- C
- Fifth letter of a
Nasdaq stock descriptor specifying that issue is exempt from
Nasdaq listing requirements for a temporary period.
- CA
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CANADA.
- CAD
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Canada Dollar.
- CAGR
- See: Compound Annual Growth
Rate
- CAMPS
- See: Cumulative
Auction Market Preferred Stocks
- CAPM
- See: Capital asset pricing
model
- CAPS
- See: Convertible
adjustable preferred stock
- CARs
- See: Certificates
of Automobile Receivables
- CARDs
- See: Certificates
of Amortized Revolving Debt
- CATS
- See: Certificate
of Accrual on Treasury Securities (CATS)
- CAX
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Canadian Cent.
- CBO
- See: Collateralized Bond
Obligation.
- CBOE
- See: Chicago Board
Options Exchange
- CC
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for COCOS (KEELING) ISLANDS.
- CD
- See: Certificate
of deposit
- CD
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CONGO, THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF.
- CDN
- See: Canadian
Dealing Network
- CEC
- See: Commodities Exchange
Center
- CEG
- See: Canadian
Exchange Group
- CF
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC.
- CFAT
- Cash flow after
taxes.
- CFAT
- See: Cash flow after
taxes
- CFC
- See: Controlled foreign
corporation
- CFTC
- See: Commodity
Futures Trading Commission
- CG
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CONG.
- CH
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for SWITZERLAND.
- CHAP
- See: Clearing
House Automated Payments System
- CHESS
- See: Clearing
House Electronic Subregister System
- CHF
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Swiss Franc.
- CHIPS
- See: Clearing
House Interbank Payments System
- CI
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for COTE D'IVOIRE.
- CK
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for COOK ISLANDS.
- CL
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CHILE.
- CLF
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Chile Unidades de Fomento.
- CLP
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Chilean Peso.
- CM
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CAMEROON.
- CMBS
- See: Commercial
Mortgage Backed Securities
- CME
- See: Chicago Mercantile
Exchange
- CML
- See: Capital market
line
- CMO
- See: Collateralized
mortgage obligation
- CN
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CHINA.
- CNY
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Chinese Renminbi (Yuan).
- CO
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for COLOMBIA.
- COP
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Colombian Peso.
- CR
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for COSTA RICA.
- CRB
- See: Commodity Research
Bureau.
- CRC
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Costa Rican Colon.
- CTA
- See: Cumulative
Translation Adjustment
- CU
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CUBA.
- CUP
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Cuban Peso.
- CUSIP
- See:
Committee on Uniform Securities Identification
Procedures
- CV
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CAPE VERDE.
- CVE
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Cape Verde Islands Escudo.
- CX
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CHRISTMAS ISLAND.
- CY
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CYPRUS.
- CYP
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Cyprus Pound.
- CZ
- The two-character ISO 3166
country code for CZECH REPUBLIC.
- CZK
- The ISO 4217
currency code for Czech Republic Koruna.
- Cabinet crowd
- NYSE members who trade bonds with a low daily traded volume. See: Automated Bond
System.
- Cabinet security
- A stock or bond listed on a major exchange with low daily traded volume.
- Cable
- Exchange rate between British pound sterling and the U.S.
dollar.
- CAC
40 index
- A broad-based index of common stocks composed of 40
of the 100 largest companies listed on the forward segment of the
official list of the Paris
Bourse.
- Cage
- A section of a brokerage firm
used for receiving and disbursing funds.
- Calendar
- List of new issues scheduled
to come to market shortly.
- Calendar effect
- Describes the tendency of stocks to perform differently at
different times, including performance anomalies like the January
effect, month-of-the-year effect, day-of-the-week effect, and
holiday effect.
- Calendar spread
- Applies to derivative products. A strategy in which there is
a simultaneous purchase and sale of options of the same class at
different strike prices, but with the same expiration date.
- Call
- An option that gives the
holder the right to buy the underlying futures contract.
- Call
date
- A date before maturity, specified at issuance, when the issuer of a bond may retire part of the bond for a
specified call price.
- Call
feature
- Part of the indenture
agreement between the bond issuer and buyer describing the
schedule and price of redemption's prior to maturity.
- Call
loan
- A loan repayable on demand. Sometimes used as a synonym for
broker loan or broker overnight loan.
- Call loan rate
- See: Call money
rate
- Call money rate
- Also called the broker
loan rate , the interest
rate that banks charge brokers
to finance margin loans to investors. The broker charges the
investor the call money rate plus a service
charge.
- Call
option
- An option contract that gives its holder the
right (but not the obligation) to purchase a specified number of
shares of the underlying stock at the given strike price, on or before
the expiration date of
the contract.
- Call an option
- To exercise a call option.
- Call
premium
- Premium in price above the
par value of a bond or share of preferred stock that must be
paid to holders to redeem the bond or share of preferred stock before its
scheduled maturity
date.
- Call
price
- The price, specified at issuance, at which the issuer of a bond may retire part of the bond at a
specified call date.
- Call protection
- A feature of some callable
bonds that establishes an initial
period when the bonds may not be called.
- Call provision
- An embedded option
granting a bond issuer the right
to buy back all or part of an issue prior to maturity.
- Call
risk
- The combination of cash
flow uncertainty and reinvestment risk introduced
by a call
provision.
- Call swaption
- A swaption in which the
buyer has the right to enter into a swap as a fixed-rate payer. The writer therefore becomes the fixed-rate
receiver/floating-rate
payer.
- Callability
- Feature of a security that
allows the issuer to redeem
the security prior to maturity by calling it in, or forcing
the holder to sell it back.
- Callable
- Applies mainly to convertible securities. Redeemable by the
issuer before the scheduled maturity under specific conditions
and at a stated price, which usually begins at a premium to par
and declines annually. Bonds are usually called when interest
rates fall so significantly that the issuer can save money by
issuing new bonds at lower rates.
- Called away
- Convertible: Redeemed before maturity.
Option: Call or put option exercised against the stockholder.
Sale: Delivery required on a short sale.
- Cumulative Auction Market Preferred
Stocks (CAMPS)
- Stands for Cumulative Auction Market Preferred Stocks,
Oppenheimer & Company's Dutch Auction preferred stock
product.
- Canadian agencies
- Agency banks established by
Canadian Banks in the US
- Canadian Dealing Network (CDN)
- The organized OTC market of
Canada. Formerly known as the Canadian Over-the-Counter Automated
Trading System (COATS), the CDN became a subsidiary of the
Toronto Stock Exchange in 1991.
- Canadian Exchange Group (CEG)
- The CEG is an association among the Toronto Stock Exchange,
the Montreal Exchange, the Vancouver Stock Exchange, the Alberta
Stock Exchange, and the Winnipeg Stock Exchange for the purpose
of providing Canadian market data to customers outside
Canada.
- "Can get
$xxx"
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. "I have a buyer who will
pay $xxx for the stock". Usually a standard markdown (1/8) from
$xxx is applied to this price in bidding the seller for its stock. Antithesis of cost me.
- Cancel
- To void an order to buy or sell from (1) the floor, or (2) the
trader/salesperson's scope. In
Autex, the indication still remains on record
as having once been placed unless it is expunged.
- "Cannot compete"
- In the context of general equities, cannot accommodate
customers at that price level (i.e., compete with other market makers), often because
there is no natural opposite
side of the trade.
- "Cannot complete"
- In the context of general equities, inability to finish an order on a principal or agency basis, given prevailing price
instructions and/or market
conditions.
- Cap
- An upper limit on the interest rate on a floating-rate note (FRN) or
an adjustable-rate
mortgage (ARM).
- Capacity
- Credit grantors' measurement
of a person's ability to repay loans.
- Capital
- Money invested in a firm.
- Capital account
- Net result of public and private international investment and
lending activities.
- Capital allocation
decision
- Allocation of invested funds between risk-free assets and the risky
portfolio.
- Capital appreciation
- See: Capital
growth
- Capital appreciation fund
- See: Aggressive growth
fund
- Capital asset
- A long-term asset, such as
land or a building, not purchased or sold in the normal course of
business.
- Capital asset pricing model
(CAPM)
- An economic theory that describes the relationship between risk and expected return, and serves as
a model for the pricing of risky securities. The CAPM asserts that the
only risk that is priced by rational investors is systematic risk, because that
risk cannot be eliminated by diversification. The CAPM says that
the expected return of
a security or a portfolio is equal to the rate on a
risk-free security plus a risk premium multiplied by the assets
systematic risk. Theory was invented by William Sharpe (1964) and
John Lintner (1965).
- Capital budget
- A firm's planned capital expenditures.
- Capital budgeting
- The process of choosing the firm's long-term capital assets.
- Capital Builder Account (CBA)
- A Merrill Lynch brokerage account that allows investors to access the loan value of his or her eligible securities to buy or sell securities. Excess cash in a CBA
can be invested in a money market fund or an
insured money market
deposit account without losing
access to the money.
- Capital expenditures
- Amount used during a particular period to acquire or improve
long-term assets such as property, plant, or
equipment.
- Capital flight
- The transfer of capital
abroad in response to fears of political risk.
- Capital formation
- Expansion of capital or capital goods through
savings, which leads to economic growth.
- Capital gain
- When a stock is sold for a profit, the capital gain is the
difference between the net sales price of the securities and their net cost, or
original basis. If a stock is
sold below cost, the difference is a capital loss.
- Capital gains distribution
- A distribution to the shareholders of a mutual fund out of profits from selling stocks or bonds, that is subject to capital gains taxes for the shareholders.
- Capital gains tax
- The tax levied on profits
from the sale of capital assets. A long-term capital gain, which is achieved
once an asset is held for at
least 12 months, is taxed at a maximum rate of 20% (taxpayers in
28% tax bracket) and 10%
(taxpayers in 15% tax
bracket). Assets held for less than 12 months are taxed at
regular income tax levels,
and, since January 1, 2000, assets held for at least five years
are taxed at 18% and 8%.
- Capital gains yield
- The price change portion of a stock's return.
- Capital goods
- Goods used by firms to produce other goods, e.g., office
buildings, machinery, equipment.
- Capital growth
- The increase in an asset's market price. Also called capital
appreciation.
- Capital-intensive
- Used to describe industries that require large investments in capital assets to produce their
goods, such as the automobile industry. These firms require large
profit margins and/or low
costs of borrowing to
survive.
- Capital International
Indexes
- Market indexes
maintained by Morgan Stanley
that track major stock
markets worldwide.
- Capital investment
- See: Capital
expenditure.
- Capital lease
- A lease obligation that has
to be capitalized on the balance sheet.
- Capital loss
- The difference between the net cost of a security and the net sales price, if
the security is sold at a
loss.
- Capital market
- The market for trading long-term debt instruments (those that mature in
more than one year).
- Capital market efficiency
- The degree to which the present asset price accurately
reflects current information in the market place. See: Efficient market
hypothesis.
- Capital market imperfections
view
- The view that issuing debt is
generally valuable, but that the firm's optimal choice of capital structure
involves various other views of capital structure (net
corporate/personal tax, agency
cost, bankruptcy cost, and pecking order), that result from
considerations of asymmetric information,
asymmetric taxes, and transaction costs.
- Capital market line (CML)
- The line defined by every combination of the risk-free asset and the market portfolio. The line
represents the risk
premium you earn for taking on extra risk. Defined by the capital asset pricing
model.
- Capital rationing
- Placing limits on the amount of new investment undertaken by
a firm, either by using a higher cost of capital, or by setting a
maximum on the entire capital budget or parts of
it.
- Capital requirements
- Financing required for the operation of a business, composed
of long-term and working capital plus fixed assets.
- Capital shares
- One of two types of shares
in a dual-purpose investment
company, which entitle the holder to the appreciation or depreciation in the value of a portfolio, as well as the gains
from trading in the portfolio. Antithesis of income
shares.
- Capital stock
- Stock authorized by a firm's charter and having par value,
stated value, or no par value. The number and the value of issued
shares are usually shown, together with the number of shares
authorized, in the capital accounts section of the balance sheet.
See: Common stock.
- Capital structure
- The makeup of the liabilities and stockholders' equity side of the balance sheet, especially the
ratio of debt to equity and the
mixture of short and long maturities.
- Capital surplus
- Amounts of directly contributed equity capital in excess of the par value.
- Capital turnover
- Calculated by dividing annual sales by average stockholder equity (net worth). The ratio indicates how
much a company could grow its current capital investment level. Low capital turnover generally corresponds to high
profit margins.
- Capitalization
- The debt and/or equity mix that funds a firm's assets.
- Capitalization method
- A method of constructing a replicating portfolio in
which the manager purchases a number of the most highly
capitalized names in the stock index in proportion to their capitalization.
- Capitalization rate
- The rate of interest used
to calculate the present
value of a number of future payments.
- Capitalization ratios
- Also called financial leverage
ratios, these ratios compare debt to total capitalization and thus
reflect the extent to which a corporation is trading on its equity. Capitalization ratios can
be interpreted only in the context of the stability of industry and company earnings and cash flow.
- Capitalization table
- A table showing the capitalization of a firm, which
typically includes the amount of capital obtained from each source - long-term debt and common equity - and the respective
capitalization ratios.
- Capitalized
- Recorded in asset accounts
and then depreciated or amortized, as is appropriate for
expenditures for items with useful lives longer than one
year.
- Capitalized interest
- Interest that is not
immediately expensed, but rather is considered as an asset and is then amortized through the income statement over
time.
- Captive finance company
- A company, usually a subsidiary that is wholly owned,
whose main function is financing consumer purchases from the
parent company.
- Caput
- An exotic option. It represents a call option on a put
option. That is, you purchase the option to buy a put option at a particular price on or before the expiriation date.
- Car
- A loose quantity term sometimes used to describe the amount
of a commodity underlying one commodity contract; e.g., "a car of bellies."
Derived from the fact that quantities of the product specified in
a contract once corresponded
closely to the capacity of a railroad car.
- Carrot equity
- British slang for an equity
investment with the added
benefit of an opportunity to purchase more equity if the company reaches certain
financial goals.
- Carry
- Related: Net
financing cost.
- Basel Accord
- Agreement concluded among country representatives in 1988 in
Switzerland to develop standardized risk-based capital requirements for banks across
countries.
- Carryforwards
- Tax losses allowed to be applied to offset future income in
some specified number of future years.
- Carrying charge
- The fee a broker charges for carrying securities on credit, such as on a margin account.
- Carrying costs
- Costs that increase with increases in the level of investment
in current assets.
- Carrying value
- Book value.
- Cartel
- A group of businesses or nations that act together as a
single producer to obtain market
control and to influence prices in their favor by limiting
production of a product. The United States has laws prohibiting
cartels.
- Cash
- The value of assets that can
be converted into cash immediately, as reported by a company.
Usually includes bank accounts and marketable securities, such as
government bonds and banker's acceptances. Cash
equivalents on balance
sheets include securities
that mature within 90 days (e.g., notes).
- Cash
account
- A brokerage account that settles transactions on a
cash-rather than credit-basis.
- Cash asset ratio
- Cash and marketable securities divided by current liabilities. See: Liquidity ratios.
- Cash
basis
- Refers to the accounting method that recognizes revenues and
expenses when cash is actually received or paid out.
- Cash and equivalents
- The value of assets that can
be converted into cash immediately, as reported by a company.
Usually includes bank accounts and marketable securities, such as
government bonds and Banker's Acceptances. Cash
equivalents on balance
sheets include securities (e.g., notes) that mature within 90 days.
- Cash
budget
- A forecasted summary of a firm's expected cash inflows and
cash outflows as well as its expected cash and loan balances.
- Cash & carry
- Applies to derivative products. Combination of a long position in a stock/index/commodity and short position in the underlying futures, which entails a cost of carry on the long position.
- Cash commodity
- The actual physical commodity, as distinguished from a futures contract.
- Cash conversion cycle
- The length of time between a firm's purchase of inventory and the receipt of cash
from accounts
receivable.
- Cash
cow
- A company that pays out most of its earnings per share to stockholders as dividends. Or, a company or division
of a company that generates a steady and significant amount of free cash flow.
- Cash
cycle
- In general, the time between cash disbursement and cash
collection. In net working
capital management, it can be thought of as the operating
cycle less the accounts
payable payment period.
- Cash deficiency agreement
- An agreement to invest cash in
a project to the extent required to cover any cash deficiency the
project may experience.
- Cash delivery
- The provision of some futures contracts that
requires not delivery of underlying assets but settlement according to the
cash value of the asset.
- Cash discount
- An incentive offered to purchasers of a firm's product for
payment within a specified time period, such as ten days.
- Cash dividend
- A dividend paid in cash to
a company's shareholders.
The amount is normally based on profitability and is taxable as
income. A cash distribution may include capital gains and return of capital in addition to the
dividend.
- Cash earnings
- A firm's cash revenues less
cash expenses, which excludes the costs of depreciation.
- Cash-equivalent items
- Examples include Treasury bills and Banker's Acceptances.
- Cash
flow
- In investments, cash flow represents earnings before depreciation, amortization, and non-cash
charges. Sometimes called cash earnings. Cash flow from operations (called funds from
operations by real estate and other investment trusts) is
important because it indicates the ability to pay dividends.
- Cash flow after interest and
taxes
- Net income plus depreciation.
- Cash flow break-even point
- The point below which the firm will need either to obtain
additional financing or to liquidate some of its assets to meet its fixed costs.
- Cash flow per common share
- Cash flow from operations
minus preferred stock
dividends, divided by the
number of common shares
outstanding.
- Cash flow coverage ratio
- The number of times that financial obligations (for interest, principal payments, preferred stock dividends, and rental payments) are
covered by earnings before
interest, taxes, rental payments, and depreciation.
- Cash flow matching
- Also called dedicating a portfolio,
this is an alternative to multiperiod
immunization that calls for the manager to match the maturity of each element in the liability stream, working
backward from the last liability to assure all required cash flows.
- Cash flow from operations
- A firm's net cash inflow resulting directly from its regular
operations (disregarding extraordinary items such as the sale of
fixed assets or transaction costs associated
with issuing securities),
calculated as the sum of net income plus noncash expenses that
are deducted in calculating net income.
- Cash flow time line
- Line depicting the operating activities and cash flows for a firm over a
particular period.
- Cash investments
- Short-term debt instrumentssuch as
commercial paper, banker's acceptances, and Treasury billsthat mature in less than one year.
Also known as money market
instruments or cash reserves.
- Cash management
- Refers to the efficient management of cash in a business in
order to put the cash to work more quickly and to keep the cash
in applications that produce income, such as the use of lock
boxes for payments.
- Cash management bill
- Very short-maturity bills that the Treasury occasionally sells because
its cash balances are down and it needs money for a few
days.
- Cash
markets
- Also called spot
markets, these are markets that involve the immediate delivery of a security or instrument. Related: Derivative
markets.
- Cash
offer
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Proposal, either hostile or
friendly, to acquire a target company through the
payment of cash for the stock of
the target. Compare to exchange offer.
- Cash-on-cash return
- A method used to find the return on investments when there is no active
secondary market. The
yield is determined by dividing
the annual cash income by the total investment. See: Current yield or yield to maturity.
- Cash on delivery (COD)
- In the context of securities, this refers to the
practice of institutional investors paying the full purchase
price for securities in
cash.
- Cash plus convertible
- Convertible bond
that requires cash payment upon conversion.
- Cash position
- The percentage of a mutual
fund's assets invested in short-term reserves, such as US Treasury bills or other money market instruments.
- Cash
price
- Applies to derivative products. See: Spot price.
- Cash
ratio
- The proportion of a firm's assets held as cash.
- Cash reserves
- See: Cash
investments
- Cash sale/settlement
- Transaction in which a contract is settled on the same day as
the trade date, or the next day
if the trade occurs after 2:30 p.m. EST and the parties agree to
this procedure. Often occurs because a party is strapped for cash
and cannot wait until the regular five-business day settlement.
See: Settlement
date.
- Cash settlement contracts
- Futures contracts
such as stock index futures that settle for cash and
do not involve delivery of the
underlying.
- Cash-surrender value
- The amount an insurance company will pay if the policyholder
tenders or cashes in a whole life insurance
policy.
- Cash transaction
- A transaction in which exchange is immediate in the form of
cash, unlike a forward
contract (which calls for future delivery of an asset at an agreed-upon price).
- Cashbook
- An accounting book that is composed of cash receipts plus
disbursements. This balance is posted to the cash account in the ledger.
- Cashier's check
- A check drawn directly on a customer's account, making the bank the primary
obligor, and assuring firms that the amount will be paid.
- Cashout
- Occurs when a firm runs out of cash and cannot readily sell marketable securities.
- Casualty-insurance
- Insurance protecting a firm or homeowner against loss of
property, damage, and other liabilities.
- Casualty loss
- A financial loss caused by damage, destruction, or loss of
property as a result of an unexpected or unusual event.
- Catastrophe call
- Early redemption of a municipal revenue bond
because a catastrophe has destroyed the project that provided the
revenue source backing the bond.
- Cats and dogs
- Speculative stocks with short
histories of sales, earnings, and dividend payments.
- Caveat emptor, caveat
subscriptor
- Latin expressions for "buyer beware" and "seller beware,"
which warn of overly risky,
inadequately protected markets.
- CEDEL
- A centralized clearing system for Eurobonds.
- Ceiling
- The highest price, interest rate, or other numerical
factor allowable in a financial transaction.
- Central bank
- A country's main bank whose responsibilities include the issue of currency, the
administration of monetary
policy, open market operations, and engaging in transactions designed to facilitate
healthy business interactions. See: Federal Reserve
System.
- Central Limit Theorem
- The Law of Large Numbers states that as a sample of
independent, identically distributed random numbers approaches
infinity, its probability density
function approaches the normal distribution. See: Normal Distribution.
- Centralized cash flow
management
- Provision of consolidated cash management decisions to all MNC units from
one location, usually at the parent's headquarters.
- Cents per share
- The amount of a mutual
fund's dividend or capital gains distributions
that a shareholder will
receive for each share
owned.
- Checkwriting
- Free checkwriting privileges offered with nonretirement
accounts for select mutual funds.
- Certainty equivalent
- An amount that would be accepted today (risk free) in lieu of
a chance to receive a possibly higher, but uncertain,
amount.
- Certainty Equivalent
Return
- The certain (zero risk) return an investor would trade for a given
(larger) return with an
associated risk. For example, a
particular investor might
trade an uncertain expected 4% active return with 6% risk, for a certain
active return of 1.5%.
- Certificate
- A formal document used to record a fact and used as proof of
the fact, such as stock
certificates, that evidence ownership of stock in a corporation.
- Certificate of Accrual on Treasury Securities
(CATS)
- Refers to a zero-coupon US Treasury issue that is sold at a deep discount
from the face value and pays
no coupon interest during its
lifetime, but returns the full
face value at maturity.
- Certificate of deposit (CD)
- Also called a time
deposit this is a certificate issued by a bank or thrift that indicates
a specified sum of money has been deposited. A CD has a maturity date and a specified interest rate, and can be
issued in any denomination. The duration can be up to five years.
- Certificates of Amortized Revolving Debt
(CARD)
- Pass-through
securities backed by credit card receivables.
- Certificates of Automobile Receivables
(CAR)
- Pass-through
securities backed by automobile loan receivables.
- Certificateless municipals
- Municipal bonds with
one certificate which is valid for the entire issue, and having no individual
certificates, easing transactions. See: Book-entry
securities.
- Certified check
- A bank guaranteed check for which funds are immediately
withdrawn, and for which the bank is legally liable.
- Certified Financial Planner
(CFP)
- A person who has passed examinations accredited by the
Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, showing that the
person is able to manage a client's banking, estate, insurance,
investment, and tax
affairs.
- Certified financial
statements
- Financial statements that include an accountant's opinion.
- Certified Public Accountant
(CPA)
- An accountant who has met certain standards, including
experience, age, and licensing, and passed exams in a particular
state.
- Chair of the board
- Highest-ranking member of a Board of Directors, who
presides over its meetings and who is often the most powerful
officer of a corporation.
- Chaos
- A deterministic non-linear dynamic system that can produce
random looking results. A chaotic system must have a fractal dimension, and
exhibit sensitive dependence on initial conditions. See: Fractal Dimension, Lyapunov Exponent, Strange Attractor.
- Chapter 7 Proceedings
- Provisions of the Bankruptcy Reform Act under which
the debtor firm's assets are liquidated by a court because
reorganization would
fail to establish a profitable
business.
- Chapter 11 Proceedings
- Provisions of the Bankruptcy Reform Act under which
the debtor firm is reorganized by a court because
the estimated value of the reorganized firm exceeds the
expected proceeds from its liquidation.
- Changes in financial
position
- Sources of funds provided from operations that alter a
company's cash flow position: depreciation, deferred taxes, other sources,
and capital
expenditures.
- Characteristic line
- The market model
applied to a single security;
a regression of security returns on the benchmark return. The slope of the
regression line is a security's beta.
- Characteristic portfolio
- A portfolio which
efficiently represents a particular asset characteristic. For a given
characteristic, it is the minimum risk portfolio, with portfolio characteristic equal to 1.
For example, the characteristic portfolio of asset betas is the benchmark. It is the minimum risk
beta = 1 portfolio.
- Charge
off
- See: Bad debt
- Charitable remainder trust
- An irrevocable trust that pays income to a designated person
or persons until the grantor's death, when the income is passed
on to a designated charity. A charitable lead trust by contrast allows the charity to
receive income during the grantor's life, and the remaining
income to pass to designated family members upon the grantor's
death.
- Charter
- See: Articles
of incorporation
- Chartered Financial Analyst
(CFA)
- An experienced financial analyst who has passed examinations in
economics, financial accounting, portfolio management, security analysis, and standards
of conduct given by the institute of Chartered Financial
Analysts.
- Chartists
- A technical analyst who
charts the patterns of stocks, bonds, and commodities to find trends in patterns of trading used to advise clients. Related:
Technical
analysts.
- Chasing the market
- Purchasing a security at a
higher price than expected because prices are rapidly climbing,
or selling a security at a
lower level when prices are quickly falling.
- Chastity bonds
- Bonds redeemable at par value in the case of a takeover.
- Chatter
- See: Whipsawed
- Chattel Mortgage
- A loan agreement that grants to the lender a lien on property other than real estate.
Chattel is personal or movable property.
- Cheapest to deliver issue
- The acceptable Treasury security with the highest implied repo rate; the rate
that a seller of a futures
contract can earn by buying an issue and then delivering it at the settlement date.
- Check
- A bill of exchange
representing a draft on a bank from deposited funds that pays a
certain sum of money to a certain person or party.
- Checking the market
- Searching for bid and offer prices from market makers to find the best
deal.
- Chicago Board Options Exchange
(CBOE)
- A securities exchange
created in the early 1970s for the public trading of standardized
option contracts. Primary place stock options, foreign currency
options, and index
options (S&P 100, 500, and OTC 250 index)
- Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT)
- The largest futures exchange in the US, and was a
pioneer in the development of financial futures and options.
- Chicago Mercantile Exchange
(CME)
- A not-for-profit corporation owned by its members. Its
primary functions are to provide a location for trading futures and options, to collect and disseminate market information, to maintain a
clearing mechanism, and to enforce trading rules. Applies to
derivative products. Primary place futures (OTC 250 industrial stock price index, S& P 100 and 500
index) and futures options (S&P 500 stock index) are traded.
- Chicago Stock Exchange (CHX)
- A major exchange trading only stocks, with 90% of trades taking place on an automated execution system, called
MAX.
- Chief Executive Officer (CEO)
- A title held often by the Chairperson of the Board,
or the president. The person principally responsible for the
activities of a company.
- Chief Financial Officer (CFO)
- The officer of a firm is responsible for handling the
financial affairs of a company.
- Chief Operating Officer (COO)
- The officer of a firm responsible for day-to-day management,
usually the president or an executive vice-president.
- Chinese hedge
- Applies mainly to convertible securities. Trading hedge in which one is short the convertible and long the underlying common, in the hope that
the convertible's premium will
fall. Antithesis of set-up.
- Chinese wall
- Communication barrier between financiers at a firm
(investment bankers) and traders. This barrier is erected to
prevent the sharing of inside information that bankers are likely
to have.
- Choice market
- Applies mainly to international equities. Locked market in London
terminology.
- Churning
- Excessive trading of a
client's account in order to increase the broker's commissions.
- Cincinnati Stock Exchange (CSE)
- Stock exchange
based in Cincinnati that is the only fully automated stock exchange in the US It has
no trading floor, but handles all members' transactions using computers.
- Circle
- Underwriters, actual or
potential, often seek out and "circle" investor interest in a new
issue before final pricing. The
customer circled has basically made a commitment to purchase the
issue if it is available at an agreed-upon price. If the actual
price is other than that stipulated, the customer supposedly has
first offer at the actual
price.
- Circuit breakers
- Measures instituted by exchanges to stop trading temporarily when the market has fallen by a certain
percentage in a specified period. They are intended to prevent a
market free fall by permitting
buy and sell orders to
rebalance.
- Circus swap
- A fixed-rate currency
swap against floating US dollar LIBOR payments.
- Citizen bonds
- Certificateless municipals that can be registered on stock exchanges and are listed
in newspapers.
- City code on takeovers and
mergers
- See: Dawn raid
- Claim dilution
- A decrease in the likelihood that one or more of a firm's
claimants will be fully repaid, including time value of money
considerations.
- Claimant
- A party to an explicit or implicit contract.
- Class
- In the case of derivative products, options of the same type-put or call-with the same underlying security. See:
Series. In general, refers to a
category of assets such as: domestic equity, fixed income,
etc.
- Class A/Class B shares
- See: Classified
stock
- Class action
- A legal complaint filed by a lawyer or group of lawyers for a
group of petitioners with an identical grievance, often with an
award proportionate to the number of shareholders involved.
- Classified stock
- The division of stock into
more than one class of common stock, usually called Class
A and Class B. The specific features of each class, which are set out in the charter
and bylaws, usually give certain advantages to the Class A shares, such as increased voting
power.
- Clean
- In the context of general equities, block trade that matches buy or sell orders/interests, sparing the block trader any inventory risk (no net position and hence none available for
additional customers). Natural.
Antithesis of open.
- Clean opinion
- An auditor's opinion reflecting an unqualified acceptance of
a company's financial statements.
- Clean
price
- Bond price excluding accrued interest.
- Clean
up
- In the context of general equities, purchase/sale of all the
remaining supply of stock, or the
last piece of a block, in a
trade-leaving a net zero position.
- "Clean your skirts"
- In the context of general equities, "make all your obligated
calls"; check with all prior obligations in a security. Often preceded by "subject to."
- Clear
- To settle a trade is settled
out by the seller delivering securities and the buyer delivering
funds in the proper form. A trade that does not clear is said to
fail. Comparison of the details of a transaction between broker/dealers prior to settlement; final exchange of
securities for cash on delivery.
- Clear a position
- To eliminate a long or short position, leaving no
ownership or obligation.
- Clear
title
- Title to ownership that is untainted by any claims on the
property or disputed interests, and therefore available for sale.
This is usually checked through a title search by a title
company.
- Clearing corporations
- Organizations that are affiliated with exchanges and are used to complete securities transactions by taking care of
validation, delivery, and settlement.
- Clearing House Automated Payments System
(CHAPS)
- A computerized clearing system for sterling funds that began
operations in 1984. It includes 14 member banks, nearly 450
participating banks, and is one of the clearing companies within
the structure of the Association for Payment Clearing Services
(APACS).
- Clearing House Electronic Subregister System
(CHESS)
- CHESS is the automatic transfer and settlement system for the
majority of Australian Stock Exchange
(ASX) listed securities.
- Clearing house funds
- Funds from the Federal Reserve System,
requiring three days to clear, that are passed to and from
banks.
- Clearing House Interbank Payments System
(CHIPS)
- An international wire transfer system for high-value payments
operated by a group of major banks.
- Clearinghouse
- An adjunct to a futures exchange through which
transactions executed on its
floor are settled by a process of matching purchases and sales. A
clearing organization is also charged with the proper conduct of
delivery procedures and the
adequate financing of the entire operation.
- Clearing member
- A member firm of a clearing house. Each clearing member must
also be a member of the exchange. Not all members of the
exchange, however, are members of the clearing organization. All
trades of a non-clearing member
must be registered with, and eventually settled through, a
clearing member.
- Clientele effect
- Describes the tendary of funds or investments to be followed
by groups of investors who have a similar preferences that the
firm follow a particular financing policy, such as the amount of
leverage it uses.
- Clone
fund
- A new fund set up in a fund
family to emulate another successful fund.
- Close
- The close is the period at the end of the trading session.
Sometimes used to refer to closing price. Related: Opening.
- Close a position
- In the context of general equities, eliminate an investment
from one's portfolio, by
either selling a long
position or covering a short position.
- Close market
- An active market in which
there is a narrow spread between
bid and offer prices, due to a high volume of trading and many competing market makers.
- Closed corporation
- A corporation whose shares
are owned by just a few people, having no public market.
- Closed-end management
company
- An investment company
that has only a set number of shares of the mutual fund that it manages, and
does not create new shares if demand increases. Antithesis of an
open-end management company.
- Closed-end fund
- An investment company that sells shares like any other corporation and
usually does not redeem its shares. A publicly traded fund sold on stock exchanges or over the counter that may trade above or below its net asset value. Related: Open-end fund.
- Closed-end management
company
- An investment company
that has only a set number of shares of the mutual fund that it manages, and
does not create new shares if demand increases. Antithesis of an
open-end management company.
- Closed-end mortgage
- Mortgage against which no
additional debt may be issued.
- Closed fund
- A mutual fund that is
no longer issuing shares, mainly because it has grown too
large.
- Closed
out
- Position that is
liquidated when the client does not meet a margin call or cover a short sale.
- Closely held
- A corporation whose voting stock is owned by only a few shareholders.
- Closely held company
- A company who has a small group of controlling shareholders.
In contrast, a widely-held firm has many shareholders. It is
difficult or impossible to wage a proxy battle for any
closely-held firm.
- Closing costs
- All the expenses involved in transferring ownership of real
estate.
- Closing price
- Price of the last transaction of a particular stock completed during a day's trading session on an exchange.
- Closing purchase
- A transaction in which the purchaser's intention is to reduce
or eliminate a short
position in a stock, or in a
given series of options.
- Closing quote
- The last bid and offer prices of a particular stock at the close of a day's trading session on an exchange.
- Closing range
- Also known as the range. The
high and low prices, or bids and offers, recorded during the period
designated as the official close.
Related: Settlement
price.
- Closing sale
- A transaction in which the seller's intention is to reduce or
eliminate a long position
in a stock, or a given series of options.
- Closing tick
- The net of the number of stocks whose closing prices are higher
than their previous trades (uptick) against the number of
stocks whose closing prices were
lower than their previous trades
(downtick). A positive closing
tick indicates "buying at the
close", or a bullish market; a negative closing tick indicates "selling at the close," or
a bearish market. See: TRIN.
- Closing transaction
- Applies to derivative products. Buy or sell transaction that eliminates an
existing position (selling a
long option or buying back a short option). Antithesis of opening
transaction.
- Closing TRIN
- See: TRIN
- Cloud on title
- Any claim or encumbrance, usually discovered in a title
search, that may impair the title to a property, and make its
validity questionable. See: bad
title.
- Cluster analysis
- A statistical technique that identifies clusters of stocks
whose returns are highly correlated within each cluster
and relatively uncorrelated across clusters. Cluster analysis has
identified groupings such as growth, cyclical, stable, and energy
stocks.
- CMO
REIT
- A very risky type of Real Estate Investment
Trust investing in the residual cash flows of Collateralized
Mortgage Obligation (CMOs). CMO cash_flows are derived from the
difference between the rates paid by the mortgage loan holders and the lower,
shorter-term rates paid to CMO investors.
- Coattail investing
- A risky trading practice of making trades similar to those of other
successful investors, usually
institutional
investors.
- COD transaction
- See: Delivery
versus payment
- Code of procedure
- The guide of the National
Association of Securities Dealers used to adjudicate
complaints filed against NASD
members.
- Coefficient of
determination
- A measure of the goodness of fit of the relationship between
the dependent and independent variables in a regression analysis; for
instance, the percentage of variation in the return of an asset explained by the market portfolio return. Also
known as R-square.
- Coefficient of Variation
- A measure of investment
risk that defines risk as the standard deviation per
unit of expected
return.
- Coffee, Sugar & Cocoa Exchange
(CS&CE)
- The New York-based commodity exchange trading futures and options. The CS&CE shares the
trading floor at the Commodities Exchange
Center.
- Cofinancing agreements
- Joint participation of the World Bank and other agencies or lenders in providing funds to developing
countries.
- Coherent Market Hypothesis
- A hypothesis that the probability density
function of the market may be determined by a combination of
group sentiment and fundamental bias. Depending on combinations
of these two factors, the market can be in one of four states: random walk, unstable
transition, chaos, or
coherence.
- Coincident indicators
- Economic indicators that give an indication of the status of
the economy.
- Coinsurance effect
- Refers to the fact that the merger of two firms lessens the
probability of default on
either firm's debt.
- Cold-calling
- Calling potential new customers in the hope of selling stocks, bonds or other financial products and
receiving commissions.
- Collar
- An upper and lower limit on the interest rate on a floating-rate note (FRN) or
an adjustable-rate
mortgage (ARM).
- Collateral
- Asset than can be repossessed
if a borrower defaults.
- Collateral trust bonds
- A bond in which the issuer (often a holding company) grants
investors a lien on stocks, notes, bonds, or other financial asset as security. Compare mortgage bond.
- Collateralized Bond Obligation
(CBO)
- Investment-grade bonds backed by a collection of junk bonds with different levels
of risk, called tiers, that are determined by the quality of junk bond involved. CBOs backed
by highly risky junk bonds receive higher interest rates than other
CBOs.
- Collateralized mortgage obligation
(CMO)
- A security backed by a
pool of pass-through
rates , structured so that there are several classes of bondholders with varying maturities, called tranches. The principal payments from the underlying pool of pass-through
securities are used to retire the bonds on a priority basis as specified in the prospectus. Related: mortgage
pass-through security.
- Collection
- The presentation of a negotiable instrument for payment, or the
conversion of any accounts receivable into
cash.
- Collection float
- The period between the time is deposited a check in an
account and the time funds are made available.
- Collection fractions
- The percentage of a given month's sales collected during the
month of sale and each month following the month of sale.
- Collection period
- See: Collection
ratio
- Collection policy
- Procedures a firm follows in attempting to collect accounts receivables.
- Collection ratio
- The ratio of a company's accounts receivable to its
average daily sales, which gives the average number of days it
takes the company to convert receivables into cash.
- Collective wisdom
- The combination of all the individual opinions about a stock's or security's value.
- COLT
(Continuous on-line trading system)
- Computerized OTC traders
assistance system that provides for trade entry and position monitoring, among other
functions.
- Comanager
- A bank that ranks just below a lead manager in a syndicated Eurocredit or
international bond issue. Comanagers may assist the lead
manager bank in the pricing and issue of the instrument.
- Combination
- Applies to derivative products. Arrangement of options involving two long or two short positions with different
expiration dates or strike (exercise) prices.
See: Straddle.
- Combination annuity
- See: Hybrid
annuity
- Combination bond +
- A bond backed by the
government unit issuing it as well as by revenue from the project
that is to be financed by the bond.
- Combination order
- See: Alternative
order
- Combination matching
- Also called horizon-matching, a variation of multiperiod
immunization and cash flow-matching in which
a portfolio is created that
is always duration-matched and
also cash-matched in the first few years.
- Combination strategy
- A strategy in which a put and
call with the same strike price and expiration are either both bought or
both sold. Related: Straddle
- Combined financial
statement
- A financial statement that merges the assets, liabilities, net worth, and operating figures of
two or more affiliated companies. A combined statement is
distinguished from a consolidated
financial statement of a company and subsidiaries, which must
reconcile investment and capital accounts.
- Come
in
- In the context of general equities, a fall in price.
- Come out of the trade
- In the context of general equities, trader's position in a security that results from executing a trade (or the expectations thereof).
Antithesis of going
into the trade.
- Comeout
- In the context of general equities, the opening. Antithesis of the close.
- COMEX
- A division of the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX).
Formerly known as the Commodity Exchange, COMEX is the leading US
market for metals futures and
options trading.
- Comfort letter
- A letter from an independent auditor in securities underwriting agreements to assure
that information in the registration statement and prospectus is correctly prepared to
the best of the auditor's knowledge.
- Commercial draft
- Demand for payment.
- Commercial hedgers
- Companies that take futures
positions in commodities so that they can
guarantee prices at which they will buy raw materials or sell
their products.
- Commercial invoice
- Bill for merchandise sold.
- Commercial letters of
credit
- Trade-related agreement that a certain amount of bank funds
is available to an entity.
- Commercial loan
- A short-term loan, typically 90 days, used by a company to
finance seasonal working
capital needs.
- Commercial Mortgage Backed
Securities
- Similar to MBS but backed by
loans secured with commercial rather than residential property.
Commercial property includes multi-family, retail, office, etc.,
They are not standardized so there are a lot of details
associated with structure, credit enhancement, diversification,
etc., that need to be understood when valuing these
instruments.
- Commercial paper
- Short-term unsecured
promissory notes issued by a corporation. The maturity of commercial paper is typically
less than 270 days; the most common maturity range is 30 to 50 days or
less.
- Commercial property
- Real estate that produces some sort of income-producing
property.
- Commercial risk
- The risk that a foreign debtor
will be unable to pay its debts
because of business events, such as bankruptcy.
- Commingling
- In the context of securities, this involves mixing
customer-owned securities with
brokerage firm-owned securities. This process is referred
to as rehypothecation,
which is the use of customers' collateral to secure their loans.
This is legal with customer consent, although some securities and collateral must be kept
separately.
- Commission
- The fee paid to a broker to
execute a trade, based on number of shares, bonds, options, and/or their dollar value. In
1975, deregulation led to the establishment of discount brokers,
who charge lower commissions than full service brokers. Full service brokers offer
advice and usually have a staff of analysts who follow specific
industries. Discount brokers
simply execute a client's order and usually do not offer an
opinion on a stock. Also known as
a round-turn.
- Commission broker
- A broker on the floor
of an exchange who acts as
agent for a particular brokerage house and buys and sells stocks for the brokerage
house on a commission basis.
- Commission house
- A firm that buys and sells futures contracts for
customer accounts. Related: futures commission
merchant, omnibus
account.
- Commission-only
compensation
- Payment to a financial adviser's of only
commissions on investments purchased when the
client implements the recommended financial plan.
- Commitment
- Describes a trader
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