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Glossary
- I
- Fifth letter of a Nasdaq
stock symbol specifying that it is the third preferred
bond of the company.
- IBES
- See: Institutional
Brokers Estimate System
- IBF
- See: International
Banking Facility
- IBRD
- See: International
Bank for Reconstruction and Development
- IC
- See: Information
Coefficient
- ICC
- See: International
Chamber of Commerce
- ID
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for INDONESIA.
- IDR
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Indonesian Rupiah.
- IDR
- See: International
Depository Receipt
- IE
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for IRELAND.
- IEP
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Irish Punt.
- IFC
- See: International
Finance Corporation
- IL
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for ISRAEL.
- ILS
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Israeli Shekel.
- IMF
- See: International
Monetary Fund
- IMM
- See: International
Monetary Market
- IN
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for INDIA.
- INR
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Indian Rupee.
-
IO
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for BRITISH INDIAN OCEAN TERRITORY
.
- IO
- See: Interest-only
strip
- IOC
order
- See: Immediate
or canceled order
- IOM
- See: Index
and Option Market
- IPL
- See: Investment
Product Line
- IPO
- See: Initial
Public Offering
- IQ
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for IRAQ.
- IQD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Iraqi Dinar.
- IR
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for IRAN, ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF.
- IRB
- See: Industrial
Revenue Bond
- IRR
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Iranian Rial.
- IRR
- See: Internal
rate of return
- IS
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for ICELAND.
- ISDA
- See: International
Swap Dealers Association
- ISK
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Icelandic Krona.
- ISMA
- See: International
Security Market Association
- ISO
- See: International
Organization for Standardization.
- IT
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for ITALY.
- ITL
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Italian Lira.
- ITM
- See: In-the-money
- ITS
- See: Intermarket
Trading System
- IBC's
money fund report average
- Report giving the average yield
of all major money
market funds.
- I-bonds
- Treasury savings bonds with a 30-year maturity
indexed to account for inflation.
- Identified
shares
- Stock or mutual
fund whose purchase date and price may be identified
for capital gains
and tax purposes when shares sold.
- Idiosyncratic
Risk
- Unsystematic
risk or risk
that is uncorrelated to the overall market
risk. In other words, the risk that is firm-specific
and can be diversified
through holding a portfolio
of stocks.
- I-I
page
- In over-the-counter trading, same as H-H
page, but exclusively for OTC
stocks.
- Illegal
dividend
- A corporation's dividend
that is declared
in violation of its charter and/or of state laws,
typically because of the way it is calculated.
- Illiquid
- In the context of finance.
absence of cash
flow needed to fulfill financial debts
and meet obligations. In the context of investments,
describes a lightly traded
investment
such as a stock
or bond that is not
easily converted into cash.
- Imbalance
of orders
- Used for listed equity securities. Too many market
orders of one kind-buy
or to sell or limit
orders to buy up or sell down, without matching
orders of the opposite kind. An imbalance usually
follows a dramatic event such as a takeover,
research recommendation, or death of a key executive,
or a government ruling that will significantly affect
the company's business. If it occurs before the
stock exchange
opens, trading
in the stock is
delayed. If it occurs during the trading day, the
specialist
halts and then
suspends trading (with floor governor's approval)
until enough matching orders can be found to make
an orderly market.
- Immediate
or canceled order (IOC order)
- Market or limited
price order that is to be executed
in whole or in part as soon as such order is represented
in the trading
crowd. The portion not executed is to be treated
as canceled. A
stop is considered
an execution in this context. See: AON
order, FOK
order.
- Immediate
family
- Term used in the NASD
rules of fair practice to refer to one's parents,
brothers, sisters, children, relatives supported
financially, father-in-law, mother-in-law, sister-in-law,
and brother-in-law.
- Immediate
payment annuity
- An annuity contract
paid by a single payment and with a specified payment
plan the starts immediately after the contract
is purchased.
- Immediate
settlement
- Delivery and
settlement of securities
within five business days.
- Immunization
- The construction of an asset
and a liability
match that benefits from offsetting
changes in value.
- Immunization
strategy
- A bond portfolio
strategy whose goal is to eliminate the portfolio's
risk, in case of
a general change in the rate of
interest, through the use of duration.
- Impaired
capital
- When a company's total capital
is less than the par
value of all its capital
stock.
- Impaired
credit
- Result of a borrower's reduced credit
rating.
- Imperfect
market
- Economic environment in which the costs of labor
and other resources used for production encourage
firms to use substitute
inputs that less costly.
- Implicit
Bankruptcy Costs
- Opportunity costs incurred prior to the bankruptcy
process such as the loss of sales or financing.
- Implicit
tax
- Lower or higher before-tax required returns on
assets that are
subject to lower or higher tax rates.
- Implied
call
- The right of the homeowner to prepay, or call,
a mortgage at
any time.
- Implied
repo rate
- The rate that a seller of a futures
contract can earn by buying an issue
and then delivering
it at the settlement
date. Related: Cheapest
to deliver issue.
- Implied
volatility
- The expected volatility
in a stock's return
derived from its option
price, maturity
date, exercise
price, and riskless
rate of return, using an option
pricing model such as Black-Scholes.
- Import/export
letters of credit
- Bank or financial institution issuance's of funds
in a certain amount provided to facilitate international
trade.
- Import
Quota
- Puts limits on the quantity of certain products
that can be legally imported into a particular country
during a particular time frame. There is a Fixed
quota, which is a maximum quantity not to be exceeded,
and tariff rate
surcharge, which permits additional quantities but
at much higher duty.
- Import
substitution development strategy
- A development strategy followed by many Latin
American countries and other LDCs
that emphasize import substitution-accomplished
through protectionism-as the route to economic growth.
- Imputation
tax system
- Arrangement by which investors
who receive a dividend
also receive a tax credit for corporate taxes that
the firm has paid.
- Imputed
interest
- Used in accounting to refer to interest
that has effectively been paid to a bondholder,
even though no money has actually been paid.
- Imputed
value
- Refers to the value of an asset,
service, or company that is not physically recorded
in any accounts
but is implicit in the product, e.g., the opportunity
cost of cash remaining in a savings account and
not invested.
- In
between
- Used in the context of general equities. Priced
higher than the bid
price but lower than the offer
price. See: In
the middle
- In
the box
- Means that a dealer
has a wire receipt for securities,
indicating that effective delivery
on them has been made.
- In
competition
- Indication
that the customer has revealed trading interest
to multiple brokers
and that the trade
will take place with the firm having the highest
bid or lowest offer.
Antithesis of exclusive.
- In
hand
- Used in the context of general equities. Firm
indicating control of a bid,
offer, or order.
- In
the hole
- Used in the context of general equities. Below
the inside market
when one is attempting to sell the stock;
at a significant discount.
Antithesis of premium.
- In-house
- In the context of general equities, keeping an
activity within the firm. For example, rather than
go to the marketplace and sell a security
for a client to anyone, an attempt is made to find
a buyer to complete the transaction
with the firm. Although a listed
trade must be taken to the floor of the stock
exchange, matching supply with demand within
the confines of the firm results in higher commissions
for the firm.
- In-house
processing float
- The time it takes the receiver of a check to process
a payment and deposit it in a bank for collection.
- In-line
- Used in the context of general equities. (1) An
order or market
in a specific security
within the inside
market; 2) any announcement (earnings) that
adheres closely to Wall
Street analysts' expectations.
- In
the middle
- Used in the context of general equities. At a
price exactly in between the bid
and offer prices.
- In-the-money
- A put option
that has a strike
price higher than the underlying
futures price,
or a call option
with a strike
price lower than the underlying futures price.
For example, if the March COMEX silver futures
contract is trading at $6 an ounce, a March
call with a strike
price of $5.50 would be considered in the money
by $0.50 an ounce. Related: Put.
Antithesis of out-of-the-money.
- In
play
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Company that has
become the target
of a takeover,
and whose stock
has now become a speculative issue.
- In-the-money
option
- An option that
has value.
- In
& out
- Refers to over-the-counter trading.
Trade in which the trader
has both the buyers and sellers lined up for a clean
trade. See: Cross
- In-and-out
trader
- A daytrader,
or a speculator
who buys and sells the same security
on the same day.
- In
the tank
- Used in the context of general equities. Slang
expression meaning market
prices are dropping
rapidly.
- In
touch with
- Used in the context of general equities. Having
a sell inquiry
in a stock (not
a firm customer sell
order), often entailing
a capital commitment. Antithesis of looking
for.
- In-substance
defeasance
- Process through which debt is removed from the
balance sheet
but not canceled.
- Inactive
asset
- Asset not used
in a productive manner at all times.
- Inactive
post
- Trading post on
NYSE floor
where inactive, lightly traded
stocks are traded
in 10-share lots
as opposed to 100-share
lots.
- Inactive
stock/bond
- A security
that trades in very
small volume on
a daily basis. See:: Illiquid.
- Incentive
fee
- Compensation paid to commodities
trading advisers
or to any practitioner who achieves above-average
returns. Sometimes
called performance fee.
- Incentive
Stock Option (ISO)
- An Option that
has met certain tax requirements entitling the optionee
to favorable tax treatment. Such an option is free
from regular tax at the date of grant and the date
of exercise (when
a non-qualified option would become taxable). If
two holding period tests are met (two years between
grant date and sale date and one year between the
exercise date and sale date), the profit on the
option qualifies as a long term capital gain rather
than ordinary income. If the holding periods are
not met, there has been a "disqualifying disposition".
- Incestuous
share dealing
- Trading of shares
between companies in order to create a tax or financial
benefit for the companies involved.
- Income
baskets
- Category to which certain income is allocated.
Losses in one basket
may not be used to offset gains in another basket.
Specified in U.S. tax code.
- Income
beneficiary
- One who receives income from a trust.
- Income
bond
- A bond whose payment
of interest is
contingent on sufficient earnings. These bonds are
commonly used during the reorganization of a failed
or failing business.
- Income
dividend
- Any payout to mutual
fund shareholders
resulting from interest,
dividends, or
other income.
- Income
exclusion rule
- The IRS
rule that excludes certain types of income from
taxation, e.g., welfare payments.
- Income
fund
- A mutual fund
that seeks to provide to liberal current income
from investments.
- Income
immunization strategies
- Methodologies adopted to insure adequate future
cash flow.
- Income
investment company
- A management company focused on managing a mutual
fund whose primary purpose is income generation,
typically investing in bonds
and high dividend yielding stocks.
- Income
limited partnership
- A limited
partnership whose main goal is income generation,
e.g., real estate, oil equipment.
- Income
property
- Real estate purchased for the reasons of income
generation.
- Income
risk
- The possibility that a portfolio's
dividends will
decline as a result of falling interest
rates. Income risk is generally greatest for
money market
instruments
and short-term
bonds, and least
for long-term
bonds.
- Income
statement (statement of operations)
- A statement showing the revenues, expenses, and
income (the difference between revenues and expenses)
of a corporation over some period of time.
- Income
stock
- Common stock
with a high dividend
yield and few profitable investment opportunities.
- Income
tax
- A state or federal government's levy on individuals
as personal income tax and on the earnings of corporations
as corporate income tax.
- Incontestability
clause
- Clause in a life insurance contract
preventing the insurer from revoking the policy
after it has been in force for a year or two if
the life insurance company discovers any important
facts that the policyholder may have concealed,
such as experiencing a stroke.
- Incorporation
- A legal process through which a company receives
a charter and the state in which it is based allows
it to operate as a corporation.
- Incoterms
- Trade terms used worldwide to specify seller and
buyer obligations in shipments against international
sales contracts.
These terms are adopted by the International
Chamber of Commerce (ICC) for international
movement of merchandise. Since they in themselves
are not law, they must be specified if desired in
quotations, sales contracts, purchase orders and
commercial invoices.
- Incremental
cash flows
- Difference between the firm's cash
flows with and without a project.
- Incremental
cost of capital
- Average cost applicable to the issue
of each additional unit of debt
and equity.
- Incremental
costs and benefits
- Costs and benefits that would occur if a particular
course of action is taken, compared to those that
would have obtained if that course of action had
not been taken.
- Incremental
internal rate of return
- Internal
rate of return (I.R.R.) on the incremental investment
from choosing a larger instead of a smaller project.
- Indemnify
- Used in insurance
policy agreements as to compensation for damage
or loss. Hold harmless
- Indemnification
- Used in insurance policy agreements as to compensation
for damage or loss. In the context of corporate
governance, Director Indemnification uses the bylaws
and/or charter to indemnify officers and directors
from certain legal expenses and judgements resulting
from lawsuits pertaining to their conduct.
- Indenture
- Agreement between lender
and borrower that details specific terms of the
bond issuance.
Specifies legal obligations of bond issuer
and rights of bondholders.
An indenture spells out the specific terms of a
bond, as well as
the rights and responsibilities of both the issuer
of the security
and the holder.
- Independent
auditor
- A certified public accountant operating outside
the company who can provide an accountant's
opinion.
- Independent
broker
- NYSE member
who executes
orders for floor
brokers and firms other than its own.
- Independent
investments
- Investments
available to a firm that may be selected individually
or in groups because each investment is different
in its nature and purpose.
- Independent
project
- A project whose acceptance or rejection is independent
of the acceptance or rejection of other projects.
- Independent
variable
- Term used in regression
analysis to represent the element or condition
that is expected to influence another (so-called
dependent)
variable.
- Index
- Statistical composite that measures changes in
the economy or in financial markets, often expressed
in percentage changes from a base year or from the
previous month. Indexes measure the ups and downs
of stock, bond,
and some commodities
markets, in terms
of market prices
and weighting of companies the index.
- Index
arbitrage
- An investment/trading strategy that exploits divergences
between actual and theoretical
futures prices. An example is the simultaneous
buying (selling) of stock
index futures
(i.e., S&P
500) while selling (buying) the underlying
stocks of
that index, capturing
as profit the temporarily
inflated basis between these two baskets.
Often, the point at which profitability exists is
expressed at the block
call as the number of points
the future must be over or under the underlying
basket for an arbitrage
opportunity to exist. See: Program
trading.
- Index
fund
- Investment fund designed to match the returns
on a stock market
index. Mutual
fund whose portfolio
matches that of a broad-based index such as the
S&P 500 and
whose performance therefore mirrors the market
as represented by that index.
- Index
futures
- A futures
contract on an index (such as a foreign stock
index) in the futures
market.
- Index
method
- Technique to calculate rates
of return that is based on initial and terminal
values.
- Index
model
- A model of stock
returns using a market
index such as the
S&P 500 to
represent common
or systematic
risk factors.
- Index
option
- A call or put
option based on a stock
market index.
- Index
and Option Market (IOM)
- A division of the CME
established in 1982 for trading stock
index products and options.
- Index
swap
- A swap of a market
index for some other
asset, such as a
stock-for-stock or debt-for-stock swap.
- Index
warrant
- A stock index
option issued
by either a corporate or a sovereign entity as part
of a security
offering, and
guaranteed by an option clearing corporation.
- Indexed
bond
- Bond whose payments
are linked to an index,
e.g., the consumer
price index.
- Indexed
Stock Options
- Options that have an exercise price which may
fluctuate above or below market value at performance
options in that the exercise price of indexed options
typically remains variable until the option is exercised.
- Indexing
- A passive instrument
strategy calling for construction of a portfolio
of stocks designed to track the total return
performance of an index
of stocks.
- Indexing
plus
- See: Enhanced
indexing
- Indicated
dividend
- Total amount of dividends
that would be paid on a share of stock
over the next 12 months if each dividend
were the same amount as the most recent dividend.
Usually represented by the letter "e"
in stock tables.
- Indicated
yield
- The yield, based
on the most recent quarterly rate times four. To
determine the yield, divide the annual dividend
by the price of the stock.
The resulting number is represented as a percentage.
See: Dividend
yield.
- Indication
- (1) Notice given by a dealer (through Autex)
or customer of an interest in buying or selling
stock, sometimes including specific volume and price;
(2) approximation of where a specialist
sees buy and sell interest to tighten the range
to an opening price.
- Indication
of interest
- A dealer's or
investor's interest
in purchasing (not commitment to buy) securities
that are still in the underwriting
stage and are being registered by the Securities
and Exchange Commission.
- Indication
pricing schedule
- A statement of rates for an interest
rate or currency
swap.
- Indicator
- Used in the context of general equities. Technical
or fundamental
measurement that securities analysts use to forecast
the market's direction, such as investment advisory
sentiment, volume of stock trading, direction of
interest rates,
and buying or selling by corporate insiders.
- Indifference
curve
- The expression in a graph of a utility
function, where the horizontal axis measures
risk and the vertical
axis measures expected
return. The curve connects all portfolios
with the same utility.
- Indirect
Claim
- Claim of a financial
intermediary; the intermediary relends funds
to the deficit unit to enable it to acquire real
assets.
- Indirect
costs of financial distress
- Costs such as lost business as a result of bankruptcy
or liquidation.
- Indirect
diversification benefits
- Diversification
benefits provided by the multinational
corporation that are not available to investors
through their portfolio
investment.
- Indirect
Exchange Rate
- The foreign
currency price of one unit of the home currency.
- Indirect
method
- Reporting in the statement of cash
flow that adjusts or reconciles net income to
cash from operations.
- Indirect
quote
- For foreign
exchange, the number of units of a foreign currency
needed to buy one US dollar.
- Indirect
terms
- The price of a unit
of domestic currency
in foreign
currency terms. See: Direct
terms.
- Individual
Retirement Account (IRA)
- A retirement account
that may be established by an employed person. IRA
contributions are tax deductible according to certain
guidelines, and the gains in the account
are tax-deferred.
- Individual
Retirement Account (IRA) rollover
- A provision of the law governing IRA's
that enables a retiree or anyone receiving a lump-sum
payment from a pension, profit-sharing,
or salary reduction plan to transfer the amount
into an IRA.
- Individual
tax return
- A tax return filed by an individual to account
for their personal income and taxes payable.
- Inductive
reasoning
- The attempt to use information about a specific
situation to draw a conclusion.
- Industrial
production
- A statistic determined by the Federal
Reserve Board focusing on the total output of
all US factories and mines on a monthly basis. Used
as an economic
indicator.
- Industrial
revenue bond (IRB)
- A bond issued
by local government agencies
on behalf of corporations.
- Industrials
- General term used in the financial markets to
refer to companies manufacturing, producing, or
distributing goods and services.
- Industry
- The category describing a company's primary business
activity. This category is usually determined by
the largest portion of revenue.
- Industry
allocation
- Investment of certain proportions of a portfolio
in certain industries. Sometimes called sector allocation.
- Inefficient
portfolio
- Group of assets dominated by at least one other
portfolio under the mean variance rule. For example,
if A has both lower return and higher volatility
than B, we say A is dominated by B.
- Infant
industry argument
- Argument that industries in the developing and
emerging sectors
of the economy need protection against international
competition in order to establish themselves.
- Inflation
- The rate at which the general level of prices
for goods and services is rising.
- Inflation
accounting
- Accounting practices allowing for the effects
of inflation.
- Inflation-escalator
clause
- A clause in a contract
providing for increases or decreases in inflation
depending on fluctuations in the cost of living,
production costs, and so forth.
- Inflation
hedge
- Investments
designed to hedge
against inflation and the loss of purchasing
power associated with it.
- Inflation-indexed
securities
- Securities
such as bonds or
notes that guarantee
a return higher
than the rate of inflation
if the security
is held to maturity.
- Inflation
risk
- Also called purchasing
power risk, the risk
that changes in the real return
the investor
will realize after adjusting for inflation will
be negative.
- Inflation
uncertainty
- The fact that future inflation
rates are not known. It is a possible contributing
factor to the makeup of the term
structure of interest rates.
- Inflexible
expenses
- Expenses that cannot be adjusted or eliminated
such as car payments or rental payments. Antithesis
of flexible
expenses.
- Information
Agent
- Agent whose primary
task is to disseminate and explain the details of
capital transactions.
- Information
asymmetry
- Condition that information is known to some, but
not all, participants.
- Information
Coefficient (IC)
- The correlation
between predicted and actual stock
returns, sometimes
used to measure the contribution of a financial
analyst. An IC
of 1.0 indicates a perfect linear relationship between
predicted and actual returns, while an IC of 0.0
indicates no linear relationship.
- Information
content effect
- The rise in the stock
price following
a dividend signal,
or publication of some other related news.
- Information
costs
- Transactions
costs that include the assessment of the investment
merits of a financial asset.
Related: Search
costs.
- Information-motivated
trades
- Trades in which
an investor believes
he or she possesses pertinent information not currently
reflected in the stock's
price.
- Information
Ratio
- The ratio of annualized expected residual return to residual risk. A central measurement for
active management, value added is proportional to
the square of the information ratio.
- Information
services
- Organizations that furnish investment and other
types of information, such as information that helps
a firm monitor its cash
position.
- Informational
efficiency
- The speed and accuracy with which prices
reflect new information.
- Information
Signaling
- Conveying intelligence through a firm's actions.
A firm's dividend
policy, for example, provides signals to investors
concerning the value of the firm's stock.
- Informational
efficiency
- The degree to which market
prices correctly and quickly reflect information
and thus the true value of an underlying
asset.
- Informationless
trades
- Trades that are
the result of either a reallocation of wealth or
an implementation of an investment strategy that
acts only on existing information.
- Infrastructure
- A country's fundamental system of transportation,
communications, and other aspects of its physical
capabilities.
- Ingot
- A bar of metal such as the type that the Federal
Reserve System uses to store gold reserves.
- Inheritance
tax return
- Tax form required to determine the amount of state
tax due on an inheritance.
- Initial
filing
- Has various meanings. It could refer to a form
that is filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
in advance of a major event, such as a public offering
or a share repurchase. It could also refer to filings
that occur before legal inside transactions.
- Initial
margin
- (1) Amount of money deposited by both buyers and
sellers of futures
contracts to ensure performance of the terms
of the contract; (2) amount of cash
or eligible securities
required to be deposited with a broker
before engaging in margin
transactions.
- Initial
margin requirement
- When buying securities
on margin, the
proportion of the total market
value of the securities that the investor
must pay for in cash.
The Security Exchange Act of 1934 gives the Board
of Governors of the Federal
Reserve the responsibility to set initial margin
requirements, but individual brokerage firms are
free to set higher requirements. In futures
contracts, initial margin
requirements are set by the exchange.
- Initial
public offering (IPO)
- A company's first sale of stock
to the public. Securities
offered in an IPO are often, but not always, those
of young, small companies seeking outside equity
capital and a public market for their stock. Investors
purchasing stock in IPOs generally must be prepared
to accept considerable risks
for the possibility of large gains. IPOs by investment
companies (closed-end
funds) usually include underwriting
fees that represent a load to buyers.
- Initial
Public Offering Spinning
- The practice of an investment bank setting aside
portions of a corporation's Initial Public Offering
for senior management of that corporation.
- Initiate
coverage
- (1) Firm is now followed by analysts at a particular
securities house; (2) Indication
to cover short
position by purchasing the underlying
stock (this cancels out the short position).
- Inland
Bill of Lading
- A document used as a receipt from the carrier
to shipper that covers the transport of goods overland.
It also acts as a contract of carriage.
- Input-output
tables
- Tables that indicate how much each industry
requires of the production of each other industry
in order to produce each dollar of its own output.
- Inquiry
- Used in the context of general equities. In-line
expression of interest in a particular stock,
usually asking the firm to bid
for or offer stock.
- In-service
withdrawal
- A participant-initiated withdrawal from an employer-sponsored
retirement plan while the participant is still employed
by the company.
- Inside
market
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. Best (highest)
bid and best (lowest)
offer, often used
in the O.T.C. Market.
See: In-line.
- Insider
information
- Material information about a company that has
not yet been made public. It is illegal for holders
of this information to make trades
based on it, however received.
- Insider
trading
- Trading by officers, directors, major stockholders,
or others who hold private inside
information allowing them to benefit from buying
or selling stock.
- Insider
Trading Sanctions Act of 1984
- Act imposing civil and criminal penalties for
insider trading
violations.
- Insider
Trading & Securities Fraud Enforcement Act of 1988
(ITSFEA)
- Federal legislation that greatly increased the
penalties for trading on material inside information.
- Insiders
- These are directors and senior officers of a corporation-in
effect, those who have access to inside
information about a company. An insider
also is someone who owns more than 10% of the voting
shares of a company.
- Insolvency
risk
- The risk that a
firm will be unable to satisfy its debts.
Also known as bankruptcy
risk.
- Insolvent
- A firm that is unable to pay debts
(its liabilities
exceed its assets).
- Inspector(s)
of Election
- The person(s) appointed by the Corporation to
act as a judge on voting matters brought before
a shareholder meeting. The inspector determines
which proxies and
ballots are in good form, and acceptable to be voted.
They also count and record the votes, supervise
and inspect the counting process and attest to the
final results. They cannot be overruled on these
matters, although they have no voice in the procedural
aspects of the meeting itself.
- Inspector’s
or Judge’s Certificate
- A form provided by the Corporation, and completed
by the Inspectors
of Election, attesting to the final voting results
and percentages of a shareholder
meeting.
- Installment
payments
- Distribution
of plan assets to
beneficiaries based upon a regular schedule.
- Installment
sale
- The sale of an asset
in exchange for a specified series of payments (the
installments).
- Instinet
(Institutional Networks Corporation)
- Computerized subscriber service that serves as
a vehicle for the fourth
market. "Instinet" is registered with
the SEC
As a stock
exchange it numbers among its subscribers a
large number of mutual
funds and other institutional
investors linked to each other by computer terminals.
The system permits subscribers to display bids
and offers (which
are exposed system wide for whatever length of time
the initiating party specifies) and to consummate
trades electronically. Instinet is largely used
by market makers,
but, nonmarket makers and customers have equal access.
- institution
- An organization, probably very large, engaged
in professional investing in securities. Normally
a bank, insurance company, or mutual fund.
- Institutional
broker
- A broker who
buys and sells securities
for institutional
investors such as banks, and mutual
funds, pensions.
- Institutional
Brokers' Estimate System (IBES)
- Service that assembles analysts'
estimates of future earnings for thousands of publicly
traded companies, detailing how many estimates are
available for each company and the high, low, and
average estimates for each.
- Institutional
investors
- Organizations that invest, including insurance
companies, depository institutions, pension funds,
investment companies, mutual
funds, and endowment
funds.
- Institutionalization
- The gradual domination of financial markets
by institutional
investors, as opposed to individual investors.
This process has occurred throughout the industrialized
world.
- Instrumentality
- Notes issued
by a federal agency whose obligations are guaranteed
by the full-faith-and-credit of the government,
even though the agency's responsibilities are not
necessarily those of the US government.
- Instruments
- Financial securities,
such as money
market instruments
or capital
market instruments.
- Insurable
interest
- An insurance
term referring to the relationship between a policy's
insured person or property and the potential beneficiary.
The beneficiary must have an insurable interest
in the insured person or property to receive payment
of the policy if the insured died while the policy
was in force.
- Insurance
- Guarding against property loss or damage making
payments in the form of premiums
to an insurance company, which pays an agreed-upon
sum to the insured in the event of loss.
- Insurance
agent
- The insurance company representative and adviser
who sells insurance policies.
- Insurance
broker
- A broker, independent
of any insurance company, who represents the interests
of the buyer in searching for insurance coverage
at the lowest cost and providing the highest benefit
to the buyer.
- Insurance
claim
- A claim for reimbursement from the insurance company
when the insured has suffered a loss that is covered
under an insurance
policy.
- Insurance
dividend
- Money paid annually to policyholders participating
in cash value life insurance policies.
- Insurance
policy
- A contract
detailing an insurance
policy and outlining what risks are insured,
what insurance premiums
are to be paid by the policyholder, what deductibles
prevail, and all the details associated with a policy.
- Insurance
premium
- Payments calculated by the insurance company based
on risk factors that must be made by the insured
to guarantee protection of property loss under an
insurance
policy.
- Insurance
principle
- The law of averages. The average outcome for many
independent trials of an experiment will approach
the expected
value of the experiment.
- Insurance
settlement
- The payment of proceeds by an insurance company
to the insured to settle an insurance
claim within the guidelines stipulated in the
insurance policy.
- Insured
- The property or persons covered by an insurance
policy.
- Insured
account
- A bank or financial account
that is insured for the benefit of the depositor,
protecting against loss in the event that the savings
institution becomes insolvent. See: FDIC.
- Insured
bond
- A municipal
bond backed both by the credit of the municipal
issuer and by commercial
insurance policies.
- Insured
plans
- Defined benefit pension plans that are guaranteed
by life insurance products. Related: Non-insured
plans
- Insured
Trade Acceptance
- A trade
acceptance where the buyer's ability to pay
is insured.
- Intangible
asset
- A legal claim to some future benefit, typically
a claim to future cash.
Goodwill, intellectual
property, patents, copyrights, and trademarks are
examples of intangible assets.
- Integer
programming
- Variant of linear
programming in which the solution values must
be integers.
- Integrated
financial market
- A market in which
there are no barriers to financial flows, and the
same risk asset commands the same expected return,
irrespective of domicile.
- Intellectual
property rights
- Patents, copyrights,
and proprietary technologies and processes that
may be the basis of a company's competitive advantage.
- Interbank
market
- Financial institutions exchange of currencies
between and among themselves.
- Interbank
rate
- See: LIBOR
- Interbank
spread
- The difference between a bank's offer and bid
rates for deposits in the Eurocurrency
market.
- Intercommodity
spread
- In the commodities
market, a spread
consisting of a long
position and a short
position in different but related commodities
for example, speculating that the price relationship
between the two commodities
will change, e.g., platinum and gold.
- Intercompany
loan
- Loan made by one
unit of a corporation to another unit of the same
corporation.
- Intercompany
transaction
- Transaction
carried out between two units of the same corporation.
- Interdelivery
spread
- Used in futures
or options market
to refer the purchase of one month of a contract
and selling another month in the same contract,
in the hope that the price difference will widen
or narrow, depending on the investment.
- Interfund
transactions
- Financial arrangements effected by payments made
from one fund group (either Federal
funds or trust funds) to another group.
- Interest
- The price paid for borrowing money. It is expressed
as a percentage rate over a period of time and reflects
the rate of exchange
of present consumption for future consumption. Also,
a share or title in property.
- Interest
coverage ratio
- The ratio of earnings
before interest
and taxes to annual interest expense. This ratio
measures a firm's ability to pay interest.
- Interest
coverage test
- A debt limitation
that prohibits the issuance of additional long-term
debt if the issuer's
interest coverage would, as a result of the issue,
fall below some specified minimum.
- Interest
deduction
- An interest
expense, such as interest
on a margin
account, that is allowed as a deduction
for tax purposes.
- Interest
equalization tax
- Tax on foreign investment by residents of the
US which was abolished in 1974.
- Interest
expense
- Interest expense is the money the corporation
or individual pays out in interest
on loans.
- Interest
in Arrears
- Interest that
is due only at the maturity
date rather than periodically over the life
of the loan.
- Interest
on interest
- Interest earned on reinvestment of each interest
payment on money invested. See: compound
interest.
- Interest-only
loan
- A loan in which
payment of principal
is deferred and interest
payments are the only current obligation.
- Interest-only
strip (IO)
- A security
based solely on the interest
payments from a pool of mortgages,
Treasury bonds,
or other bonds. Once
the principal
on the mortgages or bonds has been repaid, interest
payments stop, and the value of the IO falls to
zero.
- Interest
payments
- Contractual
debt payments based
on the coupon
rate of interest
and the principal
amount.
- Interest
rate
- The monthly effective interest rate. For example,
the periodic rate on a credit card with an 18% annual
percentage rate is 1.5% per month.
- Interest
rate agreement
- An agreement whereby one party, for an up-front
premium, agrees to compensate the other at specific
time periods if a designated interest
rate (the reference rate) is different from
a predetermined level (the strike
rate).
- Interest
rate cap
- An interest
rate agreement in which payments are made when
the reference
rate exceeds the strike rate. Also called an
interest
rate ceiling.
- Interest
rate on debt
- The firm's cost of debt
capital.
- Interest
rate ceiling
- See: Interest
rate cap
- Interest
rate floor
- An interest
rate agreement in which payments are made when
the reference
rate falls below the strike rate. Related: Interest
rate cap.
- Interest
rate futures contract
- A futures contract
based on an interbank deposit rate or an underlying
debt security.
The value of the contract
rises and falls inversely to changes in interest
rates.
- Interest
rate parity theorem
- Expression that the interest rate differential
between two countries is equal to the difference
between the forward
foreign exchange
rate and the spot
rate.
- Interest
rate parity line (IRP)
- Diagonal line on a graph that characterizes interest
rate parity.
- Interest
rate risk
- The chance that a security's
value will change due to a change in interest
rates. For example, a bond's
price drops as interest rates rise. For a depository
institution, also called funding
risk: The risk that spread
income will suffer because of a change in interest
rates.
- Interest
rate swap
- A binding agreement between counterparties
to exchange periodic interest
payments on some predetermined dollar principal,
which is called the notional
principal amount. For example, one party will
pay fixed and receive variable.
- Interest-sensitive
insurance policy
- A cash value life insurance policy whose insurance
dividend rates
vary with respect to inflation, enabling the policyholder
to avoid the loss of purchasing power associated
with inflation.
- Interest-sensitive
stock
- Stocks whose earnings
are dependent upon and change with the interest
rate, e.g., bank stocks.
- Interest
subsidy
- The value of a firm's deduction of the interest
payments on its debt
from its earnings
before calculation of its tax bill under current
tax law.
- Interest
tax shield
- The reduction in income taxes that results from
the tax-deductibility of interest payments.
- Interim
dividend
- The declaration and payment of a dividend
prior to annual earnings determination.
- Interim
financing
- A short-term loan
made to a company on the condition that a takeout
will follow with long-term
or intermediate financing.
- Interim
rate of return
- The rate
of return earned between cash
flows.
- Interim
statement
- A financial statement that reflects only a limited
period of a company's financial statement, not the
entire fiscal year.
- Interlocking
directorate
- Describes cross-memberships of directors on each
other's company Board
of Directors.
- Intermarket
sector spread
- The spread between
the interest
rate offered in two sectors of the bond
market for issues
of the same maturity.
- Intermarket
spread swaps
- An exchange of one bond
for another based on the manager's projection of
a realignment of spreads
between sectors of the bond market.
- Intermarket
Surveillance Information System (ISIS)
- A database that distributes information from all
the major stock
exchanges in the United States.
- Intermarket
Trading System (ITS)
- Electronic communications network linking the
trading floors
of seven registered exchanges
to permit trading among them in stocks
listed on either the NYSE
or AMEX
and one or more regional
exchanges. Through ITS, any broker
or market maker
on the floor of any participating exchange
can reach other participants for an execution
whenever the nationwide quote
shows a better price available. A floor
broker on the exchange can enter an ITS order
to assure excecution of all of an offering
or bid, instead of
splitting it with competing brokers.
- Intermediary
- See: Financial
intermediary
- Intermediate
targets
- An intermediate target is a variable (such as
the money supply) that is not directly under the
control of the central bank, but that does respond
fairly quickly to policy actions, is observable
frequently and bears a predictable relationship
to the ultimate goals of policy.
- Intermediate-term
- Typically one-ten years.
- Intermediate
trend
- General movement in price data that lasts from
three weeks to six months.
- Intermediated
market
- A financial
market in which some financial
institution stands between counterparties to
financial transactions.
- Intermediation
- Investment through a financial institution. Related:
Disintermediation.
- Intermittency
- When a non-linear dynamical system alternates between periodic
and chaotic behavior. See: Chaos,
Dynamical Systems.
- Internal
auditor
- An employee of a company who analyzes the company's
accounting records to that the company is following
and complying with all regulations.
- Internal
expansion
- Growth of assets
resulting from internal
financing or internally generated cash
flow.
- Internal
finance
- Finance generated within a firm by retained
earnings and depreciation.
- Internal
growth rate
- Maximum rate a firm can expand without outside
sources of funding. Growth generated by cash
flows retained by company.
- Internal
market
- The mechanisms for issuing and trading securities
within a nation, including its domestic
market and foreign
market. Compare: External
market.
- Internal
measure
- The number of days that a firm can finance operations
without additional cash
income.
- Internal
rate of return (IRR)
- Dollar-weighted
rate of return. Discount
rate at which net
present value (NPV) investment is zero. The
rate at which a bond's
future cash flows,
discounted back to today, equal its price.
- Internal
Revenue Code
- The various statutes and regulations making up
federal tax law.
- Internal
Revenue Service (IRS)
- The federal agency responsible for the collection
of federal taxes, including personal and corporate
income taxes,
Social Security taxes, and excise and gift taxes.
- Internal
Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of
1998
- The legislation targeted at IRS
reform, particularly related to the time period
required for capital
gains and taxpayer protection and rights.
- Internally
efficient market
- See: Operationally
efficient market
- International
arbitrage
- Simultaneous buying and selling of foreign securities
and ADRs
to capture the profit
potential created by time, currency, and settlement
inconsistencies that vary across international borders.
- International
Asset Pricing Model (IAPM)
- The international version of the CAPM
assuming that investors
in each country share the same consumption basket
and purchasing
power parity holds.
- International
Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD)
- IBRD or World
Bank makes loans
at nearly conventional terms to countries for projects
of high economic priority.
- International
Banking Facility (IBF)
- A branch that an American bank establishes in
the United States to do Eurocurrency
business.
- International
Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD)
- Also commonly called the World
Bank. It is a United Nations affiliated institution
that assists in the development of its poorer members
by facilitating private investments, and by making
and guaranteeing loans.
- International
bonds
- A collective term that refers to global bonds,
Eurobonds, and
foreign bonds.
- International
Chamber of Commerce (ICC)
- A business organization with membership from
over 80 countries. They work to harmonize trade
practices worldwide by establishing agreed upon
rules such as Incoterms
and Uniform
Customs and Procedures for Documentary Credits.
- International
Depository Receipt (IDR)
- A receipt issued
by a bank as evidence of ownership of one or more
shares of the underlying
stock of a foreign
corporation that the bank holds in trust. The advantage
of the IDR structure is that the corporation does
not have to comply with all the issuing requirements
of the foreign country where the stock
is to be traded. The US version of the IDR is the
American
Depository Receipt (ADR).
- International
Development Association (IDA)
- Association established to stimulate country development;
it was especially suited for less prosperous nations,
since it provided loans at low interest
rates.
- International
diversification
- The attempt to reduce risk
by investing in more than one nation. By diversifying
across nations whose economic cycles are not perfectly
correlated,
investors can
typically reduce the variability of their returns.
- International
Finance Corporation (IFC)
- A corporation owned by the World
Bank that produces a number of well-known stock
indexes for emerging
markets. Its major role is to provide financing
for projects in less developed countries.
- International
finance subsidiary
- A subsidiary
incorporated in the US, usually in Delaware, whose
sole purpose once was to issue
debentures
overseas and invest the proceeds in foreign operations,
with the interest
paid to foreign bondholders
not subject to US withholding tax. Elimination of
the corporate withholding
tax has ended the need for this type of subsidiary.
- International
Fisher effect
- States that the interest
rate differential between two countries should
be an unbiased predictor of the future change in
the spot rate.
- International
Fisher relationship
- Theory that nominal
interest rates
and inflation
rates in different countries are connected. The
Fisher equation says the nominal interest rate is
the product of one plus the real interest rate times
one plus the expected rate of inflation.
- International
fund
- A mutual fund
that can invest only outside the United States.
- International
market
- Related: External
market
- International
market index
- An index listed
on the American
Stock Exchange tracking the performance of 50
American Depository
Receipts traded
on the AMEX, NYSE,
and NASDAQ.
- International
Monetary Fund (IMF)
- An organization founded in 1944 to oversee exchange
arrangements of member countries and to lend foreign
currency
reserves to members with short-term balance
of payment problems.
- International
Monetary Market (IMM)
- A division of the CME
established in 1972 for trading financial futures.
Related: Chicago
Mercantile Exchange (CME)
- International
monetary system
- The global network of government and commercial
institutions within which currency exchange
rates are determined.
- International
mutual fund
- A mutual fund
that invests strictly in securities
markets throughout the world, excluding the United
States. A global
fund, on the other hand, invests in both foreign
and domestic securities.
- International
Organization for Standardization
- ISO is not an acronym but the name of a standards
setting organization chartered by the United Nations.
The name ISO is derived from Greek and connotes
equality, i.e. each member country regardless of
size or wealth gets only one vote. The ISO 4217
are the standard three letter currency codes. These
codes are usually composed of the ISO 3166 two letter
country code plus a third letter representing the
name of the currency.
- International
Petroleum Exchange (IPE)
- Energy futures
and options exchange
based in London.
- International
Security Market Association (ISMA)
- Swiss law association located in Zurich that regroups
all the participants on the Eurobond
primary
and secondary
markets. Establishes uniform trading procedures
in the international bond markets.
- International
Stock Exchange of the U.K. and the Republic of Ireland
(ISE)
- Organization that replaced the London stock exchange
after its merger
with the International Securities Regulatory Organization
(ISRO).
- International
Swap Dealers Association (ISDA)
- Formed in 1985 to promote uniform practices in
the writing, trading, and settlement of swaps
and other derivatives.
- Interpolation
- A method of approximating a price or yield
that is unknown by using numbers that are known.
- Interpositioning
- The practice of using a second broker
in a securities
transaction,
which is considered illegal it is if used to generate
additional commission.
- Inter
vivos trust
- A trust created
between living persons. Antithesis of a testamentary
trust.
- Intrabudgetary
transactions
- Effected when payment and receipt both occur within
the budget, or when payment is made from off-budget
federal entities whose budget authority and outlays
are excluded from the budget totals.
- Intracommodity
spread
- Used in the context of futures
trading to refer
to a trader holding,
buying, and selling contracts
in the same commodity
on the same exchange,
but for different months.
- Intracompany
trade
- Transactions between or among subsidiaries that
are part of the same parent company.
- Intraday
- Term meaning "within the day," often
to refer to the high and the low price of a stock.
- Intramarket
sector spread
- The spread between
two issues of the
same maturity
within a market
sector. For instance, the difference in interest
rates offered for five-year industrial corporate
bonds and five-year utility corporate
bonds.
- Intrastate
offering
- A securities
offering limited
to just one state in the United States.
- Intrinsic
value
- The value of an option if it were to expire immediately
with the underlying stock at its current price;
the amount by which an option is in-the-money. For
call options, this is the difference between the
stock price, if that difference is a positive number,
or zero otherwise. For put options it is the difference
between the striking price and the stock price,
if that difference is positive, and zero otherwise.
See also: In-the-Money,
Time Value
Premium, Parity.
- Intrinsic
value of an option
- The amount by which an option
is in the money.
An option that
is not in the
money has no intrinsic value.
- Intrinsic
value of a firm
- The present
value of a firm's expected future net cash
flows discounted by the required
rate of return.
- Inventory
- For companies: Raw materials, items available
for sale or in the process of being made ready for
sale. They can be individually valued by several
different means, including cost or current market
value, and collectively by FIFO
(First in, first out), LIFO
(Last in, first out) or other techniques. The
lower value of alternatives is usually used to preclude
overstating earnings
and assets. For
securities firms:
Securities bought and held by a broker
or dealer for resale.
- Inventory
financing
- Used in the context of factoring
and general finance to refer to loans to consumer
product producers that use inventory as collateral.
See also: Inventory
loan.
- Inventory
loan
- A secured short-term loan to purchase inventory.
The three basic forms are a blanket inventory lien,
a trust receipt,
and field
warehousing financing.
- Inventory
turnover
- The ratio of annual sales to average inventory,
which measures the speed at which inventory is produced
and sold. Low turnover
is an unhealthy sign, indicating excess stocks and/or
poor sales.
- Inverse
floater
- A derivative
instrument whose coupon
rate is linked to the market
rate of interest
in an inverse relationship.
- Inverse
floating-rate note
- A variable-rate
security whose
coupon rate
increases as a benchmark
interest rate
declines.
- Inverted
market
- A futures market
in which the nearer months are selling at price
premiums to the more-distant months. Related: Premium.
- Inverted
scale
- A serial bond offering
whose bonds with
earlier maturity
dates have higher yields
than bonds with later
maturity dates.
- Inverted
yield curve
- When short-term interest
rates are higher than long-term rates. Antithesis
of positive
yield curve.
- Investment
- The creation of more money through the use of
capital.
- Investment
adviser
- A person or an organization that makes the day-to-day
decisions regarding a portfolio's
investments.
Also called a portfolio
manager.
- Investment
Advisers Act
- Legislation passed in 1940 requiring financial
advisers to register with the Securities
and Exchange Commission. The measure was enacted
to protect the public from fraud or misrepresentation
by investment
advisers.
- Investment
advisory service
- A business that specializes in providing investment
advice for a fee. All advisers of an advisory service
must be registered with the Securities
and Exchange Commission.
- Investment
agreement
- An contract specifying the rights and responsibilities
of a host government and a corporation in the structure
and operation of an investment
project.
- Investment
analysts
- Related: Financial
analysts
- Investment
bank
- Financial intermediaries who perform a variety
of services, including aiding in the sale of securities,
facilitating mergers
and other corporate reorganizations, acting as brokers
to both individual and institutional clients, and
trading for their own accounts. See: Underwriters.
- Investment
certificate
- A document that serves as proof that an individual
has an investment
in a savings and loan association.
- Investment
climate
- Factors such as economic, monetary, and other
conditions that affect the performance of investments.
- Investment
club
- A group of people who combine their money into
a larger pool, then invest collectively in stocks
and bonds, making
decisions as a group.
- Investment
company
- A firm that that invests the funds of investors
in securities
appropriate for their stated investment
objectives in return for a management fee. See
also: Mutual fund.
- Investment
Company Act of 1940
- Legislation that requires investment
companies to register with the SEC
and that outlines standards by which they must operate.
- Investment
Company Institute (ICI)
- A national industry group of investment companies,
including mutual funds, founded in 1940.
- Investment
decisions
- Decisions concerning the asset
side of a firm's balance
sheet, such as the decision to offer a new product.
- Investment-grade
bonds
- A bond that is
assigned a rating in the top four categories by
commercial credit rating companies. S&P
classifies investment-grade bonds as BBB or higher,
and Moody's classifies investment grade bonds as
Baa or higher. Related: High-yield
bond.
- Investment
history
- The history of a member
firm that establishes certain norms in respect
of its investment
practice.
- Investment
income
- The revenue from a portfolio
of invested assets.
- Investment
letter
- A letter
of intent between the issuer
of new securities
and the buyer, in the private placement of these
new securities.
The letter of intent establishes that the securities
are being bought for a minimum time period and are
treated as an investment,
not for resale. If no such letter exists, the securities
must be registered with Securities
and Exchange Commission.
- Investment
management
- The process of managing money. Also called portfolio
management and money
management.
- Investment
manager
- The individual who manages a portfolio
of investments. Also called a portfolio
manager or a money
manager.
- Investment
objective
- The financial objective of an investor.
Whether the investor
requires income or capital
appreciation,
for example. The investor's
objective governs the investment
strategy.
- Investment
opportunity set
- The universe of choices as to investments
available to an individual or corporation.
- Investment
philosophy
- The style and general ideology of investment
practiced by an investor.
Certain investors
favor small-capitalization
stocks, while others
prefer large blue-chip stocks, for example.
- Investment
policy
- Statement of objectives and constraints for an
individual's or organization's approach.
- Investment
product line (IPL)
- The line of required returns
for investment projects as a function of beta
(nondiversifiable
risk).
- Investment
Risk
- Uncertainty about the future benefits to be realized
from an investment.
- Investment
Valuation Model (IVM)
- The basic mathematical technique of finance that
calculates the value of an investment
as the present
value of all future cash
flows expected to be generated by the investment.
- Investments
- As a discipline, the study of financial securities,
such as stocks and
bonds, from the investor's
viewpoint.
- Investment
software
- Computer software that helps investors
make investment
decisions by identifying situations that meet programmed
parameters.
- Investment
strategy
- A strategy, or plan of attack, an investor
uses when deciding how to allocate capital
among several options including stocks,
bonds, cash equivalents,
commodities,
and real estate. The strategy should take into account
the investor's
tolerance for risk as well as future needs for capital.
- Investment
strategy committee
- A committee within a brokerage firm that conducts
research and makes recommendations on the firm's
stated investment
strategy.
- Investment
Tax Credit
- Proportion of new capital investment that could
be used to reduce a company's tax bill (abolished
in 1986).
- Investment
trust
- A closed-end
fund regulated by the Investment Company Act
of 1940. These funds have a fixed number of shares
that are traded on the secondary
markets, like corporate stock. The market price
may exceed the net asset
value per share, in which case shares are selling
at a premium.
When the market price
falls below the (NAV)/share,
shares are selling at a discount.
Many closed-end
funds are of a specialized nature; the portfolio
represents a particular industry or, country. These
funds are usually listed on US and foreign
exchanges.
- Investment
value
- Applies mainly to dealer securities. Fixed income
value of a convertible, the price at which the convert
would have to sell as a straight debt
instrument relative to the yield of other bonds
of like maturity,
or size, and quality; represents a presumed floor
to the bond, assuming the continued creditworthiness
of the issuer and
the general level of interest
rates. Bond
value. See: conversion
value.
- Investor
- The owner of a financial asset.
- Investor
fallout
- In the mortgage
pipeline, risk
that occurs when the originator commits loan
terms to the borrowers and gets commitments from
investors at the time of application, or if both
sets of terms are made at closing.
- Investor
relations
- The process by which the corporation communicates
with its investors.
- Investor's
equity
- The balance of a margin
account. Related: Buying
on margin, initial
margin requirement.
- Investors
service bureau
- NYSE service
that deals with all general inquiries concerning
securities investments.
- Invoice
- Bill written by a seller of goods or services
and submitted to a purchaser for payment.
- Invoice
billing
- Billing system in which invoices are sent off
at the time of customer orders and are all separate
bills to be paid.
- Invoice
date
- Usually the date when goods are shipped. Payment
dates are set relative to the invoice date.
- Invoice
price
- The price that the buyer of a futures
contract must pay the seller when a Treasury
bond is delivered.
- Involuntary
liquidation preference
- A premium that
must be paid to preferred or preference stockholders
if the issuer of
the stock is forced
into involuntary liquidation.
- IPO
Spinning
- See Initial
Public Offering Spinning.
- IRA/Keogh
accounts
- Special accounts that allow saving taxes deferred
until money is withdrawn. These plans are subject
to frequent changes in law with respect to the deductibility
of contributions. Withdrawals of tax-deferred
contributions are taxed as income, including the
capital gains
from such accounts.
- Irredeemable
bond
- A bond lacking
a call feature
or a right of redemption.
Also refers to a perpetual
bond.
- Irrational
call option
- The implied
call imbedded in a MBS.
Irrational because the call is sometimes not exercised
when it is in the money (interest rates are below
the threshold to refinance), and sometimes exercised
when it is not in the money. Option exercise like
this affects payments on the MBS.
- Irrelevance
result
- The Modigliani
and Miller theorem that a firm's capital
structure is irrelevant to the firm's value.
- Irrevocable
letter of credit
- Assurance of funds issued by a bank that cannot
be canceled or
amended without the beneficiary's approval.
- Irrevocable
trust
- A trust that is unable to be amended, altered,
or revoked.
- Issue
- A particular financial asset.
- Issued
share capital
- Total amount of shares
that have been issued.
Related: Outstanding
shares.
- Issuer
- An entity that puts a financial asset
in the marketplace.
- Issuing
bank
- Bank that issues a letter
of credit.
- Istanbul
Stock Exchange
- The sole securities exchange in Turkey.
- Italian
Derivatives Market (IDEM)
- A derivatives market operated by the Italian Stock
Exchange Council. It trades
futures and options
on the 30 index and individual stock
options. See: Italian
Stock Exchange.
- Italian
Exchange (Borsa Italiana)
- Italy's major securities exchange.
- Italian
Stock Exchange (ISE)
- The Milan-based stock
exchange, which came into effect after the unification
of Italy's ten national exchanges
in 1991. All listed securities
are traded electronically.
The main indexes are the MIB and the MIBTEL, based
on the prices of all listed shares,
and the MIB 30, based on a sample of the 30 most
liquid and highly capitalized shares.
- Itemized
deduction
- Specific deductions
allowed by the IRS
outlined in the tax return.
- "It's
us,"
- Used in the context of general equities. "The
firm, and not a customer, is the party involved."
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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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