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Dictionary of Financial Terms |
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Click on any letter below to browse our list of financial terms or enter key words below to focus your search.
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| Definitions |
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Offering price When a security, such as a stock, is offered for
sale to the public for the first time, or a publicly traded company
issues new shares, the initial price per share is set by the
underwriter. That's known as the offering price or the public
offering price. When the stock begins to trade, its market price may
be higher or lower than the offering price.
In the case of open-end
mutual funds, the offering price is the price per share of the fund
that you pay when you buy. If it's a no-load fund, a back-end or
Class B fund, or a level-load or Class C fund, the offering price and
the net asset value (NAV) are the same. If it's a front-load or Class
A fund, the sales charge is added to the NAV to arrive at the
offering price. |
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Online brokerage firm To buy and sell securities over the
Internet, you can set up an account with an online brokerage firm.
The firm executes your orders and confirms them electronically,
though you may have to mail the firm a check to settle your
transaction.
Some online firms are divisions of traditional
brokerage firms, while others operate exclusively in cyberspace. Most
of them charge much smaller commissions than conventional firms, and
most provide extensive investment information, including regularly
updated market news, on their websites. |
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Online trading If you trade online, you use a computer and an
Internet connection to place your buy and sell orders. Some online
traders are day traders, buying securities and selling them within a
few hours-or less-to take advantage of price changes as they occur.
Others use online trading to place orders outside of normal trading
hours.
While online trading may become the norm in the future,
especially as after-hours trading and electronic communications
networks (ECNs) gain popularity, there are a number of issues to be
resolved. These include, for example, the responsibility of online
brokerage firms to monitor trades by inexperienced or over-zealous
investors to prevent major losses resulting from inappropriate buy
and sell decisions, and the need to keep and provide accurate records
of all trades. |
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Open market In an open market, any investor with the money to pay
for securities is able to buy those securities. US markets, for
example, are open to all buyers. In contrast, a closed market may
restrict investment to citizens of the country where the market is
located. Closed markets may also limit the sale of securities to
overseas investors, or forbid the sale of securities in specific
industries to those investors. In some countries, for example,
overseas investors may not own more than 49% of any company, while in
others, overseas investors may not invest in banks or other financial
services companies.
The term open market is also used to describe an
environment in which interest rates move up and down in response to
supply and demand in contrast to those rates that are set by the
Federal Reserve Board. The Fed's Open Market Committee assesses the
state of the US economy on a regular schedule and instructs the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York to buy or sell Treasury securities
on the open market to help control the money
supply. |
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Open-end mutual fund Most mutual funds are open-end funds, which
issue and redeem shares on a continuous basis, and therefore grow in
response to investor demand. An open-end fund is the opposite of a
closed-end fund, which issues shares only once. After that, shares in
the closed-end fund are traded like stock among investors. The
sponsor of the fund is not involved in those transactions.
However,
an open-end fund may be closed to new investors at the discretion of
the management, usually because the fund has grown very large. Large
funds may have difficulty investing their assets nimbly
enough. |
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Option Buying an option gives you the right to buy or sell a
specific investment at a specific price, called the strike price,
during a preset period of time.
If you buy an option to buy, which
is known as a call, you pay a one-time premium that's a fraction of
the cost of the actual transaction. For example, you might buy a call
option giving you the right to buy 100 shares of a particular stock
at a strike price of $80 a share when that stock is trading at $75 a
share. If the price goes higher than the strike price, you can
exercise the option and buy the stock, or trade the option to someone
else at a profit.
If the stock price doesn't go higher than the strike
price, you don't exercise the option, and it expires. Your only cost
is the money that you paid for the premium. Similarly, you buy a put
option, which gives you the right to sell the underlying investment
to the person who sold the option. In this case, you exercise the
option if the market price drops below the strike price.
In
contrast, if you sell a put or call option, you collect a premium and
must be prepared to buy or sell the underlying investment if the
investor who bought the option decides to exercise it. You can buy or
sell individual stock options, stock index options, and options on
futures contracts, currency, and Treasury securities interest
rates. |
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Option premium When you buy an option, you pay the seller a
non-refundable amount per share, known as the option premium, for the
right to exercise that option before it expires. If you sell an
option, you receive a premium from the buyer. In fact, collecting the
premium is one motive for selling options, including those you
anticipate will expire without being exercised.
An option premium is
not a fixed amount, and typically increases as the demand for the
option increases and decreases as demand shrinks. However, factors
such as the price and volatility of the underlying investment,
current interest rates, and the amount of time left before the option
expires also affect the premium price.
You can get a sense of the
current range of premium prices by looking at the Options Quotations
tables in the financial pages of your newspaper. The figures you see
there, expressed in numbers and fractions, represent the per-share
price. You multiply by 100 to find the option premium. So, for
example, 10 means a premium of $1,000 and 1/2 (or 0.5) means a $50
premium. |
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Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) The Options Clearing
Corporation issues all exchange-listed securities options and handles
the processing, delivery, and settlement of all options transactions.
The OCC, which is responsible for maintaining a fair and orderly
market in options, is overseen by the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) and is jointly owned by each of the four exchanges
that trade options: The American Stock Exchange, the Chicago Board
Options Exchange, the Pacific Exchange, and the Philadelphia Stock
Exchange.
The OCC is also a valuable source for investor
information. For an overview of what you should know about options
trading, check their publication Characteristics and Risks of
Standardized Options. |
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Original issue discount A bond or other debt security that is
issued at less than par value but redeemed for full par value at
maturity is an original issue discount.
The appeal, from an
investor's perspective, is being able to invest less up front while
anticipating full repayment later on. Issuers like these securities
as well because they don't have to pay periodic interest. Instead,
the interest accrues during the term of the bond so that the total
interest when combined with the principal equals the full par value
at maturity. Zero-coupon bonds are a popular type of original issue
discount security. |
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OTC Bulletin Board (OTCBB) During the trading day, the electronic OTC
bulletin board (OTCBB) provides continuously updated real-time bid and ask prices, volume information, and last-sale prices for
US and overseas stocks, warrants, unit investment trusts, American Depositary Receipts (ADRs), and Direct Participation Programs (DPPs) that are not listed on an organized market but are being traded over the counter (OTC).
Approximately 3,600 companies, which must reported their financial information to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or appropriate regulatory agency to have their securities qualify for inclusion, are tracked on the OTCBB. |
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Out of the money In the options market, you are out of the money
when the market price of a stock is not close to the strike price. In
the case of call options-which you buy when you think the price is
going up-you're out of the money when the stock price is below the
strike price. And in the case of put options-which you buy when you
think the price of the underlying investment is going down-you're out
of the money when the stock price is higher than the strike
price.
For example, a call option on a stock with a strike price of
$50 would be out of the money if the current market price were $45.
And a put option on the same stock would be out of the money if its
market price were $55. When an option is out of the money, you don't
exercise it but let it expire. |
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Outstanding shares The number of shares of stock that a
corporation has issued are described as its outstanding shares. A
corporation's market capitalization is figured by multiplying its
outstanding shares by the market price of a share.
The number of
outstanding shares is also used to derive all of the financial
information that's provided on a per-share basis, such as earnings
per share or sales per share. |
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Over the counter (OTC) The majority of stocks in the US are traded
over the counter, rather than on the floor of an organized stock
exchange. That number includes more than 5,000 stocks that are listed
on the Nasdaq Stock Market (Nasdaq) and are part of the National
Market System (NMS), as well as stock in companies too small to meet
stock market listing requirements.
In actual practice, OTC trading
is done through a telephone and computer network. A number of
companies that qualify for exchange listing have chosen to continue
to trade OTC because they prefer the network of dealers to the
centralized system typical of a large exchange. Government and
municipal bonds (munis) are also traded OTC. |
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Overvaluation A stock whose price seems unjustifiably high based
on standard measures, such as its earnings history, is considered
overvalued. One indication of overvaluation is a price-to-earnings
ratio (P/E) significantly higher than average for the market as a
whole and for the industry to which the corporation belongs.
The
consequence of overvaluation is usually a drop in the stock's
price-sometimes a rather dramatic one. However, in the current
market, the high stock prices commanded by some Internet-based
companies seem to defy conventional valuation
standards. |
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Copyright 2002 Lightbulb Press, Inc. All Rights Reserved
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