| M |
Fifth letter of a NASDAQ stock symbol specifying that the issue
is the company's fourth class of preferred shares. |
| M1 |
Measure of the U.S. money stock that consists of currency held
by the public, travelers checks, demand deposits and other
checkable deposits including NOW (negotiable order of
withdrawal) and ATS (automatic transfer service) account
balances and share draft account balances at credit unions. |
| M-1, M-2 and M-3 |
See: money supply. |
| M2 |
Measure of the U.S. money stock that consists of M1, certain
overnight repurchase agreements and certain overnight
Eurodollars, savings deposits (including money market deposit
accounts), time deposits in amounts of less that $100,000 and
balances in money market mutual funds (other than those
restricted to institutional investors). |
| M3 |
Measure of the U.S. money stock that consists of M2, time
deposits of $100,000 or more at all depository institutions,
termrepurchase agreements in amounts of $100,000 or more,
certain term Eurodollars and balances in money market mutual
funds restricted to institutional investor. |
| MA |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MOROCCO. |
| MAB |
See: Master Air Waybill |
| MAC clause |
Material adverse change clause. Permits a lender to avoid its
obligations to lend or, having lent, to demand repayment if an
adverse event occurs. |
| Macaroni defense |
A tactic used by a corporation that is the target of a hostile
takeoverbid involving the issue of a large number of bonds that
must be redeemed at a higher value if the company is taken over. |
| Macaulay duration |
The weighted-average term to maturity of the cash flows from a
bond, where the weights are the present value of the cash flow
divided by the price. |
| Macro |
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that takes
long-term strategic bets. For example, the manager might believe
that the Yen will appreciate relative to the dollar over the
next six months and alter the portfolio to capture this
potential profit opportunity. |
| Macro country risks |
Country risks or political risks that affect all foreign firms
in a host country. |
| Macroassessment |
Overall risk assessment of a country without consideration of an
MNC's business. |
| Macroeconomics |
Analysis of a country's economy as a whole. |
| MAD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Moroccan Dirham. |
| Madrid Stock Exchange (Bolsa de Madrid) |
The largest of Spain's four stock exchanges. |
| Magic of diversification |
The effective reduction of risk (variance) of a portfolio,
achieved without reduction to expected returns through the
combination of assets with low or negative correlations (covariances).
Related: Markowitz diversification. |
| Mail Delay |
Time a payment spends in the postal system before delivery. |
| Mail float |
Time period that checks for payment spend in the postal system. |
| Mailing Date |
A specific date set for the mailing of certain material to
security holders such as interim reports, proxy material and
dividendchecks. |
| Maintenance |
Appropriate ongoing adjustments to security holder records. |
| Maintenance call |
A call for additional money or securities when a margin account
falls below its exchange-mandated required level. |
| Maintenance fee |
A yearly charge to maintain brokerage accounts, such as asset
management accounts or IRAs. |
| Maintenance margin |
The dollar amount required to be kept at the OCC throughout the
life of an option contract; percentage of the dollar amount of
securities that must always be kept as margin. |
| Maintenance margin requirement |
A sum, usually smaller than but part of the original margin,
that must be maintained on deposit at all times. If a customer's
equity in any futurespositiondrops to or below, the maintenance
margin level, the broker must issue a margin call for the amount
at money required to restore the customer's equity in the
account to the original margin level. Related: Margin, margin
call. |
| Majority shareholder |
A shareholder who is part of a group that controls more than
half the outstandingshares of a corporation. |
| Majority voting |
Voting system under which corporate shareholders vote for each
director separately. Related: Cumulative voting. |
| Make a market |
Dealers are said to make a market when they quote bid and
offeredprices at which they stand ready to buy and sell. |
| Make whole provision |
Related to the lump-sum payments made when a loan or bond is
called, equal to the NPV of future loan or coupon payments not
paid because of the call. The payment can be significant and
negate the attractiveness of a call. |
| Make-up |
The amount of deficiency when a cash flow or capital item is
deficient. For example, an interest make-up relates to the
interest amount above a ceiling percentage. |
| Making delivery |
Refers to the seller's actually turning over to the buyer the
assets agreed upon in a forward contract. |
| Malaysia Commodity Exchange |
A subsidiary of the KLSE that tradesinterest ratefutures on the
three-month Kuala Lumpur Interbank offered rate. |
| Maloney Act |
1938 legislation amending the Securities Exchange Act that
regulates the OTC market. |
| Managed account |
An investmentportfolio one or more clients entrusted to a
manager who decides how to invest it. |
| Managed float |
Also known as "dirty" float, this is a system of floating
exchange rates with central bank intervention to reduce
currencyfluctuations. |
| Managed Futures |
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that
focuses on short-termtrading in the futures market. |
| Management |
The people who administer a company, create policies, and
provide the support necessary to implement the owners' business
objectives. |
| Management buying |
The acquisition of a controllinginterest in a promising business
by an outside investment group that retains existing management
and places representatives on the board of directors. |
| Management buyout (MBO) |
Leveraged buyout whereby the acquiring group is led by the
firm'smanagement. |
| Management contract |
An agreement by which a company will provide its organizational
and management expertise in the form of services. |
| Management fee |
An investment advisory fee charged by the financial adviser to a
fund typically on the basis of the fund's averageassets, but
sometimes determined on a sliding scale that declines as the
dollar amount of the fund increases. |
| Management/closely held shares |
Percentage of shares held by persons closely related to a
company, as defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Part of these percentages often are included in "institutional
holdings"--making the combined total of these percentages over
100. There is overlap as institutions sometimes acquire enough
stock to be considered by the SEC to be closely allied to the
company. |
| Management's discussion and analysis (MD&A) |
A report from management to shareholders that accompanies the
firm'sfinancial statements in the annual report. It explains the
period's financial results and enables management to discuss
topics that may not be apparent in the financial statements in
the annual report. |
| Manager |
A medium-level participant established according to final take. |
| Managerial decisions |
Decisions concerning the operation of the firm, such as the
choice of firm size, firm growth rates, and employee
compensation. |
| Managerial flexibility |
Flexibility in the timing and scale of investment provided by a
real investment option. |
| Managing underwriter |
The leading firm in an underwriting group, which originates the
deal and acts as an agent for the group. |
| Mandate |
The formal appointment to advise on or arrange a project
financing. |
| Mandatory convertibles |
A debt instrument that is exchangeable at some point for equity
in the form of common stock or a new issue. |
| Mandatory redemption schedule |
Schedule according to which bondsinking fund payments must be
made. |
| Manipulation |
Dealing in a security to create a false appearance of
activetrading, in order to bring in more traders. Illegal. |
| Manufactured housing securities (MHS) |
Loans on manufactured homes-that is, factory-built or
prefabricated housing, including mobile homes. |
| Maple Leaf |
A gold, silver, or platinum coin minted in Canada that usually
trades at slightly more than its current bullion value. |
| Margin |
The difference between the rate at which a lender can borrow and
the rate at which it will lend. |
| Margin |
Allows investors to buysecurities by borrowingmoney from a
broker. The margin is the difference between the market value of
a stock and the loan a broker makes. Related: Security deposit
(initial). In the context of hedging and futures contracts, the
cashcollateral deposited with a trader or exchanged as insurance
against default. |
| Margin account (stocks) |
A leverageable account in which stocks can be purchased for a
combination of cash and a loan. The loan in the margin account
is collateralized by the stock; if the value of the stock drops
sufficiently, the owner will be asked to either put in more
cash, or sell a portion of the stock. Margin rules are federally
regulated, but margin requirements and interest may vary among
broker/dealers. |
| Margin agreement |
The agreement governing customers' margin accounts. |
| Margin call |
A demand for additional funds because of adverse price movement.
Maintenance margin requirement, security deposit maintenance. |
| Margin department |
The department in a brokerage firm that monitors customers'
margin accounts, ensuring that all short sales, stock purchases,
and other positions are covered by the margin account balance. |
| Margin of profit |
Gross profit divided by net sales. Used to measure a firm's
operating efficiency and pricing policies in order to determine
how competitive the firm is within the industry. |
| Margin of safety |
With respect to working capital management, the difference
between (1) the amount of long-term financing and (2) the sum of
fixed assets and the permanent component of current assets. |
| Margin requirement |
A performance bond paid upon purchase of a futures contract that
protects the exchange clearinghouse from loss. |
| Margin requirement (options) |
The amount of cash an uncovered (naked) option writer is
required to deposit and maintain to cover his daily position
valuation and reasonably foreseeable intraday price changes. |
| Margin security |
A security that may be bought or sold in a margin account as
defined in Regulation T. |
| Margin stock |
Any stock listed on a national securities exchange, any
over-the-counter security approved by the SEC for trading in the
national market system, or appearing on the Board's list of
over-the-counter margin stock and most mutual funds. |
| Margin trading |
Buying securities, in part, with borrowedmoney. |
| Marginal |
Incremental. |
| Marginal cost |
The increase or decrease in a firm's total cost of production as
a result of changing production by one unit. |
| Marginal efficiency of capital |
The percentage yield earned on an additional unit of capital. |
| Marginal revenue |
The change in total revenue as a result of producing one
additional unit of output. |
| Marginal tax rate |
The tax rate that would have to be paid on any additional
dollars of taxable incomeearned. |
| Marginal utility |
The change in total satisfaction as a result of consuming one
additional unit of a specific good or service. |
| Marine Cargo Insurance |
Insurance covering loss or damage to goods in transit. |
| Marital deduction |
A tax deduction that allow spouses to transfer unlimited amounts
of property to one another. |
| Marital trust |
A trust created to allow one spouse to transfer, during life or
upon death, an unlimited amount of property to his/her spouse
without incurring gift or estate tax. |
| Markdown |
The amount subtracted from the selling price of securities when
they are sold to a dealer in the OTC market. Also, the
discounted price of municipal bonds after the market has shown
little interest in the issue at the original price. |
| Marked-to-market |
An arrangement whereby the profits or losses on a futures
contract are settled each day. |
| Market |
Usually refers to the equity market. "The market went down
today" means that the value of the stock marketdropped that day. |
| Market analysis |
An analysis of technical corporate and market data used to
predict movements in the market. |
| Market break |
See: Break |
| Market capitalization |
The total dollar value of all outstandingshares. Computed as
shares times current market price. Capitalization is a measure
of corporate size. |
| Market capitalization rate |
Expected return on a security. The market-consensus estimate of
the appropriate discount rate for a firm'scash flow. |
| Market check |
An investigation typically conducted by an investment banking
firm, on behalf of a target's Board of Directors (or Special
Committee) as part of a process to determine whether a proposed
price for the target (or its assets) is fair. |
| Market clearing |
Total demand for loans by borrowers equals total supply of loans
from lenders. The market, any market, clears at the equilibrium
rate of interest or price. |
| Market conversion price |
Also called conversion parity price, the price that an investor
effectively pays for common stock by purchasing a convertible
security and then exercising the conversion option. This price
is equal to the market price of the convertible security divided
by the conversion ratio. |
| Market correction |
A relatively short-termdrop in stock market prices, generally
viewed as bringing overpriced stocks back to a level closer to
companies' actual values. |
| Market cycle |
The period between the two latest highs or lows of the S&P 500,
showing net performance of a fund through both an up and a down
market. A market cycle is complete when the S&P is 15% below the
highest point or 15% above the lowest point (ending a down
market). |
| Market Eye |
A financial information service based in the U.K. sponsored by
the ISE (International Stock Exchange of the UK and the Republic
of Ireland) that provides current market and statistical
information. |
| Market failure |
The inability of arm's length markets to deliverer goods or
services. A multinational corporation's market internalization
advantages may take advantage of market failure. |
| Market impact costs |
The result of a bid/ask spread and a dealer's price concession.
Also called price impact costs. |
| Market index |
Market measure that consists of weighted values of the
components that make up certain list of companies. A stock
market tracks the performance of certain stocks by weighting
them according to their prices and the number of
outstandingshares by a particular formula. |
| Market interest rate |
Rates of interest paid on deposits and other investments,
determined by the interaction of the supply of and demand for
funds in the money market. |
| Market internalization advantages |
Conditions that allow a corporation to exploit the failure of an
arm's length market to deliver goods or services efficiently. |
| Market jitters |
Anxiety among many investors, causing them to sell stocks and
bonds, pushing prices down. |
| Market letter |
A newsletter analyzing the market that is written by an
SEC-registered investment adviser who sells the letter to
subscribers. See: Hulbert Rating. |
| Market maker |
Used in the context of general equities. One who maintains firm
bid and offerprices in a given security by standing ready to buy
or sell round lots at publicly quoted prices. See: Agent,
dealer, specialist. |
| Market microstructure |
The functional setup of a market. |
| Market model |
The market model says that the return on a security depends on
the return on the market portfolio and the extent of the
security's responsiveness as measured by beta. The return also
depends on conditions that are unique to the firm. The market
model can be graphed as a line fitted to a plot of asset returns
against returns on the market portfolio. This relationship is
sometimes called the single-index model. |
| Market Neutral |
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that has
long and short equity exposure with nearly exposure on average
to fluctuations in the market. However, the on average
qualification is important. The risk of the longs and the shorts
could fluctuate through time leading to negative returns when
the market falls sharply. |
| Market Not Held Order |
Also a market order, but the investor is allowing the
floorbroker to use his own discretion as to the exact timing of
the execution. If the floor broker expects a decline in price
and he is holding a "market not held buy order", he (she) may
wait to buy, figuring that a better price will soon be
available. There is no guarantee that a "market not held order"
will be filled. |
| Market opening |
The start of formal trading on an exchange. |
| Market order |
Used in the context of general equities. Order to buy or sell a
stated amount of a security at the most advantageous price
obtainable after the order is represented in the trading crowd.
You cannot specify special restrictions such as all or none
(AON) or good 'til canceled order (GTC) on market orders. See:
Limit order. |
| Market order go-along/participating |
Used for listed equity securities. See: Percentage order. |
| Market out clause |
A clause that may appear in an underwriting firm commitment that
releases it from its purchase requirement if there are negative
securities market developments. |
| Market overhang |
The theory that, in certain situations, institutions wish to
sell their shares but postpone the sale because large orders
under current market conditions would drive down the share price
and that the consequent threat of securitiessales will tend to
retard the rate of share price appreciation. Support for this
theory is largely anecdotal. |
| Market penetration/share |
Used in the context of general equities. Percent of trading
volume in a stock that a particular market maker trades. |
| Market Performance Committee (MPC) |
A group of NYSE market oversight specialists who monitor
specialists' efficiency in maintaining fair prices and orderly
markets. |
| Market portfolio |
A portfolio consisting of all assets available to investors,
with each asset held in proportion to its market value relative
to the total market value of all assets. |
| Market price |
The last reported price at which a security was traded on an
exchange. |
| Market price of risk |
A measure of the extra return, or risk premium, that investors
demand to bear risk. The reward-to-risk ratio of the market
portfolio. |
| Market prices |
The amount of money that a willing buyer pays to acquire
something from a willing seller, when a buyer and seller are
independent and when such an exchange is motivated by only
commercial consideration. |
| Market research |
A technical analysis of factors such as volume, price trends,
and market breadth that are used to predict price movement. |
| Market return |
The return on the market portfolio. |
| Market risk |
Risk that cannot be diversified away. Related: Systematic risk |
| Market RRR (required rate of return) Schedule |
A line that indicates the minimum return required by investors
at each level of investment risk. The schedule begins at the
risk-freeinterest rate and rises as risk increases. |
| Market sectors |
The classifications of bonds by issuer characteristics, such as
state government, corporate, or utility. |
| Market segmentation theory or preferred habitat theory |
A biased expectations theory that asserts that the shape of the
yield curve is determined by the supply of and demand for
securities within each maturitysector. |
| Market share |
The percentage of total industrysales that a particular
companycontrols. |
| Market sweep |
A second offering following a tender offer, allowing
institutional investors to obtain a controllinginterest at a
price higher than the original offer. |
| Market timer |
A money manager who assumes he or she can forecast when the
stock market will go up and down. |
| Market timing 1. |
Used in the practice of Asset allocation. Based on public
information, managers actively decide which stocks, sectors,
countries, or asset classes to over or underweight. Market
timing takes advantage of a small but important amount of
predictability in asset returns. The strategy contrasts with the
buy-and-hold strategy in which a portfolio is decided on and
held for long periods of time. Market timing is an active rather
than passive strategy. |
| Market timing 2. |
A misnomer synonym used in reference to 2003 mutual fund
scandal. The misnomer synonym refers to Stale Price Arbitrage. |
| Market timing costs |
Costs that arise from price movement of a stock during a
transaction period but attributable to other activity in the
stock. |
| Market tone |
The general state of well-being of a securities market, based
mostly on trading activity. |
| Market value |
(1) The price at which a security is trading and could
presumably be purchased or sold. (2) What investors believe a
firm is worth; calculated by multiplying the number of shares
outstanding by the current market price of a firm's shares. |
| Market value ratios |
Ratios that relate the market price of the firm'scommon stock to
selected financial statement items. |
| Market value-weighted index |
An index of a group of securities computed by calculating a
weighted average of the returns on each security in the index,
where the weights are proportional to outstandingmarket value. |
| Market: Characterized by horizontal price movement, usually
the result of low activity. |
Equities: To execute without commission or markup. |
| Marketability |
A negotiablesecurity is said to have good marketability if there
is an activesecondary market in which it can easily be resold. |
| Marketable securities |
Securities that are easily convertible to cash because there is
high demand allowing them to be sold quickly. |
| Marketable title |
A clear, reasonably incontestable title to a piece of real
estate that is good for transaction purposes. |
| Market-based corporate governance system |
Organization of a corporation whereby the supervisory board
represents a dispersed set of largely equityshareholders. |
| Market-based forecasting |
Analyzing future spot rates on the basis of a market-determined
exchange rate (such as the current spot rate or forward rate). |
| Market-book ratio |
Market price of a share divided by book value per share. |
| Marketed claims |
Claims that can be bought and sold in financial markets, such as
those of stockholders and bondholders. |
| Market-if-touched (MIT) |
A price order, below market if a buy or above market if a sell,
that automatically becomes a market order if the specified price
is reached. |
| Market-on-Close (MOC) order |
An order to tradestocks, options, or futures as close as
possible to the market close. See also MOC. |
| Marketplace price efficiency |
The degree to which the prices of assets reflect the available
marketplace information. Marketplace price efficiency is
sometimes estimated as the difficulty faced by management of
earning a greater return than passive management would, after
adjusting for the risk associated with a strategy and the
transactions costs associated with implementing a strategy. |
| Marking to market |
Settling or reconciling changes in the value of futures
contracts on a daily basis. Also refers to the practice of
reporting the value of assets on a market rather than book value
basis. |
| Marking up or down |
The amount by which a securitiesdealer raises or lowers the
price of a stock or bond due to changes in demand and supply. |
| Markovian Dependence |
The condition where observations in a time series are dependent
on previous observations in the near term. Markovian dependence
dies quickly, while long-memory effects like Hurst dependence,
decay over very long time periods. |
| Markowitz diversification |
A strategy that seeks to combine in a portfolioassets with
returns that are less than perfectly positively correlated, in
an effort to lower portfoliorisk (variance) without sacrificing
return. Related: Naive diversification. |
| Markowitz efficient frontier |
The graphical depiction of the Markowitz efficient set of
portfolios representing the boundary of the set of feasible
portfolios that have the maximum return for a given level of
risk. Any portfolios above the frontier cannot be achieved. Any
below the frontier are dominated by Markowitz efficient
portfolios. |
| Markowitz efficient portfolio |
Also called a mean-variance efficient portfolio, a portfolio
that has the highest expected return at a given level of risk. |
| Markowitz efficient set of portfolios |
The collection of all efficient portfolios, which can be graphed
as the Markowitz efficient frontier. |
| Markowitz, Harry |
Nobel laureate in economics. Father of portfolio theory. |
| Marks and Numbers |
Identifying symbols and numbers placed by the shipper on each
piece of cargo in a shipment. |
| Mark-to-market |
Adjustment of the book value or collateral value of a security
to reflect current market value. |
| Marriage penalty |
A tax that has the effect of penalizing a married couple because
they pay more tax on a joint tax return than they would if they
file tax returns individually. |
| Married put |
A put option bought at the same time as its underlying
securities in order to hedge the price paid for the securities. |
| Married Put Strategy |
A put and stock are considered to be married if they are bought
on the same day, and the position is designated at that time as
a hedge. |
| Marrried Put and Stock |
The simultaneous purchase of stock and the corresponding number
of put options. This is a limited riskstrategy during the life
of the puts because the stock can be sold at the strike price of
the puts. |
| Marshalling |
The right of a second or subsequent mortgagee to require a
mortgagee having priority to have recourse to assets charged
only to the prior mortgagee before having recourse to assets
charged to both mortgagees. |
| Master Air Waybill (MAB) |
A document issued by the originating airline when and if a
shipment involves more than one air carrier. |
| Master limited partnership (MLP) |
A publicly traded limited partnership. |
| Master pension plan |
See: Prototype plan |
| Matador market |
The foreign market in Spain. |
| Matched and lost |
The outcome of the flip of a coin used to determine which of two
brokers who are locked in competition for equal trades may
actually execute the trades. |
| Matched book |
A bank runs a matched book when the of maturities of its assets
and liabilities is distribution equal. |
| Matched maturities |
The coordination by a financial_institution of the maturities of
its assets (loans) and liabilities (deposits) in order to enable
it to meet itsobligations at the required times. |
| Matched orders |
Used for listed equity securities. Participate in equal amounts
of a trade at a certain price, particularly when two parties
have the same level of priority on the exchangefloor (this
requires standing in the trading crowd). |
| Matched Sale Purchase Transactions |
Transcations in which the Federal Reserve sells a government
security to a dealer or a foregin central bank and agrees to buy
back the security to a dealer or a foreign central bank and
agrees to buy back the security on a specified date (usually
within seven days) at eh same price (the reverse of a repurchase
agreement). Such transaction allow the Federal Reserve to
temporarily absorb excess reserves from the banking system,
limiting the ability of banks to make new loans and investments. |
| Matched sale transaction |
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Procedure whereby the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York sells government securities to
a nonbank dealer against payment in federal funds. The agreement
requires the dealer to sell the securities back by a specified
date, which ranges from 1 to 15 days. The Fed pays the dealer a
rate of interest equal to the discount rate. These transactions,
also called reverse repurchase agreements, decrease the money
supply for temporary periods by reducing dealers' bank balances
and thus excess reserves. |
| Match-fund |
A bank is said to match-fund a loan or other asset when it does
so by buying (taking) a deposit of the same maturity. The term
is commonly used in the Euromarket. |
| Matching concept |
The accounting principle that requires the recognition of all
costs that are associated with the generation of the revenue
reported in the income statement. |
| Material Adverse Change or Effect |
Many mergers and acquisitions contracts include a material
adverse change clause that allows a company to renegotiate or
walk away from a deal if the other company or its subsidiaries
announces a significant event that may negatively affect its
stock price or operations. See also materiality. |
| Materiality |
The importance of an event or information in influencing a
company'sstock price. Companies must report any material events
within one month by filing SEC form 8-K. |
| Materials requirement planning |
Computer-based systems that plan backward from the production
schedule to make purchases in order to manage inventory levels. |
| Mathematical programming |
An operations research technique that solves problems in which
an optimal value is sought subject to specified constraints.
Mathematical programming models include linear programming,
quadratic programming, and dynamic programming. |
| Matif SA |
The futuresexchange of France. |
| Matrix trading |
Swappingbonds in order to take advantage of temporary
differences in the yield spread between bonds with different
ratings or different classes. |
| Mature |
To cease to exist; to expire. |
| Mature economy |
The economy of a nation with a stable population and slowing
economic growth. |
| Matured noninterest-bearing debt |
Outstanding savings bonds and notes that have reached final
maturity and no longer earn interest. Includes all Series A-D,
F, G, 1, J, and K bonds. Series E bonds (issued between May 1941
and November 1965), Series EE (issued since January 1980),
Series H (issued from June 1952 through December 1979), and
savings notes issued between May 1967 and October 1970 have a
final maturity of 30 years. Series HH bonds (issued since
January 1980) mature after 20 years. |
| Maturity |
For a bond, the date on which the principal is required to be
repaid. In an interest rate swap, the date that the swap stops
accruing interest. |
| Maturity date |
Usually used for bonds. Date that the bond finishes and is paid
off. Date on which the principal amount of a note, draft,
acceptance, bond, or other debt instrument becomes due and
payable. |
| Maturity factoring |
An arrangement that provides collection and insurance of
accounts receivable. |
| Maturity phase |
A stage of company development in which earnings to grow at the
rate of the general economy. Related: Three-phase DDM. |
| Maturity spread |
The difference in returns between bonds of different time
lengths. |
| Maturity value |
Related: Par value |
| Maximum capital gains mutual fund |
A mutual fund whose objective is to produce capital gains by
investing in small or risky rapid-growth companies. |
| Maximum expected return criterion (MERC) |
Standard that one choose the asset with the highest anticipated
return. |
| Maximum price fluctuation |
The greatest amount by which the contract price can change, up
or down, during one trading session, as fixed by exchange rules
in the contract specification. Related: Limit price. |
| Maximum return criterion (MRC) |
Standard that one choose the asset with the highest return. |
| May Day |
The date of May 1, 1975, after which brokers were allowed to
charge any brokerage commission, rather than a mandatory rate. |
| May expand |
Used in the context of general equities. Warning that the size
of the order/total may be increased. See: "more behind it." |
| MBO |
See: Management buyout |
| MBS depository |
A book-entry depository for GNMAsecurities. The depository was
initially operated by MBSCC and is now a separately
incorporated, participant-owned, limited-purpose trust company
organized under the State of New York Banking Law. |
| MBS servicing |
The requirement that the mortgage servicer maintain payment of
the full amount of contractually due principal and interest
payments whether or not actually collected. |
| MBSCC |
See: Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation |
| MC |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MONACO. |
| MD |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MOLDOVA, REPUBLIC
OF. |
| MDA |
See: Multiple discriminant analysis |
| MDL |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Moldovan Leu. |
| Meals and entertainment expense |
A tax deduction allowed for meals and entertainment expenses
incurred in the course of business. |
| Mean |
The expected value of a random variable. Arithmetic average of a
sample. |
| Mean of the sample |
The arithmetic average; that is, the sum of the observations
divided by the number of observations. |
| Mean return |
See: Expected return |
| Mean-variance analysis |
Evaluation of risky prospects based on the expected value and
variance of possible outcomes. |
| Mean-variance criterion |
The selection of portfolios based on the means and variances of
their returns. The choice of the higher expected returnportfolio
for a given level of variance or the lower variance portfolio
for a given expected return. |
| Mean-variance efficient portfolio |
Related: Markowitz efficient portfolio |
| Measurement error |
Errors in measuring an explanatory variable in a regression,
which leads to biases in estimated parameters. |
| Measurement Noise |
See: Observational Noise. |
| Medallion Stamp Program |
A program approved by the Securities Transfer Association that
enables participating financial_institutions to guarantee
signatures. The Medallion programs ensure that the individual
signing the certificate or stock, power is in fact the
registered owner as it appears on the stock certificate or stock
power. Any U.S. financial institution that belongs to a
Medallion Stamp Program can provide Medallion guarantees. Such
institutions include banks, savings and loans, credit unions and
U.S. brokerages. |
| Median market cap |
The midpoint of market capitalization (market price multiplied
by the number of sharesoutstanding) of the stocks in a
portfolio. Half the stocks in the portfolio will have higher
market capitalizations; half will have lower. |
| Medium term |
Two-six years. |
| Medium-term bond |
A bondmaturing in two to ten years. |
| Medium-Term Guarantee Program |
Ex-Im Bank effort encouraging commercial lenders to finance the
sale of U.S. capital equipment and services to approved foreign
buyers. The Ex-IM Bank guarantees the principal and interest on
these loans. |
| Medium-term note (MTN) |
A corporate debt instrument that is continuously offered to
investors over a period of time by an agent of the issuer.
Investors can select from maturity bands of: 9 months to 1 year,
more than 1 year to 18 months, more than 18 months to 2 years,
etc., up to 30 years. |
| Medium-term note retail (MTNR) |
Medium-term note designated for retail investors. For example,
at Fannie Mae, it means that the bond is designated for
individual investors that is underwritten through a dealer
versus issuing through a program, like Investment Notes or
Benchmark Notes. |
| Meff Renta Fija |
The derivativesexchange in Barcelona, Spain, listing futures and
options on fixed-interest securities and on interest rates,
including the MIBOR (Madrid Interbank Offered Rate). |
| Meff Renta Variable |
Stockindex and equity derivatives market in Spain tradingfutures
and options on the Iberian Exchange (IBEX)-35 index and on
individual stocks. |
| Member bank |
A national- or state-chartered bank that is a member of the
Federal Reserve System. |
| Member firm |
Used for listed equity securities. Brokerage firm that has at
least one membership on a major stock exchange even though, by
exchange rules, the membership in the name of an employee and
not of the firm itself. |
| Member short sale ratio |
The total shares sold short by NYSE members divided by total
short sales, which is used to analyze market expectations and
bullish or bearishtrends. |
| Member short sale ratio |
The total shares sold short by NYSE members divided by total
short sales, which is used to analyze market expectations and
bullish or bearishtrends. |
| Membership or a seat on the exchange |
A limited number of exchangepositions that enable the holder to
trade for the holder's own accounts and charge clients for the
execution of trades for their accounts. Related: member firm. |
| Menu |
Used in the context of general equities. Hierarchy of choices
concerning price and volume of bids or offers proposed to a
customer (e.g. Menu of offerings to a customer buyer - a) 10m @
24 1/4; b) 25m @ 24 1/2; or c) 50m @ 24 3/4). |
| Merc, the |
Chicago Mercantile Exchange. |
| Mercantile agency |
An organization that supplies credit ratings and reports on
firms that are prospective customers. |
| Mercato Italiano Futures (MIF) |
The Italian futures market trading Italian Treasury bond (BTB)
futures. |
| Merchandise |
All movable goods such as cars, textiles, appliances, etc. and
'f.o.b.' means free on board. |
| Merchant bank |
A British term for a bank that specializes not in lending out
its own funds, but in providing various financial services such
as accepting bills arising out of trade, underwriting new
issues, and providing advice on acquisitions, mergers, foreign
exchange, portfolio management, etc. |
| Mercosur |
The "Common Market of the South," which includes Argentina,
Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay in a regional trade pact that
reduces tariffs on intrapact trade by up to 90%. |
| Merger |
(1) Acquisition in which all assets and liabilities are absorbed
by the buyer. (2) More generally, any combination of two
companies. The firm's activity in this respect is sometimes
called M&A (Merger and Acquisition) |
| Merger Arbitrage |
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that
involves the simultaneous purchase of stock in a company being
acquired and the sale of stock in its acquirer. |
| Method of payment |
The way a merger or acquisition is financed. |
| Mexican Stock Exchange |
The only stock exchange in Mexico. The Indice de Precios y
Cotizaciones, or IPC index, consists of the 35 most
representative stocks chosen every two months. |
| Mezzanine bracket |
The members of an underwriting group with involvement large
enough to be in the second participation tier from the top. |
| Mezzanine debt |
The portion of a loan that exceeds the amount a lender would
normally advance. So if a loan is 90% of the value of a property
and the lender’s usual criterion allows for 80% loan to value
lending, the extra 10% is mezzanine debt. This may be provided
by another lender. The margin is usually higher than for senior
debt. |
| Mezzanine financing |
The next stage of financing that follows venture capital
financing. |
| Mezzanine level |
The period in a company's development just before it goes
public. |
| MG |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MADAGASCAR. |
| MGF |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Madagascar Franc. |
| MH |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MARSHALL ISLANDS. |
| MHS |
See: Manufactured housing securities |
| Micro country risks |
Country or political risks that are specific to an industry,
company, or project within a host country. |
| Microassessment |
The risk assessment of a country as related to an MNC's type of
business. |
| Micro-cap stock |
See: Penny stock |
| Microeconomics |
Analysis of the behavior of individual economic units such as
companies, industries, or households. |
| Mid cap |
A stock with a capitalization usually between $1 billion and $5
billion. |
| Mid-cap SPDRs |
This is the same as a SPDR except the indexit tracks is
Standard&Poor's Mid-cap 400. This SPDR also trades on the AMEX,
under the symbol MDY. |
| Middle Market Manufacturing Exporter (MMME) |
An exporter with the following traits: 1) Manufacturer with less
than 500 employees 2) Ships less than $1 Million per year (on
average) overseas. |
| Midget |
A 15 year GNMA bond; similar to a Dwarf. |
| Midmarket |
Price around which a market maker derives bid and asked prices. |
| MIG |
See mortgage indemnity guarantee. |
| Milan Stock Exchange |
The largest regional stock exchange in Italy, facilitating more
than 90% of the country's tradingvolume. |
| Miller and Modigliani's irrelevance proposition |
Theory that if financial markets are perfect, corporate
financial policy (including hedging policy) is irrelevant. |
| Miller, Merton |
Nobel Laureate and coauthor of the famous Miller-Modigliani
theorems. Finance professor at the University of Chicago. |
| Mimic |
An imitation that sends a false signal. |
| Mini-manipulation |
Trading in the underwriting security of an option contract in
order to manipulate its price so that the options will become
in-the-money. |
| Minimum maintenance |
The lowest required equity level that must be held with a broker
in a margin account. See: margin call. |
| Minimum price fluctuation |
Smallest increment of price movement possible in trading a given
contract. Also called point or tick. |
| Minimum purchases |
For mutual funds, the amount required to open a new account
(Minimum Initial Purchase) or to deposit into an existing
account (Minimum Additional Purchase). These minimums may be
lowered for buyers participating in an automatic purchase plan |
| Minimum-variance frontier |
Graph of the lowest possible portfoliovariance that is
attainable for a given portfolioexpected return. |
| Minimum-variance portfolio |
The portfolio of riskyassets with lowest variance. |
| Minority interest |
An outside ownership interest in a subsidiary that is
consolidated with the parent for financial reporting purposes. |
| Minus |
The symbol (-) that precedes the change figure in a stock table
to indicate a closing sale lower than that of the previous day. |
| Minus tick |
See: downtick . |
| MIP |
See: Monthly income preferred security |
| MIPIM |
An international property conference held each March in Cannes. |
| Misery index |
An index that sums the unemployment and inflation rates, used as
a political rating or measure of consumer confidence. |
| Mismatch bond |
Floating rate note whose interest rate is reset at more frequent
intervals than the rollover period (e.g. a note whose payments
are set quarterly on the basis of the one-year interest rate). |
| Miss the price/market |
Used for listed equity securities. 1) Have an order in hand but
fail to execute a transaction on terms favorable to a customer
and, thus, be negligent as a broker; 2) receive an order just
after a print has transpired. |
| MIT |
See: Market-if-touched |
| Mixed account |
A brokerage account holding both long and
shortpositionedsecurities. |
| Mixed bag |
Used in the context of general equities. Group of stocks which
consists of some which are up, down, and neutral. |
| Mixed forecasting |
Development of forecasts using a combination of forecasting
techniques. |
| MK |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MACEDONIA, THE
FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC OF. |
| MKD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Macedonian Denar. |
| ML |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MALI. |
| MLA |
Minimum liquid asset ratio. The FSA requires banks to maintain
minimum ratios of assets to liabilities. The MLA is one relating
to liquid assets. |
| MLP |
See: Master limited partnership |
| MM |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MYANMAR. |
| MMDA |
See: Money Market Demand Account. Same as Money Market Deposit
Account |
| MMK |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Myanmar (ex-Burma) Kyat. |
| MMME |
See: Middle Market Manufacturing Exporter |
| MN |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MONGOLIA. |
| MNC |
See: Multinational corporation |
| MNT |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Mongolian Tugrik. |
| MO |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MACAU. |
| Mob spread |
The yield spread between a tax-free municipal bond and a
Treasurybond with the same maturity. |
| MOC |
See Market on Close. |
| Mock trading |
The simulated trading of securities used as a learning device in
training investors and broker. |
| Modeling |
The process of creating a depiction of reality, such as a graph,
picture, or mathematical representation. |
| Modern portfolio theory |
Principalsunderlying the analysis and evaluation of rational
portfolio choices based on risk return trade-offs and efficient
diversification. |
| Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) |
A 1986 act that set out rules for the depreciation of qualifying
assets, allowing for greater acceleration over longer periods of
time. |
| Modified duration |
The ratio of Macaulay duration to (1 + y), where y = the
bondyield. Modified duration is inversely related to the
approximate percentage change in price for a given change in
yield. |
| Modified pass-throughs |
Agency pass-throughs that guarantee (1) timely interest payments
and (2) principal payments as collected, but no later than a
specified time after they are due. Related: fully modified
pass-throughs |
| Modigliani and Miller Proposition I |
A proposition by Modigliani and Miller which states that a firm
cannot change the total value of its outstandingsecurities by
changing its capital structure proportions. Also called the
irrelevance proposition. |
| Modigliani and Miller Proposition II |
A proposition by Modigliani and Miller which states that the
cost of equity is a linear function of the
firm'sdebt/equity-ratio. |
| MOF |
See multi option facility. |
| Momentum |
The amount of acceleration of an economic, price, or volume
movement. A trader that follows a movement strategy will
purchasestocks that have recently risen in price. |
| Momentum indicators |
Indicators used in market analysis to quantify the momentum of
upward and downward price movements. |
| MONEP (Marche des Options Negociables de Paris) |
A subsidiary of the Paris Bourse that tradesstock and index
options. |
| Monetarist |
An economist who believes that changes in the money supply are
the most important determinants of economic activity and
economic cycles. |
| Monetary assets and liabilities |
Assets and liabilities with contractual payoffs. |
| Monetary Control Act of 1980 (MAC) |
Act which requires that all banks and all institutions that
accept deposits from the public make periodic reports to the
Federal Reserve System. Starting in September 1981, the Fed
charged banks for a range of services that it had provided free
in the past, including check clearing, wire transfer of funds
and the use of automated clearinghouse facilities. |
| Monetary gold |
Gold held by governmental authorities as a financial asset. |
| Monetary indicators |
Economic indicators of the effects of monetary policy, such as
the condition of the credit market. |
| Monetary policy |
Actions taken by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System to influence the money supply or interest rates. |
| Monetary/non-monetary method |
Under this translation method, monetary items (e.g. cash,
accounts payable and receivable, and long-term debt) are
translated at the current rate while non-monetary items (e.g.
inventory, fixed assets, and long-terminvestments) are
translated at historical rates. |
| Monetization |
The securitization of the gross revenues of a contract. |
| Monetize the debt |
Financing the national debt by printing new money, which causes
inflation due to a larger money supply. |
| Money |
Currency and coin that are guaranteed as legal tender by the
government, a regulatory agency or bank. |
| Money base |
Composed of currency and coins outside the banking system plus
liabilities to the deposit money banks. |
| Money center banks |
Banks that raise most of their funds from the domestic and
international money markets , relying less on depositors for
funds. |
| Money management |
Related: Investment management. |
| Money manager |
Related: Investment manager. |
| Money market |
Money markets are for borrowing and lending money for three
years or less. The securities in a money market can be
U.S.government bonds, Treasury bills and commercial paper from
banks and companies. |
| Money Market Demand Account (M.M.D.A.) |
An account that pays interest based on short-term interest
rates. Same as a Money Market Deposit Account |
| Money market fund |
A mutual fund that invests only in short term securities, such
as bankers' acceptances, commercial paper, repurchase agreements
and government bills. The net asset value per share is
maintained at $1.00. Such funds are not federally insured,
although the portfolio may consist of guaranteedsecurities
and/or the fund may have private insurance protection. |
| Money market hedge |
The use of borrowing and lendingtransactions in foreign
currencies to lock in the home currency value of a foreign
currency transaction. |
| Money market instruments |
See: Cash investments |
| Money market notes |
Publiclytradedissues that may be collateralized by mortgages and
Mortgage Backed Securities (MBSs). |
| Money market security |
Short-terminvestment usually of less than one year. |
| Money market yield |
A bondquotation convention based on a 360-day year and
semiannualcoupons. See: Bond equivalent yield. |
| Money order |
A financialinstrument backed by a deposit at a certain firm such
as a bank that can be easily converted into cash. |
| Money purchase plan |
A defined benefit contribution plan in which the participant
contributes some part and the firm contributes at the same or a
different rate. Also called an individual account plan. |
| Money rate of return |
Annualmoneyreturn as a percentage of asset value. |
| Money supply |
M1-A: Currency plus demand deposits. M1-B: M1-A plus other
checkable deposits.
M2: M1-B plus overnight repos, money market funds, savings, and
small (less than $100M) time deposits.
M3: M-2 plus large time deposits and term repos.
L: M-3 plus other liquid assets.
|
| Monitor |
To seek information about an agent's behavior; a device that
provides such information. |
| Monopoly |
Absolute control of all sales and distribution in a market by
one firm, due to some barrier to entry of other firms, allowing
the firm to sell at a higher price than the socially optimal
price. |
| Monopsony |
The existence of only one buyer in a market, forcing sellers to
accept a lower price than the socially optimal price. |
| Monte Carlo simulation |
An analytical technique for solving a problem by performing a
large number of trail runs, called simulations, and inferring a
solution from the collective results of the trial runs. Method
for calculating the probability distribution of possible
outcomes. |
| Monthly income preferred security (MIP) |
Preferred stockissued by a subsidiary located in a tax haven.
The subsidiaryrelends the money to the parent. |
| Monthly investment plan |
A plan in which a certain amount is invested each month in order
to benefit from dollar cost averaging. |
| Montreal Exchange/Bourse de Montreal |
The oldest stock exchange in Canada tradingstocks, bonds,
futures, and options. The Canadian Market Portfolio Index (XXM)
tracks the market performance of the 25 highest capitalized
stocks traded on at least two Canadian exchanges. |
| Moody's investment grade |
A rating of one through four assigned by Moody's Investors
Service to bonds. |
| Moody's Investors Service |
A leading global credit rating, research and risk analysis firm. |
| MOP |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Macau Pataca. |
| Moral hazard |
The risk that the existence of a contract will change the
behavior of one or both parties to the contract, e.g. an insured
firm will take fewer fire precautions. |
| Moral obligation bond |
A tax-exempt bondissued by a municipality or a state financial
intermediary that is backed by the moral, but not legal,
obligation of a state government to appropriate funds in case of
default . |
| Moratorium |
A prohibition on action by creditors to provide a breathing
space usually for the implementation of an administration or a
voluntary arrangement. |
| More flexible exchange rate system |
The International Monetary Fund's name for an exchange rate
system in which rates float freely. |
| Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) |
This firm publishes a number of well known benchmarks, such as
the MSCI World Index. |
| Morgan Stanley Capital International Emerging Markets Global
Index |
A market capitalization-weighted benchmark indexmade up of
equities from 29 developing countries. |
| Morgan Stanley Capital International Europe Index |
A market capitalization-weighted benchmarkindex made up of
equities from 15 European countries. France, Germany, and the
United Kingdom represent about two-thirds of the index. |
| Morgan Stanley Capital International Europe, Australia, Far
East Index |
See: EAFE Index |
| Morgan Stanley Capital International Pacific Free index |
A market capitalization-weighted benchmarkindex made up of
equities from Pacific Basin countries. Japan represents about
three-fourths of the index. |
| Morgan Stanley Capital International World Index (MSCI World
Index) |
A market capitalization-weighted benchmarkindex made up of
equities from 23 countries, including the United States. |
| Morgan Stanley REIT Index |
A capitalization-weighted benchmarkindex of the most actively
traded real estate investment trusts (REITs), designed to
measure real estate equity performance. |
| Morningstar rating system |
A system used in ratingmutual funds and annuity by Morningstar
Incorporated of Chicago. |
| Mortality tables |
Tables of probability that individuals of various ages will die
within one year. |
| Mortgage |
A loansecured by the collateral of some specified real estate
property which obliges the borrower to make a predetermined
series of payments. |
| Mortgage banker |
A company or individual that originates mortgageloans and sells
them to investors, while taking care of borrowers'loan payments,
records, taxes, and insurance. |
| Mortgage bond |
A bond in which the issuer has granted the bondholders a lien
against the pledgedassets. See: Collateral trust bonds |
| Mortgage broker |
A company or individual that places mortgageloans with lenders,
but does not originate or service loans like a mortgage banker. |
| Mortgage duration |
A modification of standard duration to account for the impact on
duration of MBSs of changes in prepayment speed resulting from
changes in interest rates. Two factors are employed: one that
reflects the impact of changes in prepayment speed or price. |
| Mortgage indemnity guarantee |
Insurance, for a single premium, against any shortfall from
selling a mortgaged property following the borrower’s default,
up to a stated limit of indemnity. Such insurance enables
lenders to offer loans in excess of their normal loan-to-value
ratio. Common in domestic mortgage transactions, this insurance
became popular in commercial property lending in the 1980s. The
decline in property values in the early 1990s gave rise to many
claims and much litigation. |
| Mortgage interest deduction |
A federal tax deduction for interest paid on a mortgage used to
acquire, construct, or improve a residence. |
| Mortgage life insurance |
A life insurance policy that pays off the remaining balance of
the insured person's mortgage at death. |
| Mortgage pass-through security |
Also called a passthrough, a security created when one or more
mortgage holders form a collection (pool) of mortgages and sells
shares or participation certificates in the pool. The cash flow
from the collateral pool is "passed through" to the security
holder as monthly payments of principal, interest, and
prepayments. This is the predominant type of MBS traded in the
secondary market. |
| Mortgage pipeline |
The period from the taking of applications from prospective
mortgageborrowers to the marketing of the loans. |
| Mortgage pool |
A group of mortgages with similar class, interest rate, and
maturity characteristics. |
| Mortgage rate |
The interest rate on a mortgageloan. |
| Mortgage REIT |
An REIT that invests in loanssecured by real estate which derive
income from mortgageinterest and fees. |
| Mortgage servicing |
The collection of monthly payments and penalties, record
keeping, payment of insurance and taxes, and possible settlement
of default , involved with a mortgageloan. |
| Mortgage-backed securities (MSBs) |
Securities backed by a pool of mortgageloans. |
| Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation (MBSCC) |
"Founded" in 1979, MBSCC is the sole provider of automated
post-trade comparison, netting, risk management and pool
notification services to the mortgage-backed securities market.
The organization is a registered clearing agency with the
Securities and Exchange Commission and majority-owned by its
members -- MBS dealers, inter-dealer brokers and other
non-broker/dealers. MBSCC provides its specialized services to
major market participants active in various Government National
Mortgage Association (GNMA), Fannie Mae(FNMA) and Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC) MBS programs. |
| Mortgagee |
The one to whom a mortgage is granted, usually a lender. |
| Mortgagee |
The lender of a loansecured by property. |
| Mortgagee in possession |
A mortgagee who has either taken physical possession of the
property charged to it, or is itself in receipt of the rents
payable in respect of the property. Onerous duties are imposed
on a mortgagee in possession so usually a mortgagee will
exercise its power of sale or appoint a receiver. |
| Mortgage-pipeline risk |
The risk associated with taking applications from prospective
mortgageborrowers who may opt to decline to accept a quoted
mortgage rate within a certain grace period. |
| Mortgager |
The borrower of a loansecured by property. |
| Mortgagor |
The person owning the property, granting the mortgage. |
| Moscow Interbank Currency Exchange (MICEX) |
Established in 1992, the most liquid and best organized
financialexchange in Russia. |
| Most active list |
The stocks with the highest volume of trading on a certain day. |
| Most distant futures contract |
When several futures contracts are considered, the contract
settling last. Related: nearby futures contract |
| Most Favored Nation |
A privilege granted by one country to another whereby the
products of the privileged country pay the lowest delivered duty
paid charged by the granting country. |
| Mother Hubbard clause |
A clause that extends the security of a mortgage to all sums
owed by the borrower to the lender. |
| Moving average |
Used in charts and technical analysis, the average of security
or commodityprices constructed in a period as short as a few
days or as long as several years and showing trends for the
latest interval. As each new variable is included in calculating
the average, the last variable of the series is deleted. |
| MP |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for NORTHERN MARIANA
ISLANDS. |
| MQ |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MARTINIQUE. |
| MR |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MAURITANIA. |
| MRO |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Mauritanian Ouguiya. |
| MRQ |
A short-form for Most Recent Quarter. Often used in the context
of explaining company performance. MRQ earnings, for example. |
| MS |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MONTSERRAT. |
| MSCI |
See: Morgan Stanley Capital International |
| MT |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MALTA. |
| MTL |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Maltese Lira. |
| MTN |
A short-form for Medium Term Note. |
| MTN |
Medium termnotesissued by corporations, much like
shorter-termcommercial paper. |
| MTNR |
A short-form for Medium Term Note Retail. |
| MU |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MAURITIUS. |
| MUD |
A municipal utility district, which is a political subdivision
that administers utility-related services, sometimes requiring
the issue of special assessment bonds. |
| Multibuyer policy |
Ex-Im Bank program that provides credit riskinsurance on export
sales to many different buyers. |
| Multicurrency clause |
Such a clause on a Euroloan permits the borrower to switch from
one currency to another currency on a rollover date. |
| Multicurrency loans |
Gives the borrower the possibility of drawing a loan in
different currencies. |
| Multifactor CAPM |
A version of the capital asset pricing model derived by Robert
Merton that includes extra-market sources of risk referred to as
factors. Related: arbitrage pricing theory |
| Multifamily loans |
Loans usually represented by conventional mortgages on
multi-family rental apartments. |
| Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) |
Agency established by the World Bank that offers various forms
of political riskinsurance to corporations. |
| Multilateral netting system |
Elimination of offsettingcash flows between a parent and several
subsidiaries. |
| Multinational corporation (MNC) |
A firm that operates in more than one country. |
| Multinational netting |
Elimination of offsettingcash flows within a multinational
corporation'sbooks. |
| Multinational restructuring |
Changing the terms of an MNC'sassets or liabilities by mutual
agreement. |
| Multi-option facility |
A facility that allows flexibility as to how the loan is
borrowed, for example part may be term loan, part on demand and
part as a letter of credit. |
| Multi-option financing facility |
A syndicated confirmed credit line with attached options. |
| Multiperiod immunization |
A portfoliostrategy in which a portfolio is created that will be
capable of satisfying more than one predetermined future
liability regardless of interest rate changes. |
| Multiple Arbitrage |
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management where by
the fund employs more than one arbitrage strategy. Portfolio
manager opportunistically allocates capital among the various
strategies in order to create the best risk/reward profile for
the overall fund. Common strategies include merger arbitrage,
convertible arbitrage, fixed income arbitrage, long/short
equities pairs trading, and volatility arbitrage. In the context
of equity and private equity investment, this refers to an
investment in a firm where by standard multiples
(earnings/price, book/price) indicate the price is far cheaper
than industry averages. |
| Multiple listing |
An agreement used by a broker who is a member of a
multiple-listing organization, providing the exclusive right to
sell with an additional authority and obligation on the part of
the listing broker to distribute the listing to the other
brokers. |
| Multiple peril insurance |
Insurance policy which covers a wide variety of property damage. |
| Multiple rates of return |
More than one rate of return from the same project that make the
net present value of the project equal to zero. This situation
arises when the IRR method is used for a project in which
negative cash flows follow positive cash flows. For each sign
change in the cash flows, there is a different rate of return. |
| Multiple regression |
The estimated relationship between a dependent variable and more
than one explanatory variable. |
| Multiple-discriminant analysis (MDA) |
Statistical technique for distinguishing between two groups on
the basis of their observed characteristics. |
| Multiple-issuer pools |
Under the GNMA-II program, pools formed through the aggregation
of individual issuers'loan packages. |
| Multiples |
Another name for price/earnings ratios. |
| Multiplier |
The investment multiplier which quantifies the overall effects
of investment spending on total income. The deposit multiplier
which shows the effects of a change in bank deposits on the
total amount of outstandingcredit and the money supply. |
| Multirule system |
A technicaltradingstrategy that combines mechanical rules, such
as the CRISMA (cumulative volume, relative strength, moving
average) Trading System of Pruitt and White. |
| Municipal bond |
State or local governments offer muni bonds or municipals, as
they are called, to pay for special projects such as highways or
sewers. The interest that investors receive is exempt from some
income taxes. |
| Municipal bond fund |
A mutual fund that invests in bondsissued by state, city, and/or
local governments. The interest obtained from these bonds is
passed through to shareholders and is generally free of federal
(and sometimes state and local) income taxes. |
| Municipal bond insurance |
An insurance policy which guarantees payment on municipal bonds
in the event of default . |
| Municipal improvement certificate |
A certificate used to finance local government projects and
services which is financed by a special tax assessment and
provides tax-free interest . |
| Municipal Investment Trust (MIT) |
A unit investment trust that buys municipal bonds and usually
holds them until maturity, passing the bond income on to
shareholders, usually tax-free. |
| Municipal notes |
Short-termnotesissued by municipalities in anticipation of tax
receipts, proceeds from a bond issue, or other revenues. |
| Municipal revenue bond |
A bondissued to finance a public project that is funded by the
revenues of the project. |
| MUR |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Mauritius Rupee. |
| Mutatis mutandis |
The necessary changes being made. |
| Mutilated security |
A certificate on which the name of the issue, the issuer, or
some other identifying detail cannot be read. |
| Mutual association |
A savings and loan association organized as a cooperative, with
members purchasing shares, voting on association affairs, and
receiving income in the form of dividends. |
| Mutual company |
A corporation that is owned by a group of members and that
distributes income in proportion to the amount of business that
members do with the company. |
| Mutual exclusion doctrine |
The doctrine that ruled that municipal bondinterest is federal
tax-free. In return for this federal tax exemption, states and
localities cannot tax interest generated by federal government
securities. |
| Mutual fund |
Mutual funds are pools of money that are managed by an
investment company. They offer investors a variety of goals,
depending on the fund and its investment charter. Some funds,
for example, seek to generate income on a regular basis. Others
seek to preserve an investor'smoney. Still others seek to invest
in companies that are growing at a rapid pace. Funds can impose
a sales charge, or load, on investors when they buy or sell
shares. Many funds these days are no load and impose no sales
charge. Mutual funds are investment companies regulated by the
Investment Company Act of 1940. Related: open-end fund,
closed-end fund. |
| Mutual fund cash-to-assets ratio |
The portion of the assets of a mutual fund which exists in cash
instruments. |
| Mutual fund custodian |
A commercial bank or trust company that holdssecurities owned by
a mutual fund and sometimes acts as transfer agent for the
mutual fund. |
| Mutual fund theorem |
A result associated with the CAPM, asserting that investors will
choose to invest their entire riskyportfolio in a market-index
or mutual fund. |
| Mutual offset |
A system, such as the arrangement between the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange (CME) and Singapore International Monetary Exchange (SIMEX),
which allows tradingpositions established on one exchange to be
offset or transferred on another exchange. |
| Mutual savings bank |
A state-charteredsavings bank which is owned by its depositors
and managed by a fiduciary board of trustees. |
| Mutually exclusive investment decisions |
Investment decisions in which the acceptance of a project
precludes the acceptance of one or more alternative projects. |
| MV |
Market value. Defined in the Red Book. |
| MV |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MALDIVES. |
| MVR |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Maldive Islands Rufiyaa. |
| MW |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MALAWI. |
| MWK |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Malawian Kwacha. |
| MX |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MEXICO. |
| MXN |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Mexican Peso. |
| MY |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MALAYSIA. |
| MYR |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Malaysian Ringgit. |
| MZ |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MOZAMBIQUE. |
| MZM |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Mozambique Metical. |