| H |
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying that the issue
is the second preferred bond of the company. |
| HAB |
See: House Air Waybill |
| Habendum clause |
The part of a conveyance that describes the quality of title
being conveyed, for example ‘to hold the same in fee simple’. |
| Haircut |
The margin or difference between the actual market value of a
security and the value assessed by the lending side of a
transaction). |
| Half-life |
The point in the life of a mortgage-backed security guaranteed
or issued by the Government National Mortgage Association, the
Federal National Mortgage Association or the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation when half the principal has been repaid. |
| Half-stock |
Stock, common or preferred, with a $50 par value. |
| Hammering the market |
Heavy selling of stocks by speculators who think that the stock
is overvalued and is about to drop. |
| Handle |
The whole-dollar price of a bid or offer is referred to as the
handle (e.g., if a security is quoted at 101.10 bid and 101.11
offered, 101 is the handle). Traders are assumed to know the
handle. See: Full. |
| Hands-off investor |
An investor who has a large stake in a company, but does not
wish to play an active role in the management of the
corporation. |
| Hands-on investor |
An investor who has a large stake in a corporation and takes an
active role in its management . Antithesis of hands-off
investor. |
| Hang Seng index |
The major index in Hong Kong. |
| Hard call protection |
Usually refers to callable bonds. The period of time when a bond
cannot be called, no matter what the interest rate is. That is,
if the interest rate falls sharply, most callable bonds will be
called (so the bond issuer can reissue at a lower interest
rate). Hard call protection ensures that the holder of the bond
can benefit when rates fall. |
| Hard capital rationing |
A capital budget that under no circumstances can be violated. |
| Hard currency |
A freely convertible currency that is not expected to depreciate
in value in the foreseeable future. |
| Hard dollars |
Actual separate payments made by a customer for services,
including research, provided by a brokerage firm. Antithesis of
soft dollars. |
| Harmless warrant |
Warrant that allows the user to purchase a bond only by
surrendering an other bond with similar terms. |
| Hart-Scott-Rodino Act |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Antitrust act administered by U.S.
Department of Justice and the FTC that requires an investor to
file a form with the government before he acquires an economic
interest in the lesser amount of $15 million or 15% of the
capitalization of a specific security. The government has thirty
days to respond to the filer. |
| Harvey, Campbell R. |
Author of this glossary. Finance professor at Duke University.
Author of research on international finance, asset allocation,
and emerging markets. |
| Hawkish |
An aggressive tone. For example, if the Federal Reserve uses
hawkish language to describe the threat of inflation, one could
reasonably expect stronger actions from the Fed. There is a
similar application to CEO describing an important issue that a
firm faces. Opposite of Dovish. |
| Head & shoulders |
In technical analysis, a pattern that results where a stock
price reaches a peak and declines; rises above its former peak
and again declines; and rises a third time but not to the second
peak, and then again declines. The first and third peaks are
shoulders, while the second peak is the formation's head.
Technical analysts generally consider a head and shoulders
formation to be a very bearishindication. |
| Headlease |
A lease from the freeholder of a property. |
| Headline rent |
The published rent, rather than the true rent. If a tenant
agrees to a 10 year lease at £50 per square foot with a review
at the 5th year and a two year rent-free period, £50 per square
foot is the headline rent. A true rent is usually taken as the
average rent payable up to the first review. In this example £30
per square foot. |
| Heads of terms |
Usually non-binding, a description of an agreement reached in
principle, from which binding legal documentation is produced. |
| Heavy |
An equities market now dominated by sellers, or oversupply,
resulting in falling prices. See: Overbought, resistance level,
tired. |
| Hedge |
A technique to minimise risk exposures such as the movement in
interest rates or currency exchange. See swaps, options and
forward rate agreements. |
| Hedge |
A transaction that reduces the risk of an investment. |
| Hedge clause |
A clause in a research report or any published document, that
attempts to absolve the writer of responsibility for the
accuracy of information provided. |
| Hedge fund |
An investment vehicle that somewhat resembles a mutual fund, but
with a number of important differences. If the fund is
"off-shore", the fund does not have to adhere to any SEC
regulations (and can only sell to non-U.S. investors or
investment vehicles). These funds employ a number of different
strategies that are not usually found in mutual funds. The term
"hedge" can actually be misleading. The traditional hedge fund
is actually hedged. For example, a fund employing a long-short
strategy would try to select the best securities for purchase
and the worst for short sale. The combination of longs and short
provides a natural hedge to market-wide shocks. However, much
more common are funds that are not hedged. There are funds that
are long-biased and short-biased. There are funds that undertake
high frequency futures strategies, sometimes called managed
futures. There are funds that take long-term macroeconomic bets,
sometimes called global macro. There are funds that try to
capitalize on merger and acquisitions. Another distinguishing
feature of hedge funds is the way that managers are rewarded.
There are two fees: fixed and variable. The fixed fee is a
percentage of asset under management. The variable or
performance fee is a percentage of the profit of the fund. There
are also funds of funds which invest in a portfolio of hedge
funds. Another important difference with hedge funds is that the
minimum required investment is usually quite large and, as a
result, minimizes the participation of retail investors. |
| Hedge quality |
Measured by the R-square in a regression of spot rate changes on
futures price changes. |
| Hedge ratio (delta) |
For options, ratio between the change in an option's theoretical
value and the change in price of the underlyingstock at a given
point in time. For convertibles, percentage of a convertible
bond representing the number of underlying common shares sold
against the shares into which bonds are convertible. If a
preferred is convertible into 2000 common shares, a 75% hedge
ratio would be short (long) 1500 common for every 1000 preferred
long (short). See: Delta. |
| Hedge wrapper |
An optionsstrategy in which an investor with a long position in
an underlyingstock buys an out-of-the-moneyput and sells an
out-of-the-moneycall. The hedge wrapper defines a range where
the stock will be sold at expiration of the option, which way
the stock moves. |
| Hedged portfolio |
A portfolio consisting of a long position in the stock and a
long position in the put option on the stock, so as to be
riskless and produce a return that equals the risk-free interest
rate. |
| Hedged tender |
An investor sells a portion of a stock holding short a tender
offer in the event all shares tendered are not accepted. For
example, investor Q has 5000 shares of XYZ. An acquiringcompany
makes a tender offer of $100 a share when the shares are
currently worth $80. Investor Q short-sells 2500 shares after
the announcement and the price of the stock has approached $100.
Company XYZ purchases only 2500 of the original shares at $100.
Investor Q has sold all shares at $100 even as the price of the
stock drops on a post-news dip. |
| Hedgie |
Slang for a hedge fund. |
| Hedging |
A strategy designed to reduce investment risk using call
options, put options, short-selling, or futures contracts. A
hedge can help lock in profits. Its purpose is to reduce the
volatility of a portfolio by reducing the risk of loss. |
| Hedging demands |
Demands for securities to hedge particular sources of
consumption risk, beyond the usual mean-variance diversification
motivation. |
| Held at the opening |
Used for listed equity securities. Not open for trading because
specialists or regulators are not allowing trading to occur
until imbalances dissipate or news is disseminated. |
| Held order |
Order that must be executed without hesitation (Hit the bid or
take the offer in line) or if the stock can be bought or sold at
that price (held limit order) in sufficient quantity. |
| Hell-or-high-water contract |
A contract that obligates a purchaser of a project's output to
make cash payments to the project in all events, even if no
product is offered for sale. |
| Helsinki Exchanges (HEX) |
The Helsinki Exchanges (HEX Ltd., Helsinki Securities and
Derivatives Exchange and Clearing House) was formed at the
beginning of 1998 following the merger of the Helsinki Stock
Exchange Ltd. and SOM Ltd., the Securities and Derivatives
Exchange, and the Clearing House. |
| Hemline theory |
A theory that stock prices move in the same direction as the
hemlines of women's dresses. For example, short skirts (1920s
and 1960s) are symbolic of bullishmarkets and long skirts (1930s
and 1940s) are symbolic of bearishmarkets. |
| Hermes |
The tradefinanceagency for Germany. |
| Herstatt risk |
The risk of loss in foreign exchange trading that one party will
deliver foreign exchange but the
counterpartyfinancial_institution will fail to complete its end
of the contract. This is also referred to as settlement risk. |
| HEX |
See: Helsinki Exchange |
| H-H page |
Quotron display page that shows new listed inquiries/orders
received after the block call. |
| HIBOR |
Hong Kong Interbank Offer Rate, the annualized offer rate banks
pay to attain Hong Kong three-month deposits in denominated
dollars. |
| Hidden load |
A sales charge that is not explicitly disclosed or is buried in
the fine print of a mutual fundprospectus or life insurance
policy and therefore is not immediately apparent. |
| Hidden values |
Valuable assets owned by a company, that are not accurately
reflected in its stock price at a particular time. |
| High credit |
The maximum amount of outstandingloans for a particular customer
on a bank's record. |
| High current income mutual fund |
A mutual fund whose primary goal is to produce a high level of
income by making higher-riskinvestments in instruments such as
junk bonds. |
| High flyer |
High-priced and highly speculative stock that moves up and down
sharply over a short period. Generally glamorous in nature due
to the capital gains potential associated with them; also used
to describe any high-priced stock. Antithesis of sleeper. |
| High price |
The highest (intraday) price of a stock over the past 52 weeks,
adjusted for any stock splits. |
| High withholding tax interest income |
Interest income that is subject to a foreign gross withholding
tax of 5% or more. Specified in US tax code. |
| High yield |
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that
focuses on low rated fixed income securities. |
| High-coupon bond refunding |
Replace a high-coupon bond with a new, lower-coupon bond. |
| High-grade |
Credit quality of AAA or AA. |
| High-grade bond |
A bond with Triple-A or Double-A rating in Standard & Poor's, or
Moody's rating system. |
| Highjacking |
Japanese term for a takeover. |
| Highly confident letter |
An investment bankingfirm's letter indicating that the firm is
highly confident it will be able to arrange financing for a
securities deal. |
| Highly leveraged transaction (HLT) |
Bank loan to a highly leveragedfirm. |
| High-premium convertible debenture |
A bond with a long-term, high-premium, common stock conversion
feature. It also offers a competitive interest rate. This type
of investment vehicle is aimed at bondinvestors who want to be
able to convert into stock to hedge against inflation. |
| Highs |
Stocks that have hit an all-time high for the current 52-week
time period. |
| High-tech stock |
Stocks of companies operating in high-technology fields. |
| High-yield bond |
See: Junk bond |
| Hire Purchase |
The right to purchase an asset by the user of the asset
according to a pre-agreed method. The user may be the owner for
tax purposes. |
| Historical cost |
Describes the accounting cost carried in the books for a current
cost of the item. |
| Historical Cost Accounting Convention |
An accounting technique that values an asset for balance sheet
purposes at the price paid for the asset at the time of its
acquisition. |
| Historical exchange rate |
An accounting term that refers to the exchange rate in effect at
the time an asset or liability is acquired. |
| Historical trading range |
The range of price over which a security or a commodity has
traded since listing on a exchange. |
| Historical volatility |
Fluctuations estimated from a historical time series. |
| Historical yield |
A measure of a mutual fund'syield over a specific period of
time, e.g., 1 year, 2 year, 5 year, or year to date. |
| Hit the bid |
A dealer who agrees to sell at the bid price quoted by another
dealer is said to "hit" that bid. Antithesis of take the offer. |
| Hit the ribbon |
Used in the context of general equities. See: Print. |
| HK |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for HONG KONG. |
| HKD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for theHong Kong Dollar. |
| HKFE |
See: Hong Kong Futures Exchange |
| HLT |
See: Highly leveraged transaction |
| HM |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for HEARD ISLAND AND
MCDONALD ISLANDS. |
| HN |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for HONDURAS. |
| HNL |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Honduras Lempira. |
| Hold |
To maintain ownership of a security over a long period of time.
"Hold" is also a recommendation of an analyst who is not
positive enough on a stock to recommend a buy, but not negative
enough on the stock to recommend a sell. |
| Holder |
The purchaser of an option. |
| Holder of record date |
The date on which holders of record in a firm'sstockledger are
designated as the recipients of either dividends or stock
rights. Also called date of record. |
| Holding company |
A corporation that owns enough votingstock in another firm to
control management and operations by influencing or electing its
Board of Directors. |
| Holding period |
Length of time a security is held. |
| Holding the market |
The illegal practice of maintaining and/or placing a sufficient
number of buy orders to create price support for a security or
commodity in an amount to of stabilize a downward trend. |
| Holding-period return |
Rate of return on an investment over a given period. |
| Holding-Period Yield (HPY) |
The annual rate of return actually realized on an investment in
a bond. |
| Home asset bias |
The tendency of investors to over invest in their own county's
assets. |
| Home run |
Large capital gain in a stock in a short period of time. |
| Homemade dividend |
Sale of some shares of stock to get cash in an amount similar to
that of a cash dividend. |
| Homemade leverage |
Idea that as long as individuals borrow (or lend) on the same
terms as the firm, they can duplicate the effects of corporate
leverage on their own. Thus, if levered firms are priced too
high, rational investors will simply borrow on personal accounts
to buyshares in unlevered firms. |
| Homeowner's equity account |
A credit line offered bymortgagelenders allowing a homeowner a
second mortgage that uses the equity present in the customer's
account as collateral. |
| Homeowner's insurance policy |
An insurance policy protecting a homeowner against damage or
loss to property. |
| Homogeneity |
The degree to which items are similar. |
| Homogeneous |
Exhibiting a high degree of homogeneity. |
| Homogeneous expectations assumption |
An assumption of Markowitzportfolio construction that investors
have the same expectations with respect to the inputs that are
used to derive efficient portfolios: assetreturns, variances,
and covariances. |
| Hong Kong Futures Exchange (HKFE) |
Established in 1976, the Hong Kong Futures Exchange (H.K.F.E.)
operates futures and options markets in index, stock, interest
rate, and foreign exchange products. |
| Horizon analysis |
An analysis of returns using total return to assess performance
over some investment horizon. |
| Horizon matching strategy |
An income immunization strategy that cash-matches over the next
few years and duration-matches the rest. |
| Horizon return |
Total return over a given horizon. |
| Horizontal acquisition |
Merger between two companies producing similar goods or
services. |
| Horizontal analysis |
The process of dividing each expense item of a given year by the
same expense item in the base year. It allows assessment of
changes in the relative importance of expense items over time
and the behavior of expense items as sales change. |
| Horizontal merger |
A merger involving two or more firms in the same industry that
are both at the same stage in the production cycle; that is, two
or more competitors. |
| Horizontal price movement |
Stock price movement within a narrow price range over an
extended period of time which creates the appearance of a
relatively straight line on a graph of the stock's price. |
| Horizontal spread |
The simultaneous purchase and sale of two options that differ
only in their expiration dates. |
| Hospital revenue bond |
A bondissued to finance construction of a hospital by a
municipal or state agency. |
| Host security |
The security to which a warrant is attached. |
| Hostile takeover |
A takeover of a company (usually made by an open tender offer to
shareholders) against the wishes of the current management and
the Board of Directors by an acquiring company or raider. |
| Hot |
Used in the context of general equities. Active, usually with
positive price implications. |
| Hot money |
Money that moves across country borders in response to interest
rate differences and that moves away when the interest rate
differential disappears. |
| House |
Firms that conduct business as broker-dealers in securities or
in the investment banking field are characterized as houses. |
| House account |
A type of account at a brokerage firm that is given a high level
of priority and is handled by the main office or an executive,
rather than a traditional salesperson. |
| House Air Waybill (AWB) |
An air waybill issued by an air freight consolidator. |
| House call |
Notification by a brokerage house that a customer's margin
account is below the minimum maintenance level. The client must
provide more cash or equity, or the account will be liquidated. |
| House maintenance requirement |
The internal rules of a brokerage house that govern the minimum
amount of equity that must be present in a customer's margin
account. |
| House of issue |
An investment banking firm whose business it is to
underwritestock or bondissues and offer the securities to the
public. |
| House poor |
People who are short on cash because most of their money is tied
up in their homes are "house poor." |
| House rules |
Internal rules of broker-dealerfirm that govern the handling of
its customers' accounts. |
| Housing association |
Generally a non-profit making body providing housing. It can
rent or sell housing, build or rehabilitate dwellings and
provide management and certain advisory services. |
| Housing bond |
Bondsissued by a local housing authority to finance housing
projects. |
| Housing corporation |
A government body set up to finance and regularise registered
social landlords principally housing associations. |
| Housing investment trust |
Originally designed to be tax transparent securitised vehicles
allowing derivative investment in the residential housing
market. Subsequent tax changes have removed much of this
attraction. |
| HR |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CROATIA. |
| HRK |
Croatian Kuna currency. (The ISO 4217 currency code) |
| HT |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for HAITI. |
| HTG |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Haiti Gourde. |
| HU |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for HUNGARY. |
| Hubris |
An arrogance due to excessive pride and an insolence toward
others. A classic character flaw of a trader or investor. |
| HUF |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Hungarian Forint. |
| Hulbert rating |
A rating by Hulbert Financial Digest, a service of CBS
MarketWatch, of how well the recommendations of various
investmentadvisory newsletters have performed. |
| Human capital |
The unique capabilities and expertise of individuals. |
| Humphrey-Hawkins Act |
Informal name for the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of
1978, from the names of the act's original sponsors. |
| Hung up |
Used to describe the position of an investor whose stocks or
bonds have dropped in value below their original purchase price. |
| Hunkering down |
A term used to describe a trader selling off a big position in a
stock. |
| Hurdle rate |
The required return in capital budgeting. For example, if a
project has an expected rate of return higher than the hurdle
rate, the project may be accepted. |
| Hurst Exponent(H) |
A measure of the bias in fractional Brownian motion. H=0.50 for
Brownian motion. 0.50<H<1.00 for persistent, or
trend-reinforcing series. 0<H<0.50 for an anti-persistent, or
mean-reverting system. The inverse of the Hurst exponent is
equal to alpha, the characteristic exponent for Stable
Paretiandistributions. The fractal dimension of a time series,
D, is equivalent to 2-H. |
| Hybrid |
A package of two or more different kinds of
riskmanagementinstruments that are usually interactive. |
| Hybrid annuity |
A type of insurance company investment that combines the
benefits of both a fixed annuity and a variable annuity. |
| Hybrid security |
A convertible security whose optioned common stock is trading in
a middle range, causing the convertible security to trade with
the characteristics of both a fixed income security and a common
stock instrument. |
| Hyperinflation |
See: Inflation |
| Hypothecation |
A pledge made where the person making the pledge retains the
thing pledged. |
| Hypothecation |
In banking, refers to the commitment of property to secure a
loan. In securities, refers to the commitment of securities to
serve as collateral for marginloans at the broker-dealer firm. |
| Hysteresis |
Used to characterize a lagging effect. Firms may fail to enter
markets that appear attractive, or firms that are once invested
in a market may persist in operating at a loss. The effect is
characteristic of investments with high entry and exit costs
along with high uncertainty. |