- V
- Fifth letter of a Nasdaq
stock symbol indicate that it is when-issued or when-distributed.
- VA
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for HOLY SEE (VATICAN CITY STATE).
- VaR
- See: Value-at-risk
model
- VC
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for SAINT VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES.
- VE
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for VENEZUELA.
- VEB
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Venezuelan Bolivar.
- VG
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for VIRGIN ISLANDS, BRITISH.
- VI
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for VIRGIN ISLANDS, U.S..
- VN
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for VIET NAM.
- VND
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Vietnamese Dong.
- VRDB
- See: Variable-rated
demand bond
- VU
- The two-character ISO
3166 country code for VANUATU.
- VUV
- The ISO
4217 currency code for the Vanuatu Vatu.
- VWAP
- The volume-weighted average price.
- Valuation
- Determination of the value of a company's stock
based on earnings and the market
value of assets.
- Valuation
Opportunity Cost
- The potential increase in firm value associated with investments
that are for gone due to capital
rationing.
- Valuation
reserve
- An allowance to provide for changes in the value of a company's
assets, such as depreciation.
- Value
Added
- Value added is the risk
adjusted return generated by an investment
strategy: the return of the
investment strategy minus the return
of the benchmark.
- Value-added
tax
- Method of indirect taxation that levies a tax is at each stage
of production on the value added at that specific stage.
- Value
additivity principal
- When the value of a whole group of assets
exactly equals the sum of the values of the individual assets
that make up the group of assets. Or, the principle that the net
present value of a set of independent projects is just the
sum of the net present values of the individual projects.
- Value
broker
- A discount broker
whose rates are a percentage of the dollar value of each transaction.
- Value
date
- In the market for Eurodollar
deposits and foreign exchange,
the delivery date of funds
traded. For spot transactions,
it is normally on spot transactions two days after a transaction
is agreed upon. In the case of a forward
foreign exchange trade, it is the future date.
- Value
dating
- When value or credit is given for funds transferred between
banks.
- Value
Line investment survey
- A proprietary service that ranks stocks
for timeliness and safety.
- Value
manager
- A manager who seeks to buy stocks
that are at a discount to their
"fair value" and to sell them at or in excess of that
value. Often a value stock is
one with a low price-to-book
value ratio. Opposite of to growth
stock.
- Value
Maximization
- Increases in owners' wealth achieved by maximizing of the value
of a firm's common stock.
- Value-at-risk
model (VaR)
- Procedure for estimating the probability
of portfolio losses exceeding
some specified proportion based on a statistical analysis of historical
market price trends, correlations,
and volatilities.
- Value
stocks
- Stocks with low price/book ratios
or price/earnings ratios. Historically, value stocks have enjoyed
higher average returns
than growth stocks (stocks
with high price/book or P/E ratios) in a variety of countries.
- Value
stock fund
- A mutual fund that emphasizes
stocks of companies whose growth
opportunities are generally regarded as subpar by the market.
A value stock company often pays regular dividend
income to shareholders
and sells at relatively low prices in relation to its earnings
or book value.
- Vancouver
Stock Exchange (VSE)
- A securities and options
exchange in Vancouver, British
Columbia, (Canada), specializing in venture
capital companies.
- Vanilla
issue
- A security issue
that has no unusual features.
- Variable
- An element in a model. For example, in the model RS&Pt+1
= a + b Tbill t + et, where RS&Pt+1
is the return on the S&P in month t+1 and Tbill
is the Tbill return at month t, both RS&P and Tbill
are "variables" because they change through time; i.e.,
they are not constant.
- Variable
annuities
- Investment contracts whose
issuer pays a periodic amount
linked to the investment performance of an underlying
portfolio.
- Variable
cost
- A cost that is directly proportional to the volume of output
produced. When production is zero, the variable cost is equal
to zero.
- Variable
interest rate
- See: Adjustable rate
- Variable
life insurance policy
- A whole life insurance
policy that provides a death benefit dependent on the insured's
portfolio market
value at the time of death. Typically the company invests
premiums in common stocks,
so variable life policies
are referred to as equity-linked policies.
- Variable-price
security
- A security that sells at
a fluctuating market-determined
price stocks and bonds are example.
- Variable-rate
CDs
- Short-term certificate
of deposits that pay interest
periodically on roll dates.
On each roll date, the coupon
on the CD is adjusted to reflect current market rates.
- Variable-rate
demand note
- A note that is payable on demand
and bears interest tied to
a money market rate.
- Variable-rate
loan
- Loan made at an interest rate
that fluctuates depending on a base interest
rate, such as the prime rate
or LIBOR.
- Variable
rated demand bond (VRDB)
- Floating-rate bond
that periodically can be sold back to the issuer.
- Variance
- A measure of dispersion of a set of data points around their
mean value. The mathematical expectation
of the average squared deviations from the mean.
The square root of the variance is the standard
deviation.
- Variance-minimization
approach to tracking
- An approach to bond indexing
that uses historical data to estimate the variance
of the tracking error.
- Variance
rule
- Specifies the permitted minimum or maximum quantity of securities
that can be delivered to satisfy a TBA
trade. For Ginnie
Mae, Fannie Mae, and
Freddie Mac pass-through
securities, the accepted variance is plus or minus 2.499999
% per million of the par value
of the TBA quantity.
- Variation
margin
- An additional required deposit to bring an investor's equity
account up to the initial margin
level when the balance falls below the maintenance
margin requirement.
- Velda
Sue
- Stands for Venture Enhancement and Loan Development Administration
for Smaller Undercapitalized Enterprises. A federal agency that
buys and pools small business loans made by banks, and then issues
securities that are bought
by large institutional
investors.
- Velocity
- The number of times a dollar is spent, or turns over, in a specific
period of time. Velocity affects the amount of economic activity
generated by a given money supply.
- Vendor
- Seller or supplier.
- Venture
capital
- An investment in a start-up business that is perceived to have
excellent growth prospects
but does not have access to capital
markets. Type of financing sought by early-stage companies
seeking to grow rapidly.
- Venture
capital limited partnership
- A partnership between a startup company and a brokerage firm
or entrepreneurial company that provides capital
for the new business in return for stock
in the company and a share of the profits.
- Vertical
acquisition
- Buying or taking over a firm in the same industry in which the
acquired firm and the acquiring
firm represent different steps in the production process.
- Vertical
analysis
- Dividing each expense item
in the income statement
of a given year by net sales to identify expense items that rise
more quickly or more slowly than a change in sales.
- Vertical
line charting
- A form of technical charting that shows the high, low, and closing
prices of a stock or a market
on each day on one vertical line with the closing price indicated
by a short horizontal mark.
- Vertical
merger
- When one firm acquires another firm that is in the same industry
but at another stage in the production cycle. For example, the
firm being acquired serves as a supplier to the
firm doing the acquiring.
- Vertical
spread
- Simultaneous purchase and sale of two options
that differ only in their exercise
price. See: Horizontal
spread.
- Vest
- Become applicable or exercisable. A term mainly used on the
context of employee stock ownership or option programs. Employees
might be given equity in a firm but they must stay with the firm
for a number of years before they are entitled to the full equity.
This is a vesting provision. It provides incentive for the employee
to perform.
- Vesting
- Nonforfeitable ownership (or partial ownership) by an employee
of the retirement account balances or benefits contributed on
the employees behalf by an employer. The Tax Reform Act of 1986
established minimum vesting rights for employees based on their
years of servicefull vesting in five years or 20% vesting
per year starting by the end of the third year.
- Veterans
Administration (VA) mortgage
- A home mortgage loan granted
by a lending institution to U.S. veterans and guaranteed by the
Veterans Administration.
- V formation
- A technical chart pattern
that follows a letter V form, indicating that the security
price has bottomed out, and is now in a bullish
trend.
- Vienna
Stock Exchange (VSX)
- One of the world's oldest exchanges,
which accounts for approximately 50% of Austrian stock
transactions; the balance
are traded OTC.
- Virtual
currency option
- A new option contract
introduced by the PHLX in 1994
that is settled in US dollars rather than in the underlying
currency. These options are also called 3-Ds (dollar-denominated
delivery).
- Visible
supply
- New muni bond issues
scheduled to come to market within
the next 30 days.
- Volatility
- A measure of risk based on the
standard deviation
of the asset return. Volatility
is a variable that appears
in option pricing formulas,
where it denotes the volatility of the underlying
asset return from now to the expiration of the option.
There are volatility indexes. Such as a scale of 1-9; a higher
rating means higher risk.
- Volume
deleted
- A note appearing on the consolidated
tape when the tape
is running behind under heavy trading,
meaning that only the stock symbol
and price will be shown for trades
under 5000 shares.
- Volume
discount
- A reduction in price based on the purchase of a large quantity.
- Voluntary
accumulation plan
- Arrangement allowing shareholders
of a mutual fund to purchase
shares over a period of time
on a regular basis, and in so doing take advantage of dollar
cost averaging.
- Voluntary
bankruptcy
- The legal proceeding that follows a petition of bankruptcy.
- Voluntary
liquidation
- Liquidation proceedings
that are supported by a company's shareholders.
- Voluntary
plan
- A pension plan supported partially by the employee by pension
contributions deducted from each paycheck.
- Volatility
risk
- The risk in the value of options
portfolios due to the unpredictable
changes in the volatility of the underlying
asset.
|
Std Deviation |
Rating |
|
Std Deviation |
Rating |
| up to 7. 99 |
1 |
|
20. 00-22.
99 |
6 |
| 8. 00-10. 99 |
2 |
|
23. 00-25.
99 |
7 |
| 11. 00-13.
99 |
3 |
|
26. 00-28.
99 |
8 |
| 14. 00-16.
99 |
4 |
|
29. 00 and
up |
9 |
| 17. 00-19.
99 |
5 |
|
|
|
- Volume
- This is the daily number of shares of a security that change hands between a buyer and a seller.
- Voting certificate
- Certificates issued by a voting trust to stockholders in exchange for their common stock, which represent all the rights of common stock except voting rights.
- Voting rights
- The right to vote on matters that are put to a vote of security holders. For example the right to vote for directors.
- Voting stock
- The shares in a corporation that entitle the shareholder to vote.
- Voting trust certificate
- A trust in which control of a corporation is given to a few individuals, usually to support reorganization of a corporation without interference.
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