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Glossary
- B
- Fifth letter of a Nasdaq
stock descriptor specifying that issue is the Class
B shares of the company.
- B2B
- An Internet strategy of dealing directly with
businesses, rather than consumers, i.e. business
to (2) business.
-
BA
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code forBOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA.
- BAM
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Bosnia & Herzegovinan
Convertible Mark.
- BAN
- See: Bank
anticipation notes
- BB
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BARBADOS.
- BBD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Barbadan Dollar.
- BD
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BANGLADESH.
- BDT
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Bangladeshi Taka currency.
- BE
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BELGIUM.
- BHD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Bahrainian Dinar.
- BEACON
- See: Boston
Exchange Automated Communication Order-Routing Network
- BEARS
- See: Bonds
Enabling Annual Retirement Savings (BEARS)
- BEF
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Belgium Franc.
-
BF
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BURKINA FASO.
-
BG
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BULGARIA.
- BGL
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Bulgarian Lev.
-
BH
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BAHRAIN.
-
BI
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BURUNDI.
- BIC
- See: Bank
Investment Contract
- BIF
- See: Bank
Insurance Fund
- BIF
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Burundian Franc.
- BIPS
- See: Basis point.
- BIS
- See: Bank
for International Settlements
-
BJ
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BENIN.
-
BM
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BERMUDA.
- BMD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Bermudan Dollar.
-
BN
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BRUNEI DARUSSALAM.
- BND
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Brunei Darussalam Dollar.
-
BO
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BOLIVIA.
- BOB
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Bolivian Boliviano.
- BPS
- See: Basis point.
-
BR
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BRAZIL.
- BRL
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Brazilian Real.
-
BS
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BAHAMAS.
- BSD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Bahamas Dollar.
-
BT
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BHUTAN.
- BTM
- See: Book
to market.
- BTN
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Bhutan Ngultrum.
-
BV
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BOUVET ISLAND.
-
BW
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BOTSWANA.
- BWP
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Botswanan Pula.
- BY
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BELARUS.
- BYB
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Belarus Rouble.
- BZ
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BELIZE.
- BZD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Belize Dollar.
- Baby
bond
- A bond with a par
value of less than $1000.
- Back
away
- In the context of general equities, to withdraw
from a previously declared interest, indication,
or transaction; broker-dealer's
failure, as a market
maker in a given security,
to make good on a bid/offer
for the minimum quantity.
- Back
fee
- The fee paid on the extension
date if the buyer wishes to continue the option.
- Back
months
- In the context of futures
and options trading,
refers to the months of contracts
with expiration
dates farthest away. See farthest
month.
- Back
office
- Brokerage house clerical operations that support,
but do not include, the trading of stocks
and other securities. All written confirmation
and settlement of trades,
record keeping, and regulatory compliance happen
in the back office.
- Back
on the shelf
- In the context of general equities, permanently
canceledorder/interest
in a stock by
a customer. See: Take
a powder.
- Back
taxes
- Due taxes that have not been paid on time.
- Back
up
- (1) When bond yields
rise and prices fall, the market
is said to backup. (2) An investor who swaps
out of one security
into another of shorter current maturity
is said to back up.
- "Back
up the truck"
- In the context of general equities, "Prepare
for a very large buyer."
- Backdating
- In the context of mutual
funds, a feature allowing fundholders to use
an earlier date on a letter
of intent to invest in a mutual
fund in exchange for a reduced sales charge,
e.g. Giving retroactive value to purchases from
the earlier date.
- Backed
in
- In the context of general equities, to describe
result of unanticipated events that allow for a
purchase at a discount
or a sale at a premium.
- Back-end
load fund
- A mutual fund
that charges investors a fee to sell (redeem) shares,
often ranging from 4% to 6%. Some back-end load
funds impose a full commission
if the shares are
redeemed within a designated length of time, such
as one year. The commission decreases, the longer
the investor
holds the shares. The formal name for the back-end
load is the contingent
deferred sales charge, or CDSC
- Back-testing
- Creating a hypothetical portfolio
performance history by applying current asset
selection criteria to prior time periods.
- Back-to-back
financing
- An intercompany loan
channeled through a bank.
- Back-to-back
loan
- A loan in which two companies in separate countries
borrow each other's currency
for a specific time period and repay the other's
currency at an agreed-upon maturity.
- Backup
line
- A commercial paper issuer's
bank line of
credit covering maturing notes
if, for some reason, selling new notes to cover
the maturing notes is not possible.
- Backup
Line of Credit
- A bank assurance of funds obtained by an issuer
of commercial paper to protect the CP investor
from default.
The issuer pays
a commitment
fee to the bank.
- Backwardation
- A market condition
in which futures
prices are lower in the distant delivery
months than in the nearest delivery month. This
may occur when the costs of storing the product
until eventual delivery are effectively subtracted
from the price today. The opposite of contango.
- Bad
debt
- A debt that is
written off and deemed uncollectible.
- Bad
delivery
- Antithesis of good
delivery.
- Bad
title
- Title to property that does not distinctly confer
ownership, usually in the context of real estate.
- Bai-kai
- Two-sided market
picture, in Japanese
terminology applies mainly to international equities.
- Bailing
out
- In the context of securities,
refers to selling a security
or commodity
quickly, regardless of the price. May occur when
an investor no
longer wants to sustain further losses on a stock.
Also refers to relieving an individual, corporation,
or government entity in financial trouble.
- Bailout
bond
- A bond issued
by the Resolution
Funding Corporation (Refcorp) to save the failing
savings
and loan associations in the late 1980s and
early 1990s.
- Baker
Plan
- A plan by former U.S. Treasury Secretary James
Baker under which 15 principal middle-income debtor
countries (the Baker 15) would undertake growth-oriented
structural reforms, to be supported by increased
financing from the World
Bank and continued lending from commercial banks.
- Balance
of payments
- A statistical compilation formulated by a sovereign
nation of all economic transactions between residents
of that nation and residents of all other nations
during a stipulated period of time, usually a calendar
year.
- Balance
of trade
- Net flow of goods (exports minus imports) between
two countries.
- Balance
on goods and services
- Netting of transaction balances, including the
net amount of payments of interest
and dividends
to foreign investors
and investments,
as well as receipts and payments resulting from
international tourism.
- Balance
sheet
- Also called the statement of financial condition,
it is a summary of a company's assets,
liabilities,
and owners' equity.
- Balance
sheet exposure
- See: Accounting
exposure.
- Balance
sheet identity
- Total assets =
Total liabilities
+ Total stockholders'
equity.
- Balanced
budget
- A budget in which
the income equals expenditure. See: budget.
- Balanced
fund
- An investment company that invests in stocks
and bonds. The same
as a balanced
mutual fund.
- Balanced
mutual fund
- This is a fund that buys common stock,
preferred
stock, and bonds.
The same as a balanced
fund.
- Balloon
interest
- In the context of serial
bond issues,
the elevated coupon
rate on bonds with
late maturity's.
- Balloon
maturity
- Any large principal
payment due at maturity
for a bond or loan
with or without a sinking
fund requirement.
- Balloon
Payment
- The final (large) payment that repays all the
remaining principal
and interest
of a partially amortized
or unamortized loan.
- Ballot
- The document distributed at the annual meeting
to shareholders
of record who wish to vote their shares in person.
- BAN
- See: Bond
anticipation note.
- Bank
anticipation notes (BAN)
- Notes issued by
states and municipalities
to obtain interim financing for projects that will
eventually be funded long
term through the sale of a bond
issue.
- Bank
collection float
- The time that elapses between when a check is
deposited into a bank account and when the funds
are available to the depositor, during which period
the bank is collecting payment from the payer's
bank.
- Bank
discount basis
- A convention used for quoting bids
and offers for Treasury
bills in terms of annualized yield,
based on a 360-day year.
- Bank
draft
- A draft addressed to a bank.
- Bank
holding company
- A company that owns or has controlling interest
in two or more banks and/or other bank holding companies.
- Bank
Insurance Fund (BIF)
- A unit of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) that provides
deposit
insurance for banks excluding thrifts.
- Bank
for International Settlements (BIS)
- An international bank headquartered in Basel,
Switzerland, which serves as a forum for monetary
cooperation among several European central banks,
the Bank of Japan, and the US
Federal Reserve System. Founded in 1930 to handle
the German payment of World War I reparations, it
now monitors and collects data on international
banking activity and promulgates rules concerning
international bank regulation.
- Bank
Investment Contract (BIC)
- Interest guaranteed
by the bank in a portfolio
over a specific time frame with a specific yield.
- Bank
line
- Line of credit
that by a bank grants to a customer.
- Bank
Letter of Credit Policy
- Standards allowing banks to confirm letters
of credit by foreign banks supporting the purchase
of US exports.
- Bank
note
- A term used synonymously with paper money or currency
issued by a bank. Notes are, in effect a promise
to pay the bearer on demand the amount stated on
the face of the note. Today, only the Federal Reserve
Banks are authorized to issue bank notes, i.e. Federal
Reserve notes, in the United States.
- Bank
regulation
- The formulationand issuance by authorized agencies
of specific rules or regulations, under govering
law, for the conduct and structure of banking.
- Bank
run (bank panic)
- A series of unexpected cash withdrawals caused
by a sudden decline in depositor confidence or fear
that the bank will be closed by the chartering agency,
i.e. many depositors withfraw cash almost simultaneously.
Since the cash reserve a bank keeps on hand is only
a small fraction of its depoits, a large number
of withdrawals in a short period of time can deplete
available cash and force the bank to close and possibly
go out of business.
- Bank
trust department
- Bank department that deals with estates, administers
trusts, and provides
services such as estate planning advice to its clients.
- Bank
wire
- A computer message system linking major banks.
It is used not for effecting payments, but as a
mechanism to advise the receiving bank of some action
that has occurred, e.g., the payment by a customer
of funds into that bank's account.
- Banker's
acceptance
- A short-term credit investment created by a nonfinancial
firm and guaranteed by a bank as to payment. Acceptances
are traded at discounts
to face value
in the secondary
market. These instruments have been a popular
investment for money
market funds. They are commonly used in international
transactions.
- Banking
Delay
- Time required for processing and clearing a check
through the banking system.
- Bankmail
- An agreement between a company engaged in a takeover
bid and a bank that the bank will not finance
the bid of another acquirer.
- Bankruptcy
- Inability to pay debts.
In bankruptcy of a publicly owned entity, the ownership
of the firm's assets
is transferred from the stockholders
to the bondholders.
- Bankruptcy
cost view
- The argument that expected indirect and direct
bankruptcy costs offset the other benefits from
leverage so that
the optimal amount of leverage is less than 100%
debt financing.
- Bankruptcy
risk
- The risk that a
firm will be unable to meet its debt
obligations. Also referred to as default
or insolvency
risk.
- Bankruptcy
view
- The argument that expected bankruptcy costs preclude
firms from financing entirely with debt.
- Bar
- Slang for one million dollars.
- Barbell
strategy
- A fixed income strategy in which the maturity's
of the securities included in the portfolio
are concentrated at two extremes.
- Barefoot
pilgrim
- A slang term for an unsophisticated investor
who has lost everything on the stock
market.
- Bargain
hunter
- In the context of general equities, purchaser
who is extremely selective in the price sought on
a transaction.
- Bargain-purchase-price
option
- Gives the lessee
the option to purchase the asset
at a price below fair
market value when the lease
expires.
- Barometer
- Economic and market
data that represent an overall trend.
The Dow
Jones Industrial Average is an example of a
stock market
barometer.
- BARRA's
performance analysis (PERFAN)
- A method developed by BARRA, a consulting firm
in Berkeley, Calif. It is commonly used by
institutional investors applying performance
attribution analysis to evaluate their money
managers' performance.
- Barrier
options
- Option
contracts with trigger points that, when crossed,
automatically generate buying or selling of other
options. These
are exotic options.
- Barron's
confidence index
- Index measuring
the ratio of the average yield
on 10 top-grade bonds
to the average yield on 10 intermediate-grade bonds.
The discrepancy between high-rated top-grade bonds
and low-rated bond yields establishes a measure
that is indicative of investor
confidence.
- Barter
- The trading/exchange
of goods or services without using currency.
- Base
- A technical
analysis tool. A chart pattern
depicting the period when the supply and demand
of a certain stock
are in relative equilibrium, resulting in a narrow
trading range. The merging of the support
level and resistance
level.
- Base
currency
- Applies mainly to international equities. Currency
in which gains or losses from operating an international
portfolio are measured.
- Base
interest rate
- Related:
Benchmark interest rate.
- Base
market value
- A group of securities,
average market
price at a specific time. Used for the purpose
of indexing.
- Base
period
- A particular period of time used for comparative
purposes when measuring economic data.
- Base
probability of loss
- The probability of not achieving a portfolio
expected return.
Related: Value
at risk.
- Base
rate
- British equivalent of the US prime
rate.
- Bank-based
corporate governance system
- Organization of a supervisory board so that it
is dominated by bankers and corporate insiders.
- Bank
Letter of Credit Policy
- Standards allowing banks to confirm letters
of credit by foreign banks supporting the purchase
of US exports.
- Basic
balance
- In a balance
of payments, the basic balance is the net balance
of the combination of the current
account and the capital
account.
- Basic
business strategies
- Key strategies a firm intends to pursue in carrying
out its business plan.
- Basic
IRR rule
- Accept the project if IRR
is higher than the discount rate; reject the project
if it is lower than the discount
rate. It is wise to also consider net
present value for project evaluation.
- Basis
- The price an investor
pays for a security
plus any out-of-pocket expenses. It is used to determine
capital gains
or losses for
tax purposes when the stock
is sold. Also, for a futures
contract, the difference between the cash price
and the futures price observed in the market.
- Basis
point
- In the bond market,
the smallest measure used for quoting yields
is a basis point. Each percentage point of yield
in bonds equals 100
basis points. Basis
points also are used for interest
rates. An interest rate of 5% is 50 basis points
higher than an interest rate of 4.5%. Sometimes
referred to as BPS, BIPS, and pronounced "Bips"
- Basis
price
- Price expressed in terms of yield
to maturity or annual
rate of return.
- Basis
risk
- Uncertainty about the basis
at the time a hedge may be lifted.
Hedging substitutes basis
risk for price
risk.
- Basket
- Applies to derivative products. Group of stocks
that is formed with the intention of either being
bought or sold all at once, usually to perform index
arbitrage or a hedging
program.
- Basket
options
- Packages that involve the exchange of more than
two currencies against a base
currency at expiration. The basket option buyer
purchases the right, but not the obligation, to
receive designated currencies in exchange for a
base currency, either at the prevailing foreign
exchange market
rate or at a prearranged rate of exchange. Multinational
corporations with multicurrency cash flows frequently
use basket options because it is generally cheaper
to buy an option
on a basket of currencies than to buy individual
options on each of the currencies that make up the
basket.
- Basket
trades
- Related: Program
trades.
- BD
form
- An SEC required
document of brokerage houses that outlines the firm's
finances and officers.
- BDS
Statistic
- A statistic based upon the correlation integral
which examines the probability that a purely random
system could have the same scaling properties as
the system under study. See: Correlation
Integral.
- Boston
Exchange Automated Communication Order-Routing Network
(BEACON)
- This system permits the automatic execution
of trades based
on the current stock
prices on the consolidated markets
at any of the US securities
exchanges.
- Bear
- An investor
who believes a stock
or the overall market
will decline. A bear market is a prolonged period
of falling stock prices, usually by 20% or more.
Related: bull.
- Bear
CD
- A bear CD pays the holder a fraction of any fall
in a given market index.
- Bear
hug
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Hostile takeover
attempt in which the acquirer
offers an exceptionally large premium
over the market
value of the acquiree's
share so as to as to squeeze (hug) the target
into acceptance.
- Bear
market
- Any market in which prices
exhibit a declining trend.
For a prolonged period, usually falling by 20% or
more.
- Bear
raid
- In the context of general equities, attempt by
investors to move the price of a stock
opportunistically by selling large numbers of shares
short. The investors
pocket the difference between the initial price
and the new, lower price after this maneuver. This
technique is illegal under SEC
rules, which stipulate that every short
sale must be on an uptick.
- Bear
spread
- Applies to derivative products. Strategy in the
options market
designed to take advantage of a fall in the price
of a security
or commodity,
usually executed
by buying a combination of calls
and puts on the same
security at different strike prices in order to
profit as the security's price falls.
- Bear
trap
- The predicament facing short
sellers when a bear
market reverses its trend
and becomes bullish.
The assets continue
to sell in anticipation of further declines in price,
and short sellers then are forced to cover at higher
prices.
- Bearer
bond
- Bonds that are not registered on the books of
the issuer. Such
bonds are held in physical form by the owner, who
receives interest payments by physically detaching
coupons from the
bond certificate and delivering them to the paying
agent.
- Bearer
form
- Describes issue form of security
not registered on the issuing
corporation's books, and therefore payable to its
bearer. See also: Bearer
bond; coupon
bond.
- Bearer
share
- Security not
registered
on the books of the issuing corporation and thus
payable to possessor of the shares. Negotiable without
endorsement and transferred by delivery,
thus avoiding some of the control associated with
ordinary shares.
Dividends are
payable upon presentation of dividend coupons, which
are dated or numbered. Applies mainly to international
equities.
- Bearish
- Words used to describe investor attitude.
- Beating
the gun
- In the context of general equities, gaining an
advantageous price in a trade
through a quick response to market
developments.
- Before-tax
contributions
- The portion of an employee's salary contributed
to a retirement plan before federal income taxes
are deducted; this reduces the individual's gross
income for federal tax purposes.
- Before-tax
profit margin
- The ratio of net
income before taxes to net sales.
- Beggar-thy-neighbor
- An international trade
policy of competitive devaluations and increased
protective barriers that one country institutes
to gain at the expense of its trading partners.
- Beggar-thy-neighbor
devaluation
- A devaluation that is designed to cheapen a nation's
currency and thereby increase its exports at the
expense of other countries. Devaluation can also
reduce a nation's imports. Such devaluations often
lead to trade wars.
- Behind
- Used for listed equity securities. At the same
price but entered after your order/interest,
such as on the specialist's
book. Antithesis of ahead
of you.
- Bell
- Signal on a stock
exchange to indicate the open
and close of trading.
- Bellwether
issues
- Related: Benchmark
issues.
- Below
par
- Less than the nominal
or face value
of a security.
- Benchmark
- The performance of a predetermined set of securities,
used for comparison purposes. Such sets may be based
on published indexes
or may be customized to suit an investment strategy.
- Benchmark
error
- Use of an inappropriate proxy for the true market
portfolio.
- Benchmark
interest rate
- Also called the base interest
rate, it is the minimum interest rate investors
will demand for investing in a non-Treasury
security. It is also tied to the yield
to maturity offered on the comparable-maturity
Treasury security that was most recently issued
(on-the-run).
- Benchmark
issue
- Also called on-the-run
or current-coupon
issue or bellwether
issues. In the secondary
market, the benchmark issue is the most recently
auctioned Treasury issues for each maturity.
- Beneath
- Used for listed equity securities. 1)
Behind; 2) Lower in price.
- Beneficial
Owner
- As used for most purposes under the federal securities
laws. A beneficial owner of stock
is any person or entity with sole or shared power
to vote or dispose of the stock. This SEC
definition is intended to include a holder who enjoys
the benefits of ownership although the shares may
be held in another name.
- Beneficial
ownership
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Person who enjoys
the benefits of ownership even though title is in
another name. (Abused through the illegal use of
a parking
violation.)
- Beneficiary
- Term used to refer to the person who receives
the benefits of a trust
or the recipient of the proceeds of a life
insurance policy.
- Bequest
- Property left to an heir under the terms of a
will.
- Best's
rating
- A rating A.M.
Best Co. assigns to insurance companies based on
the company's ability to meet its obligations to
its policyholders.
- Best-efforts
sale
- A method of securities distribution/underwriting
in which the securities firm agrees to sell as much
of the offering as possible and return any unsold
shares to the issuer.
As opposed to a guaranteed or fixed-price sale,
in which the underwriter agrees to sell a specific
number of shares (and holds any unsold shares in
its own account if necessary).
- Best-interests-of-creditors
test
- The requirement that a claim holder voting against
a plan of reorganization must receive at least as
much as if the debtor were liquidated.
- Beta
- The measure of an asset's risk in relation to
the market (for
example, the S&P500) or to an alternative benchmark
or factors. Roughly speaking, a security with a
beta of 1.5, will have move, on average, 1.5 times
the market return. [More precisely, that stock's
excess return
(over and above a short-term money market rate)
is expected to move 1.5 times the market excess
return).] According to asset pricing theory, beta
represents the type of risk, systematic
risk, that cannot be diversified away. When
using beta, there are a number of issues that you
need to be aware of: (1) betas may change through
time; (2) betas may be different depending on the
direction of the market (i.e. betas may be greater
for down moves in the market rather than up moves);
(3) the estimated beta will be biased if the security
does not frequently trade; (4) the beta is not necessarily
a complete measure of risk (you may need multiple
betas). Also, note that the beta is a measure of
comovement, not volatility. It is possible for a
security to have a zero beta and higher volatility
than the market.
- Beta
equation (security)
- The market beta
of a security is determined as follows: Regress
excess returns
of stock y on excess returns of the market. The
slope coefficient is beta. Define n as number of
observation numbers.
- Beta=
- [(n) (sum of [xy]) ]-[ (sum of x) (sum of y)]/
- [(n) (sum of [xx]) ]-[ (sum of x) (sum of x)]
- where: n = # of observations (usually 36 to 60
months)
- x = rate of return
for the S&P 500 index
- y = rate of return for the security.
- Related: Alpha
- Biased
expectations theories
- Related: Pure
expectations theory.
- Bid
- The price a potential buyer is willing to pay
for a security.
Sometimes also used in the context of takeovers
where one corporation is bidding for (trying to
buy) another corporation. In trading,
we have the bid-ask
spread which is the difference between what
buyers are willing to pay and what sellers are asking
for in terms of price.
- Bid
away
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. Bid
from another dealer
exists at the same (listed) or higher (OTC)
price.
- Bid-asked
spread
- The difference between the bid
and the asked prices.
- Bid
price>
- This is the quoted bid, or the highest price an
investor is willing
to pay to buy a security.
Practically speaking, this is the available price
at which an investor can sell shares
of stock. Related:
Ask,
offer.
- Bid-to-cover
ratio
- The ratio of the number of bids
received in a Treasury
security auction
compared to the number of accepted bids.
- Bid
wanted
- Used in the context of general equities. Announcement
that a holder of securities wants to sell and will
entertain bids.
- Bidder
- A firm or person that wants to buy a firm or security.
- Bidding
buyer
- In the context of general equities, a nonaggressive
buyer who prefers to await a natural
seller in the hope of paying a lower price.
-
Bidding through the market
- In the context of general equities, aggressive
willingness to purchase a security
at a premium to
the inside market.
Contrast with bidding
buyer.
- Bidding
up
- Moving the bid price
higher.
- Bifurcation
- When a non-linear dynamic system develops twice
the possible solutions that it had before it passed
its critical level. A bifurcation cascade is often
called the period doubling route to chaos
because the transition from an orderly system to
a chaotic system often occurs when the number of
possible solutions begins increasing, doubling each
time.
- Bifurcation
Diagram
- A graph that shows the critical points where bifurcation occurs, and the possible solutions
that exist at that point.
- Big
Bang
- The term applied to the liberalization in 1986
of the London Stock Exchange (LSE) when trading
was automated.
- Big
Board
- A nickname for the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Also known as The
Exchange. More than 2,000 common and preferred
stocks are traded.
Founded in 1792, the NYSE is the oldest exchange
in the United States, and the largest. It is located
on Wall Street in New York City.
- Big
picture
- To highlight trading interest due to the size
of the trade.
- Big
producer
- A successful broker
who generates a large volume
of commission.
See Rainmaker.
- Big
uglies
- Unpopular stocks.
- Bill
of exchange
- General term for a document demanding payment.
- Bill
of lading
- A contract
between an exporter and a transportation company
in which the latter agrees to transport the goods
under specified conditions that limit its liability.
It is the exporter's receipt for the goods as well
as proof that goods have been or will be received.
- Billing
cycle
- The time elapsed between billing periods for goods
sold or services rendered.
- Binder
- An amount of money paid to indicate good
faith in a transaction
before the transaction is completed.
- Binomial
option pricing model
- An option pricing
model in which the underlying
asset can assume one of only two possible, discrete
values in the next time period for each value that
it can take on in the preceding time period.
- Bi-weekly
mortgage loan
- A mortgage
loan on which interest
and principal
payments are made every half-month (total of 26
payments) as opposed to monthly payments. This results
in earlier loan retirement.
- Black
Friday
- A precipitous drop in a financial market
. The original Black Friday occurred on September
24, 1869, when prospectors attempted to corner the
gold market.
- Black
market
- An illegal market.
- Black
Monday
- Refers to October 19, 1987, when the Dow
Jones Industrial Average fell 508 points on
the heels of sharp drops the previous week. On Monday,
October 27, 1997, the Dow dropped 554 points. While
the point drop set a new record, the percentage
decline was substantially less than in 1987.
- Black-Scholes
option-pricing model
- A model for pricing call
options based on arbitrage
arguments. Uses the stock
price, the exercise
price, the risk-free
interest rate, the time to expiration, and the expected
standard deviation of the stock return.
Developed by Fischer Black and Myron Scholes in
1973.
- Blank
check
- A check that is duly signed, but the amount of
the check is left blank to be supplied by the drawee.
- Blank
check offering
- An initial
public offering by a company whose business
activities are undefined and therefore peculative.
- Blank
Check Preferred Stock
- This is stock over which the board of directors
has broad authority to determine voting, dividend,
conversion, and other rights. While it can be used
to enable a company to meet changing financial needs,
its most important use is to implement poison pills
or to prevent takeover by placement of this stock
with friendly investors.
- Blanket
certification form
- See: NASD
form FR-1
- Blanket
fidelity bond
- SEC-required
insurance coverage that brokerage firms are required
to have in order to cover fraudulent trading
by employees.
- Blanket
inventory lien
- A secured loan that gives the lender a
lien against all the borrower's inventories.
- Blanket
Mortgage
- A mortgage that covers at least two pieces of
real estate as collateral for the same mortgage.
- Blanket
recommendation
- A recommendation by a brokerage firm sent to all
its customers advising that they buy or sell a particular
stock regardless
of investment
objectives or portfolio
size.
- Blind
pool
- A limited
partnership that does not announce its intentions
as to what properties will be acquired.
- Blind
trust
- A trust in which
a fiduciary third party has total discretion to
make investments
on behalf of a beneficiary
while the beneficiary is uninformed about the holdings
of the trust.
- Blitzkrieg
tender offer
- In the context of a takeover,
refers to a tender
offer that is priced so attractively that the
tender is completed quickly.
- Block
- Large quantity of stock or large dollar amount
of bonds held or traded. As a rule of thumb, 10,000
shares or more of stock and $200,000 or more worth
of bonds would be described as a block.
- Block
call
- In the context of general equities, conference
meeting during which customer indications and orders,
along with the traders'
own buy/sell preferences,
are conveyed to the entire organization. See block
list.
- Block
house
- Brokerage firms that help to find potential buyers
or sellers of large block
trades.
- Block
list
- In the context of general equities, listing of
stock the investment
bank is looking for (wants to buy)
or (wants to sell) at the beginning of the day,
whether on an agency
or principal
basis.
- Block
trade
- A large trading order,
defined on the New
York Stock Exchange as an order that consists
of 10,000 shares
of a given stock
or at a total market
value of $200,000 or more.
- Block
trader
- A dealer who
will take a position
in the block trades to accommodate customer buyers
and sellers of blocks. See: Dealer,
market maker,
principal.
- Block
voting
- Describes a group of shareholders
banding together to vote their shares
in a single block.
- Blocked
currency
- A currency
that is not freely convertible to other currencies
due to exchange
controls.
- Blocked
funds
- Cash flows
generated by a foreign project that cannot be immediately
repatriated to the parent firm because of capital
flow restrictions imposed by the host government.
- Blow-off
top
- A steep and rapid increase in price followed by
a steep and rapid drop. This is an indicator
seen in charts and used in technical
analysis of stock
price and market
trends.
- Blowout
- The rapid sale of all shares
in a new securities
offering. See:
hot issue.
- Blue
list
- Daily financial publication featuring bonds
offered for sale by dealers
and banks that represent billions of dollars in
par value. Also
available on-line at www.bluelist.com.
- Blue-chip
company
- Used in the context of general equities. Large
and creditworthy company. Company renowned for the
quality and wide acceptance of its products or services,and
for its ability to make money and pay dividends.
Gilt-edged
security.
- Blue
chip stocks
- Common stock
of well-known companies with a history of growth
and dividend
payments.
- Blue-sky
laws
- State laws covering the issue
and trading of securities.
- Bo
Derek stock
- High quality stock.
- Board
broker
- Employee of the Chicago
Board Options Exchange who manages away
from the market orders,
which cannot be executed
immediately.
- Board
of Directors
- Individuals elected by the shareholders
of a corporation who carry out certain tasks established
in the charter.
- Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
- The managing body of the Federal
Reserve System, set which policies on bank practices
and the money
supply.
- Board
room
- A room at a brokerage firm where its clients can
watch an electronic board displaying stock
prices and transactions.
Also refers to the room where Board
of Directors meetings take place.
- Bogey
- The return an investment manager is compared to
for performance evaluation.
- Boiler
room
- Used to describe place or operation in which unscrupulous
salespeople call and try to sell people speculative,
even fraudulent, securities.
- Boilerplate
- Standard terms and conditions.
- Bollinger
Bands
- Plus or minus two standard deviations where the
standard deviations are calculated historically
in a moving window estimation. Hence, the bands
will widen if the most recent data is more volatile.
If the prices break out of the band, this is considered
a significant move.
- Bolsa
- Spanish for stock
exchange.
- Bolsa
de Commercio de Santiago (SSE)
- Chile's preeminent stock
exchange.
- Bolsa
de Valores de Rio de Janeiro (BVRJ)
- Brazil's second-largest stock
exchange.
- Bolsa
de Valores de Sao Paulo (BOVESPA)
- The largest stock
exchange in Brazil.
- Bolt
- Used for listed equity securities. Block
trading version of COLT.
- Bombay
Stock Exchange (BSE)
- See: National
Stock Exchange; Mumbai stock exchange.
- Bond
- Bonds are debt
and are issued for
a period of more than one year. The US government,
local governments, water districts, companies and
many other types of institutions sell bonds. When
an investor buys
bonds, he or she is lending money. The seller of
the bond agrees to repay the principal
amount of the loan at a specified time. Interest-bearing
bonds pay interest
periodically.
- Bond
agreement
- A contract
for privately placed debt.
- Bond
anticipation note (BAN)
- A short-term debt
instrument issued by a state or municipality
to borrow against
the proceeds of an upcoming bond issue.
- Bond
broker
- A broker on the
floor of an exchange
who trades bonds.
- Bond
Buyer
- A daily publication featuring many essential statistics
and index figures
relevant to the fixed income markets.
- Bond
Buyer's municipal bond index
- A municipal
bond price tracking index
published daily by the Bond
Buyer.
- Bond
counsel
- An attorney who prepares the legal
opinion concerning a municipal
bond issue.
- Bond
covenant
- A contractual provision in a bond indenture.
A positive
covenant requires certain actions, and a negative
covenant limits certain actions.
- Bond
crowd
- Members of the stock
exchange who transact bond
orders on the floor
of the exchange.
- Bond
discount
- The difference by which a bond's market
price is lower than its face
value. The antithesis of a bond
premium, which prevails when the market
price of a bond
is higher than its face
value. See: Original
issue discount.
- Bond-equivalent
basis
- The method used for computing the bond-equivalent
yield.
- Bond
equivalent yield
- Bond yield calculated on an annual
percentage rate method. Differs from annual
effective yield.
- Bond
fund
- A mutual fund
that emphasizes incomeconsistent with risk,
rather than growthby investing in corporate,
municipal, or US government debt
obligations,
or some combination of them.
- Bond
indenture
- Contract that
sets forth the promises of a corporate bond
issuer and the
rights of investors.
- Bond
indexing
- Designing a bond portfolio
so that its performance will match the performance
of some bond index.
- Bond
market association
- An international trade association of broker/dealers
and banks in US government and federal agency securities,
municipal securities, mortgage-backed
securities, and money
market securities.
- Bond
mutual fund
- A mutual fund
holding bonds.
- Bond
of Indemnity
- An insurance policy that indemnifies
the corporation, the shareholder and the Transfer
Agent against any and all claims arising from
the replacement by the Transfer Agent of certificates
lost or stolen.
- Bond
points
- A conventional unit of measure for bond prices
set at $1 and equivalent to 1% of the $100 face
value of the bond. A price of 80 means that the
bond is selling at
80% of its face or par
value.
- Bond
power
- A form used in the transfer of registered
bonds from one owner to a different owner.
- Bond
premium
- See: Bond
discount
- Bond
rating
- A rating based
on the possibility of default
by a bond issuer.
The ratings range
from AAA (highly unlikely to default) to D (in default).
See: Rating, investment
grade.
- Bond
ratio
- The percentage of a company's capitalization
represented by bonds.
The ratio is calculated by dividing the total bonds
due after one year by that same figure plus all
other equity. See:
Debt-to-equity-ratio.
- Bond
swap
- The sale of one bond
issue and purchase
of another bond
issue simultaneously.
See: Swap; swap order.
- Bond
value
- With respect to convertible
bonds, the value the security
would have if it were not convertible. That is the
market value
of the bond minus the value of the conversion option.
- Bondholder
- The firm often has stockholders
and bondholders.
In a liquidation,
the bondholders have first priority.
- BONDPAR
- A system that monitors and evaluates the performance
of a fixed income portfolio,
as well as the individual securities
held in the portfolio. BONDPAR decomposes the return
into the elements beyond the manager's control--such
as the interest
rate environment and client-imposed duration
policy constraints--and those that the management
process contributes to, such as interest rate management,
sector/quality allocations, and individual bond
selection.
- Bonds
Enabling Annual Retirement Savings (BEARS)
- Holders of BEARS receive the face
value of bonds
underlying
call option,
which are exercised
by CUBS (an acronym for Calls Underwritten by Swanbrook).
If the calls are
exercised by CUBS, BEARS holders receive the total
of the exercise
price.
- Bon
voyage bonus
- See: Greenmail.
- Boning
- Charging a lot more for an asset
than its worth.
- Book
- A banker or trader's
positions.
- Book
cash
- A firm's cash balance as reported in its financial
statements. Also called ledger
cash.
- Book
to market
- The ratio of book value to market value of equity.
A high ratio means is often interpreted as a value
stock (the market is valuing equity relatively cheaply
compared to book value). This is the same as a low
price-to-book
value ratio. Value managers often form portfolios
of securities with high book to market values.
- Book
profit
- The cumulative book income plus any gain or loss
on disposition of assets.
- Book
runner
- The managing underwriter
for a new issue.
The book runner maintains the book of securities
sold.
- Book
to bill
- The book-to-bill ratio is the ratio of orders
taken (booked) to products shipped and bills sent
(billed). The ratio measures whether the company
has more orders than it can deliver (>1), equal
amounts (=1), or less (<1). This ratio is of
significant interest to investors/
traders in the
high-technology sector.
- Book
value
- A company's total assets
minus intangible
assets and liabilities,
such as debt. A company's
book value might be higher or lower than its market
value.
- Book
value per share
- The ratio of stockholder
equity to the average number of
common shares. Book value per share should not
be thought of as an indicator of economic worth,
since it reflects accounting valuation (and not
necessarily market
valuation).
- Book-Entry
- Registered ownership of stock without the issuance
of a corresponding stock
certificate, as is the case with dividend reinvestment
and direct purchase plans, employee plans and Direct
Registration System issuances. Periodic statements
of ownership are issued instead of certificates.
- Book-entry
securities
- System in which securities
are not represented by paper certificates
but are maintained in computerized records at the
Fed
in the names of member banks, which in turn keep
computer records of the securities they own as well
as those they are holding for customers. In the
case of other securities where a book-entry
has developed, certificates reside in a central
clearinghouse
or by another agent.
These securities do not move from holder to holder.
- Bootstrap
- Term used to describe the start-up of a company
with very little capital.
- Bootstrapping
- Creating a theoretical spot
rate curve using one yield
projection as the basis
for the yield of the next maturity.
- Borrow
- To obtain or receive money on loan with the promise
or understanding that it will be repaid.
- Borrowed
reserves
- Funds borrowed
from a Federal
Reserve Bank by member banks to maintain the
required reserve
ratios.
- Borrower
fallout
- In the mortgage
pipeline, the risk that prospective borrowers
of loans committed to be closed will elect to withdraw
from the contract.
- Bot
- Shorthand for bought. Antithesis of SL, meaning
sold.
- Bottom
- Refers to the base support level for market
prices of any type. Also used in the context
of securities
to refer to the lowest market price of a security
during a specific time-frame.
- Bottom
fisher
- An investor
seeking stocks that
have fallen to prices at or near their bottom, which
he or she believes will trend
up in the future.
- Bottom-up
equity management style
- A management style that de-emphasizes the significance
of economic and market
cycles, focusing instead on the analysis of individual
stocks.
- Bought
deal
- Security issue
in which one or two underwriters
buy the entire issue.
- Bounce
- A check returned by a bank because it is not payable,
usually because of insufficient funds. Also used
in the context of securities
to refer to the rejection and ensuing reclamation
of a security; a stock
price's abrupt decline and recovery.
- Bourse
- French for a stock
market.
- Boutique
- A small, specialized brokerage firm
that offers limited services and products to a limited
number of clients. Antithesis of financial
supermarket.
- Box
- The actual physical location at a brokerage house
or bank where securities
or other documents are stored for safekeeping. Alternatively,
a quotation
machine or battery march.
- Box
spread
- A type of option arbitrage in which both a bull
spread and a bear
spread are established for a near-riskless position.
One spread is established using put
options and the other is established using calls.
The spread may both be debit spreads (call bull
spread vs. put bear spread) or both credit spreads
(call bear spread vs. put bull spread). Break-Even
Point--the stock price (or prices) at which a particular
strategy neither makes nor loses money. It generally
pertains to the result at the expiration date of
the options involved in the strategy. A "dynamic"
break-even point is one that changes as time passes.
- Bracket
- A term signifying the extent of an underwriter's
commitment in a new issue,
e.g., major bracket or minor bracket.
- Bracket
creep
- The gradual movement into higher tax
brackets when incomes increase as a result of
inflation.
- Brady
bonds
- Bonds issued by
emerging countries under a debt
reduction plan.
- Branch
- An operation in a foreign country incorporated
in the home country.
- Breadth
- The percentage of assets
or stocks advancing relative to those unchanged or declining.
Also the number of independent forecasts available
per year. A stock picker forecasting returns to
100 stocks every quarter exhibits a breadth of 400,
assuming each forecast is independent (based on
separate information).
- Breadth
of the market
- In the context of general equities, percentage
of stocks participating
in a particular market
move. Technical
analysts say there was significant breadth if
two-thirds of the stocks listed on an exchange
move in the same direction during a trading session.
See: A/D line.
- Break
- A rapid and sharp price decline. Related: Crash.
- Break
price
- Used in the context of general equities. Change
one's offering or
bid prices to move
to a more realistic, tight
level where execution
is more feasible. Often done to trim one's position,
thus "breaking price" from where the trades
occurred (if long,
"break price" downward 1/8 a point or
more).
- Break-even
analysis
- An analysis of the level of sales at which a project
would make zero profit.
- Break-even
lease payment
- The lease payment
at which a party to a prospective lease is indifferent
between entering and not entering into a lease arrangement.
- Break-even
payment rate
- The prepayment rate of an
MBS coupon
that will produce the same cash flow yield (CFY)
as that of a predetermined benchmark MBS coupon.
Used to identify for coupons higher than the benchmark
coupon the prepayment rate that will produce the
same cash flow yield (CFY) as that of the benchmark
coupon; and for coupons lower than the benchmark
coupon the lowest prepayment
rate that will do so.
- Break-even
point
- Refers to the price at which a transaction
produces neither a gain nor a loss. In the context
of options, the
term has the additional definitions:
1. Long calls
and short uncovered
calls: strike
price plus premium.
2. Long puts
and short uncovered
puts: strike
price minus premium.
3. Short covered
call: purchase price
minus premium.
4. Short put
covered by short
stock: short
sale price of underlying
stock plus premium.
- Break-even
tax rate
- The tax rate at which a party to a prospective
transaction is indifferent between entering into
and not entering into the transaction.
- Break-even
time
- Related: Premium
payback period.
- Breaking
the syndicate
- Terminating an agreement among underwriters,
specifically the investment
banking group assembled to underwrite the issue
of a security.
- Breakout
- A rise in a security's
price above a resistance
level (commonly its previous high price) or
a drop below a level of support
(commonly the former lowest price.) A breakout is
taken to signify a continuing move in the same direction.
Can be used by technical
analysts as a buy
or sell indicator.
- Breakpoint
sale
- For mutual funds,
refers to the investment
amount necessary to make the fundholder eligible
for a reduced sales charge. See: Letter
of intent; right of accumulation.
- Breakup
value
- See: Private
market value.
- Breeden,
Douglas T.
- Inventor of one of the foundational asset pricing
models in finance, the consumption based capital
asset pricing model. Chairman of Smith Breeden Associates.
- Bretton
Woods Agreement
- An agreement signed by the original United Nations
members in 1944 that established the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the post-World
War II international monetary system of fixed exchange
rates.
- Bridge
financing
- Interim financing of one sort or another used
to solidify a position
until more permanent financing is arranged.
- "Bring
it out"
- In the context of general equities, "make
stock available for sale to indicated buyers."
- British
clearers
- The large clearing banks that dominate deposit
taking and short-term lending in the domestic sterling
market.
- Broad-Base
- Generally referring to an index, it indicates
that the index is composed of a sufficient number
of stocks or of stocks in a variety of industry
groups. See also: Narrow-Based.
- Broad
Market
- Usually refers to indices such as the Wilshire
5000 that track the performance of 5,000 securities,
rather than the more narrow measures such as the
Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S and P 500.
- Broad
tape
- An expanded version of the ticker
tape, which is displayed on a screen in the
board room
of a brokerage firm and shows constantly updated
financial information and news.
- Broken
up
- Used for listed equity securities. Prevented from
executing a
trade (committed
to upstairs)
due to exchange priority
rules excluding one's order
(e.g., higher bid/lower
offer on floor,
market order
to satisfy).
- Broker
- An individual who is paid a commission
for executing
customer orders. Either a floor
broker who executes
orders on the floor of the exchange,
or an upstairs broker
who handles retail customers and their orders. Also,
person who acts as an intermediary between a buyer
and seller, usually charging a commission. A "broker"
who specializes in stocks,
bonds, commodities,
or options acts
as an agent and
must be registered with the exchange where the securities
are traded. Antithesis of dealer.
- Broker-dealer
- Any person, other than a bank, engaged in the
business of buying or selling securities on its
own behalf or for others. See: Dealer.
- Broker
loan rate
- Related: Call
money rate.
- Brokered
CD
- A certificate
of deposit issued by a bank or thrift institution
bought by a brokerage firm in bulk for the purpose
of reselling to brokerage customers. A broker CD
features a higher interest
rate, usually 1% higher, and is FDIC
insured and do not usually have commissions.
- Brokered
market
- A market in which an intermediary offers search
services to buyers and sellers.
- Brokers'
loans
- Money brorowed by brokers from banks for uses
such as financing specialists's inventories of stock,
financing the underwriting of new issues of corporate
and municipal securities, and financing customer
margin accounts.
- Brought
over the wall
- Compelling a research analyst
of an investment
bank to work in the underwriting
department for a corporate client, therefore allowing
for the transmission of insider
information. Also called "Over the Chinese
wall".
- Brussels
Stock Exchange (BSE)
- Stock exchange
that handles the majority of securities
transactions
in Belgium.
- Bubble
theory
- Security prices
sometimes move wildly above their true values, or
the price falls sharply until the "bubble bursts.".
- Budget
- A detailed schedule of financial activity, such
as an advertising budget, a sales budget, or a capital
budget.
- Budget
authority
- Broad responsibility by Congress that government
agencies have the power to spend federal
funds. Congress can specify criteria for the
spending of these funds. For example, it may stipulate
that a given agency must spend within a specific
year, number of years, or any time in the future.
The basic forms of budget authority are; appropriations,
authority to borrow, contract authority, and authority
to obligate and expend offsetting receipts and
collections. The period of time during which Congress
makes funds available may be specified as one-year,
multiple years or no year. The available amount
may be classified as either definite or indefinite;
a specific amount or an unspecified amount can
be made available. Authority may also be classified
as current or permanent. Permanent authority requires
no current action by Congress.
- Budget
deficit
- The amount by which government spending exceeds
government revenues.
- Buck
- Slang for one million dollars.
- Bucket
shop
- An illegal brokerage firm that accepts customer
orders but does
not attain immediate executions.
A bucket shop broker
promises the customer a certain price, but waits
until a price discrepancy is present and the trade
is advantageous to the firm and then keeps the difference
as profit. Alternatively,
the broker may
never fill the customer's order
but keep the money.
- Budapest
Stock Exchange
- Established in 1864, the major securities market
of Hungary.
- Budget
surplus
- The amount by which government revenues exceed
government pending.
- Buenos
Aires Stock Exchange (Bolsa de Comercio de Buenos
Aires)
- Argentina's major securities market.
- Build
a book
- In the context of general equities, develop customer
orders to gather
demand/supply in order to make a bid
or an offer.
- Builder
buydown loan
- A mortgage
loan on newly developed property that the builder
subsidizes during the early years of the development.
The builder uses cash to buy down the mortgage rate
to a lower level than the prevailing market
loan rate for some period of time. The typical buydown
is 3% of the interest rate amount for the first
year, 2% for the second year, and 1% for the third
year (also referred to as a 3-2-1 buydown).
- Bulge
- A short-lived stock
price increase. Synonymous with bubble.
- Bulge
bracket
- A tier of firms
in an underwriting
syndicate that have the highest participation
level. See: Mezzanine
bracket.
- Bull
- An investor
who thinks the market
will rise. Related: Bear.
- Bull-bear
bond
- Bond whose principal
repayment is linked to the price of another security.
The bonds are issued
in two tranches:
In the first tranche repayment increases with the
price of the other security, and in the second tranche
repayment decreases with the price of the other
security.
- Bull
CD
- A bull CD
pays its holder a specified percentage of the increase
in return on a specified marketindex
while guaranteeing a minimum rate
of return.
- Bull
market
- Any market in which prices
are in an upward trend.
- Bull
spread
- A spread
strategy in which an investor buys an
out-of-the-money put
option, financing it by selling an out-of-the
money call option on the same underlying
security.
- Bulldog
bond
- Foreign bond issue
made in London.
- Bulldog
market
- The foreign
market in the United Kingdom.
- Bullet
contract
- A guaranteed investment contract
purchased with a single (one-shot)
premium. Related:
Window contract.
- Bullet
loan
- A bank term loan
that calls for no amortization.
- Bullet
strategy
- A fixed income strategy in which a
portfolio is constructed so that the maturity's
of its securities are highly concentrated at one
point on the yield
curve.
- Bullion
coins
- Metal coins consisting of gold, silver, platinum,
or palladium that are actively traded.
Some examples include the American eagle and the
Canadian maple leaf. Their price is directly connected
to the underlying
price of their metal.
- Bullish
- Words used to describe investor attitudes. Bullish
refers to an optimistic outlook, while bearish means
a pessimistic outlook.
- Bump-up
CD
- A certificate
of deposit granting the owner the right to increase
its yield one time
for the remaining term of the CD.
The power is exercised
by the owner in the event of an interest
rate hike.
- Bunching
- Describes the act of traders
combining round-lot
orders for execution
at the same time. Bunching can also be used to combine
odd-lot orders
to save the odd-lot
differential for customers. Also used to refer to
the pattern on
the ticker tape
when a series of trades
for a security appear consecutively.
- Bundling,
unbundling
- Creation of securities either by combining primitive
and derivative
securities into one composite hybrid or by separating
returns on an asset
into classes.
- Bureau
of Labor Statistics (BLS)
- A reserch agency of the U.S. Department of Labor;
it compiles statistics on hours of work, average
hourly earnings, employment and unemployment, consumer
prices and many other variables.
- Burn
rate
- Used in venture
capital financing to refer to the rate at which
a startup company expends capital
to finance overhead
costs prior to the generation of positive cash
flow.
- Burnout
- Depletion of a tax
shelter's benefits. In the context of mortgage
backed securities it refers to the percentage
of the pool that has prepaid their mortgage.
- Business
combination
- See: Merger
- Business
Combination laws
- These laws impose a moratorium on certain kinds
of transactions (e.g., asset sales, mergers) between
a large shareholder and the firm for a period usually
ranging between three and five years after the shareholder's
stake passes a pre-specified (minority) threshold.
These laws are in place in more than half the U.S.
states.
- Business
cycle
- Repetitive cycles of economic expansion and recession.
The official peaks and troughs of the US cycle are
determined by the National Bureau of Economic Research
in Cambridge, MA.
- Business
day
- A day in which financial markets
are open for trading.
- Business
failure
- A business that has terminated operations with
a loss to creditors.
- Business
risk
- The risk that the cash
flow of an issuer
will be impaired because of adverse economic conditions,
making it difficult for the issuer to meet its operating
expenses.
- Business
segment reporting
- Reporting the results of the separate divisions
or subsidiaries of a business.
- Busted
convertible
- Related:
Fixed income equivalent. Mainly applies to convertible
securities. Convertible
bond selling essentially as a straight bond.
Assuming the issuer
is "money good," or will continue to meet
credit obligations, such issues
can be highly attractive since the price makes virtually
no allowance for the bond's call on the common
stock, although such issues usually carry high
premiums.
- Bust-up
takeover
- A leveraged
buyout in which the buyer sells off the assets
of the target_company
to repay the debt
that financed the takeover.
- Butterfly
- In the context of equities, a firm with two divisions
may split into two companies and issue original
shareholders two shares (one in each of the new
companies) for every old share they have.
- Butterfly
shift
- A
nonparallel shift in the yield curve involving
the height of the curve.
- Butterfly
spread
- Applies to derivative products. Complex option
strategy that involves selling two calls
and buying two calls on the same or different markets,
with several maturity
dates. One of the options has a higher exercise
price and the other has a lower exercise
price than the other two options. The payoff
diagram resembles the shape of a butterfly.
- Buy
- To purchase an asset;
taking a long
position.
- Buy-and-hold
strategy
- A passive investment strategy with no active buying
and selling of stocks
from the time the portfolio
is created until the end of the investment horizon.
- Buy-and-write
strategy
- An options strategy
that calls for the purchase of stocks
and the writing of covered
call options on them.
- Buy
the book
- An order, typically
from a large institutional
investor to a broker
to purchase all the shares
available at the market
from the specialist
and other brokers
and dealers at
the current offer price. The book
refers to the record a specialist
kept before the advent of computers.
- Buydown
- A lump sum payment made to the creditor by the
borrower or by a third party to reduce the amount
of some or all of the consumer's periodic payments
to repay the indebtedness.
- Buy
hedge
- See: Long hedge
- Buy
in
- To cover, offset,
or close out a short
position. Related: Evening
up, liquidation.
- Buy
limit order
- A conditional trading order
that indicates a security
may be purchased only at the designated price or
lower. Related: Sell
limit order.
- Buy
minus order
- In the context of general equities, rare market
or limit order
to buy a stated
amount of a stock,
provided that the price to be obtained is not higher
than the last sale if the last sale is a minus or
zero-minus tick,
and is not higher than the last sale minus the minimum
fractional change in the stock if the last sale
is a plus or zero-plus tick.
(If limit, then the buy
cannot occur above the limit, regardless of tick.)
- Buy
on the bad news
- Buying stock
shortly after a price drop resulting from bad news
from the company. Investors
believe that the price has hit bottom and will trend
upward. See: Bottom
fisher.
- Buy
on close
- Buying at the end
of the trading session at a price within the closing
range.
- Buy
on margin
- Borrowing to buy
additional shares,
using the shares themselves as collateral.
- Buy
on opening
- Buying at the beginning of a trading session at
a price within the opening range.
- Buy
order
- An order to a
broker to purchase
a specific quantity of a security.
- Buy-side
analyst
- A financial analyst
employed by a nonbrokerage firm, typically one of
the larger money
management firms that purchases securities on
its own account.
- Buy
stop order
- A buy order
not to be executed
until the market
price rises to the stop
price. Once the security
has broken through that price, the order
is then treated as a market
order. Also known as a suspended market order.
- "Buy
them back"
- Used for listed equity securities. "Cover
my short position.
- Buy
write
- See also Covered
Call.
- Buyback
- The covering of a short
position by purchasing a long
contract, usually
resulting from the short
sale of a commodity.
See: Short
covering, stock
buyback. Also used in the context of bonds.
The purchase of corporate bonds
by the issuing company at a discount in the open
market. Also used
in the context of corporate
finance. When a firm elects to repurchase some
of the shares trading in the market.
- Buydowns
- Mortgages in
which monthly payments consist of principal
and interest.
During the early part of the loan, portions of these
payments are provided by a third party to reduce
the borrower's monthly payments.
- Buyer's
market
- Market in which
the supply exceeds the demand, creating lower prices.
Antithesis of seller's_market.
- Buyers/sellers
on balance
- Used for listed equity securities. Indicates that
at a given time (usually before the opening of a
stock/market or
at expiration
time), there are more buyers/sellers in the marketplace,
usually with market
orders. See: Imbalance
of orders.
- Buying
climax
- A rapid rise in the price of a stock
resulting from heavy buying, which usually creates
the market condition
for a rapid fall in the price.
- Buying
the index
- Purchasing the stocks
in the S&P
500 in the same proportion as the index
to achieve the same return.
- Buying
power
- The amount of money available to buy securities,
determined by adding the total cash held in brokerage
accounts and the
amount that could be spent if securities
were margined to
the limit.
- Buyout
- Purchase of
a controlling interest
(or percent of shares)
of a company's stock.
A leveraged
buy out is effected with borrowed money.
- Bylaws
- Rules and practices that govern management of
an organization.
- Bylaw
Amendment Limitations
- These provisions limit shareholders' ability to
amend the governing documents of the corporation.
This might take the form of a supermajority vote
requirement for charter or bylaw amendments, total
elimination of the ability of shareholders to amend
the bylaws, or the ability of directors beyond the
provisions of state law to amend the bylaws without
shareholder approval.
- Bypass
trust
- An irrevocable trust that is designed to pay trust
income (and principal,
if needed) to an individual's spouse for the duration
of the spouse's lifetime. The bypass trust is not
part of the beneficiary
spouse's estate and is not subject to federal estate
taxes upon his/her death.
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Campbell
R. Harvey's Hypertextual Finance Glossary
Copyright © 2007. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. Do not reproduce without explicit
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