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Glossary
- L
- Fifth letter of a Nasdaq
stock symbol specifying that the issue is a class
of stock such as third preferred class of warrants,
foreign preferred, sixth class of preferred stock,
or preferred when issued stock.
- LA
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for LAO PEOPLE'S DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC.
- LAK
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Laos New Kip.
- LB
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for LEBANON.
- LBO
- See: Leveraged
buyout
- LBP
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Lebanese Pound.
- LC
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for SAINT LUCIA.
- LCL
- See: Less
Than Container Load
- LDC
- See: Less
developed countries
- LEAPS
- See: Long-Term
Anticipation Securities
- LI
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for LIECHTENSTEIN.
- LIBOR
- See: London
Interbank Offered Rate
- LIFFE
- See: London
International Financial Futures and Options Exchange
- LIFO
- See: Last
in, first out
- LK
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for SRI LANKA.
- LKR
- The ISO
4217 currency code for Sri Lankan Rupee.
- LOC
- See: Letter
of credit
- LR
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for LIBERIA.
- LRD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Liberian Dollar.
- LS
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for LESOTHO.
- LSL
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Lesotho Loti.
- LT
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for LITHUANIA.
- LTL
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Lithuanian Litas.
- LTV
- See: Loan-to-value
ratio
- LU
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for LUXEMBOURG.
- LUF
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Luxembourg Franc.
- LV
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for LATVIA.
- LVL
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Latvian Lats.
- LY
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for LIBYAN ARAB JAMAHIRIYA.
- LYD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Libyan Dinar.
- LYON
- See: Liquid
yield option note
- Ladder
strategy
- A bond portfolio
construction strategy that invests approximately
equal amounts in every
maturity within a given range.
- Lady
Macbeth Strategy
- Strategy in which a third party poses as a white
knight in a takeover
bid, and then joins
forces with an unfriendly bidder.
- Laffer
curve
- A curve conjecturing that economic output will
increase if marginal tax rates are cut. Named after
economist Arthur Laffer.
- Lag
- Payment of a financial obligation later than is
expected or required, as in lead and lag. Also,
the number of periods that an independent variable
in a regression
model is "held back" in order to predict
the dependent variable.
- Lag
response of prepayments
- A delay of typically about three months between
the time the weighted-average
coupon of an MBS
pool crosses the threshold for refinancing and observation
of an acceleration in prepayment
speed is observed.
- Lagging
- Strategy used by a firm
to stall payments, normally in response to exchange
rate projections.
- Lagging
indicators
- Economic indicators that follow rather than precede
the country's overall pace of economic activity.
See also: Leading
indicators and coincident
indicators.
- Laisse-faire
- Doctrine that a government should not interfere
with business and economic affairs.
- Lambda
- The ratio of a change in the option
price to a small change in the option volatility.
It is the partial derivative of the option
price with respect to the option volatility.
- Land
contract
- A method of real estate financing; a mortgage-holding
seller finances a buyer by taking a down payment
and subsequent payments in installments, but holds
the title until the mortgage
is fully repaid.
- Landlord
- A property owner who rents property to a tenant.
- Lapsed
option
- An option that
no longer has any value because it has reached its
expiration
date without being exercised.
- Large-cap
- A stock with a
high level of capitalization,
usually at least $5 billion market
value.
- Lagging
indicators
- Economic indicators that follow rather than precede
the country's overall pace of economic activity.
See also: Leading
indicators and coincident
indicators.
- Last
in, first out (LIFO)
- An accounting method that fixes the cost of goods
sold to the most recent purchases. Hence, if prices
are generally rising, LIFO will lead to lower accounting
profitability.
- Last
sale
- The most recent trade
performed in a security.
- Last
split
- After a stock
split, the number of shares
distributed for each share held and the date of
the distribution.
- Last
trading day
- The final day under an exchange's
rules during which trading may take place in a particular
futures
or options
contract. Contracts outstanding
at the end of the last trading day must be settled
by delivery of
underlying physical commodities or financial
instruments,
or by agreement for monetary settlement, depending
futures contract
specifications.
- Late
charge
- A fee a credit grantor charges a borrower for
a late payment.
- Late
tape
- A delay in the display of price changes on the
tape of an exchange
because of heavy trading.
In severe instances the first digit of each price
is intentionally deleted.
- Launder
- To move illegally acquired cash through financial
systems so that it appears to be legally acquired.
- Law
of large numbers
- The mean of a random
sample approaches the mean (expected
value) of the population as sample size increases.
- Law
of one price
- An economic rule stating that a given security
must have the same price no matter how the security
is created. If the payoff of a security can be synthetically
created by a package of other securities,
the implication is that the price of the package
and the price of the security whose payoff it replicates
must be equal. If it is unequal, an arbitrage
opportunity would present itself.
- Lay
off
- In the context of general equities, this eliminates
all or part of a position
by finding customers or other dealers
to take the position.
- Layup
- Used in the context of general equities. Easily
executed trade
or order. See: Lead
pipe.
- Lead
- Payment of a financial obligation earlier than
is expected or required.
- Lead
manager
- The commercial or investment
bank with the primary responsibility for organizing
syndicated bank
credit or bond issued.
The lead manager recruits additional lending or
underwriting
banks, negotiates terms of the issue with the issuer,
and assesses market
conditions.
- Lead
pipe
- Used in the context of general equities. Virtually
certain that trade
will take place; lead pipe cinch. See: Layup.
- Lead
regulator
- A leading self-regulatory organization that over
sees compliance with a particular section of the
law, such as the NYSE,
ASE, or NASDAQ.
- Lead
underwriter
- The head of a syndicate
of financial firms that are sponsoring an initial
public offering of securities
or a secondary offering of securities.
Could also apply to bond
issues.
- Leader
- A stock or group
of stocks that is the first to move in a market
upsurge or downturn.
- Leading
- Strategy used by a firm
to accelerate payments, normally in response to
exchange rate
expectations.
- Leading
economic indicators
- Economic series that tend to rise or fall in advance
of the rest of the economy.
- Leading
indicator
- A change in a measurable economic factor that
is evident before the economy starts to follow a
specific trend.
- Leading
and lagging
- Refers to timing of cash
flows within a corporation.
- Leading
the market
- In the context of general equities, this is a
stock or group of
stocks moving with the market
as a whole, but moving in advance of the general
market.
- Leakage
- Release of information selectively or not before
official public announcement.
- Lease
- A long-term rental agreement, and a form of secured
long-term debt.
- Lease
acquisition cost
- The legal fees and other expenses incurred when
acquiring a lease.
- Leasehold
- An asset providing
the right to use property under a lease
agreement.
- Leasehold
improvement
- An improvement made to leased property.
- Lease-purchase
agreement
- An agreement that allows for portions of lease
payments to be used to purchase the leased property.
- Lease
rate
- The payment per period stated in a lease
contract.
- Leaseback
- A transaction
that involves the sale of some property, and an
agreement by the seller to lease
the property back from the buyer after the sale.
- Leaves
- Used in the context of general equities. Remains
to buy or sell of
a previously entered order
after a report of partial execution
has been given. If the floor
broker to buy 20M IBM at $115, and he then buys
6M at this price, his report would be, "You
bought 6M IBM at $115; leaves 14."
- Ledger
cash
- A firm's cash balance as reported in its financial
statements. Also called book
cash.
- Leg
- A prolonged trend
in stock market
prices, such as a multiple-period bull
market; or, an option
that is one side of a spread
transaction.
See: Lifting
a leg.
- Leg
up
- Used in the context of general equities. (1)Have
a portion of the offsetting
side of a trade
in your pocket
(spoken for) so your capital
risk in the transaction
is reduced. (Purchase of 10,000 of a 50,000 buy
order leaves the
trader a "leg
up".) (2) Complete one side of a two-sided
transaction, as in a swap
or contingency
order.
- LEGAL
- A computerized database maintained by the NYSE
to keep track of enforcement actions, audits, and
complaints against member firms. This term is not
an acronym but is referred to in capitals.
- Legal
capital
- Value at which a company's shares
are recorded in its books.
- Legal
bankruptcy
- A legal proceeding for liquidating
or reorganizing a business.
- Legal
defeasance
- The deposit of cash
and permitted securities,
as specified in the bond
indenture, into an irrevocable trust sufficient
to enable the issuer
to fully discharge its obligations under the bond
indenture.
- Legal
entity
- A person or organization that can legally enter
into a contract,
and may therefore be sued for failure to comply
with the terms of the contract.
- Legal
investments
- Investments
that a regulated entity is permitted to make under
the rules and regulations that govern its conduct.
- Legal
list
- A list of high-quality debt
and equity securities
chosen by a state agency that are acceptable holdings
for fiduciary institutions.
- Legal
monopoly
- A government-regulated firm that is legally entitled
to be the only company offering a particular service
in a particular area.
- Legal
opinion
- A statement, usually written by a specialized
law firm, required for a new municipal
bond issue stating
that the issue is
legally acceptable.
- Legal
transfer
- A stock transaction
that requires special documentation in addition
to standard stock or bond
power to be legally valid.
- Legislative
risk
- The risk that new or changed legislation will
have a large positive or negative effect on an investment.
- Legitimate
- Used in the context of general equities. Real
interest in trading
as compared to a profile
stance. See: Natural.
- Lehman
Brothers Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Index
- A benchmark
index that includes
all agency-guaranteed securities
with coupons that
periodically adjust based on a spread
over a published index.
-
Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index
- A benchmark
index made up of
the Lehman Brothers Government/Corporate
Bond Index, Mortgage-Backed
Securities Index, and Asset-Backed
Securities Index, including securities
that are of investment-grade quality or better,
have at least one year to maturity,
and have an outstanding
par value of
at least $100 million.
-
Lehman Brothers California Municipal Bond Index
- A benchmark
index that includes
investment-grade, tax-exempt, and fixed-rate bonds
issued in California. All securities
have long-term
maturities (greater
than two years) and are selected from issues
larger than $50 million.
- Lehman
Brothers Corporate Bond Index
- A benchmark
index that includes
all publicly issued,
fixed-rate, nonconvertible, dollar-denominated,
SEC-registered,
investment-grade corporate debt.
- Lehman
Brothers Government Bond Index
- A benchmark
index made up of
the Treasury
Bond Index and the Agency Bond Index as well
as the 1-3 Year Government Index and the 20+ Year
Treasury Index.
-
Lehman Brothers Government/Corporate Bond Index
- A benchmark
index made up of
the Lehman Brothers® Government
and Corporate
Bond indexes, including U.S. government Treasury
and agency
securities as well as corporate and Yankee
bonds.
-
Lehman Brothers Mortgage-Backed Securities Index
- A benchmark
index that includes
15- and 30-year fixed-rate securities
backed by mortgage pools of the Government
National Mortgage Association (GNMA), Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC), and
Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA).
-
Lehman Brothers Municipal Bond Index
- A benchmark
index that includes
investment-grade, tax-exempt, and fixed-rate bonds
with long-term
maturities (greater
than two years) selected from issues
larger than $50 million.
- Lehman
Brothers New York Municipal Bond Index
- A benchmark
index that includes
investment-grade, tax-exempt, and fixed-rate bonds
issued in the state of New York. All securities
have long-term
maturities (greater
than two years) and are selected from issues
larger than $50 million.
- Lemon
- An investment
with poor results.
- Lemons
problem
- Named after 2001 Nobel Laureate George Akerlof's
1970 paper "The Market for Lemons". His
original example had to do with used cars. Why does
the seller want to get rid of the car? It might
be a lemon. The buyer and seller have asymmetric
information. Hence, the buyer will demand a deep
discount on the car because of the possibility it
is a lemon.
- Lend
- To provide money temporarily on the condition
that it or its equivalent will be returned, often
with an interest
fee.
- Lendable
funds
- The pool of funds available to borrows; typically
categorized by currency
and maturity.
- Lender
- Businesses that provide loans
to others.
- Lender
of last resort
- Traditionally the Federal
Reserve Bank in the US, which assists banks
that face large withdrawals of funds and in so doing
stabilizes the banking system.
- Lender
liability lawsuits
- Legal action of debtor against creditors
that alleges unfair enforcement of loan covenants
or violation of implied terms of a loan agreement.
- Lending
agreement
- A contract
regarding funds transferred between a lender
and a borrower.
- Lending
at a premium
- A loan from one broker
to another of securities
to cover a customer's short
position, with a borrowing
fee included. A fee is unusual since securities
are normally lent freely between brokers.
- Lending
at a rate
- Interest paid
to a customer on the credit balance received from
a short sale.
- Lending
securities
- Securities
borrowed from a broker's
inventory, from another customer's margin
account, or from another broker,
when a customer is required to deliver on a short
sale.
- Leptokurtosis
- The condition of a probability
density curve to have fatter tails and a higher
peak at the mean than the normal distribution.
- Less-developed
countries (LDCs)
- Also known as emerging markets. Countries who's
per capita GDP
is below a World
Bank-determined level.
- Less
Than Container Load
- Shipments of less than container load size (<$50,000).
- Lessee
- An entity that leases
an asset from another
entity.
- Lessor
- An entity that leases
an asset to another
entity.
- Letter
of Administration
- A certificate issued by the Court evidencing the
appointment of the Administrator of an Estate.
- Letter
of comment
- A communication to the firm from the SEC
that suggests changes to its registration
statement.
- Letter
of credit (LOC)
- A form of guarantee of payment issued
by a bank on behalf of a borrower that assures the
payment of interest
and repayment of principal
on bond issues.
- Letter
of Guarantee
- A letter from a bank to a brokerage firm which
states that a customer (who has written a call option)
does indeed own the underlying stock and the bank
will guarantee delivery if the call is assigned.
Thus the call can be considered covered. Not all
brokerage firms accept letters of guarantee. Also:
letter issued to Option Clearing Corporation by
member firms covering a guarantee of any trades
made by one of its customers, (a trader or broker
on the exchange floor).
- Letter
of intent
- An assurance by a mutual
fund shareholder
that a certain amount of money will be invested
monthly, in exchange for lower sales charges. In
mergers, a preliminary
merger agreement
between companies after significant negotiations.
- Letter
stock
- Privately placed common
stock, so-called because the SEC
requires a letter from the purchaser stating that
the stock is not
intended for resale.
- Letter
of Testamentary
- A certificate issued by the court evidencing the
appointment of an executor of estate.
- Letter
of Transmittal
- A document used by security holder to accompany
certificates surrendered in an exchange or other
corporate action.
- Level
- Used in the context of general equities. Price
measure of an indication.
- Level-coupon
bond
- Bond with a stream of coupon
payments that remain the same throughout the
life of the bond.
- Level
debt service
- A municipal charter provision that debt
payments must be relatively equal from year to year
so that required revenue projections are easier.
- Level
load
- A mutual fund
that charges a permanent sales charge, usually at
some fixed percentage. See: Front-end
loads and back-end loads.
- Level
pay
- Scheduling principal
and interest
payments (P&I) due under a mortgage
so that total monthly payment of P&I is the
same. Different from the typical mortgage for which
the principal
payment component of the monthly payment becomes
gradually greater while the monthly interest component
shrinks.
- Level
term insurance
- A life
insurance policy with a fixed face
value and increasing premiums.
- Leverage
- The use of debt
financing, or property of rising or falling at a
proportionally greater amount than comparable investments.
For example, an option
is said to have high leverage compared to the underlying
stock because a
given price change in the stock may result in a
greater increase or decrease in the value of the
option.
- Leverage
clientele
- A group of shareholders
who, because of their personal leverage,
seek to invest in corporations that maintain a compatible
degree of corporate leverage.
- Leverage
ratios
- Measures of the relative value of stockholders,
capitalization, and creditors
obligations, and of the firm's ability to pay
financing charges. Value of firm's debt
to the total value of the firm (debt plus stockholder
capitalization).
- Leverage
rebalancing
- Making transactions to adjust (rebalance) a firm's
leverage ratio
to a target ratio.
- Leveraged
beta
- The beta of a leveraged
required return;
that is, the beta as adjusted for the degree of
leverage in the
firm's capital
structure.
- Leveraged
buyout (LBO)
- A transaction used to take a public corporation
private that is financed through debt
such as bank loans
and bonds. Because
of the large amount of debt relative to equity
in the new corporation, the bonds are typically
rated below investment-grade,
properly referred to as high-yield
bonds or junk
bonds. Investors
can participate in an LBO through either the purchase
of the debt (i.e., purchase of the bonds or participation
in the bank loan) or the purchase of equity
through an LBO fund that specializes in such investments.
- Leveraged
company
- A company that has debt
in its capital
structure.
- Leveraged
equity
- Stock in a firm
that relies on financial leverage.
Holders of leveraged equity experience the benefits
and costs of using debt.
- Leveraged
investment company
- An investment
company or mutual
fund entitled to borrow
capital for its
operations. Also, an investment
company that issues both income shares
and capital shares.
- Leveraged
lease
- A lease arrangement
under which the lessor
borrows a large proportion of the funds needed to
purchase the asset.
The lender has
a lien on the assets
and a pledge of the lease payments to secure the
borrowing.
- Leveraged
portfolio
- A portfolio
that includes risky
assets purchased with funds borrowed.
- Leveraged
recapitalization
- Often used in risk arbitrage. A public company
takes on significant additional debt
with the purpose of either paying an extraordinary
dividend or repurchasing
shares, leaving
the public shareholders
with a continuing interest in a more financially
leveraged company.
Popular form of shark
repellent See: Stub.
- Leveraged
required return
- The required
return on an investment when the investment
is financed partially by debt.
- Leveraged
stock
- Stocks financed
with credit, such as that purchased on a margin
account.
- Levered
portfolio
- Investment at least partially financed by borrowing.
- Liability
- A financial obligation, or the cash
outlay that must be made at a specific time to satisfy
the contractual
terms of such an obligation.
- Liability
funding strategies
- Investment strategies that select assets
so that cash flows
will equal or exceed the client's obligations.
- Liability
insurance
- Insurance guarding against damage or loss that
the policyholder, may cause another person in the
form of bodily injury or property damage.
- Liability
swap
- An interest
rate swap used to alter the cash
flow characteristics of an institution's liabilities
so as to provide a better match with its assets.
- License
agreement
- A contract by which a domestic company (the licensor)
allows a foreign company (the licensee) to market
its products in a foreign country in return for
royalties, fees, or other forms of compensation.
- Licensing
- Arrangement in which a local firm
in the host country produces goods in accordance
with another firm's
(the licensing firm's)
specifications; as the goods are sold, the local
firm can retain part
of the earnings.
- Lien
- A security
interest in one or more assets
that lenders hold
in exchange for secured
debt financing.
- Life
annuity
- An annuity that
pays a fixed amount for the lifetime of the annuitant.
- Life
cycle
- The lifetime of a product or business, from its
creation to its demise or transformation.
- Life
expectancy
- The length of time that an average person is expected
to live, which is used by insurance companies use
to make projections of benefit payouts.
- Life
insurance
- An insurance
policy that pays a monetary benefit to the insured
person's survivors after death.
- Life
insurance in force
- The dollar amount of life insurance that a company
has issued, measured
as the sum of policy face
values and dividends
paid.
- Life
insurance policy
- The contract
that sets out the terms of life
insurance coverage.
- Lifetime
reverse mortgage
- A type of mortgage
in which a homeowner borrows
against the value a home, while retaining title,
and making no payments while residing in the home.
When the owner ceases living in the house, the property
is sold, and the loan repaid.
- Lift
- An increase in securities
prices, as shown by some economic indicator.
- Lifted
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. Having an
offer taken in a
stock, followed
by the market
maker raising the offer
price.
- Lifting
a leg
- Closing out one side of a long-short arbitrage
before the other is closed.
- Lighten
up
- Selling some part of a stock
or bond position
in a portfolio
to realize capital
gains or to losses or increase cash assets.
- Lima
Stock Exchange
- Peru's major securities market.
- Limit
- See Trading
Limit.
- Limit
Cycles
- An attractor for non-linear dynamic systems which has periodic cycles
or orbits in phase
space. An example is an undamped pendulum which
will have a closed circle orbit equal to the amplitude
of the pendulum's swing. See: Attractor,
Phase Space.
- Limit
on close order
- An order to buy
or sell stock at
the closing price only if the price is at a predetermined
level or better.
- Limit
order
- An order to buy
a stock at or below
a specified price, or to sell a stock at or above
a specified price. For instance, you could tell
a broker "buy
me 100 shares of
XYZ Corp at $8 or less" or "sell 100 shares
of XYZ at $10 or better" The customer specifies
a price, and the order can be executed
only if the market
reaches or betters that price. A conditional trading
order designed to avoid the danger of adverse unexpected
price changes.
- Limit
order book
- A record of unexecuted
limit orders
maintained by the specialist.
These orders are
treated equally with other orders in terms of priority
of execution.
- Limit
order information system
- The electronic system supplying information about
securities traded
on participating exchanges
so that the best securities
prices can be found.
- Limit
price
- See: Maximum
price fluctuation
- Limit
up, limit down
- The maximum price change allowed for a commodity
futures contract
per trading day.
- Limitation
on asset dispositions
- A bond covenant
that restricts in some way a firm's ability to sell
major assets.
- Limitation
on conversion
- Applies mainly to convertible securities. Possible
delay in convertibility. More frequently, the right
to convert may be terminable prior to a redemption
date, preventing the holder from receiving a
final coupon or
dividend. See:
Accrued interest.
- Limitation
on liens
- A bond covenant
that restricts in some way a firm's ability to grant
liens on its assets.
- Limitation
on merger, consolidation, or sale
- A bond covenant
that restricts in some way a firm's ability to merge
or consolidate with another firm.
- Limitation
on sale-and-leaseback
- A bond covenant
that restricts in some way a firm's ability to enter
into sale-and-leaseback
transactions, financing techniques that could affect
creditor thinness..
- Limitation
on subsidiary borrowing
- A bond covenant
that restricts in some way a firm's ability to borrow
at the level of firm subsidiary.
- Limited
company
- A form of business commonly used in the U.K. comparable
to incorporation in the U.S.
- Limited
discretion
- Permission by a client that allows a broker
to make certain stock
and option trades
without first consulting the client about the trade.
- Limited
flexibility exchange rate system
- The International
Monetary Fund's name for an exchange
rate system with a managed
float.
- Limited
liability
- Limitation of loss to what has already been invested.
- Limited-liability
instrument
- A security,
such as a call
option, in which the owner can lose only the
initial investment.
- Limited
partner
- A partner who has limited
legal liability for the obligations of the partnership.
- Limited
partnership
- A partnership
that includes one or more partners who have limited
liability.
- Limited
payment policy
- Life insurance
providing full life protection but requiring premiums
for only part of the customer's lifetime.
- Limited
risk
- The risk inherent in options
contracts, which
is much lower than that of a futures
contract, which
has unlimited risk. The maximum loss in buying a
call option,
for example, is the premium
paid for the option.
- Limited
price order
- Used in the context of general equities. See:
Limit order.
- Limited-tax
general obligation bond
- A general obligation bond
of a government backed by specified or constrained
revenue sources.
- Limited
warranty
- A warranty with certain conditions and limitations
on the parts covered, type of damage covered, and/or
time period for which the agreement is good.
- Line
of credit
- An informal loan arrangement between a bank and
a customer allowing the customer to borrow up to
a prespecified amount.
- Linear
programming
- Technique for finding the maximum value of some
equation, subject to stated linear constraints.
- Linear
regression
- A statistical technique for fitting a straight
line to a set of data points.
- Linking
method
- Method for calculating rates of return that multiplies
one plus the interim rate
of return.
- Lintner's
observations
- John Lintner's work (1956) suggests that dividend
policy is related both a target level, and to the
speed of adjustment of change in dividends.
- Lipper
Mutual Fund Industry Average
- The average level of performance for all mutual
funds, as reported by Lipper Analytical Services.
- Liquid
asset
- Asset that is
easily and cheaply turned into cash-notably,
cash itself and short-term securities.
- Liquid
market
- A market allowing
the buying or selling of large quantities of an
asset at any time
and at low transactions
costs.
- Liquid
yield option note (LYON)
- Zero-coupon,
callable, putable,
convertible
bond developed by Merrill Lynch & Co.
- Liquidating
dividend
- Payment by a firm to its owners from capital
rather than from earnings.
- Liquidation
- Occurs when a firm's business is terminated. Assets
are sold, proceeds are used to pay creditors,
and any leftovers are distributed to shareholders.
Any transaction that offsets
or closes out a long
or short position.
Related: Buy in,
evening up,
offset liquidity.
- Liquidation
by assignment
- Sale or realization of a debtor
firm's assets voluntarily
agreed to by its creditors
who estimate that the firm's liquidation value exceeds
its going-concern
value.
- Liquidation
rights
- The rights of a firm's securityholders in the
event the firm liquidates.
- Liquidation
value
- Net amount that could be realized by selling the
assets of a firm
after paying the debt.
- Liquidator
- Person appointed by an unsecured
creditor in the United Kingdom to oversee the
sale of an insolvent
firm's assets and
the repayment of its debts.
- Liquidity
- A high level of trading
activity, allowing buying and selling with minimum
price disturbance. Also, a market characterized
by the ability to buy
and sell with relative ease. Antithesis of illiquidity.
- Liquidity
diversification
- Investing in a variety of maturities
to reduce the price risk
to which holding long bonds
exposes the investor.
- Liquidity
Fund
- A California company that buys real estate limited
partnership interests
at 25% to 35% lower than the current value of the
real estate assets.
- Liquidity
preference hypothesis
- The argument that greater liquidity is valuable,
all else equal. Also, the theory that the forward
rate exceeds expected future interest
rates.
- Liquidity
premium
- Forward rate
minus expected future short-term interest
rate.
- Liquidity
ratios
- Ratios that measure a firm's ability to meet its
short-term financial obligations on time, such as
the ratio of current assets to current liabilities.
- Liquidity
risk
- The risk that arises
from the difficulty of selling an asset
in a timely manner. It can be thought of as the
difference between the "true value" of
the asset and the likely price, less commissions.
- Liquidity
theory of the term structure
- A biased expectations
theory that asserts that the implied forward
rates will not be a pure estimate of the market's
expectations of future interest
rates because they embody a liquidity
premium.
- Lisbon
Stock Exchange (LSE)
- Stock exchange
trading stocks,
bonds, and unit trusts.
The BVL general index is the exchange's
official index.
- Listed
firm
- A company whose stock
trades on a stock
exchange, and conforms to listing requirements.
- Listed
option
- An option that
has been accepted for trading
on an exchange.
- Listed
security
- Stock or bond
that has been accepted for trading
by one of the organized and registered securities
exchanges in
the United States. Generally, the advantages of
being listed are that exchanges provide: (1) an
orderly marketplace; (2) liquidity;
(3) fair price determination; (4) accurate and continuous
reporting on sales and quotations;
(5) information on listed companies; and (6) strict
regulation for the protection of securityholders.
Antithesis of OTC Security.
- Listed
stocks
- Stocks that are
traded on an exchange.
- Listing
- In the context of real estate, written agreement
between a property owner and a real estate broker
that gives the broker
permission to find a buyer or tenant for some property.
See: Listing
broker.
- Listing
broker In the context of equity,
when a stock is traded in exchange it is said to
be listed.
- A licensed real estate broker
who completes a listing of a property for sale.
- Listing
requirements
- Requirements, including minimum shares
outstanding,
market value,
and income, that are laid down by an exchange
for any stock to
be listed for trading.
- Living
benefits
- Life insurance
benefits from which the insured can draw cash while
still living, usually in the case of some high-cost
illness.
- Living
trust
- A trust that an individual establishes during
the individual's lifetime, enabling the person to
control the assets
contributed to the trust. Also known as an inter
vivos trust.
- Living
will
- A document specifying the kind of medical care
a person wants-or does not want-in the event of
terminal illness or incapacity.
- Lloyds
of London
- A marketplace in London for underwriting
syndicates.
- Load
- The sales fee charged to an investor
when shares are
purchased in a load
fund or annuity.
See: Bank-end load; front-end
load; level load.
- Load
fund
- A mutual fund
that sells shares
with a sales
charge-typically 4% to 8% of the net amount
indicated. Some no-load funds also levy distribution
fees permitted by Article 12b-1
of the Investment Company Act; these are typically
0. 25%. A true no-load fund has neither a sales
charge nor
- Load-to-load
- Arrangement whereby the customer pays for the
last delivery
when the next one is received.
- Load
spread option
- A method of allocating the annual sales charge
on load funds,
often through percentage deductions from a customer's
periodic fixed payments.
- Loan
- Temporary borrowing of a sum of money. If you
borrow $1 million you have taken out a loan for
$1 million.
- Loan
amortization schedule
- The timetable for repaying the interest
and principal
on a loan.
- Loan
commitment
- Assurance by a lender to make money available
to a borrower on specific terms in return for a
fee.
- Loan
crowd
- Historical term. In the 1920's and 1930's, it
refers to the group of member
firms that lend
or borrow securities
needed to cover the positions
of customers who have sold short
securities. The
crowd could be found around the loan post.
- Loan
Preference Principle
- The theory that a covered
loan is less expensive when its cost is calculated
in one currency,
it will also be less expensive in all other currencies.
- Loan
syndication
- Group of banks sharing a loan.
See: Syndicate.
- Loan
value
- The maximum percentage of the value of securities
that a broker can
lend to a margin
account customer, as dictated by the Federal
Reserve Board in Regulation T.
- Loan-to-value
ratio (LTV)
- The ratio of money borrowed on a property to the
property's fair market
value.
- Loaned
flat
- Securities
lent interest-free
between brokers
to cover customers' short
sale positions.
- Local
- A futures exchange
member who trades
securities for
his or her own account.
- Local
expectations hypothesis (LEH)
- Theory that bonds
similar in all aspects except maturity
will have the same holding-period rate
of return.
- Local
expectations theory
- A form of the pure
expectations theory that suggests that the returns
on bonds of different
maturities will
be the same over a short-term investment horizon.
- Local
taxes
- Property, sewer, school, or other community paid
to a locality. Local taxes are usually deductible
for federal income tax purposes.
- Location-specific
advantages
- Advantages (natural and created) that are available
only or primarily in a particular place.
- Locational
arbitrage
- Attempt to exploit discrepancies in exchange
rates between banks.
- Lock
- Used in the context of general equities. Make
a market both ways
(bid and
offer) either on the bid, offering,
or an in-between
price only. Locking on the offering occurs to attract
a seller, since the trader
is willing to pay (and ask)
the offering side when others only ask it. Locking
on the bid side attracts buyers for similar reasons.
Typically, the sell side requires a plus
tick to comply with short
sale rules.
- Lock
in
- To ensure that an individual transacts all his
or her business with a sole
broker by providing superior services, such
as accommodating block buy
and sell needs or preparing excellent research (soft-dollar
lock). This usually guarantees a certain volume
of business.
- Lock-out
- With PAC
bond CMO
classes, the period before the PAC sinking
fund becomes effective. With multifamily
loans, the period of time during which prepayment
is prohibited.
- Lock-up
CDs
- CDs
that are issued
with the tacit understanding that the buyer will
not trade the certificate.
Quite often, the issuing bank will insist that it
hold the certificate for safekeeping by it to ensure
that the buyer holds the understanding.
- Lockup
option
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Privilege offered
a white knight
(friendly acquirer) by a target
company to buy crown
jewels or additional equity.
The aim is to discourage a hostile takeover.
See: Shark
repellent.
- Lockbox
- A collection and processing service provided to
firms by banks, which collect payments from a dedicated
postal box to which the firm directs its customers
to send payment to. The banks make several collections
per day, process the payments immediately, and deposit
the funds into the firm's bank account.
- Locked
in
- When an investor
is unable to take advantage of preferential tax
treatment because of time remaining on a required
holding period.
Also, a commodities
position in which
the market has
a limit up or limit down day and investors
are unable to move in to or out of the market.
- Locked
market
- A market is locked
if the bid price equals
the ask price. This
can occur, for example, if the market
is brokered and one side pays brokerage only, in
over-the-counter
trading the initiator of the transaction. Highly
competitive market environment with inside bid and
offering at the same price. Often occurs when an
OTC dealer has
not updated the market.
- Log-linear
least-squares method
- A statistical technique for fitting a curve to
a set of data points. One of the variables
is transformed by taking its logarithm, and then
a straight line is fitted to the transformed set
of data points.
- Lognormal
distribution
- Pattern of frequency of occurrence in which the
logarithm of the variable
follows a normal
distribution. Lognormal distributions are used
to describe returns
calculated over periods of a year or more.
- Lombard
rate
- Applies mainly to international equities. Interest
rate the German Bundesbank uses as an upper
limit to the day-to-day money rate, since no bank
will pay higher rates in the money market
than it has to pay for very short-term recourse
to Lombard credit.
- London
Commodity Exchange (LCE)
- Merged with the London International Financial
Futures and Options Exchange in 1996.
- London
Interbank Bid Rate (LIBID)
- The bid rate that a Euromarket bank is willing
to pay to attract a deposit from another Euromarket
bank in London. Related: LIBOR.
- London
Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR)
- The rate of interest
that major international banks in London charge
each other for borrowings. Many variable
interest rates in the US are based on spreads off
LIBOR. By contrast with the bid
rate LIBID quoted by banks seeking such deposits.
- London
International Financial Futures and Options Exchange
(LIFFE)
- A leading market for trading options and futures
on euro money market derivatives.
- London
Metal Exchange (LME)
- A market for
trading base metals,
where traded options
contracts are
available against the underlying
futures contract.
- London
Stock Exchange (LSE)
- The U.K.'s six regional exchanges
joined together in 1973 to form the stock
exchange of Great Britain and Ireland, later
named the LSE. The FTSE
100 index (known as the footsie)
is its dominant index.
- Long
- One who has bought a contract
to establish a market
position and
who has not yet closed out this position through
an offsetting sale;
the opposite of short.
- Long
bonds
- Bonds with a long
current maturity.
The "long bond" is the 30-year US Treasury
bond.
- Long
coupons
- (1) Bonds or notes
with a long current
maturity. (2) A bond on which one of the coupon
periods, usually the first, is longer than the other
periods or the standard period.
- Long-term
forward contracts
- Contracts that
state exchange
rate at which a specified amount of a particular
currency can be exchanged at a future date (more
than one year from today).
- Long
hedge
- The purchase of a futures
contract in anticipation of actual purchases
in the cash market.
Used by processors or exporters as protection against
an advance in the cash price. Related: hedge,
short hedge
- Long
leg
- The part of an option
spread in which an agreement to buy the underlying
security is made.
- Long
market value
- The market
value of a security,
excluding options,
as of the close of the last business day.
- Long
position
- Owning or holding options (i.e., the number of
contracts bought exceeds the number of contracts
sold). For equities, a long position occurs when
an individual owns securities.
An owner of 1,000 shares
of stock is said
to be "Long the stock." Related: Short
position.
- Long
position in an option
- Purchase of an options.
- Long
run
- A period of time in which all costs are variable;
longer than one year.
- Long
straddle
- Taking a long
position in both a put
and a call option.
- Long-term
- In accounting terms, one year or longer.
- Long-term
assets
- Value of property, equipment, and other capital
assets minus the
depreciation.
This is an entry in the bookkeeping records of a
company. It is usually established on a "cost"
basis, and thus
does not necessarily reflect the market
value of the assets.
- Long-term
capital gain
- A profit on the
sale of a security
or mutual fund
share that has
been held for more than one year.
- Long-term
debt
- An obligation having a maturity
of more than one year from the date it was issued.
Also called funded
debt.
- Long-term
debt/capitalization
- Indicator of financial leverage.
Shows long-term debt as a proportion of the capital
available. Determined by dividing long-term debt
by the sum of long-term debt, preferred
stock and common stockholder's
equity.
- Long-term
debt-to-equity ratio
- A capitalization
ratio comparing long-term
debt to shareholders' equity.
- Long-term
debt ratio
- The ratio of long-term debt to total capitalization.
- Long-Term
Anticipation Securities (LEAPS)
- Long-term options.
- Long-term
financial plan
- Financial plan covering two or more years of future
operations.
- Long-term
financing
- Liabilities
repayable in more than one year plus equity.
- Long-term
gain
- A profit on the
sale of a capital
assets held longer
than 12 months, and eligible for long-term capital
gains tax treatment.
- Long-term
goals
- Financial goals expected to be accomplished in
five years or longer.
- Long-term
investor
- A person who makes investments
for a period of at least five years in order to
finance his or her long-term goals.
- Long-term
liabilities
- Amount owed for leases,
bond repayment, and
other items due after 1 year.
- Long-term
loss
- A loss on the sale of a capital
asset held less
than 12 months that can be used to offset a capital
gain.
- Look
- Used for listed equity securities. See: Picture.
- Look-thru
- A method for calculating US taxes owed on income
from controlled foreign corporations that was introduced
by the Tax
Reform Act of 1986.
- Lookback
option
- An option that
allows the buyer to choose as the option strike
price any price of the underlying
asset that has occurred during the life of the
option. For a call
option, the buyer will choose the minimum price;
for a put option,
the buyer will choose the maximum price. This option
will always be in the money.
- Looking
for
- In the context of general equities, this describing
a buy interest in
which a dealer
is asked to offer
stock, often involving
a capital commitment.
Antithesis of in
touch with.
- Loophole
- A technicality in some legislation or regulation
that makes it possible to avoid certain consequences
or circumvent a rule without breaking the law, such
as in the use of a tax
shelter.
- Loose
credit
- Policy by the Federal
Reserve Board to make loans less expensive and
more available by reducing interest
rates through open market
operations.
- Loss
- The opposite of gain.
- Loss
Carry-Back (Carry-Forward)
- A tax provision that allows operating
losses to be used as a tax
shield to reduce taxable
income in prior and future years. Losses can
be carried backward for up to three years and forward
for up to 15 years under current tax codes.
- Loss-control
activities
- Actions that an insured person or company takes
at the instigation of an insurance company in order
to prevent accidents or losses.
- Loss-of-income
insurance
- Insurance coverage that will pay out income that
a policyholder loses as a result of a disability,
injury, or business disruption.
- Loss
ratio
- The ratio of losses paid or accrued by an insurer
to premiums collected
over a year.
- Lots
- In the context of general equities, this blocks
or portions of trades.
Can express a specific transaction in a stock
at a certain time, often implying execution
at the same price (e.g., "I traded 40m in two
lots of 10 and four lots of 5.").
- Louvre
Accord
- 1987 agreement between countries to attempt to
stabilize the value of the US dollar.
- Low
- In the context of general equities, this is a
specific minimum limit required by a seller in execution
an order ("I'll
sell 50 with an eighth low."); implies a not-held
limit order. Antithesis of top.
- Low
balance method
- A method of calculating interest
on the basis of the lowest balance of an account
over the applicable period.
- Low
ball
- Slang for making an offer well below the fair
value of an asset in hopes that the seller may be
desperate to sell.
- Low-coupon
bond refunding
- Refunding of a low-coupon
bond with a new,
higher-coupon bond.
- Low
grade
- A bond with a rating
of B or lower.
- Low-load
fund
- A mutual fund
that charges a sales commission
of 3.5% or less for the purchase of shares.
- Low
price
- The day's lowest price of a security
that has changed hands between a buyer and a seller.
- Low
price-earnings ratio effect
- The tendency of portfolios
of stocks with a low price-earnings
ratio to outperform portfolios of stocks with high
price-earnings
ratios.
- Lump
sum
- A large one-time payment of money.
- Lump-sum
distribution
- A single payment that represents an employee's
interest in a qualified retirement plan. The payment
must be prompted by retirement (or other separation
from service), death, disability, or attainment
of age 59-1/2, and must be made within a single
tax year to avoid the federal government's 10% penalty
tax.
- Lyapunov
Exponents
- A measure of the dynamics of an attractor. Each dimension has a Lyapunov exponent.
A positive exponent measures sensitive dependence
on initial conditions, or how much our forecasts
can diverge based upon different estimates of starting
conditions. Another way to view Lyapunov exponents
is the loss of predictive ability as we look forward
into time. Strange
Attractors are characterized by at least one
positive exponent. A negative exponent measures
how points converge towards one another. Point Attractors are characterized by all
negative variables.
See: Attractor, Limit Cycle, Point Attractor, Strange Attractor.
back to top
Divider
Campbell
R. Harvey's Hypertextual Finance Glossary
Copyright © 2007. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. Do not reproduce without explicit
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