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Terms
 
Laddering

Level load

Leverage

Liability

Limit order

Lipper Inc.

Liquidity

Listing requirement

Load fund

Long bond

Long-term equity anticipation security (LEAPS)

Loose credit

Lump sum

  Large-capitalization (large-cap) stock

Level term insurance

Leveraged buyout

Life expectancy

Limited partnership

Liquid asset

Listed security

Load

Logarithmic scale

Long position

Long-term gain (or loss)

Loser

Lump-sum distribution

 
 
Definitions
 
 
Laddering
By laddering, or staggering, the maturities on fixed-income investments, such as certificates of deposit (CDs) and bonds, you can set up a schedule for when various investments come due. That way, you can avoid having to reinvest all your money at one time, when interest rates may be low, and you can take advantage of new investment opportunities, including those with higher returns, as they become available.

As each investment matures, you can reinvest that amount, use it for a preplanned purchase, or have it available to cover unexpected expenses. For example, instead of one $15,000, five-year CD yielding 5%, you can buy three $5,000 CDs maturing one year apart. Laddering is sometimes used in planning to pay for college expenses, with each investment coming due in time to pay tuition for that year.

 
 
 
Large-capitalization (large-cap) stock
This is the stock of large, established companies, with market capitalizations in the billions of dollars. (Market capitalization is figured by multiplying the number of outstanding shares by the current share price.) Large-cap stocks, such as those tracked by Standard & Poor's 500-stock Index (S&P 500), are generally considered less volatile than mid-cap or small-cap stocks. Mutual funds that invest in this type of stock are known as large-cap funds.

Recently, however, several Internet stocks have enjoyed large market capitalizations as their stock prices have soared, though as new issues they would not ordinarily be thought of as large-cap stocks.

 
 
 
Level load
Some mutual funds impose a recurring sales charge, called a level load, each year you own the fund rather than charging either a front- or back-end load.

The level-load rate is generally less, usually 1% to 2% annually, than the rate that's charged on a front- or back-end load fund. But the total sales charge you pay over time with a level load can be substantially more than other types of loads, especially if you own the fund for a number of years. Level-load funds are frequently identified by mutual fund companies as Class C shares to distinguish them from front-end loads (Class A shares) and back-end loads (Class B shares).

 
 
 
Level term insurance
With level term life insurance, you pay a preset premium each year over the entire term of your policy, often ten years. In many cases, the amount you pay in the early years of the term is higher than you would pay for comparable annual renewable term coverage. But level term insurance can save you money in the long run because the premium doesnt increase.
 
 
 
Leverage
Using leverage is an investment technique in which you borrow money to increase the size of your investment. The expectation is that you'll realize a much greater return than you could by investing your own money alone. In addition, using leverage lets you wield greater financial power without putting your own money at stake. For example, if you borrow money to buy a home, you are using the leverage of the mortgage to buy a much more expensive home than you could have afforded by paying cash.

Buying on margin is a type of leveraging, as is buying a futures contract or an option. Leveraging can be very risky, however, if the investment doesn't perform as you anticipate, since you risk losing your own money as well as the borrowed money you will have to repay.

 
 
 
Leveraged buyout
A leveraged buyout occurs when a small group of investors, using borrowed money, often raised with junk bonds or other kinds of debt, takes over a company.
 
 
 
Liability
In personal finance, liabilities are the amounts you owe to creditors, or the people and organizations that lend you money. Typical liabilities include your mortgage, car and educational loans, and credit card debt. When you figure your net worth, you subtract your liabilities, or what you owe, from your assets. The result is your net worth, or the cash value of what you own.

In business, liabilities also refer to the claims against the assets of a corporation, and may include accounts payable, wages and salaries, dividends, taxes, and debt obligations, such as bonds and bank loans.

 
 
 
Life expectancy
Your life expectancy is the age to which you can expect to live. The IRS provides actuarial tables that establish your official life expectancy, which you use to determine your minimum required distribution from a 401(k), traditional IRA, or other tax-deferred retirement savings plan. However, your true life expectancy, based on your lifestyle, family history, and other factors, may be longer or shorter than your official life expectancy.
 
 
 
Limit order
When you give your broker an order to buy or sell a stock when it reaches a certain price or better, it is called a limit order. For example, if you place a limit order to buy a certain stock at $25 a share when its current market price is $28, your broker will not buy the stock until its share price is at $25 or lower.
 
 
 
Limited partnership
A limited partnership is a financial affiliation, including a general partner and a number of limited partners, that usually invests in real estate or some other venture.

The arrangement can be public, which means you can buy into the partnership through a brokerage firm. Or it can be private, which generally means you have to know the people involved to participate. What makes the partnership limited is that everyone but the general partner has limited liability. The most they can lose is the amount they invest.

 
 
 
Lipper Inc.
Lipper Inc. provides financial data and performance analysis for more than 30,000 open- and closed-end mutual funds and variable annuities worldwide. Lipper fund ratings are closely watched, and its mutual fund indexes are considered benchmarks for the 29 categories of funds Lipper defines.
 
 
 
Liquid asset
Liquid assets include cash, money in bank accounts, and investments that can be converted readily to cash with little loss of value. Money market mutual funds and US Treasury bills are often described as liquid assets. Most stocks, bonds, and stock and bond mutual funds are also liquid in the sense that they can be sold easily for cash. But since their prices fluctuate, there is always the chance of having to sell at a loss if you need the money quickly.
 
 
 
Liquidity
If you can convert an investment easily and quickly to cash, with little or no loss of value, you have liquidity. For example, you can typically redeem shares in a money market mutual fund at $1 a share. Similarly, you can cash in a certificate of deposit (CD) and get back at least the amount you put into it (though you may forfeit some or all of the interest you had expected to earn if you liquidate before the end of the CD's term).

In a related way, investments have liquidity if you can buy or sell them quickly. For example, you could sell several hundred shares of a blue chip stock by simply calling your broker, something that might not be possible if you wanted to sell stock in a small, thinly traded company.

The difference between cash-equivalent investments and securities like stocks and bonds, however, is that securities constantly fluctuate in value. So while you may be able to sell them quickly, you might get back less than you paid if you have to sell when the price is down.

 
 
 
Listed security
A listed security is a stock or bond that is traded on an organized exchange, such as the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), or on a stock market, such as the Nasdaq Stock Market (Nasdaq). Being listed has advantages, including being part of an orderly and widely reported trading process that helps insure fairness and liquidity.
 
 
 
Listing requirement
Each organized securities exchange and stock market-including the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the Nasdaq-Amex Market Group-has its own listing requirements, which a corporation must meet in order to have its stocks or bonds traded there.

Among the criteria used for listing are a corporation's pretax earnings, number of outstanding shares, and minimum market value. For example, the NYSE, which has the most stringent requirements, requires pretax earnings of $2.5 million, a minimum of 1.1 million outstanding shares, and a minimum market value of $100 million.

 
 
 
Load
If you buy mutual funds through a broker or other sales representative, you often pay a sales charge or commission, also called a load. If the charge is levied when you purchase the shares, it's called a front-end load. If you pay when you sell shares, it's called a back-end load. And with a level load, you pay a percentage of your investment amount each year you own the fund.
 
 
 
Load fund
Some mutual funds charge a load, or sales commission, when you buy or sell shares or, in some cases, each year you own the fund. The charge is generally figured as a percentage of your investment amount. Most load funds are sold by brokers, financial planners, and other advisors, while no-load funds, which don't have sales charges (but may levy other fees), are usually sold directly to the public by the fund company.

There's no evidence that load funds outperform no-loads, or that funds with higher loads outperform those with lower ones, so the added cost of load funds should be considered in choosing one fund rather than another.

 
 
 
Logarithmic scale
On a logarithmic scale or graph, comparable percentage changes in the value of an investment, an index, or an average appear similar even though the underlying change in value may be significantly different.

For example, a stock whose price increases during the year from $25 a share to $50 a share has the same percentage change as a stock whose price increases from $100 a share to $200 a share despite the fact that the dollar value of the second stock is four times the value of the first. Similarly, the percentage change in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) as it rose from 1,000 to 2,000 is comparable to the percentage change when it moved from 4,000 to 8,000.

 
 
 
Long bond
The long bond is the 30-year bond issued by the US Treasury. The yield, or what you earn, on a long-term bond is usually higher than the yield on shorter-term bonds. That's because the long bonds have to pay higher interest rates to attract investors who are willing to tie up their money for an extended period of time. The yield on the long bond is considered a benchmark, or key indicator, of long-term interest rates.
 
 
 
Long position
Having a long position when you own a stock or bond means you have the right to collect the dividends or interest it pays, the right to sell it or give it away when you wish, and the right to keep any profits if you do sell.

It's the opposite of having a short position, which means you have borrowed shares from your broker, sold them, and must return them at some point in the future. The term long position is also used to describe stocks or bonds you own that are held by your brokerage firm in street name.

 
 
 
Long-term equity anticipation security (LEAPS)
These long-term stock options expire in two to five years rather than within a year, as most stock options do. The advantage, from an investment perspective, is that you have more time for the price movement you anticipate to actually occur. However, stocks on which LEAPS are available are more limited than those on which there are standard options.
 
 
 
Long-term gain (or loss)
When you sell an asset, such as a security or real estate, that you have held 12 months or longer, any money you make on the sale is considered a long-term capital gain. If you lose money on the sale, you have a long-term capital loss.Long-term gains are taxed at 20% for people in the 28% tax bracket and higher, and at 10% for those in the 15% bracket. Long-term losses are deductible against long-term gains. Each year, you can also usually deduct up to $3,000 of your long-term losses against your ordinary income.
 
 
 
Loose credit
In order to combat a sluggish economy, the Federal Reserve Board (the Fed) sometimes institutes a loose credit policy. The Fed buys large quantities of Treasury securities, which gives banks additional money to lend at lower interest rates. This abundance, or looseness, of credit tends to stimulate borrowing, which in turn is designed to stimulate the economy as a whole.

Tight money is the opposite of loose credit. It's the result of the Fed's selling securities, which makes borrowing-and therefore spending-harder. A tight money policy is designed to slow down a rapidly accelerating economy.

 
 
 
Loser
Stocks whose market price drops the most during the trading day are described, rather bluntly, as losers. The stocks that lose the most value relative to their opening price are called percentage losers, and stocks that lose the most points are called net losers or dollar losers.

The number of losers in a trading day is usually compared to the number of gainers, or stocks that have risen the most in value during the day. If there are more losers than gainers over a period of days, the market as a whole is in a slump.

 
 
 
Lump sum
A lump sum is money you pay or receive all at once rather than in increments over a period of time. For example, you buy an immediate annuity with a single lump-sum payment. Similarly, if you receive the face value of a life insurance policy when the insured person dies, or get a check for the full value of the assets in your retirement account, those payments are also lump sums.

Cash distribution:


PROS


- Can use money immediately

- Can make your own investment decisions

CONS



- Taxes due immediately

- Owe additional taxes on investment gains

- Must make initial investment decisions quickly

- Easy to spend too fast

 
 
 
Lump-sum distribution
When you retire, you may have the option of taking the value of your pension, salary reduction, or profit-sharing plan in a series of regular payments, generally described as an annuity, or all at once, in what is known as a lump-sum distribution.

If you take the lump sum from a pension, your employer calculates how much you would have received over your estimated lifespan if you'd taken the pension as an annuity and then subtracts the amount the pension fund estimates it would have earned in interest on that amount during the years of payout.

When you take a lump-sum distribution from a salary reduction or profit-sharing plan, you receive the amount that has accumulated in the plan. You may also take a lump-sum distribution from these plans when you change jobs. However, that is usually not the case with a traditional pension plan.

Whether you're retiring or changing jobs, you can take a lump-sum distribution as cash, or you can roll over the distribution into an individual retirement account (IRA). If you take the cash, you owe income tax on the full amount of the distribution, and you may owe an additional 10% penalty if you're younger than 59 1/2. If you roll over the lump sum into an IRA, the full amount continues to be tax-deferred, and you can postpone paying income tax until you withdraw from the account.

 
 

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