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Glossary
- G
- Fifth letter of a Nasdaq
stock symbol specifying that the issue is the first
convertible bond of the company.
- GA
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GABON.
- GAAP
- See: Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles
- GB
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for UNITED KINGDOM.
- GBP
- Pound Sterling currency
- GBP
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the United Kingdom Pound.
- GD
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GRENADA.
- GDP
- See: Gross
Domestic Product
- GE
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GEORGIA.
-
GF
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for FRENCH GUIANA.
- GH
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GHANA.
- GI
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GIBRALTAR.
- GIC
- See: Guaranteed
Investment Contract
- GL
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GREENLAND.
- GNP
- See: Gross
National Product
- GM
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GAMBIA.
- GMC
- See: Guaranteed
Mortgage Certificate
- GN
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GUINEA.
- GP
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GUADELOUPE.
- GPM
- See: Graduated
Payment Mortgages
-
GQ
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for EQUATORIAL GUINEA.
- GR
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GREECE.
- GS
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for SOUTH GEORGIA AND THE SOUTH
SANDWICH ISLANDS.
- GT
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GUATEMALA.
- GTC
- See: Good
'til cancelled order
- GU
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GUAM.
- GW
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for GUINEA-BISSAU.
- GY
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for the for GUYANA.
- Gadfly
- A nickname for a "professional" securityholder
who owns stock in
various companies, attends annual meetings and asks
senior management hard and often embarrassing questions.
- Gaijin
- Japanese term used to describe a nonJapanese investor
in Japan.
- Gain
- A profit on a
securities transaction
recognized by selling a security
for more than the security
originally cost. The gain is the difference between
the cost and the sale.
- Gamma
- The ratio of a change in the option
delta to a small
change in the price of the asset
on which the option is written.
- Gap
- Financing that is required, but for which no provision
has been made. The difference in total funding needed
for a proposal and the amount of funding already
made available.
- Gap
opening
- In the context of general equities, opening
price that is substantially higher or lower
than the previous day's closing
price, usually because of some extraordinarily
positive or negative news.
- Garage
- The floor of the NYSE,
which is situated on the north side of the main
trading floor.
- Garbatrage
- Rising stock prices
and increased market
activity in an entire sector
caused by a psychology change stemming from a major
takeover involving
two companies in the sector.
Speculators
feel other takeovers are likely in the sector.
See: Rumortrage.
- Garman-Kohlhagen
option pricing model
- A model widely used to price foreign
currency options.
- Gather
in the stops
- A market strategy
in which investors
sell stocks to drive
prices to a level that breaks through stop
orders known to exist. Once the price is low
enough, the stop
orders become market
orders and are executed,
to create snowballing.
- Gaussian
- A system whose probabilities are well described
by the normal distribution, or
bell shaped curve.
- GDP
implicit price deflator
- An economic technique used to account for inflation
by comparing the current-dollar gross
domestic product GDP to constant-dollar GDP
as a ratio. The ratio accounts for price changes
of goods and services that make up GDP and changes
in the composite of GDP.
- Gearing
- Financial leverage.
- GEM
(growing equity mortgage)
- Mortgage in
which annual increases in monthly payments are used
to reduce outstanding
principal and
to shorten the term of the loan.
- General
Average
- Provision in maritime law where all shippers on
a given voyage would reimburse the ship line in
the event of vessel sinking or catastrophic damage.
It also provides for the reimbursement to those
shippers whose cargo was thrown overboard in order
to save the vessel.
- General
Average Contribution
- The amount of money paid by each shipper involved
in a General
Average.
- General
account
- Federal
Reserve Board's term for a margin
account provided to a customer by a brokerage
firm. Governed by Regulation
T of the FED.
- General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
- A treaty adopted by the United Nations aimed at
elimination of international trade barriers between
member countries.
- General
cash offer
- A public
offering made to investors
at large.
- Generic
credit spread
- Refers to the corporate bond spread for a particular
credit rating and expiry. For example, 10-year single
A corporates were priced or trading at 130 basis
points above Treasuries last night, or said diffrently,
130 is the generic credit spread for 10-year single
A corporates.
- General
ledger
- Accounting records that show all the financial
statement accounts of a business.
- General
lien
- An attachment that gives the lender
the right to seize the personal property of a borrower
who has not fulfilled the obligations of the loan,
but prevents the lender from seizing real property.
- General
loan and collateral agreement
- The agreement governing the broker-dealer's
borrowing against
listed securities
from a bank for the purpose of carrying on business
and making transactions.
See: Broker
loan rate.
- General
mortgage
- A type of obligation that covers all a borrower's
mortgageable properties, not just one specific property.
- General
obligation bonds
- Municipal
securities secured by the
issuer's pledge of its full faith, credit, and
taxing power.
- General
Order
- A penalty imposed on imported goods that are not
promptly cleared through customs.
- General
partner
- A participant who has unlimited
liability for the obligations of a partnership.
- General
partnership
- A partnership
in which all participants are general
partners.
- General
revenue
- The sum of taxes, charges, and miscellaneous income
taken in at the state and local level while neglecting
overlapping revenue which may be erroneously counted
twice.
- Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP)
- The overall conventions, rules, and procedures
that define accepted accounting practice at a particular
time in the U.S.
- Generation-skipping
transfer or trust
- A trust in which
a principal
amount is placed in a trust
on the death of person A and is transferred to A's
grandchildren when A's children die. The income
from the trust goes
to the children of person A while they survive.
- Generic
- Describes the characteristics and/or experience
of the total universe of a coupon
of MBS
sector type; that is, in contrast to a specific
pool or collateral group, as in a specific CMO
issue.
- Genetic
Algorithms
- Models that optimize rules by mimicking the Darwinian
Law of survival of the fittest. A set of rules are
chosen by those that work the best. The weakest
are discarded. In addition, two successful rules
can be combined (the equivalent to genetic cross-overs)
to produce offspring rules. The offspring can replace
the parents, or they will be discarded if less successful
than the parents. Mutation is also accomplished
by randomly changing elements. Mutation and cross-over
occur with low probability, as in nature.
- Geographic
risk
- Risk that arises
when an issuer
issues policies concentrated within certain geographic
areas, such as the risk of damage from a hurricane
or an earthquake.
- Geometric
mean return
- Also called the time-weighted
rate of return, a measure of the compound
rate of growth of the initial portfolio
market value
during the evaluation period, assuming that all
cash distributions are reinvested in the portfolio.
It is computed by taking the geometric average of
the portfolio
subperiod
returns.
- Gestation
repo
- A reverse repurchase
agreement between mortgage
firms and securities
dealers. Under
the agreement, the firm sells federal agency-guaranteed
MBS
and simultaneously agrees to repurchase them at
a future date at a fixed price.
- Get
hit
- Go lower in price, when bids
in the stock or
market are hit,
causing those bids to vanish and be replaced by
lower ones. Come in.
Antithesis of on
the take.
- Get
out
- Used in the context of general equities. Sell
interest ("We could get out big size in Humana.")
- Ghosting
- The illegal practice that one firm drives a stock's
price higher or lower, while other conspiring firms
follow its lead to influence up the price of the
stock.
- Gift
splitting
- A technique used to avoid a gift
tax in which a large sum of money to be given
by two parents to a child is halved and given to
the child separately For example, a husband and
wife each donate $10,000 to their child rather than
one parent donating $20,000.
- Gift
tax
- A tax assessed on the giver of a property or asset
as a gift. A $10,000 federal gift tax exemption
exists per recipient. See: Gift
splitting.
- Gift
inter vivos
- A piece of property or asset
given from one living person to another.
- Gilt-edged
securities
- British and Irish government securities. Blue
Chip.
- Gilts
- British and Irish government securities. Blue
Chip.
- Ginnie
Mae
- See: Government
National Mortgage Association
- Ginnie
Mae pass-through
- A security
guaranteed by the Government
National Mortgage Association that is backed
by a collection of mortgages,
in which the investor
receives the interest
and principal
payments of participating homeowners.
- Give
up
- Used for listed equity securities.
(1) Term used in a securities transaction involving
three brokers,
as follows: Broker A, a floor
broker, executes
a buy order for
broker B (a member
firm broker who has too much business at the
time to execute
the order). The broker with whom broker A completes
the transaction (the sell-side broker) is broker
C. Broker A "gives up" the name of broker
B, so that the record shows a transaction between
broker B and broker C even though the trade
is actually executed between broker A and broker
C; (2) distribution of commissions to brokerage
houses not participating in a trade. This is a grey
area of the law governing reimbursement of a broker
for services (e.g., research). See: Directed brokerage.
- Glamor
stock
- A popular stock
characterized by high earnings growth rate and a
price that rise is faster than the market
average in a bull
market.
- Global
Depository Receipt
- A receipt denoting ownership of foreign-based
corporation stock
shares which are
traded in numerous
capital markets
around the world.
- Glass-Steagall
Act
- 1933 legislation prohibiting commercial banks
to own, underwrite,
or deal in corporate stock and
corporate bonds.
- Global
bonds
- Bonds designed
to qualify for immediate trading in any domestic
capital market
and in the Euromarket.
- Global
fund
- A mutual fund
that can invest anywhere in the world, including
the U.S.
- Globalization
- Tendency toward a worldwide investment environment,
and the integration of national capital
markets.
- GNMA-I
- Mortgage-backed
securities (M.B.S.) on which registered holders
receive separate principal
and interest payments on each of their certificates,
usually directly from the servicer of the M.B.S.
pool. GNMA-I
mortgage-backed securities are single-issuer
pools.
- GNMA-II
- Mortgage-backed
securities (M.B.S.) on which registered holders
receive an aggregate
principal and
interest payment from a central paying agent
on all their certificates. Principal
and interest
payments are disbursed on the 20th day
of the month. GNMA-II
M.B.S. are backed by multiple-issuer
pools or custom pools (one issuer but different
interest rates that may vary within one percentage
point). Multiple-issuer
pools are known as "jumbos."
Jumbo pools are generally longer and offer certain
mortgages that are more geographically diverse than
single-issuer pools. Jumbo pool mortgage interest
rates may vary within one percentage point.
- GNMA
Midget
- A GNMA
pass-through certificate backed by fixed-rate
mortgages with a 15-year maturity.
GNMA Midget is a dealer
term and is not used by GNMA in the formal description
of its programs.
- Gnomes
- Freddie Mac's
15-year fixed-rate pass-through
securities issued
under its cash program.
- Go
along
- Used for listed equity securities.
Buy or sell at prices
that randomly occur on the floor, participating
in what trades the
specialist
and other players
will allow.
- Go
around
- Describes the N.Y. Federal Reserve Bank's trading
desk practice of communicating with primary dealers
to establish a market
of bids and offers
on behalf of the Federal
Open Market Committee.
- Goal
- An individual's or institution's financial objective.
- Godfather
offer
- An aggressive takeover
technique in that the proposed offer of the acquiring
company is so large that management of the target
company cannot refuse, out of fear of lawsuits
or shareholder
revolt.
- Go-go
fund
- A type of mutual
fund in highly aggressive growth
stocks. The fund has high levels of risk and
potential return.
- Go
to
- Used in the context of general equities. Sell
interest ("we've got 50 IBM to go".).
- Goes
- Used in the context of general equities. (1) Trades
("10 IBM goes on at 115 "); see Print;
(2) indicates a change in the stock's
inside market
("Apple goes 3/4 bid").
- Going
ahead
- A broker-dealer
trades in a personal
account prior
to filling the orders
of his or her clients. Prohibited by the NASD
rules of fair practice.
- Going
away
- The type of bond
purchased by dealers
for immediate resale to investors,
as opposed to purchasing bond,
to hold for some amount of time, and then reselling
it at a future date.
- Going-concern
value
- The value of a company to another company or individual
in terms of an operating business. The difference
between a company's going-concern value and its
asset or liquidation
value is deemed goodwill and plays a major role
in mergers and
acquisitions.
- Going
long
- The investor's
purchase of a security
for investment
or speculation that the price will rise resulting
in a profit once
the security
is sold. See:: long
position. Antithesis of going
short.
- Going
out
- Used in the context of general equities. Soliciting/advertising
over the SS1, NASDSAQ,
or Autex.
- Going
private
- When publicly owned stock
in a firm is replaced with complete equity
ownership by a private group. The firm is delisted
on stock exchanges
and can no longer be purchased in the open markets.
- Going
public
- When a private company first offers
shares to the public
market and investors.
See: IPO.
- Going
short
- Selling stock that an investor does not own by
borrowing shares
from a broker.
The assumption is that the price will fall. The
investor then
buys (covers the short)
the shares at a
lower price than what they were sold for, recognizing
the difference as a profit.
Antithesis of going long.
- Going
into the trade
- Used in the context of general equities. 1) Condition
of the traders position
in the security
and expectations of stock
placement with accounts just prior to taking an
order to the exchange floor for execution;
2) On the way in. Antithesis of come
out of the trade.
- Gold
bars
- Bars with a minimum content of 99.5% gold, which
may be held by central banks or traded
by investors.
- Gold
bond
- Bonds issued
by gold-mining companies and backed by gold. The
bonds make interest
payments based on the level of gold prices.
- Gold
bullion
- Investment-grade, pure gold, which may be smelted
into gold coins
or gold bars.
- Gold
certificate
- Certificate of an investor,
that shows proof of ownership of gold
bullion.
- Gold
coins
- Coin minted in gold, such as the American Eagle
or the Canadian Maple Leaf.
- Gold
exchange standard
- A fixed exchange
rate system adopted in the Bretton
Woods agreement. It required the U.S. to peg
the dollar to gold and other countries to peg their
currencies to the dollar.
- Gold
fixing
- The process of determining the price of gold based
on supply and demand forces of the market;
which occurs twice daily in London.
- Gold
mutual fund
- A mutual fund
that primarily invests in gold-mining companies'
stock.
- Gold
standard
- An international monetary system in which currencies
are defined in terms of their gold content, and
payment imbalances between countries are settled
in gold. It was in effect from about 1870 to 1914.
- Goldbug
- Analysts who
recommends gold as an investment/hedge.
- Golden
handcuffs
- A contract
that binds a broker
to a brokerage firm by offering the broker
commissions
and bonuses, but penalizes the broker
if he or she goes to work for another firm.
- Golden
handshake
- A large payment to a senior employee who is forced
into retirement or fired as a result of a takeover
or simular development.
- Golden
hello
- A bonus a securities
firm pays to attract an employee from a competing
firm.
- Golden
parachute
- Compensation paid to top-level management by a
target
firm if a takeover
occurs.
- Goldilocks
economy
- A term developed in the mid 1990s to describe
the positive performance of the economy as "not
too hot, not too cold; just right."
- Good
delivery
- A delivery
in which everything - order-endorsement, any necessary
attached legal papers.
- Good
delivery and settlement procedures
- Refers to PSA Uniform Practices such as cutoff
times on delivery
of securities
and notification, allocation, and proper endorsement.
- Good
faith deposit
- Used in the context of commodities.
Refers to the initial margin
account deposit needed when buying or selling
a futures contract;
approximately 2%-10% of the contract
value.
Used in the context of securities
to describe the deposit required by securities
firms engaged in transactions
on behalf of a new client.
Also used to refer to the deposit with a municipal
bond issuer
by firms competing for the underwriting
business.
- Good
money
- Federal funds that clear
on the same day, unlike clearinghouse
funds, which require three days to clear.
- Good-this-Month
order (GTM)
- An order to buy
or sell securities
that continues to be a valid order
until the end of the current month.
- Good
through/until date order
- Used in the context of general equities. Market
or limited price
order that remains viable for a stated period
of time unless cancelled,
executed, or
changed, after which such order
or the portion thereof not executed is to be treated
as cancelled.
- Good
'til cancelled order (GTC)
- An order to buy
or sell stock that
is good until you execute
or cancel it. Brokerages
usually set a limit of 30-60 days, at which the
G.T.C. order expires if not restated. (Different
from a day order.)
- Goodwill
- Excess of purchase price over fair market
value of net assets
acquired under the purchase method of accounting.
- Government
bond
- See: Government
securities
- Government
National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae)
- A wholly owned U.S. government corporation within
the Department of Housing & Urban Development.
Ginnie Mae guarantees the timely payment of principal
and interest on securities
issued by approved
servicers that are collateralized
by FHA-issued, VA-guaranteed, or Farmers Home Administration
(FmHA)-guaranteed mortgages.
- Government
obligations
- U.S. government-backed debt
instruments, which are considered among the
safest investments
possible, including Treasury
bonds, bills, and notes,
and savings bonds.
- Government
securities
- Negotiable U.S.
Treasury securities.
- Government
sponsored enterprises
- Privately owned, publicly chartered entities,
such as the Student Loan Marketing Association,
created by Congress to reduce the cost
of capital for certain borrowing sectors of
the economy including farmers, homeowners, and students.
- Governments
- U.S. government-issued
securities, such
as Treasury bills,
bonds, and notes,
and savings bonds. Governments are considered among
the safest investments
available as they are backed by the U.S. government.
Also used to refer to debt
issues of federal
agencies, which are not directly backed by the U.S.
government.
- Grace
period
- The time period stipulated in most loan contracts
and insurance policies during which a late payment
will not result in default
or cancellation.
- Graduated
call writing
- Selling covered
call options at incrementally rising exercise
prices, so that as the price of the underlying
stock rises and
the options are
exercised, the
seller receives a higher average price than the
original exercise
price.
- Graduated
lease
- A type of long-term
lease whose payments are variable rather than fixed,
and depend upon a benchmark
rate, such as changes in the consumer
price index.
- Graduated
payment
- Repayment terms calling for gradual increases
in the payments on a closed-end obligation. A graduated
payment loan usually involves negative amortization.
- Graduated-payment
mortgage (GPM)
- A type of stepped-payment loan in which the borrower's
payments are initially lower than those on a comparable
level-rate mortgage.
The payments gradually increase over a predetermined
period (usually 3, 5, or 7 years), and then are
fixed at a level-pay
schedule, which will be higher than the level-pay
amortization
of a level-pay mortgage originated at the same time.
The difference between what the borrower actually
pays and the amount required to fully amortize the
mortgage is added to the unpaid principal
balance.
- Graduated
security
- A security
that has moved from listing on an exchange
of less prominence to one of more prominence.
- Graham
and Dodd method of investing
- An investment
strategy based on security
analysis and identification. Investors buy stocks
with undervalued assets
speculating that these assets
will appreciate to their true value.
- Graham-Harvey
Measure 1
- Performance measure developed by John Graham and
Campbell Harvey. The idea is to lever a fund's portfolio
to exactly match the volatility
of the S&P
500. The difference between the fund's levered return
and the S&P
500 return is the performance
measure.
- Graham-Harvey
Measure 2
- Performance measure developed by John Graham and
Campbell Harvey. The idea is to lever the S&P
500 portfolio to exactly match the volatility
of the fund. The difference between the fund's return
and the levered S&P
500 return is the performance measure.
- Grandfathered
activities
- Nonbank activities, some of which would normally
not be permissible for bank holding companies and
foregin banks in the United States, but which were
acquired or engaged in before a particular date.
Such activities may be continued under the "grandfather"
clauses of the Bank Holding Company Act and the
International Banking Act.
- Grandfather
clause
- A provision included in a new rule or regulation
that exempts a business that is already conducting
business in the area addressed by the regulation
from penalty or restriction.
- Grant
- The issuance of an award under a stock plan, such
as a stock option
or shares of restricted
stock.
- Grant
Date
- The date on which an option
or other award is granted.
- Grantor
- A trader in
the options market
who makes premium
income by selling options.
- Grantor
Retained Income Trust (GRIT)
- A tax-saving trust
in which a grantor transfers property to a beneficiary,
but receives income until termination, at which
time the beneficiary begins receiving the income.
- Grantor
trust
- A mechanism of issuing
MBS
wherein the mortgages' collateral
is deposited with a trustee under a custodial
or trust agreement.
- Graveyard
market
- Bear market
in which investors
who sell are faced with substantial losses, while
potential investors prefer to stay liquid;
that is, to keep their money in cash or cash equivalents
until market conditions
improve.
- Gray
knight
- In a merger or
acquisitions,
a gray knight is an acquiring company that outbids
a white knight
in pursuit of its own best interests, although it
is friendlier than a hostile
bidder.
- Gray
list
- Formal roster of stocks
that can be traded by the block
desks, but not in risk
arbitrage because an investment bank is involved
with the company on nonpublic activity (e.g., mergers
and acquisitions
defense). A stock's presence on this list should
never be conveyed to anyone outside the trading
area, much less outside the firm. See: Restricted
list.
- Gray
market
- Describes the sale of securities
that have not officially been issued
to firms other than the underwriting
syndicate. This type of market
serves as a good indicator of demand for a new issue
in the public market.
- Great
call
- Used in the context of general equities. Potential
customer who may have an interest in participating
in a particular trade
if customer's past inquiry
or activity is any indication.
- Greater
fool theory
- An investment
notion that even when a stock
is fully valued by conventional standards, there
is room for upward movement because there are enough
buyers to push prices farther upward purely on speculation
or hype.
- Greenmail
- The holding of a large block of stock
of a target company by an unfriendly company, with
the object of forcing the target
company to repurchase the stock at a substantial
premium to prevent
a takeover.
- Greenshoe
option
- Option
that allows the underwriter
for a new issue
to buy and resell
additional shares.
- Gross
per broker
- The dollar amount of commissions
generated by a broker
or registered
representative over a specific period.
- Gross
domestic product (GDP)
- The market
value of goods and services produced over time
including the income of foreign corporations and
foreign residents working in the U.S., but excluding
the income of U.S. residents and corporations overseas.
- Gross
earnings
- A person's total taxable
income prior to adjustments. See: adjusted
gross income.
- Gross
estate
- The total value of a person's property and assets
before accounting for debts,
taxes, and liabilities.
- Gross
income -
- A person's total income prior to exclusions and
deductions.
- Gross
interest
- Interest earned
before taxes are deducted.
- Gross
lease
- A type of property lease in which the lessor (owner
of the property being leased) pays expenses associated
with ownership such as damages, taxes, and insurance.
- Gross
National Product (GNP)
- Measures and economy's total income. It is equal
to G.D.P.
plus the income abroad accruing to domestic residents
minus income generated in domestic
market accruing to non-residents.
- Gross
parity
- Applies mainly to convertible securities and international
equities. Antithesis of net
parity. For the price of a convertible, including
accrued interest.
For the price of international security,
including commissions, fees, stamp
duty, and other transaction costs, translated
into U.S. dollar amounts.
- Gross
profit
- Sales minus the cost
of goods sold.
- Gross
profit margin
- Gross profit divided by sales, which is equal
to each sales dollar left over after paying for
the cost of goods sold.
- Gross
sales
- Total sales calculated by summing all sales at
invoice values, neglecting any adjustments such
as customer discounts or returns.
- Gross
spread
- The fraction of the gross proceeds of an underwritten
securities offering
that is paid as compensation to the underwriters
of the offering.
- Gross
Weight
- The full weight (including goods and packaging)
of shipment.
- Ground
lease
- A lease of land, as opposed to a lease of a building.
- Group
insurance
- Insurance coverage for a group, which can usually
be obtained at a cheaper rate than insurance for
an individual.
- Group
of Eight (G-8)
- The G-7
countries plus Russia.
- Group
of Five (G-5)
- The five leading countries (France, Germany, Japan,
the U.K., and the U.S.) that meet periodically to
achieve some cooperative effort on international
economic issues. When currency issues
are discussed, the monetary authorities of these
nations hold the meeting.
- Group
of Seven (G-7)
- The G-5
countries plus Canada and Italy.
- Group
of Ten
- A group of the ten major industrialized countries
whose mission is to create a more stable world economic
trading environment
through monetary and fiscal policies. The ten are
Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan,
the Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and
the United States.
- Group
rotation
- The tendency of stocks
in one sector of
the market to outperform
and then underperform other industries, usually
as a result of economic cycles or the conditions
in a particular industry.
- Group
rotation manager
- A top-down
manager who deduces the phases of the business
cycle and allocates assets
accordingly.
- Group
sales
- Block sale (of large amounts) of securities
to institutional
investors.
- Group
Universal Life Policy (GULP)
- Universal
life insurance on a group basis. See: Group
insurance.
- Growing
Equity Mortgage (GEM)
- Mortgage with
a fixed interest
rate and payments that increase throughout the
term of the mortgage.
- Growing
perpetuity
- A constant stream of cash
flows without end that is expected to rise indefinitely.
- Growth
fund
- A mutual fund
that invests primarily in stocks
with a history of and future potential for capital
gains.
- Growth
and income fund
- A mutual fund
that invests primarily in stocks
with a history of capital
gains (growth) and consistent dividend
payments (income).
- Growth
manager
- A money manager
who seeks to buy stocks
that typically sell at relatively high P/E
ratios due to high earnings
growth, with the expectation of continued high or
higher earnings growth.
- Growth
opportunity
- Opportunity to invest in profitable projects.
- Growth
phase
- A phase of development during which a company
experiences rapid earnings
growth as it produces new products and expands market
share.
- Growth
rates
- Compound annual growth rate for the number of
full fiscal years shown. If there is a negative
or zero value for the first or last year, the growth
is N.M. (not meaningful).
- Growth
stock
- Common stock
of a company that has an opportunity to invest money
and earn more than the opportunity
cost of capital.
- Guarantee
- The assumption of responsibility for payment of
a debt or performance
of some obligation if the liable party fails to
perform to expectations.
- Guarantee
Fee
- A sum paid by the importer to the guarantor, usually
as a percentage per annum of the face
value of the bills or notes being guaranteed.
- Guarantee
letter
- A commercial bank's letter assuring payment of
the exercise
price of a client's put
option.
- Guaranteed
bond
- A type of bond
for which a firm other than the issuer
guarantees its interest
and principal
payments.
- Guaranteed
insurability
- A life and health insurance policy feature that
enables the insured to add coverage at future times
and at fixed and agreed-upon rates regardless of
health conditions.
- Guaranteed
insurance contract
- A contract
promising a stated nominal
interest rate over some specific time period,
usually several years.
- Guaranteed
investment contract (GIC)
- A pure investment product in which a life
company agrees, for a single premium,
to pay at a maturity date the principal
amount of a predetermined annual crediting
(interest) rate over the life of the investment.
- Guaranteed
Mortgage Certificates (GMC)
- First issued by
Freddie Mac
in 1975, G.M.C.s, like PCs, represent undivided
interest in specified conventional
whole loans and participations
previously purchased by Freddie
Mac.
- Guardian
- An individual or trust institution appointed by
a court to care for a minor or an incompetent person
and his or her property.
- Guaranteed
renewable policy insurance
- A type of insurance
policy that requires the insurer to renew the
policy to an individual regardless of health changes.
No changes may be made to an individual policyholder
unless the same change is applied to all policyholders.
- Guaranteed
replacement cost coverage insurance
- A policy that covers the full cost of replacing
damaged property without any allowances or deductions,
e.g., depreciation.
- Guaranteeing/
Avalising Bank
- The person, bank, or financial entity who gives
the guarantee
for the importer.
- Guarantor
program
- Under the Freddie
Mac program, the aggregation by a single
issuer (usually an S&L) for the purpose
of forming a qualifying pool to be issued
as PCs under the Freddie
Mac guarantee.
- Gun
jumping
- In the context of securities
trading, refers
to trading in a
security on the
basis of information that has not been made available
to the public. The illegal solicitation of buy orders
in an underwriting
before completion and finalization of Securities
and Exchange Commission registration.
- Gunslinger
- An aggressive portfolio
manager who makes risky
investments,
typically in margin
accounts, in search of high returns.
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Divider
Campbell
R. Harvey's Hypertextual Finance Glossary
Copyright © 2007. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. Do not reproduce without explicit
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