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Glossary
- UA
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for UKRAINE.
- UAH
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Ukraine Hryvnia.
- UG
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for UGANDA.
- UGX
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Uganda Shilling.
- UM
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for UNITED STATES MINOR OUTLYING
ISLANDS.
- US
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for UNITED STATES.
- USD
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the USA Dollar.
- UY
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for URUGUAY.
- UYU
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Uruguay Peso Uruguayo.
- UZ
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for UZBEKISTAN.
- UZS
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Uzbekistan Sum.
- Ultra
vires activities
- Corporate actions and operations that are not
sanctioned by corporate charter, sometimes leading
to shareholder
lawsuits.
- Ultradot
- Applies to derivative products. Firm proprietary
software that stores, and sends baskets
of stock through
SEAQ to either
the NYSE
or the curb for program
trading.
- Ultra-short-term
bond fund
- A mutual fund
that invests in bonds
with very short maturity
periods, usually one year or less.
- Umbrella
personal liability policy
- A liability
insurance policy that provides protection against
damages not covered by standard liability policies,
such as large jury awards in lawsuits.
- Umbrella
policy
- Insurance for exports of an exporter whose issuer
handles all administrative requirements.
- Unamortized
bond discount
- Par value
of a bond less the
proceeds received from the sale of the bond, less
whatever portion has been amortized.
- Unamortized
premiums on investments
- The unexpensed portion of the difference between
the price paid for a security
and its par value.
- Unbiased
expectations hypothesis
- Theory that forward
exchange rates are unbiased predictors of future
spot rates.
See Forward
parity.
- Unbiased
predictor
- A theory that spot
prices at some future date will be equal to
today's forward
rates.
- Unbundling
- Separation of a multinational firm's transfers
of funds into discrete flows for specific purposes.
See: Bundling.
- Uncollected
funds
- The amount of bank deposits in the form of checks
that have not yet been paid by the banks on which
the checks are drawn.
- Uncollectible
account
- An account which cannot be collected by a company
because the customer is not able to pay or is unwilling
to pay.
- Unconfirmed
Letter of Credit
- A letter
of credit which has not been guaranteed or confirmed
by any bank other than the bank that opened it.
The advising bank merely informs the beneficiary
of the letter of credit terms and conditions.
- Uncovered
call
- A short call
option position
in which the writer
does not own shares
of underlying
stock represented
by the option contracts.
Uncovered calls are much riskier
for the writer than a covered
call, where the writer of the uncovered call
owns the underlying
stock. If the buyer of a call
exercises the
option to call, the writer would be forced to buy
the asset at the current market
price. Also called a "naked" asset.
- Uncovered
call writing
- A short call option position in which the writer
does not own an equivalent position in the underlying
security represented by his option contracts.
- Uncovered
options
- See: Naked
options
- Uncovered
put
- A short put
option position
in which the writer
does not have a corresponding short stock
position
or has not deposited, in a cash account, cash or
cash equivalents equal to the exercise
value of the put.
The writer has pledged to buy
the asset at a certain price if the buyer of the
option chooses
to exercise it. Uncovered put options limit the
writer's risk to the value of the stock (adjusted
for premium received.) Also called "naked"
puts.
- Uncovered
Put writing
- A short put option position in which the writer
does not have a corresponding short position in
the underlying security or has not deposited, in
a cash account,
- Under
the belt
- Long position
in a stock.
- Underbanked
- When an originating investment
banker cannot find enough firms to underwrite
a new issue.
- Underbooked
- Describes limited interest by prospective buyers
in a new issue of
a security during
the preoffering
registration period.
- Undercapitalized
- A business has insufficient capital
to carry out its normal functions.
- Underfunded
pension plan
- A pension plan
that has a negative surplus (i.e.,
liabilities exceed assets).
- Underinvestment
problem
- The mirror image of the asset
substitution problem, in that stockholders
refuse to invest in low-risk assets
to avoid shifting wealth from themselves to debtholders.
- Underlying
- What supports the security or instrument that
parties agree to exchange in a derivative
contract.
- Underlying
asset
- The security or property or loan agreement that
an option gives
the option holder the right to buy
or to sell.
- Underlying
debt
- Municipal
bonds issued by government entities but under
the control of larger government entities and for
which the larger entity shares
the credit responsibility.
- Underlying
futures contract
- A futures contract
that supports an option
on that future, which is executed if the option
is exercised .
- Underlying
security
- For options, the security
that is subject to purchase or sold upon exercise
of an option contract.
For example, IBM stock is the underlying
security for IBM options. For Depository
receipts, the class,
series, and number
of the foreign shares
represented by the depository receipt.
- Undermargined
account
- A margin
account that no longer meets minimum maintenance
requirements, requiring a margin
call on the investor.
- Underperform
- When a security
is expected to, or does, appreciate at a slower
rate than the overall market
rate of performance.
- Underpricing
- Issuing securities
at less than their market
value.
- Undervalued
- A stock price perceived to be too low or cheap,
as indicated by a particular valuation model. For
instance, some might consider a particular company's
stock price cheap if the company's price-earnings
ratio is much lower than the industry average.
To refer to undervaluation or overvaluation
implicitly assumes some model of valuation. It is
always possible that the security is valued correctly
and that model applied is wrong.
- Undervalued
security
- A security
selling below its market
value or liquidation
value.
- Underwithholding
- When a taxpayer has withheld too little tax from
salary and will therefore owe tax when filing a
return.
- Underwrite
- To guarantee, as to guarantee the issuer
of securities
a specified price by entering into a purchase
and sale agreement. To bring securities to market.
- Underwriter
- A firm, usually
an investment
bank, that buys an issue
of securities from a company and resells it to investors.
In general, A party that guarantees the proceeds
to the firm from a security
sale, thereby in effect taking ownership of the
securities.
- Underwriter's
discount
- See: Gross
spread
- Underwriting
- Acting as the underwriter
in the issue of new securities for a firm.
- Underwriting
agreement
- The contract between a corporation issuing new
publicly offered securities
and the managing underwriter
as agent for the underwriting group. Compare to
agreement
among underwriters.
- Underwriting
Commission
- The fee investment
bankers charge for underwriting
a security issue.
- Underwriting
fee
- The portion of the gross underwriting spread that
compensates the securities firms that underwrite
a public offering
for their services.
- Underwriting
income
- For an insurance company, the difference between
the premiums earned
and the costs of settling claims.
- Underwriting
spread
- The income that is generated by the underwriting
syndicate and the selling group, which is essentially
the difference between the amount paid to the issuer
of securities
in a primary distribution and the public
offering price.
- Underwriting
syndicate
- A group of investment
banks that work together to sell new security
offerings to
investors. The underwriting
syndicate is
led by the lead
underwriter. See also: Lead
underwriter.
- Underwritten
offering
- A purchase
and sale.
- Undigested
securities
- Newly issued securities
that are not purchased because of lack of demand
during the initial
public offering.
- Undiversifiable
risk
- Related: Systematic
risk
- Unearned
income (revenue)
- Income received in advance of the time at which
it is earned, such as prepaid rent.
- Unearned
interest
- Interest that
has been received on a loan, but that cannot be
treated as a part of earnings
yet, because the principal
of the loan has not been outstanding
long enough.
- Unemployment
rate
- The percentage of the people classified as unemployed
as compared to the total labor force.
- Unencumbered
- Property that is not subject to any claims by
creditors. For
example, securities
bought with cash instead of on margin
and homes with mortgages
paid off.
- Unequal
Voting
- These provisions limit the voting rights of some
shareholders and expand those of others. Under time-phased
voting, shareholders who have held the stock for
a given period of time are given more votes per
share than recent purchases. Another variety is
the substantial shareholder provision, which limits
the voting power of shareholders who have exceeded
a certain threshold of ownership.
- Unfavorable
Balance of Trade
- The value of a nation's imports in excess of the
value of its exports.
- Unfunded
debt
- Debt maturing within
one year (short-term debt). See: Funded
debt.
- Unfunded
pension plan
- Provides for the employer to pay out amounts to
retirees or beneficiaries as and when they are needed.
There is no money put aside on a regular basis.
Instead, it is taken out of current income.
- Unified
tax credit
- A federal tax credit that reduces tax liability,
dollar for dollar, on lifetime gifts and asset transfers
at death.
- Uniform
Commercial Code (UCC)
- Collection of laws dealing with commercial business.
- Uniform
Customs and Practices (Brochure 500)
- International Chamber of Commerce rules (commonly
referred to as UCP 500 or ICC 500), that are used
for Letters
of credit. These letters then become legally
binding when written into the text of the letter.
- Uniform
Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA)
- Legislation that provides a tax-effective manner
of transferring property to minors without the complications
of trusts or guardianship
restrictions.
- Uniform
practice code
- Standards of the NASD
prescribing procedures for handling over-the-counter
securities transactions,
such as delivery,
settlement
date, and ex-dividend date.
- Uniform
Rules for Collections
- International Chamber of Commerce rules on the
handling of documentary and clean collections.
- Uniform
securities agent state law examination
- A test required in some states for registered
representatives who are employees of member firms
of the NASD or
over-the-counter
brokers.
- Uniform
Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA)
- A law similar to the Uniform
Gifts to Minors Act that extends the definition
of gifts to include real estate, paintings, royalties,
and patents.
- Unilateral
transfers
- Items in the current
account of the balance
of payments of a country's accounting books
that correspond to gifts from foreigners or pension
payments to foreign residents who once worked in
the particular country.
- Uninsured
motorist insurance
- Insurance that covers the policyholder
and family if they are injured by a hit-and-run
or uninsured motorist, assuming the other driver
is at fault.
- Unique
Diversification Benefit
- Reduction in the likelihood of financial distress
for a conglomerate firm that comes with its diversified
investments.
- Unique
risk
- Also called unsystematic
risk or idiosyncratic risk. Specific company
risk that can be
eliminated through diversification.
See: Diversifiable
risk and unsystematic
risk.
- Unissued
stock
- Shares authorized
in a corporation's
charter, but not issued.
- Unit
- More than one class
of securities
traded together
(e.g., one common share
and three subscription
warrants).
- Unit
benefit formula
- Method used to determine a participant's benefits
in a defined
benefit plan. Involves multiplying years of
service by the percentage of salary.
- Unit
investment trust
- Money invested in a portfolio
whose composition is fixed for the life of the fund.
Shares in a unit
trust are called redeemable
trust certificates, and they are sold at a premium
to net asset
value.
- Unit
Share Investment Trust (USIT)
- A unit
investment trust comprising one unit of prime
and one unit of score.
- Unit
of trading
- See: Trading
unit.
- Unit
trust
- In the United Kingdom and other foreign markets,
an open-end
mutual fund.
- United
States Customs Service
- An agency of the Treasury Department charged
with enforcing laws relative to imports.
- United
States government securities
- Debt issues
of the U.S. government, as distinguished from government-sponsored
agency issues.
- Universal
life
- A whole
life insurance product whose investment component
pays a competitive interest
rate rather than the below-market crediting
rate.
- Universe
of securities
- A group of stocks
having a common feature, such as similar outstanding
market capitalization
or same product line.
- Unleveraged
beta
- The beta of an
unleveraged
required return (i.e., no debt) on an investment
when the investment is financed entirely by equity.
- Unleveraged
program
- The use of borrowed
funds to finance less than 50% of a purchase of
assets. In a leveraged
program borrowed
funds are used to finance more than 50%.
- Unleveraged
required return
- The required
return on an investment when the investment
is financed entirely by equity
(i.e., no debt).
- Unlevered
cost of equity
- The discount
rate appropriate for an investment
that it is financed with 100% equity.
- Unlimited
liability
- Full liability
for the debt and
other obligations of a legal entity. The general
partners of a partnership
have unlimited liability.
- Unlimited
marital deduction
- An Internal
Revenue Service provision that allows an individual
to transfer an unlimited amount of assets
to a spouse, during life or at death, without incurring
federal estate or gift tax.
- Unlimited
tax bond
- A municipal
bond secured by the pledge to levy taxes until
full repayment at an unlimited rate.
- Unlisted
security
- A security
traded in the over-the-counter
market that is not listed on an organized exchange.
- Unlisted
trading
- Trading in unlisted
securities that occurs on an organized
exchange to accommodate members. This practice
is not permitted at the NYSE.
- Unloading
- Selling securities
or commodities
whose prices are dropping to minimize loss.
- Unmargined
account
- A cash account held at a brokerage firm.
- Unmatched
book
- If the average
maturity of a bank's liabilities
is shorter than that of its assets,
it is said to be running an unmatched book. The
term is commonly used with the Euromarket. Also
refers to entering into OTC
derivatives
contracts and
not hedging by making trades
in the opposite direction to another financial intermediary.
In this case, the firm with an unmatched book usually
hedges its net market
risk with futures
and options. Related
expressions: Open
book and short
book.
- Unpaid
dividend
- A dividend
declared by the directors of a corporation that
has not yet been paid.
- Unqualified
opinion
- An independent auditor's opinion that a company's
financial statements comply with accepted accounting
procedures. Antithesis of qualified
opinion.
- Unrealized
capital gain/loss
- An increase/decrease in the value of a security
that is not "real" because the security
has not been sold. Once a security is sold by the
portfolio
manager, the capital
gains/losses
are "realized" by the fund, and any payment
to the shareholder
is taxable during the tax year in which the security
is sold.
- Usance
- The time allowed for settlement of a draft.
- Usance
Draft
- See: Time Draft
- Usance
Letter of Credit
- A letter
of credit payable at a determined future date
after presentation of conforming documents.
- Unseasoned
issue
- Issue of a security
for which there is no existing market.
See: Seasoned
issue.
- Unsecured
debt
- Debt that does
not identify specific assets
that the debtholder
is entitled to in case of default.
- Unsterilized
intervention
- Foreign
exchange market
intervention in which the monetary authorities have
not insulated their domestic money supplies from
the foreign exchange transactions.
- Unsystematic
risk
- Also called the diversifiable
risk or residual risk. The risk
that is unique to a company such as a strike, the
outcome of unfavorable litigation, or a natural
catastrophe that can be eliminated through diversification.
Related: Systematic
risk.
- Unwind
a trade
- Reverse a securities transaction through an offsetting
transaction in the market.
- Up
- Market indication;
willingness to go both ways (buy
or sell) at the mentioned volume and market.
Print; up on the
ticker tape,
confirming that the trade
has been executed.
- Up
tick
- Plus tick.
- Upgrading
- Raising the quality rating
of a security
because of new optimism about the prospects of a
firm due to tangible or intangible factors.
This can increase investor
confidence and push up the price of the security.
- Upset
price
- The minimum price at which a seller of property
will accept a bid
at an auction.
- Upside
potential
- The amount by which analysts
or investors
expect the price of a security
may increase.
- Upstairs
market
- A network of trading
desks for the major brokerage firms and institutional
investors, which communicate with each other
by means of electronic display systems and telephones
to facilitate block
trades and program
trades.
- Upstairs
order
- Used for listed equity securities. Off-floor
order.
- Upswing
- An upward turn in a security's
price after a period of falling prices.
- Uptick
rule
- SEC rule that
selling short is
allowed only on an up
tick.
- Uptick
trade
- A transaction that takes place at a higher price
than the preceding transaction involving the same
security. Related:
Tick test
rules.
- Useful
life
- The expected period of time during which a depreciating
asset will be productive.
- US
Treasury bill
- US government debt
with a maturity
of less than a year.
- US
Treasury bond
- US government debt
with a maturity
of more than 10 years.
- US
Treasury note
- US government debt
with a maturity
of one to 10 years.
- U.S.
Treasury securities
- Interest-bearing obligations if the U.S. government
issued by the U.S. Department of the Treasury as
a means of borrowing money to meet government expenditures
not covered by tax revenues. There are three types
of marketable Treasury securities-bills, notes and
bonds.
- Usury
laws
- Laws limiting the amount of interest
that can be charged on loans.
- Utility
- A power company that owns or operates facilities
used for the generation, transmission, or distribution
of electric energy, which is regulated at state
and federal levels.
- Utility
function
- A mathematical expression that assigns a value
to all possible choices. In portfolio
theory, the utility function expresses the preferences
of economic entities with respect to perceived risk
and expected
return.
- Utility
revenue bond
- A municipal
bond issued
to finance the construction of public utility services.
These bonds are repaid
from the operating revenues the project produces
after the utility is finished.
- Utility
value
- The welfare a given investor
assigns to an investment with a particular expected
return and risk.
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Divider
Campbell
R. Harvey's Hypertextual Finance Glossary
Copyright © 2007. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. Do not reproduce without explicit
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