- Close, the
- The
period at the end of the trading session. Sometimes
used to
refer to closing price. Related:Opening,
the.
- Closing purchase
- A
transaction in which the purchaser's intention is to
reduce
or eliminate a short
position
in a stock, or in a given series
of options.
- Closing range
- Also known as the range.
The high
and low prices, or bids
and
offers,
recorded during the period
designated as the official close. Related:
settlement price.
- Closing sale
- A
transaction in which the seller's intention is to reduce
or
eliminate a long position
in
a stock, or a given series
of
options.
- Cluster analysis
- A
statistical technique that identifies clusters of stocks
whose
returns
are highly
correlated
within each cluster and
relatively uncorrelated between clusters. Cluster analysis
has
identified groupings such as growth, cyclical, stable
and
energy stocks.
- Coefficient
of determination
- A
measure of the goodness of fit of the relationship
between the
dependent and independent variables in a regression
analysis; for
instance, the percentage of variation in the
return
of an
asset
explained by the
market portfolio
return.
- Coinsurance effect
- Refers
to the fact that the merger
of two firms decreases the probability of
default on either firm's debt.
- Collar
- An
upper and lower limit on the
interest rate
on a
floating-rate note (FRN).
- Collateral
- Assets
than can be repossessed if a borrower
defaults.
- Collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO)
- A
security
backed by a pool of
pass-through rates
, structured so
that there are several classes of bondholders with
varying maturities,
called tranches. The principal payments from the underlying
pool of
pass-through securities are used to retire the bonds
on a priority
basis as specified in the prospectus.
Related: mortgage
pass-through security
- Collateral
trust bonds
- A bond
in which the
issuer
(often a holding company)
grants investors a lien on stocks, notes, bonds, or
other financial
asset as security.
Compare mortgage bond.
- Collection float
- The
negative float that is created between the time when
you
deposit a check in your account and the time when funds
are made
available.
- Collection fractions
- The
percentage of a given month's sales collected during
the
month of sale and each month following the month of sale.
- Collection policy
- Procedures
followed by a firm in attempting to collect
accounts receivables.
- Collective wisdom
- The
combination of all of the individual opinions about
a
stock's or security's value.
- Comanger
- A
bank that ranks just below a
lead manager
in a
syndicated
Eurocredit or
international bond issue. Comanagers may assist the
lead manger
bank in the pricing and issue of the instrument.
- Combination matching
- Also
called horizon matching, a variation of
multiperiod immunization
and
cash flow matching
in which a portfolio
is created
that is always duration
matched
and also cash-matched in the first few years.
- Combination strategy
- A
strategy in which a put
and
with the same strike price
and expiration are either both bought or both sold. Related:
Straddle
- Commercial draft
- Demand
for payment.
- Commercial paper
- Short-term
unsecured promissory notes
issued by a corporation. The maturity of
commercial paper
is
typically less than 270 days; the most common maturity
range is 30 to
50 days or less.
- Commercial risk
- The
risk
that a foreign debtor
will be unable to pay its debts because of business
events, such as
bankruptcy.
- Commission
- The fee paid to a broker
to execute a trade,
based on number
of shares, bonds,
options,
and/or their dollar value.
In 1975, deregulation led to the creation of discount
brokers, who
charge lower commissions than full service brokers.
Full service
brokers offer advice and usually have a full staff
of analysts who
follow specific industries. Discount brokers simply
execute a
client's order -- and usually do not offer an opinion
on a stock.
Also known as a round-turn.
- Commission broker
- A
broker on the floor of an exchange acts as agent for
a
particular brokerage house and who buys and sells stocks
for the
brokerage house on a commission basis.
- Commission
house
- A firm which buys and sells future
contracts
for customer accounts. Related:
futures
commission merchant,
omnibus account.
- Commitment
- A
trader is said to have a commitment when he assumes
the obligation
to accept or make delivery
on a
futures contract.
Related: Open interest
- Commitment fee
- A
fee paid to a commercial bank in return for its legal
commitment to lend funds that have not yet been advanced.
- Committee,
AIMR Performance Presentation Standards Implementation Committee
- The
Association for Investment
Management
and Research (AIMR's) Performance Presentation Standards
Implementation Committee is charged with the
responsibility to interpret, revise and update the
AIMR
Performance Presentation Standards (AIMR-PPS(TM) for
portfolio
performance
presentations.
- Commodities
Exchange Center (CEC)
- The location of five New York futures
exchanges: Commodity Exchange, Inc. (COMEX), the New
York Mercantile
exchange (NYMEX), the New York Cotton Exchange, the
Coffee, Sugar and
Cocoa exchange (CSC), and the New York futures
exchange (NYFE). common size statement A statement
in which all items
are expressed as a percentage of a base figure, useful
for purposes of
analyzing trends and the changing relationship between
financial
statement items. For example, all items in each year's
income statement
could be
presented as a percentage of net sales.
- Commodity
- A
commodity is food, metal, or another physical substance
that
investors buy or sell, usually via futures
contracts.
- Common-base-year
analysis
- The
representing of accounting information over multiple
years as
percentages of amounts in an initial year.
- Common
market
- An
agreement between two or more countries that permits
the free
movement of capital
and labor as well as goods
and services.
- Common shares
- In
general, there are two types of shares, common and preferred stock.
The common shares usually entitle the shareholders
to vote at shareholders meetings. The common shares have a discretionary dividend.
- Common-size analysis
- The
representing of balance
sheet
items as percentages of assets and of
income statement
items as
percentages of sales.
- Common
stock
- These
are securities that represent
equity
ownership in a company.
Common shares
let an
investor
vote on such matters as
the election of directors. They also give the holder
a share in a
company's profits via dividend
payments or the capital appreciation of the
security.
- Common stock equivalent
- A
convertible security
that is traded like an equity
issue
because the optioned common
stock is trading high.
- Common
stock market
- The
market for trading equities, not including
preferred stock.
- Common stock/other equity
- Value
of outstanding common
shares
at par, plus accumulated retained
earnings.
Also called
shareholders' equity.
- Common stock ratios
- Ratios
that are designed to measure the relative claims of
stockholders
to
earnings (cash
flow
per share), and equity (book
value
per share) of a firm.
- Company-specific
risk
- Related: Unsystematic
risk
- Comparative
credit analysis
- A
method of analysis in which a firm is compared to others
that
have a desired target debt
rating in
order to infer an appropriate financial ratio target.
- Comparison universe
- The
collection of money managers of similar investment
style
used for assessing relative performance of a portfolio manager.
- Compensating balance
- An
excess balance that is left in a bank to provide indirect
compensation for loans
extended or
services provided.
- Competence
- Sufficient
ability or fitness for ones needs. Possessing the
necessary abilities to be qualified to achieve a certain
goal or
complete a project.
- Competition
- Intra-
or intermarket rivalry between businesses trying to
obtain a larger piece of the same market share.
- Competitive bidding
- A
securities
offering process
in which securities firms submit competing
bids
to the issuer for the securities
the issuer wishes to sell.
- Competitive
offering
- An
offering of securities through competitive
bidding.
- Complete
capital market
- A market
in which there is a
distinct marketable security
for
each and every possible outcome.
- Complete
portfolio
- The entire portfolio,
including risky and risk-free
assets.
- Completion bonding
- Insurance
that a construction contract will be successfully
completed.
- Completion risk
- The
risk
that a project will not
be brought into operation successfully.
- Completion
undertaking
- An
undertaking either (1) to complete a project such that
it meets
certain specified performance criteria on or before
a certain
specified date or (2) to repay project debt if the
completion test
cannot be met.
- Composition
- Voluntary
arrangement to restructure a firm's
debt, under which payment is reduced.
- Compounding
- The
process of accumulating the
time value of money
forward in time. For example, interest
earned in one period earns additional interest during
each subsequent
time period.
- Compounding
frequency
- The
number of compounding periods in a year. For example,
quarterly compounding has a compounding frequency of 4.
- Compounding period
- The
length of the time period (for example, a quarter in
the case
of quarterly compounding) that elapses before
interest compounds.
- Compound interest
- Interest
paid on previously
earned interest as well as on the principal.
- Compound option
- Option on an option.
- Comprehensive due diligence investigation
- The
investigation of a firm's business in conjunction with
a securities offering to
determine whether the firm's business and financial
situation and its
prospects are adequately disclosed in the prospectus for the offering.
- Concentration account
- A
single centralized account into which funds collected
at
regional locations (lockboxes) are transferred.
- Concentration services
- Movement
of cash
from different lockbox
locations into a single concentration account from
which
disbursements and investments are made.
- Concession
agreement
- An
understanding between a company and the host government
that
specifies the rules under which the company can operate locally.
- Conditional sales contracts
- Similar
to equipment trust certificates except that the lender
is
either the equipment manufacturer or a bank or finance
company to
whom the manufacturer has sold the conditional sales
contract.
-
Confidence indicator
- A
measure of investors' faith in the economy and the
securities
market. A low or deteriorating level of confidence
is considered by
many technical analysts
as a bearish sign.
- Confidence
level
- The
degree of assurance that a specified failure
rate is not exceeded.
- Confirmation
- The
written statement that follows any ``trade'' in the
securities markets. Confirmation is issued immediately
after a
trade
is executed. It spells out
settlement date,
terms,
commission, etc.
- Conflict
between bondholders and stockholders
- These
two groups may have interests in a corporation that
conflict.
Sources of conflict include dividends,
distortion of investment, and underinvestment.
Protective covenants
work to resolve
these conflicts.
- Conglomerate
- A
firm engaged in two or more unrelated businesses.
- Conglomerate merger
- A
merger
involving two or more
firms that are in unrelated businesses.
- Consensus
forecast
- The mean
of all financial
analysts' forecasts for a company.
- Consol
- A
government bond with no maturity.
Popular in Great Britain. The formula for valuing these bonds is simple. The consol payment divided by yield to maturity
is the price of the bond.
- Consolidation
- The
combining of two or more firms to form an entirely new entity.
- Consortium banks
- A
merchant banking
subsidiary set up by several banks that may or may
not be of the same
nationality. Consortium banks are common in the Euromarket
and are
active in loan syndication.
- Constant-growth model
- Also
called the Gordon-Shapiro model, an application of
the
dividend discount model
which assumes (1) a fixed growth
rate
for future dividends and (2) a single
discount rate.
- Consumer credit
- Credit
granted by a firm to consumers for
the purchase of goods or services. Also called retail credit.
- Consumer Price Index
- The
CPI, as it is called, measures the prices of consumer
goods
and services and is a measure of the pace of U.S.
inflation.
The U.S.Department of
Labor publishes the CPI very month.
- Contango
- A
market condition in which futures
prices
are higher in the distant delivery months.
- Contingent
claim
- A
claim that can be made only if one or more specified
outcomes
occur.
- Contingent
deferred sales charge (CDSC)
- The formal name for the load of a back-end load fund.
- Contingent immunization
- An
arrangement in which the money
manager
pursues an active bond
portfolio
strategy until an
adverse investment experience drives the then-available
potential
return
down to the safety-net level.
When that point is reached, the
money manager
is obligated
to pursue an immunization
strategy to lock in the safety-net level return.
- Contingent pension liability
- Under
ERISA, the firm is liable to the plan participants
for up
to 39% of the net worth
of the
firm.
- Continuous compounding
- The
process of accumulating the
time value of money
forward in time on a continuous, or instantaneous,
basis. Interest is
earned continuously, and at each instant, the interest
that accrues
immediately begins earning interest on itself.
- Continuous random variable
- A
random value that can take any fractional value within
specified
ranges, as contrasted with a discrete
variable.
- Contract
- A
term of reference describing a unit of
trading
for a financial or
commodity
future. Also, the
actual bilateral agreement between the buyer and seller
of a
transaction as defined by an exchange.
- Contract month
- The month in which futures
contracts may be satisfied by making or accepting a
delivery.
Also called value
managers, those who assemble portfolios with relatively
lower betas,
lower price-book and P/E
ratios and
higher dividend
yields, seeing
value where others do not.
- Contribution
margin
- The difference between variable revenue and variable cost.
- Control
- 50% of the outstanding votes plus one vote.
- Controlled disbursement
- A
service that provides for a single presentation of
checks each
day (typically in the early part of the day).
- Controlled foreign corporation (CFC)
- A
foreign corporation whose voting stock is more than
50% owned by
U.S. stockholders,
each of whom
owns at least 10% of the voting power.
- Controller
- The
corporate manager responsible for the firm's accounting
activities.
- Convenience yield
- The
extra advantage that firms derive from holding the
commodity
rather than the
future.
- Conventional
mortgage
- A
loan based on the credit of the borrower and on the
collateral
for the mortgage.
- Conventional pass-throughs
- Also
called private-label pass-throughs, any
mortgage
pass-through security
not guaranteed by government agencies. Compare
agency pass-throughs.
- Conventional project
- A
project with a negative initial cash
flow
(cash outflow), which is expected to be followed by
one or more
future positive cash flows (cash inflows).
- Convention
statement
- An
annual statement filed by a life insurance company
in each
state where it does business in compliance with that
state's
regulations. The statement and supporting documents
show, among
other things, the assets,
liabilities,
and surplus of the
reporting company.
- Convergence
- The
movement of the price of a futures
contract
toward the price of the underlying cash
commodity.
At the start, the contract
price is higher because of the time
value.
But as the contract nears expiration, the futures
price and the cash price converge.
- Conversion
factors
- Rules
set by the Chicago Board of Trade for determining the
invoice price
of each
acceptable deliverable Treasury issue
against the Treasury Bond
futures contract.
- Conversion parity price
- Related:Market conversion price
- Conversion premium
- The
percentage by which the conversion price in a
convertible security
exceeds
the prevailing common
stock
price at
the time the convertible security is issued.
- Conversion ratio
- The
number of shares
of common stock that the security
holder will receive from exercising the
call option
of a
convertible security.
- Conversion value
- Also
called parity value, the value of a
convertible security
if it is converted immediately.
- Convertibility
- The
degree of freedom to exchange a
currency
without government restrictions or
controls.
- Convertible bonds
- Bonds
that can be converted into common stock at the
option of the holder.
- Convertible eurobond
- A
eurobond
that can be
converted into another asset, often through
exercise of attached warrants.
- Convertible exchangeable preferred stock
- Convertible preferred stock
that may be exchanged, at the issuer's option, into
convertible bonds
that have the same conversion features as the convertible
preferred
stock.
- Convertible
preferred stock
- Preferred
stock
that
can be converted into common stock at the option
of the holder.
- Convertible price
- The
contractually specified price per share at which a
convertible security
can be converted into shares of common
stock.
- Convertible security
- A
security
that can be
converted into common stock at the option
of the security holder, including
convertible bonds
and convertible
preferred stock.
- Convex
- Bowed,
as in the shape of a curve. Usually referring to the
price/required yield
relationship for
option-free bonds.
- Core
competency
- Primary
area of competence. Narrowly defined fields or tasks
at
which a company or business excels. Primary areas of specialty.
- Corner A Market
- To purchase enough of the available supply of a commodity or stock in order to manipulate its price.
- Corporate acquisition
- The
acquisition of one firm by anther firm.
- Corporate
bonds
- Debt
obligations issued by
corporations.
- Corporate charter
- A
legal document creating a corporation.
- Corporate
finance
- One
of the three areas of the discipline of
finance.
It deals with the
operation of the firm (both the investment decision
and the
financing decision) from that firm's point of view.
- Corporate financial management
- The
application of financial principals within a corporation
to create
and maintain value through decision making and proper
resource
management.
- Corporate
financial planning
- Financial
planning
conducted by a firm that encompasses preparation of
both long- and
short-term financial plans.
- Corporate
processing float
- The
time that elapses between receipt of payment from a
customer
and the depositing of the customer's check in the firm's
bank account;
the time required to process customer payments.
- Corporate taxable equivalent
- Rate of return
required
on a par bond to produce the same after-tax
yield to maturity
that the premium
or
discount bond quoted would.
- Corporate tax view
- The
argument that double (corporate and individual) taxation
of
equity
returns makes
debt a cheaper financing method.
- Corporation
- A
legal ``person'' that is separate and distinct from
its owners.
A corporation is allowed to own assets,
incur liabilities,
and sell
securities, among other things.
- Correlation
- See:
Correlation coefficient.
- Correlation
coefficient
- A
standardized statistical measure of the dependence
of two
random variables,
defined as the covariance
divided by the
standard deviations
of
two variables.
- Cost-benefit ratio
- The
net present value
of an investment divided by the investment's initial
cost. Also
called the profitability
index.
- Cost
company arrangement
- Arrangement
whereby the shareholders of a project receive output
free of charge but agree to pay all operating and financing
charges of
the project.
- Cost of capital
- The
required return for a capital
budgeting project.
- Cost
of carry
- Related:Net
financing cost
- Cost of equity
- The
required rate of return
for an investment of 100% equity.
- Cost
of funds
- Interest
rate
associated with borrowing money.
- Cost
of lease financing
- A lease's
internal rate of return.
- Cost of limited partner capital
- The
discount rate
that equates
the after-tax inflows with outflows for capital
raised from limited partners.
- Counterparties
- The
parties to an interest
rate swap.
- Counterpart items
- In
the balance of payments,
counterpart items are analogous to unrequited transfers
in the
current account.
They arise because
the double-entry system in balance of payments accounting
and refer
to adjustments in reserves owing to monetization or
demonetization
of gold, allocation or cancellation of SDRs, and revaluation
of the
various components of total reserves.
- Counterparty
- Party
on the other side of a trade or transaction.
- Counterparty risk
- The
risk that the other party to an agreement will
default.
In an options contract,
the risk to the option
buyer that
the option writer
will not
buy or sell the underlying as agreed.
- Counter
trade
- The exchange of goods for other goods rather than for cash; barter.
- Country beta
- Covariance
of a national economy's rate
of return
and the rate of return the
world economy divided by the variance of the world economy.
- Country economic risk
- Developments
in a national economy that can affect the outcome
of an international financial transaction.
- Country
financial risk
- The
ability of the national economy to generate enough
foreign exchange
to meet
payments of interest
and
principal
on its foreign
debt.
- Country
risk
- General
level of political and economic uncertainty in a country
affecting the value of loans
or
investments in that country.
- Country
selection
- A
type of active international management that measures
the
contribution to performance attributable to investing
in the
better-performing stock markets of the world.
- Coupon
- The periodic interest
payment
made to the bondholders during the life of the
bond.
- Coupon
equivalent yield
- True interest
cost expressed on
the basis of a 365-day year.
- Coupon
payments
- A bond's interest
payments.
- Coupon rate
- In
bonds, notes
or other fixed
income securities, the stated percentage rate of
interest,
usually paid twice a
year.
- Covariance
- A
statistical measure of the degree to which
random variables
move
together.
- Covenants
- Provisions
in a bond indenture
or preferred stock
agreement that require the bond or preferred stock
issuer to take
certain specified actions (affirmative covenants) or
to refrain from
taking certain specified actions (negative covenants).
- Cover
- The purchase of a contract
to offset
a previously established
short position.
- Coverage ratios
- Ratios
used to test the adequacy of cash flows generated through
earnings
for purposes of meeting
debt and lease obligations, including the
interest
coverage
ratio and the fixed charge coverage ratio.
- Covered call
- A short
call option
position
in which the
writer
owns the number of
shares
of the underlying stock
represented by the option
contracts.
Covered calls generally limit the risk the
writer
takes because the stock does
not have to be bought at the market price, if the holder
of that
option decides to exercise
it.
- Covered call writing strategy
- A
strategy that involves writing a
call option
on securities that
the investor
owns in his or her
portfolio.
See
covered
or
hedge option strategies.
- Covered
interest arbitrage
- A
portfolio manager invests dollars in an instrument
denominated
in a foreign currency
and
hedges
his resulting foreign exchange
risk by selling the proceeds of the investment forward for dollars.
- Covered or hedge option strategies
- Strategies
that involve a position
in an option
as well as a position
in the underlying stock, designed so that one position
will help
offset
any unfavorable price movement
in the other, including covered call
writing and protective put
buying.
Related: naked
strategies
- Covered Put
- A
put option
position
in which the
option writer
also is
short
the corresponding stock or has
deposited, in a cash account, cash or cash equivalents
equal to the
exercise
of the
option.
This limits the option
writer's risk because money or stock is already set
aside. In the
event that the holder of the put option decides to
exercise
the option, the writer's
risk is more limited than it would be on an uncovered
or naked put
option.
- Cramdown
- The
ability of the bankruptcy
court to confirm a plan of reorganization over the
objections of some
classes of creditors.
- Crawling
peg
- An
automatic system for revising the
exchange rate.
It involves
establishing a par value
around
which the rate can vary up to a given percent. The
par value is
revised regularly according to a formula determined
by the
authorities.
- Credible signal
- A
signal that provides accurate information; a signal
that can be
distinguish among senders.
- Credit
- Money
loaned.
- Credit analysis
- The
process of analyzing information on companies and
bond
issues in order to estimate the
ability of the issuer
to live up to
its future contractual obligations. Related:
default risk
- Credit enhancement
- Purchase
of the financial guarantee of a large insurance company
to raise funds.
- Crediting rate
- The
interest
rate offered on an
investment type insurance policy.
- Creditor
- Lender
of money.
- Credit period
- The
length of time for which the customer is granted
credit.
- Credit
risk
- The
risk that an issuer of debt securities or a borrower
may
default on his obligations, or that the payment may
not be made on a
negotiable instrument. Related:
Default risk
- Credit scoring
- A
statistical technique wherein several financial characteristics
are combined to form a single score to represent a
customer's
credit worthiness.
- Credit spread
- Related:Quality spread
- Cross-border risk
- Refers
to the volatility
of
returns on international investments caused by events
associated with
a particular country as opposed to events associated
solely with a
particular economic or financial agent.
- Cross
default
- A
provision under which default on one debt obligation
triggers
default on another debt obligation.
- Cross hedging
- The practice of hedging
with a
futures contract
that is
different from the underlying being hedged.
- Cross holdings
- One corporation holds shares in another firm.
- Crossover rate
- The return
at which two
alternative projects have the same net
present value.
- Cross rates
- The exchange
rate
between two currencies expressed as the ratio of two
foreign exchange
rates that are both expressed in terms of a third currency.
- Cross-sectional approach
- A
statistical methodology applied to a set of firms at
a
particular point in time.
- Crown
jewel
- A
particularly profitable or otherwise particularly valuable
corporate unit or asset
of a firm.
- Cum dividend
- With
dividend.
- Cum rights
- With rights.
- Cumulative abnormal return (CAR)
- Sum
of the differences between the
expected return
on a stock
and the actual return that comes from the release of
news to the
market.
- Cumulative
dividend feature
- A
requirement that any missed preferred or preference
stock
dividends
be paid in full before
any common dividend payment is made.
- Cumulative
preferred stock
- Preferred
stock
whose dividends accrue, should the
issuer
not make timely
dividend payments. Related:
non-cumulative
preferred stock.
- Cumulative
probability distribution
- A function that shows the probability
that the random variable
will attain a value less than or equal to each value
that the random
variable can take on.
- Cumulative
Translation Adjustment (CTA) account
- An entry in a translated balance sheet
in which gains and/or losses from translation have
been accumulated
over a period of years. The CTA account is required
under the FASB
No. 52 rule.
- Cumulative voting
- A
system of voting for directors of a corporation in
which
shareholder's total number of votes is equal to his
number of shares
held times the number of candidates.
- Currency
- Money.
- Currency arbitrage
- Taking
advantage of divergences in exchange
rates
in different money markets
by
buying a currency in one market and selling it in another market.
- Currency basket
- The
value of a portfolio of specific amounts of individual
currencies,
used as the basis for setting the
market value of another currency. It is also referred
to as a
currency cocktail.
- Currency
future
- A financial
future
contract for the delivery of a specified foreign currency.
- Currency option
- An option
to buy or sell a
foreign currency.
- Currency risk
- Related: Exchange rate risk
- Currency risk sharing
- An
agreement by the parties to a transaction to share
the currency
risk associated with the transaction. The arrangement
involves a
customized hedge
contract embedded
in the underlying
transaction.
- Currency selection
- Asset
allocation in which the investor chooses among investments
denominated in different currencies.
- Currency swap
- An agreement to swap
a series of
specified payment obligations denominated in one currency
for a
series of specified payment obligations denominated
in a different
currency.
- Current account
- Net
flow of goods, services, and unilateral transactions
(gifts)
between countries.
- Current assets
- Value
of cash,
accounts receivable,
inventories,
marketable securities
and other assets that could be converted to cash in less than 1 year.
- Current coupon
- A bond selling at or close to par,
that is, a bond with a coupon close to the
yields
currently offered on new bonds
of a similar maturity and credit risk.
- Current-coupon
issues
- Related: Benchmark
issues
- Current issue
- In
Treasury securities, the most recently auctioned issue.
Trading
is more active in current
issues than in off-the-run issues.
- Current
liabilities
- Amount owed for salaries, interest,
accounts payable
and
other debts due within 1 year.
- Current maturity
- Current
time to maturity
on an
outstanding debt instrument.
- Current / noncurrent method
- Under
this currency translation method, all of a foreign
subsidiary's
current assets
and liabilities are
translated into home currency at the current
exchange rate
while
noncurrent assets and liabilities are translated at
the historical
exchange rate, that is, the rate in effect at the time
the asset was
acquired or the liability incurred.
- Current
rate method
- Under
this currency translation method, all foreign currency
balance-sheet and income statement items are translated
at the
current exchange rate.
- Current ratio
- Indicator
of short-term debt paying ability. Determined by
dividing current assets
by current liabilities.
The higher the ratio, the more liquid the company.
- Current yield
- For bonds or notes, the coupon
rate divided by the market price of the
bond.
- Cushion
bonds
- High-coupon
bonds that sell at only at a
moderate premium
because they are
callable at a price below that at which a comparable
non-callable
bond would sell. Cushion bonds offer considerable downside
protection
in a falling market.
- Custodial
fees
- Fees
charged by an institution that holds securities in
safekeeping for an investor.
- Customary payout ratios
- A
range of payout ratios
that is typical based on an analysis of comparable firms.
- Customized benchmarks
- A
benchmark
that is designed
to meet a client's requirements and long-term objectives.
- Customs union
- An
agreement by two or more countries to erect a common
external
tariff and to abolish restrictions on trade among members.
Glossary
created by Campbell R. Harvey,
Professor of
Finance, Fuqua School of Business at Duke
University
Copyright © 1997-1999 Yahoo! All Rights Reserved.
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