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Glossary
- H
- Fifth letter of a Nasdaq
stock symbol specifying that the issue is the second
preferred bond of the company.
- HAB
- See: House
Air Waybill
- HEX
- See: Helsinki
Exchange
- HK
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for HONG KONG.
- HKD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for theHong Kong Dollar.
- HKFE
- See: Hong
Kong Futures Exchange
- HLT
- See: Highly
leveraged transaction
- HM
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for HEARD ISLAND AND MCDONALD
ISLANDS.
- HN
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for HONDURAS.
- HNL
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Honduras Lempira.
-
HR
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for CROATIA.
- HRK
- Croatian Kuna currency. (The ISO
4217 currency code)
- HT
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for HAITI.
- HTG
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Haiti Gourde.
- HU
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for HUNGARY.
- HUF
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Hungarian Forint.
- Haircut
- The margin or
difference between the actual market
value of a security
and the value assessed by the lending side of a
transaction).
- Half-life
- The point in the life of a mortgage-backed
security guaranteed or issued
by the Government
National Mortgage Association, the Federal
National Mortgage Association or the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation when half the
principal has been repaid.
- Half-stock
- Stock, common
or preferred,
with a $50 par value.
- Hammering
the market
- Heavy selling of stocks
by speculators
who think that the stock
is overvalued and is about to drop.
- Handle
- The whole-dollar price of a bid
or offer is referred
to as the handle (e.g., if a security
is quoted at 101.10 bid and 101.11 offered, 101
is the handle). Traders
are assumed to know the handle. See: Full.
- Hands-off
investor
- An investor
who has a large stake in a company, but does not
wish to play an active role in the management of
the corporation.
- Hands-on
investor
- An investor
who has a large stake in a corporation and takes
an active role in its management. Antithesis of
hands-off
investor.
- Hang
Seng index
- The major index
in Hong Kong.
- Hard
capital rationing
- A capital budget that under no circumstances can
be violated.
- Hard
currency
- A freely convertible currency
that is not expected to depreciate in value in the
foreseeable future.
- Hard
dollars
- Actual separate payments made by a customer for
services, including research, provided by a brokerage
firm. Antithesis of soft
dollars.
- Harmless
warrant
- Warrant that
allows the user to purchase a bond
only by surrendering an other bond with similar
terms.
- The
Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System
- Commonly known as Harmonized System. It isa a
classification system devised by the Customs Cooperation
Council to provide uniformity in tariff classification,
trade statistics, and transport documentation among
cooperating countries.
- Hart-Scott-Rodino
Act
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Antitrust act administered
by U.S. Department of Justice and the FTC that requires
an investor to
file a form with the government before he acquires
an economic interest in the lesser amount of $15
million or 15% of the capitalization of a specific
security. The
government has thirty days to respond to the filer.
- Harvey,
Campbell R.
- Author of this glossary. Finance professor at
Duke University. Author of research on international
finance, asset allocation, and emerging markets.
- Head
& shoulders
- In technical
analysis, a pattern that results where a stock
price reaches a peak and declines; rises above its
former peak and again declines; and rises a third
time but not to the second peak, and then again
declines. The first and third peaks are shoulders,
while the second peak is the formation's head. Technical
analysts generally consider a head and shoulders
formation to be a very bearish
indication.
- Heavy
- An equities market now dominated by sellers, or
oversupply, resulting in falling prices.
See: Overbought,
resistance
level, tired.
- Hedge
- A transaction that reduces the risk
of an investment.
- Hedge
clause
- A clause in a research report or any published
document, that attempts to absolve the writer of
responsibility for the accuracy of information provided.
- Hedge
fund
- A fund that may employ a variety of techniques
to enhance returns,
such as both buying and shorting
stocks according
to a valuation model.
- Hedge
quality
- Measured by the R-square
in a regression
of spot rate
changes on futures
price changes.
- Hedge
ratio (delta)
- For options,
ratio between the change in an option's
theoretical value and the change in price of
the underlying
stock at a given
point in time. For convertibles, percentage of a
convertible
bond representing the number of underlying
common
shares sold against the shares into which bonds
are convertible. If a preferred
is convertible into 2000 common shares, a 75% hedge
ratio would be short
(long) 1500
common for every 1000 preferred long (short). See:
Delta.
- Hedge
wrapper
- An options strategy
in which an investor
with a long
position in an underlying
stock buys an out-of-the-money
put and sells an out-of-the-money
call. The hedge wrapper
defines a range
where the stock will be sold at expiration of the
option, which way
the stock moves.
- Hedged
portfolio
- A portfolio
consisting of a long
position in the stock
and a long position
in the put option
on the stock, so as to be riskless and produce a
return that equals
the risk-free
interest rate.
- Hedged
tender
- An investor
sells a portion of a stock holding short a tender
offer in the event all shares
tendered are not accepted. For example, investor
Q has 5000 shares
of XYZ. An acquiring company makes a tender offer
of $100 a share
when the shares are currently worth $80. Investor
Q short-sells 2500
shares after the
announcement and the price of the stock
has approached $100. Company XYZ purchases only
2500 of the original shares
at $100. Investor
Q has sold all shares
at $100 even as the price of the stock drops on
a post-news dip.
- Hedgie
- Slang for a hedge
fund.
- Hedging
- A strategy designed to reduce investment risk
using call options,
put options, short-selling,
or futures
contracts. A hedge can help lock in profits.
Its purpose is to reduce the volatility
of a portfolio
by reducing the risk of loss.
- Hedging
demands
- Demands for securities
to hedge particular
sources of consumption risk,
beyond the usual mean-variance diversification
motivation.
- Held
at the opening
- Used for listed equity securities. Not open for
trading because
specialists
or regulators are not allowing trading
to occur until imbalances dissipate or news is disseminated.
- Held
order
- Order that must
be executed
without hesitation (Hit
the bid or take
the offer in line) or if the stock
can be bought or sold at that price (held limit
order) in sufficient quantity.
- Hell-or-high-water
contract
- A contract
that obligates a purchaser of a project's output
to make cash payments to the project in all events,
even if no product is offered for sale.
- Helsinki
Exchanges (HEX)
- The Helsinki Exchanges (HEX Ltd., Helsinki Securities
and Derivatives Exchange and Clearing House) was
formed at the beginning of 1998 following the merger
of the Helsinki Stock Exchange Ltd. and SOM Ltd.,
the Securities and Derivatives Exchange, and the
Clearing House.
- Hemline
theory
- A theory that stock
prices move in the same direction as the hemlines
of women's dresses. For example, short skirts (1920s
and 1960s) are symbolic of bullish
markets and long
skirts (1930s and 1940s) are symbolic of bearish
markets.
- Herstatt
risk
- The risk of loss
in foreign
exchange trading
that one party will deliver foreign exchange
but the counterparty
financial institution will fail to complete its
end of the contract. This is also referred to as
settlement risk.
- H-H
page
- Quotron display page that shows new listed inquiries/orders
received after the
block call.
- HIBOR
- Hong Kong Interbank Offer Rate, the annualized
offer rate banks pay to attain Hong Kong three-month
deposits in denominated dollars.
- Hidden
load
- A sales charge that is not explicitly disclosed
or is buried in the fine print of a mutual
fund prospectus or life insurance policy and
therefore is not immediately apparent.
- Hidden
values
- Valuable assets
owned by a company, that are not accurately reflected
in its stock price
at a particular time.
- High-coupon
bond refunding
- Replace a high-coupon
bond with a new, lower-coupon bond.
- High
credit
- The maximum amount of outstanding
loans for a particular customer on a bank's record.
- High
current income mutual fund
- A mutual fund
whose primary goal is to produce a high level of
income by making higher-risk investments
in instruments such as junk
bonds.
- High
flyer
- High-priced and highly speculative stock
that moves up and down sharply over a short period.
Generally glamorous in nature due to the capital
gains potential associated with them; also
used to describe any high-priced stock. Antithesis
of sleeper.
- High-grade
- Credit quality of AAA or AA.
- High-grade
bond
- A bond with Triple-A
or Double-A rating
in Standard & Poor's, or Moody's rating system.
- High
price
- The highest (intraday) price of a stock
over the past 52 weeks, adjusted for any stock
splits.
- High-premium
convertible debenture
- A bond with a long-term,
high-premium,
common stock
conversion feature. It also offers
a competitive interest
rate. This type of investment
vehicle is aimed at bond
investors who
want to be able to convert into stock
to hedge against
inflation.
- High-tech
stock
- Stocks of companies
operating in high-technology fields.
- High
withholding tax interest income
- Interest income that is subject to a foreign gross
withholding
tax of 5% or more. Specified in US tax code.
- High
yield
- In the context of hedge funds, a style of management
that focuses on low rated fixed income securities.
- High-yield
bond
- See: Junk bond
- Highjacking
- Japanese term for a takeover.
- Highly
confident letter
- An investment
banking firm's letter indicating that the firm
is highly confident it will be able to arrange financing
for a securities
deal.
- Highly
leveraged transaction (HLT)
- Bank loan to a
highly leveraged
firm.
- Highs
- Stocks that have
hit an all-time high for the current 52-week time
period.
- Historical
cost
- Describes the accounting cost carried in the books
for a current cost of the item.
- Historical
Cost Accounting Convention
- An accounting technique that values an asset
for balance
sheet purposes at the price paid for the asset
at the time of its acquisition.
- Historical
exchange rate
- An accounting term that refers to the exchange
rate in effect at the time an asset
or liability
is acquired.
- Historical
trading range
- The range of price
over which a security
or a commodity
has traded since
listing on a exchange.
- Historical
volatility
- Fluctuations estimated from a historical time
series.
- Historical
yield
- A measure of a mutual
fund's yield
over a specific period of time, e.g., 1 year, 2
year, 5 year, or year to date.
- Hit
the bid
- A dealer who
agrees to sell at the bid
price quoted by another dealer is said to "hit"
that bid. Antithesis of take
the offer.
- Hit
the ribbon
- Used in the context of general equities. See:
Print.
- Hold
- To maintain ownership of a security
over a long period of time. "Hold" is
also a recommendation of an analyst
who is not positive enough on a stock
to recommend a buy, but not negative enough on the
stock to recommend a sell.
- Holder
- The purchaser of an option.
- Holder
of record date
- The date on which holders of record in a firm's
stock ledger are
designated as the recipients of either dividends
or stock rights. Also called date
of record.
- Holding
company
- A corporation that owns enough voting
stock in another
firm to control management and operations by influencing
or electing its board of directors.
- Holding
the market
- The illegal practice of maintaining and/or placing
a sufficient number of buy orders
to create price support for a security
or commodity
in an amount to of stabilize a downward trend.
- Holding
period
- Length of time a security
is held.
- Holding-period
return
- Rate of return
on an investment over a given period.
- Holding-Period
Yield (HPY)
- The annual
rate of return actually realized on an investment
in a bond.
- Home
asset bias
- The tendency of investors
to over invest in their own county's assets.
- Home
run
- Large capital
gain in a stock
in a short period of time.
- Homemade
dividend
- Sale of some shares
of stock to get
cash in an amount similar to that of a cash
dividend.
- Homemade
leverage
- Idea that as long as individuals borrow (or lend)
on the same terms as the firm, they can duplicate
the effects of corporate leverage
on their own. Thus, if levered firms are priced
too high, rational investors
will simply borrow on personal accounts to buy
shares in unlevered
firms.
- Homeowner's
equity account
- A credit line offered by mortgage lenders allowing
a homeowner a second
mortgage that uses the equity
present in the customer's account
as collateral.
- Homeowner's
insurance policy
- An insurance
policy protecting a homeowner against damage
or loss to property.
- Homogeneity
- The degree to which items are similar.
- Homogeneous
- Exhibiting a high degree of homogeneity.
- Homogeneous
expectations assumption
- An assumption of Markowitz
portfolio construction
that investors have the same expectations with respect
to the inputs that are used to derive efficient
portfolios: asset
returns, variances,
and covariances.
- Hong
Kong Futures Exchange (HKFE)
- Established in 1976, the Hong Kong Futures Exchange
(H.K.F.E.) operates futures and options markets
in index, stock, interest rate, and foreign exchange
products.
- Horizon
analysis
- An analysis of returns
using total return to assess performance over some
investment horizon.
- Horizon
matching strategy
- An income immunization
strategy that cash-matches over the next few
years and duration-matches
the rest.
- Horizon
return
- Total return
over a given horizon.
- Horizontal
acquisition
- Merger between
two companies producing similar goods or services.
- Horizontal
analysis
- The process of dividing each expense item of a
given year by the same expense item in the base
year. It allows assessment of changes in the relative
importance of expense items over time and the behavior
of expense items as sales change.
- Horizontal
merger
- A merger involving
two or more firms in the same industry that are
both at the same stage in the production cycle;
that is, two or more competitors.
- Horizontal
price movement
- Stock price movement
within a narrow price range
over an extended period of time which creates the
appearance of a relatively straight line on a graph
of the stock's price.
- Horizontal
spread
- The simultaneous purchase and sale of two options
that differ only in their expiration dates.
- Hospital
revenue bond
- A bond issued
to finance construction of a hospital by a municipal
or state agency.
- Host
security
- The security to which a warrant
is attached.
- Hostile
takeover
- A takeover
of a company against the wishes of the current management
and the board of directors by an acquiring company
or raider.
- Hot
- Used in the context of general equities. Active,
usually with positive price implications.
- Hot
money
- Money that moves across country borders in response
to interest
rate differences and that moves away when the
interest rate differential disappears.
- House
- Firms that conduct business as broker-dealers
in securities
or in the investment
banking field are characterized as houses.
- House
account
- A type of account
at a brokerage firm that is given a high level of
priority and is handled by the main office or an
executive, rather than a traditional salesperson.
- House
Air Waybill (AWB)
- An air waybill issued by an air
freight consolidator.
- House
call
- Notification by a brokerage house that a customer's
margin account
is below the minimum maintenance level. The client
must provide more cash or equity,
or the account
will be liquidated.
- House
of issue
- An investment
banking firm whose business it is to underwrite
stock or bond
issues and offer
the securities
to the public.
- House
maintenance requirement
- The internal rules of a brokerage house that govern
the minimum amount of equity
that must be present in a customer's margin
account.
- House
poor
- People who are short on cash because most of their
money is tied up in their homes are "house
poor."
- House
rules
- Internal rules of broker-dealer
firm that govern the handling of its customers'
accounts.
- Housing
bond
- Bonds issued
by a local housing authority to finance housing
projects.
- "How
are you making XXX?"
- "What is your market in a particular stock?"
See: Quotation.
- Hubris
- An arrogance due to excessive pride and an insolence
toward others. A classic character flaw of a trader
or investor.
- Hulbert
rating
- A rating by
Hulbert Financial Digest (of Alexandria, Virginia)
of how well the recommendations of various investment
advisory newsletters have performed.
- Human
capital
- The unique capabilities and expertise of individuals.
- Humphrey-Hawkins
Act
- Informal name for the Full Employment and Balanced
Growth Act of 1978, from the names of the act's
original sponsors.
- Hung
up
- Used to describe the position
of an investor
whose stocks or
bonds have dropped
in value below their original purchase price.
- Hunkering
down
- A term used to describe a trader
selling off a big position
in a stock.
- Hurdle
rate
- The required
return in capital
budgeting. For example, if a project has an
expected rate
of return higher than the hurdle rate, the project
may be accepted.
- Hurst
Exponent(H)
- A measure of the bias in fractional Brownian motion.
H=0.50 for Brownian motion. 0.50<H<1.00 for
persistent, or trend-reinforcing series. 0<H<0.50
for an anti-persistent,
or mean-reverting
system. The inverse of the Hurst exponent is equal
to alpha, the characteristic exponent for Stable Paretian distributions. The fractal dimension of a time series, D,
is equivalent to 2-H.
- Hybrid
- A package of two or more different kinds of risk
management instruments
that are usually interactive.
- Hybrid
annuity
- A type of insurance company investment that combines
the benefits of both a fixed annuity and a variable
annuity.
- Hybrid
security
- A convertible
security whose optioned common
stock is trading
in a middle range, causing the convertible security
to trade with the characteristics of both a fixed
income security and a common
stock instrument.
- Hyperinflation
- See: Inflation
- Hypothecation
- In banking, refers to the commitment of property
to secure a loan.
In securities,
refers to the commitment of securities
to serve as collateral
for margin loans
at the broker-dealer
firm.
- Hysteresis
- Used to characterize a lagging effect. Firms may
fail to enter markets
that appear attractive, or firms that are once invested
in a market may persist in operating at a loss.
The effect is characteristic of investments with
high entry and exit costs along with high uncertainty.
back to top
Divider
Campbell
R. Harvey's Hypertextual Finance Glossary
Copyright © 2007. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. Do not reproduce without explicit
permission.
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