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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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Back-end load Some mutual funds impose a load, or sales charge,
when you sell shares in the fund. That's called a back-end load, or a
contingent deferred sales load. Typically, the charge, which is a
percentage of the value of the assets you have in the fund, applies
only during the first few years you own your shares. In most cases,
too, the percentage you pay declines each year during that period and
then is dropped.
Shares in back-end load funds are sometimes
described as Class B shares to distinguish them from front-end load
funds, which are known as Class A shares, and level-load funds,
called Class C shares. |
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Bankruptcy When you file a petition of bankruptcy, you acknowledge
that you are insolvent, or unable to pay your debts. If you file for
Chapter 7, or liquidation bankruptcy, most of your assets are sold to
repay the debts. A court-appointed trustee oversees settling creditor
claims, which are usually not repaid in full. However, some debts are
not reduced by a declaration of bankruptcy, including past due
federal income taxes, alimony, and higher-education loans.
With
Chapter 11 bankruptcy, also called reorganization bankruptcy, you
work with the court and your creditors to set up a plan to pay off
some or all of the debt over a specific period of time, such as three
to five years. Similarly, when you hear that a company is
reorganizing or is "in Chapter 11," it means it has filed for
bankruptcy.
While bankruptcy damages your credit rating and
exposes your finances to public scrutiny, it can be a way to get out
from under the burden of debt and make a new financial start. It may
also be a way to hold on to your home, even in a Chapter 7
bankruptcy, since you are not required to liquidate your home or a car you
need to get to work. |
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Barbell strategy When you use a barbell strategy you buy bonds with widely separated maturity dates, some short-term and others long-term, but none with intermediate terms. That buying pattern creates the shape that gives the strategy its name.
For example, you might buy a portfolio of bonds, with some that mature within a year or two and an equal number that mature in 30 years. When the shorter-term bonds come due, you continue the strategy by replacing them with other short-term bonds. Its a different approach from laddering your bond investment, so that your bonds mature in a rolling pattern every few years.
The goal of a barbell strategy is to earn more interest than intermediate-term bonds would provide without taking more risk. You may find it especially appealing in periods when youre not sure whether interest rates are going down which might be a reason to buy long-term bonds or going up which might be a reason to buy short-term bonds. Instead, you balance your interest-rate risk by buying some of each maturity.
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Basis point Yields on bonds, notes, and other fixed-income
investments fluctuate regularly, typically changing only within
hundredths of a percentage point. These small variations are measured
in basis points, or gradations of 0.01%, or one-hundredth of a
percent, with 100 basis points equaling 1%. For example, when the
yield on a bond changes from 6.72% to 6.65%, it has dropped seven
basis points.
The term is also used to describe small changes in the
interest rates charged for mortgages or other loans, and to indicate
your percentage of ownership in certain kinds of investments, where
each basis point equals 0.01% of the whole
investment. |
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Bearer bond Unlike most bonds issued in the US since 1983, which
are registered electronically, a bearer bond is a certificate that
states the security's par value and the rate at which its interest
will be paid. The bond may come with detachable coupons that must be presented
to the issuer to receive the interest payments, which explains why a
bond's interest rate is often referred to as its coupon rate.
A
bearer bond isn't registered, and there's no record of ownership,
which means it can be sold or redeemed by the person or organization
that holds it. Similarly, whoever presents a coupon is entitled to an
interest payment. |
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Benchmark Originally a benchmark was a surveyor's mark indicating
a specific height above sea level. But it has come to have a much
broader meaning in the world of investing.
A stock market benchmark,
for example, is an index or average whose movement is considered a
general indicator of the direction of the overall market, against
which investors and financial professionals often gauge their market
expectations and judge the performance of individual stocks or market
sectors. For example, the Standard & Poor's 500-stock Index (S&P 500)
and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) are the most widely
followed benchmarks, or indicators, of the US market. There are also
benchmarks for international markets, and for other types of
investments such as bonds, mutual funds, and commodities.
In a
somewhat different way, the changing yield on the 10-year US Treasury
bond is also considered a benchmark of investor attitudes. For
example, a lower yield is an indication that investors are putting
money into bonds, driving up the price, possibly because they expect
stock prices to drop. |
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Beneficiary A beneficiary is the person or organization who receives assets that are held in your name in a retirement plan, or are paid on your behalf by an insurance company, after your death. If you have established a trust, the beneficiary you name receives the assets of the trust.
A life insurance policy pays your beneficiary the face value of your policy minus any loans you haven't repaid when you die. A retirement plan pays your beneficiary the accumulated assets or requires the beneficiary to withdraw assets either as a lump sum or over a period of time, depending on the way the plan is set up.
You may name any person or institution or several people and institutions as beneficiary of a trust or life insurance policy. Some retirement plans require that you name your spouse as beneficiary unless you get his or her written permission to name someone else.
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Beta Beta is a measure of an investment's relative volatility. The
higher the beta, the more sharply the value of the investment can be
expected to fluctuate in relation to a market index. For example,
Standard & Poor's 500-stock Index (S&P 500) has a beta coefficient
(or base) of 1. That means if the S&P 500 moves 2% in either
direction, a stock with a beta of 1 would also move 2%. Under the
same market conditions, however, a stock with a beta of 1.5 would
move 3% (2% increase x 1.5 beta = 0.03, or 3%). But a stock with a
beta lower than 1 would be expected to be more stable in price and
move less.
Betas as low as 0.5 and as high as 4 are fairly common,
depending on the sector and size of the company. However, in recent
years, a number of experts have disputed the validity of assigning
and using a beta value as an accurate predictor of stock
performance. |
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Boiler room A boiler room is a stock brokerage firm that uses aggressive tactics to sell risky, and sometimes falsified, stocks to willing investors. Boiler rooms often use sales methods that violate NASD rules requiring brokers to recommend investments that appropriate to each investors portfolio.
For example, a broker working in a boiler room might try to sell very speculative stock to retired investors whose portfolios cannot tolerate such high risk. Many boiler room brokers may also try to create investor interest in companies that don't actually exist in order to profit from the sale of fraudulent shares.
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Bond fund Bond mutual funds invest in bonds to produce income.
Unlike individual bonds, bond funds have no fixed maturity date and
no guaranteed interest rate. Nor do they promise to return your
principal. Their appeal is that you can usually invest a much smaller
amount of money than you would need to buy a portfolio of bonds on your own, making
it easier to diversify your fixed-income investments.
There is a great variety of
bond funds, each with a specific investment strategy. For example,
some funds invest in long-term, and others in short-term, bonds. Some
buy government bonds, while others buy corporate bonds or municipal
bonds. Finally, some buy investment-grade bonds, while others focus
on high-yield bonds. In other words, you could buy a long-term,
investment-grade municipal bond fund, a short-term, high-yield
corporate bond fund-or almost any other
combination. |
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Bond rating Independent agencies, such as Standard & Poor's (S&P)
and Moody's Investors Service, assess the likelihood that bond
issuers whether corporations or governments are likely to default on
their loans or interest payments. Ratings systems differ from one
agency to another but usually have at least 10 categories, ranging
from a high of AAA (or Aaa) to a low of D. Bonds ranked BBB (or Baa)
or higher are considered investment-grade bonds.
Rating a bond a key to the code:
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Moody's
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S&P's |
Meaning |
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Aaa |
AAA |
Best Quality |
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Aa |
AA |
High Quality |
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A |
A |
High to medium quality |
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Baa |
BBB |
Medium Quality |
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Ba |
BB |
Some speculative element |
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B |
B |
At risk of default |
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Caa |
CCC |
Poor quality |
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Ca |
CC |
Highly speculative quality |
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C |
C |
Lowest-rated |
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D |
In default |
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Book value Book value is the net asset value (NAV) of a company's
stocks and bonds. Finding the NAV involves subtracting the company's
short- and long-term liabilities from its assets to find net assets,
and then dividing by the number of shares of common stock, preferred
stock, or bonds to get the NAV per share or per bond.
Book value is
sometimes cited as a way of determining whether a company's assets
cover its outstanding obligations and equity issues. Further, some
investors and analysts look at the price of a stock in relation to
its book value, which is provided in the company's annual report, to
help identify undervalued stocks. Other investors discount the
relevance of this information. |
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Bottom-up investing When you use a bottom-up investing strategy,
you focus on the potential of individual stocks, bonds, and other
investments. Using this approach, for example, means you pay less
attention to the economy as a whole, or to the prospects of the
industry a company is in, than you do to the company itself.
In
making decisions based on bottom-up investing, you read research
reports, examine the company's financial stability, and evaluate what
you know about its products and services in great
detail. |
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Breakpoint Mutual funds that charge a percentage of the amount you
invest as a front-end load, or sales charge, when you buy shares may
reduce that percentage if you make a large investment. The dollar
amount at which the reduction applies is known as a breakpoint.
In
most cases, the first breakpoint is $25,000, with further reductions
for each additional $25,000 or $50,000 purchase. For example, if the
standard load were 5.5%, it might drop to 5.25% at $25,000, to 5% at
$50,000, and perhaps to as low as 2.5% with an investment of
$250,000.
In calculating breakpoints, some fund companies will
combine the value of all of your investments in the mutual funds they
offer. So, for example, if you had $45,000 invested in various funds
and added $5,000 to one of them, you might qualify for the reduced
sales charge because the total value of your investment reached the
breakpoint of $50,000. |
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Broker A stock broker works for a brokerage firm, and acts as an agent, handling client orders
to buy or sell stocks, bonds, commodities, and options in return for a commission. Brokers are licensed in the state where they work and must be registered on the exchange or market where they work.
They must also pass a uniform examination
administered by the National Association of Securities Dealers
(NASD). Many brokers provide a range of investor services, including
financial planning and advice on specific buy and sell
decisions.
A real estate broker represents the seller in a real estate transaction and receives a commission on the sale. A mortgage or insurance broker acts as an intermediary to find the best mortgage or insurance policy for his or her client and also receives a commission. |
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Brokerage account To buy and sell securities through a
broker/dealer or other financial services firm, you establish an
account, generally known as a brokerage account, with that firm.
In
a traditional full-service brokerage firm, a registered
representative or account executive who works for the firm handles
your buy and sell instructions and often provides investment advice.
If your account is with a discount firm, you are more likely to give
your orders to the person who answers the telephone when you call. And if
your account is with an online firm, you give orders
and get confirmations electronically.
In all three cases, the firm
provides updated information on your investment activity and
portfolio value, and handles the required paperwork. And in some
cases, your brokerage account may be part of a larger package of
financial services known as an asset management
account. |
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Brokerage firm Brokerage firms are licensed by the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) to buy and sell securities for clients and
for their own accounts. When a brokerage firm sells securities it
owns, it is said to be acting as a principal in that
transaction.
Firms frequently maintain research departments for
their own and their clients' benefit, and increasingly they provide a
range of financial products and services, including financial
planning, asset management, and educational programs. Online
brokerage firms, discount brokerage firms, and some traditional
full-service brokerage firms encourage customers to trade electronically and provide a wealth of investment information on their
websites. |
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Buyback When a company purchases shares of its own publicly traded
stock or its own bonds in the open market, it's called a buyback. The
most common reason a company buys back its stock is to make the stock
more attractive to investors by increasing its earnings per share.
While the actual earnings stay the same, the earnings per share increase
because the number of shares has been reduced.
Companies may also
buy back shares to pay for acquisitions that are financed with stock
swaps, to make stocks available for employee stock option plans, to
decrease the risk of a hostile takeover by reducing the number of
shares available for sale, or to discourage short-term trading in its
stock by driving the price of the outstanding shares
upward.
Companies may buy back bonds when they are selling at
discount, which is typically the result of rising interest rates. By
paying less than par in the open market, the company is able to
reduce the cost of redeeming the bonds when they come
due. |
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Copyright 2002 Lightbulb Press, Inc. All Rights Reserved
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