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Glossary
- R
- Fifth letter of a Nasdaq
stock symbol specifying that the stock has rights.
- RAM
- See: Reverse-annuity
mortgage
- RAP
- See: Regulatory
accounting procedures
- RE
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for REUNION.
- REIT
- See: Real
Estate Investment Trust
- REMIC
- See: Real
Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit
- RO
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for ROMANIA.
- ROA
- See: Return
on assets
- ROCE
- See: Return
on capital employed
- ROE
- See: Return
on equity
- ROI
- See: Return
on investment
- ROL
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Romanian Leu.
- RPPP
- See: Relative
purchasing power parity
- RU
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for RUSSIAN FEDERATION.
- RUB
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Russian Rouble.
- RW
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for RWANDA.
- RWF
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Rwanda Franc.
- Radar
alert
- Close monitoring of trading
patterns in a company's
stock by senior managers to uncover unusual
buying activity that might signal a
takeover attempt. See: Shark
watcher.
- Raider
- Individual or corporate investor
who intends to take control of a company (often
ostensibly for greenmail) by buying a controlling
interest in its stock
and installing new management. Raiders who accumulate
5% or more of the outstanding
shares in the target
company must report their purchases to the SEC,
the exchange of listing, and the target itself.
See: takeover.
- Rainmaker
- A valuable employee, manager or subcontracted
person who brings new business to a company.
- Rally
(recovery)
- An upward movement of prices.
Opposite of reaction.
- Reverse-annuity
mortgages (RAM)
- Bank loan for an amount equal to a percentage
of the appraisal value of the home. The loan is
then paid to the homeowner in the form of an annuity.
- Random
variable
- A function that assigns a real number to each
and every possible outcome of a random experiment.
- Random
walk
- Theory that stock price changes from day to day
are accidental or haphazard; changes are independent
of each other and have the same probability distribution.
Many believers in the random walk theory believe
that it is impossible to outperform the market
consistently without taking additional risk.
- Randomized
strategy
- A strategy of introducing into the decision-making
process a chance element that is designed to confound
the information content of the decision-maker's
observed choices.
- Range
- The high and low prices, or high and low bids
and offers, recorded
during a specified time.
- Range
forward
- A forward
exchange rate contract
that places upper and lower bounds on the future
cost of foreign
exchange.
- Rate
anticipation swaps
- An exchange of bonds
in a portfolio
for new bonds that will achieve the target portfolio
duration, given
the investor's
assumptions about future changes in interest
rates.
- Rate
base
- The value of a regulated public utility and its
operations as defined by its regulators and on which
the company is allowed to earn a particular rate
of return.
- Rate
covenant
- A provision governing a municipal revenue project
financed by a revenue bond
issue, which establishes
the rates to be charged users of the new facility.
- Rate
of exchange
- See: Exchange
Rate
- Rate
lock
- An agreement between the mortgage
banker and the loan applicant guaranteeing a specified
interest rate
for a designated period, usually 60 days.
- Rate
of interest
- The rate, as a proportion of the principal,
at which interest
is computed.
- Rate
of return
- Calculated as the (value now minus value at time
of purchase) divided by value at time of purchase.
For equities, we often include dividends
with the value now. See also: Return,
annual
rate of return.
- Rate
of return ratios
- Ratios that measure the profitability of a firm
in relation to various measures of investment in
the firm.
- Rate
risk
- In banking, the risk
that profits may
drop or losses occur because a rise in interest
rates forces up the cost
of funding fixed-rate
loans or other fixed-rate assets.
- Ratings
- An evaluation of credit
quality of a company's debt issue by Thomson
Financial BankWatch, Moody's, S&P, and Fitch
Investors Service. Investors
and analysts use
ratings to assess the riskness of an investment.
- Ratio
analysis
- A way of expressing relationships between a firm's
accounting numbers and their trends
over time that analysts use to establish values
and evaluate risks.
- Ratio
Calendar Combination
- A strategy consisting of a simultaneous position
of a ratio calendar spread using "calls"
and a similar position using puts, where the striking
price of the "calls" is greater that the
striking price of the "puts".
- Ratio
Calendar Spread
- Selling more near-term options than longer-term
ones purchased, all with the same strike; either
puts or calls.
- Ratio
Spread
- Constructed with either puts or calls, the strategy
consists of buying a certain amount of options and
then selling a larger quantity of more out-of-the-money
options.
- Ratio
Strategy
- A strategy in which one has an unequal number
of long secruities and short sercurities. Normally,
it implies a preponderance of short options over
either long options or long stock.
- Ratio
writer
- An option
writer who does not own the number of shares
required to cover the call
options he or she writes.
- Rational
expectations
- The idea that people rationally anticipate the
future and respond today to what they see ahead.
This concept was pioneered by Nobel Laureate, Robert
E. Lucas, Jr.
- Raw
material
- Materials a manufacturer converts into a finished
product.
- Raw
material supply agreement
- As used in connection with project
financing, an agreement to furnish a specified
amount per period of a specified raw material.
- Reachback
- The ability of a tax shelter or limited
partnership to deduct certain costs and expenses
at the end of the year that were incurred throughout
the entire year.
- Reaction
- A decline in prices
following an advance. Opposite of rally.
- Reading
the tape
- Judging the performance of stocks
by monitoring changes in price as they are displayed
on the ticker
tape.
- Real
- Used in the context of general equities. (1) natural,
(2) not dividend
roll-or program
trading-related; (3) not tax-related. "Real"
indications
have three major repercussions: a) pricing will
be more favorable to the other side of the trade
since an investment
bank is not committing any capital; b) price
pressure will be stronger if real since a natural
buyer/seller may have
information leading to his decision or more behind
it, and c) an uptick may be required for the trader
to transact if the indication
is not real and the trader has no long
position.
- Real
assets
- Identifiable assets,
such as land and buildings, equipment, patents,
and trademarks, as distinguished from a financial
investment.
- Real
appreciation/depreciation
- A change in the purchasing power of a currency.
- Real
body
- On a candlestick line, it is the broad part consisting
of the difference between opening and closing prices.
- Real
capital
- Wealth that can be represented in financial terms,
such as savings account balances, financial securities,
and real estate.
- Real
cash flow
- Income expressed in current purchasing power terms.
- Real
Currency
- The purchasing power in today's currency
of future nominal currency to be disbursed or received.
- Real
estate
- A piece of land and whatever physical property
is on it.
- Real
estate appraisal
- An estimate of the value of property using various
methods.
- Real
estate broker
- An intermediary who receives a commission
for arranging and facilitating the sale of a property
for a buyer or a seller.
- Real
Estate Investment Trust (REIT)
- REITs invest in real estate or loans
secured by real estate and issue
shares in such
investments. A REIT is similar to a closed-end
mutual fund.
- Real
Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit (REMIC)
- A pass-through tax entity that can hold mortgages
secured by any type of real property and can issue
multiple classes
of ownership interests to investors
in the form of pass-through certificates, bonds,
or other legal forms. A financing vehicle created
under the Tax
Reform Act of 1986.
- Real
exchange rates
- Exchange rates
that have been adjusted for the inflation
differential between two countries.
- Real
gain or loss
- A gain or loss adjusted for increasing prices
by an inflation
index such as the
CPI.
- Real
GDP
- Inflation-adjusted
measure of Gross Domestic
Product.
- Real
income
- The income of an individual, group, or country
adjusted for inflation.
- Real
interest rate
- The rate of interest
excluding the effect of expected inflation;
that is, the rate that is earned in terms of constant-purchasing-power
dollars. Interest rate expressed in terms of real
goods, i.e. nominal
interest rate adjusted for expected inflation.
- Real
market
- The bid and offer
prices at which a dealer
could execute the desired quantity of shares. Quotes
in the brokers
market.
- Real
option
- An option or
option-like feature embedded in a real investment
opportunity.
- Real
property
- Land plus all other property that is in some way
attached to the land.
- Real
rate of return
- The percentage return
on some investments
that has been adjusted for inflation.
- Real
return
- The actual payback on an investment
after removing the effect of inflation.
- Real
time
- A real-time stock
or bond quote is
one that states a security's
most recent offer
to sell or bid (buy).
Different from a delayed quote, which shows the
same bid and ask prices
15 minutes and sometimes 20 minutes after a trade
takes place.
- Realistic
on price
- In trading, and indication that the size
under consideration requires
price give, especially with illiquid stocks.
See: Takes price.
- Realized
compound yield
- Yield assuming
that coupon
payments are invested at the going market
interest rate
at the time of their receipt and held thus until
the bond matures.
- Realized
profit (or loss)
- A capital gain
or loss on securities
held in a portfolio
that has become actual by the sale or other type
of surrender of one or many securities.
- Realized
return
- The return that
is actually earned over a given time period.
- Realized
yield
- The holding-period
return actually generated from an investment
in a bond.
- Realtor
- A specific designation given to members of real
estate firms affiliated with the National Association
of Realtors (NAR) who are trained and licensed to
assist clients in buying and selling real estate.
- Rebalancing
- Realigning the proportions of assets
in a portfolio
as needed.
- Rebate
- Negotiated return
of a portion of the interest earned by the lender
of stock to a short
seller. When a stock is sold short,
the seller borrows stock from an owner or custodian
and delivers it to the buyer. The proceeds are delivered
to the lender. The borrower, who is short, often
wants a rebate of the interest earned on the proceeds
under the lender's control, especially when the
stock can be borrowed from many sources. Note: The
seller must pay the lender any dividends
paid out or, in the case of bonds,
interest that accrues
daily during the term of the loan.
- Recalculation
method
- A method of calculating required minimum distributions
from a retirement plan using life expectancy tables.
Unisex data tables allow a plan holder to determine
the applicable life expectancy each year a distribution
is required.
- Recapitalization
proposal
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Plan by a target
company to restructure its capitalization (debt
and equity) in
a way to ward off a hostile or potential suitor.
- Recapture
- A provision in a contract
that allows one party to recover (recapture) some
degree of possession of an asset,
such as a share of the profits
derived from some property.
- Receipts
- Funds collected from selling land, capital, or
services, as well as collections from the public
(budget receipts), such as taxes, fines, duties,
and fees.
- Receive
fixed counterparty
- The transactor in an interest
rate swap who receives payments based on the
fixed rate and makes payments based on the floating
rate.
- Receive
floating counterparty
- The transaction in an interest
rate swap who receives payments based on the
floating rate and makes payments based on the fixed
rate.
- Receive
versus payment
- An instruction that only cash will be accepted
in exchange for delivery
of securities.
- Receivables
balance fractions
- The percentage of a month's sales that remains
uncollected (and part of accounts
receivable) at the end of succeeding months.
- Receivables
turnover ratio
- Total operating revenues divided by average receivables.
Used to measure how effectively a firm is managing
its accounts
receivable.
- Received
for Shipment Bill of Lading
- A document issued by a carrier that looks like
a bill of lading
as evidence of receipt of goods for shipment. This
type of document is issued prior to the vessel loading
and is therefore not an on board bill of lading.
- Receiver
- A bankruptcy
practitioner appointed by secured creditors to oversee
the repayment of debts.
- Receiver's
certificate
- A debt instrument
issued by a receiver and serving as a lien
on the property, which provides funding to continue
operations or to protect assets
in receivership.
- Recession
- A temporary downturn in economic activity, usually
indicated by two consecutive quarters of a falling
GDP.
- Recharacterization
- The reversal of a traditional IRA
contribution or conversion into a Roth
IRA, or vice versa.
- Reciprocal
marketing agreement
- A strategic alliance in which two companies agree
to comarket each other's products. Production rights
may or may not be transferred.
- Reclamation
- A claim for the right to return or the right to
demand the return of a security
that has been previously accepted as a result of
bad delivery
or other irregularities in the delivery and settlement
process.
- Record
date
- (1) Date by which a shareholder
must officially own shares
in order to be entitled to a dividend.
For example, a firm might declare a dividend on
Nov. 1, payable Dec. 1 to holders of record Nov.
15. Once a trade
is executed,
an investor becomes
the "owner of record" on settlement,
which currently takes five business days for securities
and one business day for mutual
funds. Stocks trade ex-dividend
the fourth day before the record date, since the
seller will still be the owner of record and is
thus entitled to the dividend. (2) The date that
determines who is entitled to payment of principal
and interest
due to be paid on a security.
The record date for most MBS is the last day of
the month, although the last day on which an MBS
may be presented for the transfer is the last business
day of the month. The record dates for CMOs
and asset-backed
securities vary with each issue.
- Recordholder
- The individual or institution listed on the Corporation's
books as a securityholder as of a specified record
date.
- Record
Owner
- The stockholder of record as distinguished from
the beneficial owner.
- Recourse
- Term describing a type of loan.
If a loan is with recourse, the lender
has a general claim against the parent company if
the collateral
is insufficient to repay the debt.
- Recovery
- The use of depreciation
of assets to offset
costs; or a new period of rising securities
prices after a period of declining security
values.
- Redemption
date
- The date on which a bond
matures or is redeemed.
- Redemption
fee
- A fee some mutual
funds charge when an investor
sells shares within
a specified short period of time.
- Redemption
price
- See: Call price
- Red
herring
- A preliminary prospectus
providing information required by the SEC.
It excludes the offering
price and the coupon
of the new issue.
- Redeemable
- Eligible for redemption under the terms of an
indenture.
- Redemption
- Repayment of a debt
security or preferred
stock issue,
at or before maturity,
at par or at a premium
price.
- Redemption
charge
- The commission
a mutual fund
charges an investor who is redeeming shares.
For example, a 2% redemption charge (also called
a back
end load) on the sale of shares valued at $1000
will result in payment of $980 (or 98% of the value)
to the investor.
This charge may decline or be eliminated as shares
are held for longer time periods.
- Redemption
cushion
- The percentage by which the conversion
value of a convertible
security exceeds the redemption price (strike
price).
- Redemption
or call
- Right of the issuer
to force holders on a certain date to redeem their
convertibles
for cash. The objective usually is to force holders
to convert into common
prior to the redemption deadline. Typically, an
issue is not called
away unless the conversion
price is 15%-25% below the current level of
the common. An exception might occur when an issuer's
tax rate is high, and the issuer could replace it
with debt securities
at a lower after-tax cost.
- Rediscount
- To discount short-term negotiable debt
instruments for a second time, after they have
been discounted with a bank.
- Red-lining
- Illegal discrimination in making loans, insurance
coverage, or other financial services available
to people or property in certain areas because of
poor economic conditions, high levels of fraudulent
transaction, or frequent defaults.
- Reduction-Option
Loan (ROL)
- A hybrid of a
fixed-rate and adjustable-rate
mortgage. An ROL the borrower
to match the current mortgage
rate, which then becomes fixed for the rest
of the term. This reduction is usually allowed if
rates drop more than 2% in a year.
- Reference
rate
- A benchmark
interest rate (such as LIBOR)
used to specify conditions of an interest
rate swap or an interest
rate agreement.
- Refinancing
- An extension and/or increase in amount of existing
debt.
- Reflation
- Government monetary action that causes a reversal
of deflation.
- Refund
- To retire existing bond
issues through the
sale of a new bond
issue, usually to
reduce the interest
rate being paid.
- Refundable
- Eligible for refunding under the terms of a bond
indenture.
- Refunded
bond
- Also called a prerefunded bond, a bond that originally
may have been issued
as a general
obligation or revenue bond
but that is now secured by an escrow fund consisting
entirely of direct U.S. government obligations that
are sufficient for paying the bondholders.
- Refunding
- Redeeming a bond
with proceeds received from issuing
lower-cost debt obligations
with ranking equal to or superior to the debt to
be redeemed.
- Refunding
Escrow Deposits (REDs)
- A financial instrument
involving a forward
purchase contract
that obligates investors
to buy bonds at a
certain rate when issued.
The future date coincides with the first optional
call date on
an existing high-rate bond.
In the interim, investors'
money is invested in secondary
market Treasury
bonds. The Treasuries mature around the call
date on the existing bonds,
providing the money to buy the new issue
and redeem the old one.
- Regional
bank
- A bank operating in a specific region of the country,
taking deposits and offering loans.
- Regional
Check Processing Center (RCPC)
- A Federal Reserve check processing operation that
clears checks drawn on depository institutions located
within a specified area. RCPCs expedite collection
and settlement of checks within the area on an overnight
basis.
- Regional
fund
- A mutual fund
that invests in a specific geographic area overseas,
such as Asia or Europe.
- Regional
stock exchanges
- Organized national securities exchanges located
outside of New York City and registered with the
SEC They include:
the Boston, Cincinnati, Intermountain (Salt Lake
City-dormant, owned by COMEX), Midwest (Chicago),
Pacific (Los Angeles and San Francisco), Philadelphia
(Philadelphia and Miami), and Spokane (local mining
and Canadian issues, non-reporting trades) Stock
Exchanges.
- Registered
bond
- A bond whose issuer
records ownership and interest
payments. Differs from a bearer
bond, which is traded without record of ownership
and whose possession is the only evidence of ownership.
- Registered
check
- A check issued and guaranteed by a bank for a
customer who provides funds for payment of the check.
- Registered
company
- A company that is listed
with the SEC after
submission of a required statement and compliance
with disclosure requirements.
- Registered
competitive market maker
- An NASD-registered
dealer who acts
as a market maker
for a designated over-the-counter
stock by buying
and selling that stock
to maintain stability.
- Registered
equity market maker
- Member firm of the American
Stock Exchange registered as a trader
to make stabilizing trades
for its own account in particular securities.
- Registered
investment adviser
- SEC-registered
individual or firm that substantiates completion
of education and work experience in the field, and
pays an annual membership fee.
- Registered
investment company
- An investment
firm which is registered with the SEC
and complies with certain stated legal requirements.
- Registered
options trader
- An American
Stock Exchange specialist
who monitors a certain group of options
to help maintain a fair and orderly market.
- Registered
Owner
- An individual or organization to whom certificates
are directly issued and who, as a result, is recorded
on the Corporation's securityholder records (as
maintained by the transfer
agent).
- Registered
Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP)
- Tax-sheltered
retirement plan for Canadian citizens, much like
an American IRA.
- Registered
representative
- A person registered with the CFTC
who is employed by and solicits business for a commission
house or futures
commission merchant.
- Registered
secondary offering
- A reoffering of a large block
of securities,
previously publicly issued,
by the holder of a large portion of some corporation
through an investment
firm.
- Registered
security
- Used in the context of general equities. Securities
whose owner's name is recorded on the books of the
issuer or the issuer's
agent, called a registrar.
- Registered
Shares
- Shares that are
issued in a shareholder's name as the holder of
record.
- Registered
trader
- A member of the exchange
who executes
frequent trades
for his or her own account.
- Registrar
- Financial institution appointed to record issue
and ownership of company securities.
- Registration
- In the securities market describes process set
up pursuant to the Securities Exchange Acts of 1933
and 1934 whereby securities
that are to be sold to the public are reviewed by
the SEC.
- Registration
statement
- A legal document filed with the SEC
to register securities for public
offering that details the purpose of the proposed
public offering. The statement outlines financial
details, a history of the company's operations and
management, and other facts of importance to potential
buyers. See: Registration.
- Regression
- A mathematical technique used to explain and/or
predict. The general form is Y = a + bX + u, where
Y is the variable that we are trying to predict;
X is the variable that we are using to predict Y,
a is the intercept; b is the slope, and u is the
regression residual. The a and b are chosen in a
way to minimize the squared sum of the residuals.
The ability to fit or explain is measured by the
R-square.
- Regression
analysis
- A statistical technique that can be used to estimate
relationships between variables.
- Regression
coefficient
- Term yielded by regression
analysis that indicates the sensitivity of the
dependent variable
to a particular independent variable. See: Parameter.
- Regression
equation
- An equation that describes the average relationship
between a dependent
variable and a set of explanatory variables.
- Regression
toward the mean
- The tendency that a random
variable will ultimately have a value closer
to its mean value.
- Regressive
tax
- A tax system that provides that average tax rates
decrease with increases in individuals' income brackets.
- Regular
settlement
- Transaction in which a stock
contract is settled
and delivered
on the fifth full business day following the date
of the transaction (trade
date). In Japan, regular settlement occurs three
business days following the trade date; in London,
two weeks following the trade date (at times, three
weeks); in France, once per month.
- Regular
way settlement
- In the money and bond
markets, the standard
basis on which some security
trades are settled
is that the delivery
of the securities purchased is made against payment
in Fed funds
on the day following the transaction.
- Regulated
commodities
- The group of registered commodity
futures and options
contracts traded
on organized U.S. futures
exchanges.
- Regulated
investment company
- An investment
company allowed to pass capital
gains, dividends,
and interest
earned on fund investments
directly to its shareholders
so that it is taxed only at the personal level,
and double taxation is avoided.
- Regulation
A
- A Federal Reserve Board regulation that exempts
small public
offerings, valued at less than $1.5MM from most
registration requirements with the SEC.
- Regulation
D
- Federal
Reserve Board regulation that currently requires
member banks to hold reserves
against their net borrowings from foreign offices
of other banks over a 28-day averaging period. Regulation
D has been merged with Regulation
M.
- Regulation
FD (fair disclosure)
- U.S. SEC regulation whose purpose is to ensure
that select groups of investors are not privy to
firm-specific information before other investors.
Executives are not allowed to reveal nonpublic information
during their communications with analysts and select
shareholders. If information is inadvertently released,
they must take steps to broaden the dissemination
of the information within 24 hours of discovering
the disclosure.
- Regulation
G
- Federal
Reserve Board regulation of lenders
other than commercial banks, brokers,
or dealers that
provide credit for the purchase of or carrying of
securities. This
regulation was discontinued by a 1998 amendment.
- Regulation
M
- Federal
Reserve Board regulation that currently requires
member banks to hold reserves
against their net borrowings from their foreign
branches over a 28-day averaging period. Reg M has
also required member banks to hold reserves
against Eurodollars
lent by their foreign branches to domestic corporations
for domestic purposes.
- Regulation
Q
- Federal
Reserve Board regulation imposing caps
on the rates that banks may pay on savings and time
deposits. Currently time
deposits with a denomination of $100,000 or
more are exempt from Reg Q.
- Regulation
T
- Federal
Reserve Board regulation that deals with granting
credit to customers by securities
brokers, dealers,
and exchange
member as far as initial
margin requirements and securities
that are covered under the rules.
- Regulation
T Calls
- Federal
Reserve Board Regulation T margin calls are
issued when a customer makes a transaction in a
margin account and does not meet the minimum initial
requirement of 50% cash or loan available. This
margin call is referred to as a Fed Call. The customer
must increase the equity in the account by depositing
additional funds and/or marginable securities. If
the necessary amount of cash or securities is not
deposited into the account within the specified
time period, securities may be sold to meet the
call, and the account may become restricted.
- Regulation
U
- Federal
Reserve Board limit on how much credit a bank
can allow a customer for the purchase and carrying
of margin securities.
- Regulations
- Rules specifying the appropriate behavior of agencies,
organizations or individuals in the securities industry.
- Regulatory
accounting procedures (RAP)
- Accounting principles required by the FHLB
that allow S&Ls
to elect annually to defer gains and losses on the
sale of assets and
amortize
these deferrals over the average life of the asset
sold.
- Regulatory
pricing risk
- Risk that arises
when insurance companies are subject to regulation
of the premium
rates that can they charge.
- Regulatory
surplus
- The surplus as measured using regulatory
accounting principles (RAP), which may allow
the nonmarket valuation of assets
or liabilities
and which may be materially different from economic
surplus.
- Rehypothecation
- Pledging to banks by securities
brokers of the
amount in customers' margin
account as collateral
for broker loans,
which are used to cover margin
loans to customers for margin
purchases and selling short.
- Reimbursement
- Payment made to someone for out-of-pocket expenses
has incurred.
- Reinstatement
- The restoration of an insurance
policy after it has lapsed for nonpayment of
premiums.
- Reinsurance
- The spreading of risk
and division of client premiums
among insurance companies allowing the sharing of
the burden of a large risk.
- Reinvestment
- Use of investment
income to buy additional securities.
Many mutual fund
companies and investment services offer the automatic
reinvestment of dividends
and capital gains
distributions
as an option investors.
- Reinvestment
date
- The date on which an investment's dividend
or capital gains
income is reinvested, if requested by the shareholder,
to purchase additional shares.
Also known as the ex-dividend
date.
- Reinvestment
effect
- The impact of a change in interest rates on the
reinvestment
rate.
- Reinvestment
privilege
- A shareholder's
right to reinvest dividends
and buy more shares
in the corporation or mutual
fund.
- Reinvestment
rate
- The rate at which an investor
assumes interest
payments made on a debt
security can
be reinvested
over the life of that security.
- Reinvestment
risk
- The risk that proceeds
received in the future may have to be reinvested
at a lower potential interest
rate.
- Reinvoicing
center
- A central financial subsidiary
an MNC
uses to reduce transaction exposure by billing all
home country exports in the home currency
and reinvoicing to each operating affiliate in that
affiliate's local currency. It can also be used
as a netting center.
- Rejection
- Refusal by a bank to grant credit, usually because
of the applicants financial history, or refusal
to accept a security
presented to complete a trade,
usually because of a lack of proper endorsements
or violation of rules of a firm.
- Relative
form of purchasing power parity
- Theory that the rate of change in the prices of
products should be somewhat similar, but not absolutely
the same when measured in a common currency, as
long as transportation costs and trade barriers
are unchanged.
- Relative
purchasing power parity (RPPP)
- Idea that the rate of change in the price level
of commodities
in one country relative to the price level in another
determines the rate of change of the exchange
rate between the two countries' currencies.
- Relative
strength
- Movement of a stock
price over the past year as compared to a market
index (like the S&P
500). A value below 1.0 means the stock shows relative
weakness in price movement (underperformed the market);
a value above 1.0 means the stock shows relative strength over the one-year period.
Equation for Relative Strength: [current stock price/year-ago
stock price] divided by [current S&P 500/year-ago
S&P 500]. Note this can be a misleading indicator
of performance because it does not take risk
into account.
- Relative
value
- The attractiveness measured in terms of risk,
liquidity, and
return of one instrument
relative to another, or, for a given instrument,
of one maturity
relative to another.
- Relative
yield spread
- The ratio of the yield
spread to the yield level. Used for bonds.
- Release
- Relieve party to a trade
of any previously made obligation concerning that
trade, hence allowing the would-be transactor to
show the inquiry/order
to a new broker.
- Release
clause
- A mortgage
provision that releases a pledged asset
after a certain portion of the total payments has
been made.
- Reload
Stock Option
- A replacement stock
option granted by some companies to optionees
upon a stock swap. The number of reload shares granted
is equal to the number of shares delivered to exercise
the option plus, in some cases, any shares withheld
for tax withholding obligations. The exercise price
of the new option is the current market
price. The option generally expires on the same
date that the original option would have.
- Remainderman
- One who receives the principal
of a trust when it is dissolved.
- Remaining
maturity
- The length of time remaining until a bond
comes due
- Remaining
principal balance
- The amount of principal
dollars remaining to be paid under a mortgage
as of a given time.
- Remargining
- Putting up additional cash or securities
after a margin
call on a brokerage customer's margin
account so that it meets minimum maintenance
requirements.
- Rembrandt
market
- The foreign
market in the Netherlands.
- Remit
- To pay for purchases by cash, check, or electronic
transfer.
- Remote
disbursement
- Technique that involves writing checks drawn on
banks in remote locations so as to maximize disbursement
float.
- Renegotiable
rate
- A type of variable rate involving a renewable
short-term "balloon" note. The interest
rate on the loan is generally fixed during the term
of the note, but when the balloon comes due, the
lender may refinance it at a higher rate. In order
for the loan to be fully amortized, periodic refinancing
may be necessary.
- Renewal
- Placement of a day order identical to one not
completed on the previous day.
- Renewable
term life insurance
- A policy for a stated period that may be renewed
if desired at the end of the term.
- Rent
- Regular payments to an owner for the use of some
leased property.
- Rental
lease
- See: Full-service
lease
- Rent
control
- Municipal regulation restricting the amount of
rent that a building owner can charge.
- Reoffering
yield
- In a purchase and sale, the yield
to maturity at which an underwriter
offers to sell bonds
to investors.
- Reopen
an issue
- The Treasury,
when it wants to sell additional securities,
will occasionally sell more of an existing issue
(reopen it) rather than offer
a new issue.
- Reopening
- Treasury offerings of additional amounts of outstanding
issues, rather than
an entirely new issue. A reopened issue will always
have the same maturity
date, CUSIP
number, and interest
rate as the original issue.
- Reorg
(or Corporate Action or Reorganization)
- Any transaction
involving the issuance of stock
or cash, or the cancellation
of stock tendered by a shareholder, such as in the
case of a merger,
acquisition or tender
offer.
- Reorganization
- Creation of a plan to restructure a debtor's
business and restore its financial health.
- Reorganization
bond
- A bond issued
by a company undergoing a reorganization process.
- Repatriation
- The return from
abroad of the financial assets
of an organization or individual.
- Replacement
Chain
- A concept that views a capital
investment as an indefinite commitment to a
specific type of technology. The replacement chain
concept can be used to allow the comparison of mutually
exclusive investments
with unequal lives.
- Replacement
cost
- Cost to replace a firm's assets.
- Replacement
cost accounting
- An accounting method that includes as part of
depreciation
the difference between the original purchase price
of an asset and
the current replacement cost.
- Replacement
cost insurance
- Insurance
that pays out the full amount required to replace
damaged property with new property, without taking
into account the depreciated
value of the property.
- Replacement
cycle
- The frequency with which an asset
is replaced by an equivalent asset.
- Replacement
value
- Current cost of replacing the firm's assets.
- Replacement-chain
problem
- Idea that future replacement decisions must be
taken into account in selecting among projects.
- Replicating
portfolio
- A portfolio
constructed to match an index
or benchmark.
- Repo
- An agreement in which one party sells a security
to another party and agrees to repurchase it on
a specified date for a specified price. See: Repurchase
agreement.
- Report
- Written or oral confirmation that all or part
of one's order has
been executed,
including the price and size parameters of the trade
being reported; often followed by a fresh
picture.
- Report
of Condition and Income
- Financial report that all banks, bank holding
companies, savings, and loan associations, Edge
Act and agreement corporations, and certain other
types of organizations must file with a federal
regulatory agency. Informally termed a call report.
- Reported
factor
- The pool factor
as reported by the bond
buyer for a given amortization
period.
- Reporting
currency
- The currency
in which the parent firm prepares its own financial
statements; that is, US dollars for a US company.
- Repricing
- To change the price of an asset. In derivatives,
it sometimes refers to the exchange of options of
with different strike prices.
- Reproducible
assets
- A tangible
asset with physical properties that can be matched
or duplicated, such as a building or machinery.
- Repurchase
agreement
- An agreement with a commitment
by the seller (dealer)
to buy a security
back from the purchaser (customer) at a specified
price at a designated future date. Also called a
repo, it represents
a collateralized short-term loan for which, where
the collateral
may be a Treasury
security, money
market instrument,
federal agency security, or mortgage-backed security.
From the purchaser's (customer's) perspective, the
deal is reported as a reverse
repo.
- Repurchase
of stock
- Technique to pay cash to firm's shareholders
that provides more preferential tax treatment for
shareholders than dividends.
Treasury stock
is the name given to previously issued
stock that has been repurchased by the firm. A repurchase
is achieved through either a Dutch
auction, open market, purchase,
or tender offer.
- Required
minimum distribution (RMD)
- The minimum amount that the IRS
requires must be withdrawn each year from all tax-advantaged
retirement plans starting in the calendar year following
the year in which the plan holder reaches age 70-1/2.
Roth IRAs are
exempt from this rule.
- Required
Rate of Return (RRR)
- The minimum expected yield by investors
require in order to select a particular investment.
- Required
reserves
- The dollar amounts, based on reserve
ratios, that banks are required to keep on deposit
at a Federal
Reserve Bank.
- Required
return
- The minimum expected
return you would need in order to purchase an
asset, that is,
to make the investment.
- Required
yield
- Generally referring to bonds;
the yield required
by the marketplace to match available expected
returns for financial instruments
with comparable risk.
- Rescaled
Range (R/S) Analysis
- The analysis developed by H.E. Hurst to determine
long-memory effects and fractional
Brownian motion. Rescaled range analysis measures
how the distance covered by a particle increases
as we look at longer and longer time scales. For
Brownian motion, the distance covered increases
with the square root of time. A series which increases at a different rate is not
random. See: Anti-persistence,
Fractional Brownian Motion,
Hurst Exponent,
Persistence, Joseph Effect, Noah Effect.
- Rescheduled
loans
- Bank loans that are usually altered to have longer
maturities in
order to assist the borrower
in making the necessary repayments.
- Rescind
- To cancel a contract
because of misrepresentation, fraud, or illegal
procedure.
- Research
and development (R"D)>
- Development of new products and services by a
company in order to obtain a competitive advantage.
- Research
and development limited partnership
- A partnership whose investors
put up money to finance new product R&D in return
for profits generated
from the products.
- Research
department
- The office in an institutional
investing organizations that analyzes markets
and securities.
- Research
portable
- Service offered to clients that transmits investment
bank research electronically by computers.
- Reserve
- An accounting entry that properly reflects contingent
liabilities.
- Reserve
currency
- A foreign
currency held by a central bank or monetary
authority for the purposes of exchange intervention
and the settlement of intergovernmental claims.
- Reserve
ratios
- Specified percentages of deposits, established
by the Federal
Reserve Board, that banks must keep in a noninterest-bearing
account at one of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks.
- Reserve
requirements
- The percentage of different types of deposits
that member banks are required to hold on deposit
at the Fed.
- Reservation
price
- The price below or above which a seller or purchaser
is unwilling to go.
- Reset
bonds
- Bonds that allow
the initial interest
rates to be adjusted on specific dates in order
that the bonds trade
at the value they had when they were issued.
- Reset
frequency
- The frequency with which the floating
rate changes.
- Residential
mortgage
- Mortgage on
a residential property, tax-deductible for individuals
up to $1 million.
- Residential
property
- Property that consists of homes, apartments, townhouses,
and condominiums.
- Residual
assets
- Assets that remain
after sufficient assets are dedicated to meet all
senior debtholders'
claims in full.
- Residual
claim
- Related: Equity
claim
- Residual
dividend approach
- An approach that suggests that a firm pay dividends
if and only if acceptable investment opportunities
for those funds are currently unavailable.
- Residual
method
- A method of allocating the purchase
price for the acquisition
of another firm among the acquired
assets.
- Residual
Return
- Return independent
of the benchmark. The residual return is the return
relative to beta
times the benchmark return. To be exact, an asset's
residual return equals its excess return minus beta times the benchmark excess return.
- Residual
risk
- Related: Unsystematic
risk
- Residuals
- (1) Part of stock
returns not explained
by the explanatory variable
(the market index return). Residuals measure the
impact of firm-specific
events during a particular period. (2) Remainder
cash flows generated
by pool collateral
and those needed to fund bonds
supported by the collateral.
- Residual
value
- Usually refers to the value of a lessor's
property at the time the lease
expires.
- Resiliency
- Speed with which new orders respond to a change
in prices.
- Resistance
- An effective upper bound on prices achieved because
of many willing sellers at that price level.
- Resistance
level
- A price level above which it is supposedly difficult
for a security
or market to rise.
Price ceiling at which technical
analysts note persistent selling of a commodity
or security.
Antithesis of support
level.
- Resolution
- A document that records a decision or action by
a board of directors, or a bond
resolution by a government entity authorizing a
bond issue.
- Resolution
Funding Corporation (RefCorp)
- A government agency established by Congress in
1989 to issue bailout bonds
and raise funds for the activities of the Resolution
Trust Corporation, as well as to administer
struggling institutions inherited from the disbanded
Federal
Savings and Loan Corporation.
- Resolution
Trust Corporation (RTC)
- A government agency established in 1989 and disbanded
in 1996 that administered federal
savings and loan institutions that were insolvent
between 1989 and August 1992 by either bailing them
out or merging them.
- Restricted
- Placed on a list that dictates that the trader
may not maintain positions,
solicit business, or provide indications
in a stock, but
may serve as broker
in agency trades
after being properly cleared. Traders are so restricted
due to investment
bank involvement with the company on nonpublic
activity (i.e., mergers
and acquisitions
defense), affiliate ownership, or underwriting
activities; signified on the Quotron by a flashing
"R." A restricted list and the stocks
on it should never be conveyed to anyone outside
of the trading areas, much less outside the firm.
See: Grey list.
- Restricted
account
- A margin
account without enough equity
to meet the initial
margin requirement that is restricted from any
purchases until the requirement is fulfilled.
- Restricted
Securities
- The term used under Rule
144 for securities
issued privately by the company, without the benefit
of a registration statement. Restricted securities
are subject to a holding period before they can
be sold under Rule 144.
- Restricted
surplus
- A portion of retained earnings not allowed by
law to be used for the payment of dividends.
- Restricted
stock
- Stock that must
be traded in compliance
with special SEC
regulations concerning its purchase and resale.
These restrictions generally result from affiliate
ownership, M&A
activity, and underwriting
activity.
- Restricted
Stock Award
- Grants of shares
of stock subject
to restrictions on sale and risk of forfeiture until
vested by continued employment. Restricted stock
typically vests in increments over a period of several
years. Dividends or dividend equivalent rights may
be paid, and award holders may have voting rights,
during the restricted period.
- Restrictive
covenants
- Provisions that place constraints on the operations
of borrowers, such as restrictions on working
capital, fixed
assets, future borrowing, and payment of dividends.
- Restrictive
endorsement
- An endorsement signature on the back of a check
that specifies the conditions under which the check
can be transferred or paid out.
- Restructuring
- The reorganization of a company in order to attain
greater efficiency and to adapt to new markets.
Major corporate restructuring transactions include
mergers, acquisitions, tender offers, leveraged
buyouts, divestitures, spin-offs, equity carve-outs,
liquidations and reorganizations.
- Resyndication
limited partnership
- The sale of existing properties to new limited
partners, so that they can receive the tax advantages
that are no longer available to the old partners.
- Retail
- Individual and institutional customers as opposed
to dealers and
brokers.
- Retail
credit
- Credit granted
by a firm to consumers for the purchase
of goods or services. See: consumer
credit.
- Retail
house
- A brokerage firm that caters to individual customers
rather than large institutions.
- Retail
investors
- Small individual investors
who commit capital for their personal account rather
than on behalf of another company.
- Retail
price
- The total price charged for a product sold to
a customer, which includes the manufacturer's cost
plus a retail markup.
- Retained
earnings
- Accounting earnings
that are retained by the firm for reinvestment
in its operations; earnings that are not paid out
as dividends.
- Retained
earnings statement
- A statement of all transactions
affecting the balance of a company's retained earnings
account.
- Retention
- The number of units allocated to an underwriting
syndicate member less the units held back by
the syndicate
manager for facilitating institutional sales
and for allocation to nonmember firms.
- Retention
rate
- The percentage of present earnings
held back or retained by a corporation, or one minus
the dividend
payout rate. Also called the retention
ratio.
- Retire
- To extinguish a security,
as in paying off a debt.
- Retirement
- Removal from circulation of stock
or bonds that have
been reacquired or redeemed.
- Retirement
Protection Act of 1994
- Legislation designed to protect the pension benefits
of workers and retirees by increasing required support
of pension plans
by employers.
- Retracement
- A price movement in the opposite direction of
the previous trend.
- Return
- The change in the value of a portfolio
over an evaluation period, including any distributions
made from the portfolio
during that period.
- Return
if Exercised
- The return that a covered call writer would make
if the underlying stock were called away.
- Return
of capital
- A cash distribution resulting from the sale of
a capital asset,
or securities,
or tax breaks from depreciation.
- Return
on assets (ROA)
- Indicator of profitability.
Determined by dividing net
income for the past 12 months by total average
assets. Result is
shown as a percentage. ROA can be decomposed into
return on sales (net income/sales) multiplied by
asset utilization (sales/assets).
- Return
on capital employed (ROCE)
- Indicator of profitability
of the firm's capital investments. Determined by
dividing Earnings
Before Interest and Taxes by (capital employed
plus short-term loans minus intangible assets).
The idea is that this ratio should at least be greater
than the cost of borrowing.
- Return
on equity (ROE)
- Indicator of profitability.
Determined by dividing net
income for the past 12 months by common
stockholder
equity (adjusted for stock splits). Result is
shown as a percentage. Investors use ROE as a measure
of how a company is using its money. ROE may be
decomposed into return
on assets (ROA) multiplied by financial leverage
(total assets/total equity).
- Return
on investment (ROI)
- Generally, book income as a proportion of net
book value.
- Return
on sales
- A measurement of operational efficiency equaling
net pre-tax profits
divided by net sales expressed as a percentage.
- Return
on total assets
- The ratio of earnings
available to common
stockholders
to total assets.
- Return-to-maturity
expectations
- A variant of pure
expectations theory that suggests that the return
an investor will
realize by rolling over short-term bonds
to some investment horizon will be the same as holding
a zero-coupon
bond with a maturity
that is the same as that investment horizon.
- Reuters
- International news and quotation
service based in London.
- Revaluation
- An increase in the foreign
exchange value of a currency that is pegged
to other currencies or gold.
- Reversal
Arbitrage
- A riskless arbitrage that involves selling the
stock short, writing a put, and buying a call. The
options have the same terms.
- Revenue
Anticipation Note (RAN)
- A short-term municipal debt
issue that will
be repaid with anticipated revenues, such as sales
taxes, from the project.
- Revenue
bond
- A bond issued
by a municipality to finance either a project or
an enterprise in which the issuer
pledges to the bondholders
the revenues generated by the operation of the projects
financed. Examples are hospital revenue bonds and
sewer revenue bonds.
- Revenue
fund
- A fund accounting for all revenues from an enterprise
financed by a municipal
revenue bond.
- Revenue
Reconciliation Act of 1993
- Legislation created to reduce the federal budget
deficit by cutting spending and increasing taxes.
- Revenue
sharing
- The percentage split between the general partner
and limited
partners of profits
and losses resulting from the operation of the involved
business.
- Reversal
- Turn, unwind.
For convertible reversal, selling a convertible
and buying the underlying
common,
usually effected by an arbitrageur.
For market reversal, change in direction in the
stock or commodity
futures markets, as charted by technical
analysts in trading ranges. For options reversal,
closing the
positions of each aspect of an options spread
or combination
strategy.
- Reverse
a swap
- Reswap of bonds
to gain the advantage of a yield
spread or tax loss and restore a bond
portfolio to
its position
before the original swap.
- Reverse
conversion
- A technique in which brokerage firms earn interest
on the stocks they
hold for their customers by selling the short
and investing the proceeds in money
market accounts. The short
positions are hedged
to protect against adverse market
conditions.
- Reverse
leverage
- Occurs when the interest
on borrowings exceeds
the return on investment
of the funds that were borrowed.
- Reverse
leveraged buyout
- Bringing back into publicly traded
status a company that had been privatized by way
of a leveraged
buyout.
- Reverse
mortgage
- A mortgage
agreement allowing a homeowner to borrow
against home equity
and receive tax-free payments until the total principal
and interest
reach the credit limit of equity,
and the lender is either repaid in full or takes
the house.
- Reverse
price risk
- A type of mortgage
pipeline risk that occurs when a lender
commits to sell loans
to an investor
at rates prevailing at the time of mortgage application
but sets the note
rates when the borrowers closes. The lender is thus
exposed to the risk of falling rates.
- Reverse
repo
- In essence, refers to a repurchase
agreement. From the customer's perspective,
the customer provides a collateralized
loan to the seller.
- Reverse
stock split
- A proportionate decrease in the number of shares,
but not the total value of shares
of stock held by
shareholders.
Shareholders maintain the same percentage of equity
as before the split.
For example, a 1-for-3 split would result in stockholders
owning one share for every three shares owned before
the split. After the reverse split, the firm's stock
price is, in this example, three times the pre-reverse
split price. A firm generally institutes a reverse
split to boost its stock's market
price. Some think this supposedly attracts investors.
- Reversing
trade
- Entering the opposite side of a currently held
futures position
to close
out the position.
- Revised
estimate
- The third estimate of GDP
released about three months after the measurement
period.
- Revisionary
trust
- An irrevocable trust that becomes a revocable
trust after a certain amount of time.
- Revocable
letter of credit
- Assurance of funds issued by a bank that can be
canceled at any time without prior notification
to the beneficiary.
- Revocable
trust
- A trust that may
altered as many times as desired in which income-producing
property passes directly to the beneficiaries at
the time of the grantor's death. Since the arrangement
can be altered at any time, the assets
are considered part of the grantor's estate and
they are taxed as such.
- Revolving
credit agreement
- A legal commitment in which a bank promises to
lend a customer up
to a specified maximum amount during a specified
period.
- Revolving
line of credit
- A bank line
of credit on which the customer pays a commitment
fee and can take and repay funds at will. Normally
a revolving LOC involves a firm commitment from
the bank for a period of several years.
- Reward-to-volatility
ratio
- Ratio of excess
return to portfolio
standard
deviation.
- Rich
- Term for a security
whose price seems too high in light of its price
history.
- RICO
- Stands for Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization
Act. Legislation under/which inside
traders may be convicted.
- Rider
- A form accompanying an insurance
policy that alters the policy's terms or coverage.
- Riding
the yield curve
- Buying long-term bonds
in anticipation of capital
gains as yields
fall with the declining maturity
of the bonds.
- Riegle-Neal
Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act
of 1994
- Law permitting interstate banking in the US
- Rigged
market
- Manipulation of prices in a market
to attract buyers and sellers.
- Right
- Privilege granted shareholders
of a corporation to subscribe to shares
of a new issue of
common stock
before it is offered
to the public. Such a right, which normally has
a life of two to four weeks, is freely transferable
and entitles the holder to buy
the new common stock below the public
offering price. See: Warrant.
- Right
here
- Used in the context of general equities. In-line,
emphasizing that this is a customer inquiry
that is ready to be executed and not distant on
price. See: Tight.
- Rights
offering
- Issuance to shareholders
that allows them to purchase additional shares,
usually at a discount
to market price.
Holdings of shareholders who do not exercise
rights are usually diluted by the offering.
Rights are often transferable, allowing the holder
to sell them on the open market
to others who may wish to exercise them. Rights
offerings are particularly common to closed-end
funds, which cannot otherwise issue
additional common
stock.
- Right
of first refusal
- The right of a person or company to purchase some
thing before the offering is made to others.
- Right
of redemption
- The right to recover property that has been attached
by paying off the debt
.
- Right
of rescission
- The right to void a contract
without any penalty within three days as provided
in the Consumer Credit Protection Act of 1968.
- Rights
Agreement (aka "Poison Pill")
- An anti-takeover
arrangement often established by a company in anticipation
of a hostile
takeover attempt. The company appoints a Rights
Agent who will issue Rights certificates to each
shareholder at the time of the takeover attempt.
The shareholder may then exercise
these rights to receive additional shares of stock
and/or debentures,
making the target
company more expensive to acquire as a result
of the additional shares outstanding,
or the additional debt.
- Rights
Offering
- A popular means of raising capital by offering
shareholders the opportunity to buy additional shares
of the same stock
at a price below the current market value.
- Rights-on
- Shares trading
with rights attached
to them.
- Rights
of set-off
- An agreement defining each party's rights should
one party default
on its obligation. A setoff is common in parallel
loan arrangements.
- Rings
- Trading arenas
located on the floor of an exchange
in which traders
execute orders.
Sometimes called a pit.
- "Ring
the cash register"
- Used in the context of general equities. "Take
a profit." See: Profit
taking.
- Rio
de Janeiro Stock Exchange (Bolsa do Rio)
- Brazil's major securities market.
- Rising
bottoms
- Chart pattern
showing an increasing trend
in the daily low prices of a security
or commodity.
- Risk
- Often defined as the standard
deviation of the return
on total investment. Degree of uncertainty of return
on an asset. In
context of asset
pricing theory. See: Systematic
risk.
- Risk-adjusted
discount rate
- The rate established by adding a expected risk
premium to the risk-free rate in order to determine
the present value of a risky
investment.
- Risk-adjusted
profitability
- A probability
used to determine a "sure" expected
value (sometimes called a certainty
equivalent) that would be equivalent to the
actual risky expected
value.
- Risk-adjusted
return
- Often we subtract from the rate
of return on an asset
a rate of return from another asset that has similar
risk. This gives
an abnormal rate of return that shows how the asset
performed over and above a benchmark
asset with the same risk. We can also use the beta
against the benchmark
to calculate an alpha,
which is also risk-adjusted performance.
- Risk
arbitrage
- Traditionally, the simultaneous purchase of stock
in a company being acquired and the sale of stock
of the acquirer. Modern risk arbitrage focuses on
capturing the spreads between the market
value of an announced takeover
target
and the eventual price at which the acquirer will
buy the target's shares.
- Risk-averse
- Describes an investor
who, when faced with two investments with the same
expected return
but different risks,
prefers the one with the lower risk.
- Risk-based
capital ratio
- Bank requirement that there be a minimum ratio
of estimated total capital
to estimated risk-weighted
asset.
- Risk
classes
- Groups of projects that have approximately the
same amount of risk.
- Risk
controlled arbitrage
- A self-funding, self-hedged
series of transactions that generally use mortgage
securities (MBS) as the primary assets.
- Risk
factor
- In arbitrage
pricing theory or the multibeta capital asset
pricing model, the set of common factors
that impact returns,
e.g., market return, interest
rates, inflation,
or industrial production.
- Risk-Free
Interest Rate
- Describes return
available to an investor
in a security
somehow guaranteed to produce that return. The risk-free
interest rate
compensates the investor
for the temporary sacrifice of consumption.
- Risk
indexes
- Categories of risk
used to calculate fundamental
beta, including (1) market
variability, (2) earnings
variability, (3) low valuation, (4) immaturity and
smallness, (5) growth orientation, and (6) financial
risk.
- Risk
profile
- The slope of a line graphed according to the value
of an underlying
asset on the x-axis and the value of a position
exposed to risk in
the underlying
asset on the y-axis. Also used with changes
in value. See: Payoff
profile.
- Risk-return
trade-off
- The tendency for potential risk
to vary directly with potential return,
so that the more risk involved, the greater the
potential return, and vice versa.
- Risk
tolerance
- An investor's
ability or willingness to accept declines in the
prices of investments while waiting for them to
increase in value.
- Riskless
arbitrage
- The simultaneous purchase and sale of the same
asset to yield
a profit.
- Riskless
or risk-free asset
- An asset whose
future return is
known today with certainty. The risk-free
asset is commonly defined as short-term obligations
of the US government.
- Riskless
rate
- The rate earned on a riskless investment, typically
the rate earned on the 90-day US
Treasury Bill.
- Riskless
rate of return
- The rate earned on a riskless asset.
- Riskless
transaction
- A transaction
that is guaranteed a profit,
such as the arbitrage
of a temporary differential between commodity
prices in two different markets.
The evaluation of whether dealer
markups and markdowns in OTC
transactions
are reasonable. According to NASD,
markups or markdowns should not exceed 5%.
- Risk
lover
- A person willing to accept lower expected
returns on prospects with higher amounts of
risk.
- Risk
management
- The process of identifying and evaluating risks
and selecting and managing techniques to adapt to
risk exposures.
- Risk-neutral
- Insensitive to risk.
- Risk-prone
- Willing to pay money to assume risk
from others.
- Risk
premium
- The reward for holding the risky
equity market
portfolio rather than the risk-free
asset. The spread
between Treasury and non-Treasury bonds of comparable
maturity.
- Risk
premium approach
- A common approach for tactical asset
allocation to determine the relative valuation of
asset classes
based on expected
returns.
- Risk
profile
- A mapping of the change in value or profits
and losses to which an organization has exposure.
- Risk-return
tradeoff
- The basic concept that higher expected returns
accompany greater risk,
and vice versa.
- Risk-reward
ratio
- Relationship of substantial reward corresponding
to the amount of risk
taken; mathematically represented by dividing the
expected return
by the standard
deviation.
- Risk
seeker
- Investor who likes to take risk
and is even willing to pay for it. Also called risk
lover.
- Risk
transfer
- The shifting of risk
through insurance or securitization of debt
because of risk aversion.
- Risky
asset
- An asset whose
future return is
uncertain.
- Risk-adjusted
return
- Return earned
on an asset normalized
for the amount of risk
associated with that asset.
- Risk-free
asset
- An asset whose
future normal return
is known today with certainty.
- Risk-free
rate
- The rate earned on a riskless
asset.
- Road
show
- A promotional presentation by an issuer
of securities
to potential buyers about the desirable qualities
of the investments.
- Rotation
- An active asset management strategy that tactically
overweighted and underweighted certain sectors,
depending on expected performance. Sometimes called
sector rotation.
- Rocket
scientist
- An employee of an investment
firm (often having a Ph.D. in physics or mathematics)
that works on highly mathmatic models of derivative
pricing.
- Roll
down
- To move to an option
position with
a lower exercise
price.
- Roll
forward
- To move to an option
position with
a later expiration
date.
- Roll,
Richard
- Author of path-breaking work on asset pricing
including the famous Roll critique. Finance professor
at UCLA.
- Roll
order
- (1) Dividend
roll; (2) Replacement of a maturing position
with an identical one in the new maturity;
(3) Recognizition of capital
gain or loss while reestablishing the position
at the risk of the
market.
- Roll
over
- To reinvest funds received from a maturing
security in a
new issue of the
same or a similar security.
- Roll
up
- To move to an option
position with
a higher exercise
price. In venture capital, refers to the venture
capitalist forcing small firms to merge operations
in order to reduce costs
- Rolling
of Futures
- As financial
futures have short-term
maturities, often 3-9 months, before or at maturity, the future must be sold and a new future (for the same asset but with a new maturity) must be repurchased.
- Rollover
- Means that a loan is periodically repriced at
an agreed spread
over the appropriate, currently prevailing rate.
Most term loans
in the Euromarket are made on a rollover basis as
to current LIBOR
rate.
- Rollover
IRA
- A traditional individual retirement account holding
money from a qualified plan or 403(b) plan. These
assets, as long
as they are not mixed with other contributions,
can later be rolled over to another qualified plan
or 403(b) plan. Also known as a conduit IRA.
- Roll's
Critique
- That the CAPM
holds by construction when performance
is measured against a mean-variance
efficient index; otherwise, it holds not at
all. Attributable to Richard
Roll in 1977.
- Ross,
Stephen
- Developer of the Arbitrage Pricing Theory. Finance
professor at MIT.
- Roth
IRA
- Individual
Retirement Account that allows contributors
to invest up to $2,000 per year, and to withdraw
the principal
and earnings totally tax-free under certain conditions.
- Round
lot
- A trading order
typically of 100 shares
of a stock or some
multiple of 100. Related: odd
lot.
- Round-trip
trade
- The purchase and sale of a security
within a short period of time.
- Round-trip
transactions costs
- Costs of completing a transaction, including commissions,
market impact costs,
and taxes.
- Round-turn
- Procedure by which the long
or short position
of an individual is offset
by an opposite transaction or by accepting or making
delivery of the
actual financial instrument
or physical commodity.
- Royalty
- Payment for the right to use intellectual property
or natural resources.
- Rubber
check
- A check that bounces for lack of funds.
- R
square (R2)
- Square of the correlation
coefficient. The proportion of the variability
in one series that
can be explained by the variability of one or more
other series a regression model. A measure of the
quality of fit. 100% R-square means perfect predictability.
- Rule
lOb-5
- An SEC rule that
prohibits trading by insiders on material nonpublic
information. This is also the rule under which a
company may be sued for false or misleading disclosure.
- Rule
13-d
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Requirement under
Section 13-d of the Securities Act of 1934 that
a form must be filed with the SEC within ten business
days of acquiring direct or beneficial
ownership of 5% or more of any class
of equity securities in a publicly held corporation.
The purchaser of such stock
must also file a 13-d with the stock
exchange on which the shares
are listed (if any) and the company itself. Required
information includes the way the shares were acquired,
the purchaser's background, and future plans regarding
the target
company. The law is designed to protect against
insidious takeover
attempts and to keep the investing public aware
of information that could affect the price of their
stock. See: Williams
Act.
- Rule
14-d
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Regulations and
restrictions covering public tender offers and related
disclosure requirements.
- Rule
144
- Restricts solicitation of buyers to complete the
sell order of an
insider (unless
the firm is already a buyer); signified by a flashing
"E" on Quotron.
- Rule
144a
- SEC rule allowing
qualified institutional buyers to buy
and trade unregistered
securities.
- Rule
405
- NYSE codification
of "know your customer" rules, which require
that a customer's situation is suitable for any
investment
being made.
- Rule
415
- Permits corporations to file a registration
for securities
they intend to issue
in the future when market
conditions are favorable. See: Shelf
registration.
- Rule
of Absolute Priority
- A condition of bankruptcy
proceedings under which junior (subordinated) claim
holders can receive no payment until senior (priority)
claim holders are paid in full.
- Rule
of 72
- A formula used to determine the amount of time
it will take for invested money to double at a given
compound interest
rate, which is 72 divided by the interest rate.
- Rules
of fair practice
- Rules established by the NASD
that lay down guidelines for just and equitable
principles of trade
and business in securities
markets.
- Rumortrage
- A term combining the words "rumor" and
arbitrage, used
to describe trading
that occurs on the basis of rumors of a takeover.
- Rump
- Usually used in the context of a merger or acquisition.
A group of shareholders who refuse to tender their
shares for a merger or acquisition. In a merger
of Company A and Company B for example, if a sufficient
number of Company B shareholders do not tender their
shares, the new company will not be able to access
the cash flows of Company B.
- Run
- A run consists of a series
of bid and offer
quotes for different securities
or maturities.
Dealers give and
ask for runs from each other.
- Rundown
- A summary of the amount and prices of a serial
bond issue that
is still available for purchase.
- Running
ahead
- The illegal practice of trading
in a security
for a broker's
personal account before placing an order
for the same security
for a customer.
- Runoff
- Used for listed equity securities. Series
of trades printed
on the ticker
tape that occur on the NYSE
before 4:00 p.m., but are not reported until afterwards
due to heavy trading
that makes the tape late.
- Russell
Indexes
- US equity index
widely used by pension and mutual
fund investors
that are weighted by market
capitalization and published by the Frank Russell
Company of Tacoma, Washington. For example, the
Russell 3000 index
includes the 3,000 largest US companies according
to market capitalization.
- Russell
1000
- A market
capitalization-weighted benchmark
index made up of
the 1000 highest-ranking US stocks
in the Russell
3000.
- Russell
2000
- A market
capitalization-weighted benchmark
index made up of
the 2000 smallest US companies in the Russell
3000.
- Russell
3000
- A market
capitalization-weighted benchmark
index made up of
the 3000 largest US stocks,
which represent about 98% of the US equity
market.
- Russian
Exchange
- Russia's major securities market.
- Russian
Trading System (RTS)
- An electronic system in Russia, like the Nasdaq
system on which the majority of Russian equities
trading is conducted.
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Campbell
R. Harvey's Hypertextual Finance Glossary
Copyright © 2007. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. Do not reproduce without explicit
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