| Q |
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying that it is in
bankruptcy proceedings. |
| Q ratio or Tobin's Q ratio |
Market value of a firm'sassets divided by replacement value of
the firm's assets. Named after James Tobin of Yale University. |
| QA |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for QATAR. |
| QAR |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Qatar Rial. |
| QQQ |
The Nasdaq-100 Index Tracking Stock. This is a tracking stock
which trades like an index mutual fund which follows the Nasdaq
100 index. It trades continuously. |
| Quadratic programming |
Variant of linear programming in which the objective function is
quadratic rather than linear. In portfolio selection, we often
minimize the variance of the portfolio (which is a quadratic
function) subject to constraints on the mean return of the
portfolio. |
| Qualification period |
A period of time during the first few months or weeks of a new
policy when an insurance company will not reimburse a
policyholder for a claim in order to allow the insurance company
time to find any fraudulent information in the application. |
| Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) |
A judgment, decree, or order that gives a pension plan
participant access to retirement assets that must be used to pay
an ex-spouse or dependent children. |
| Qualified endorsement |
A signature on the back of a negotiable instrument transferring
the amount to some other party but that includes wording that
limits the endorser's liability. |
| Qualified opinion |
An auditor's opinion expressing certain limitations of an audit. |
| Qualified plan or trust |
A tax-deferred plan allowing employer and employee contributions
that build up savings, which are paid out at retirement or on
termination of employment. Tax is paid only when amounts are
drawn from the trust. |
| Qualified retirement plan |
A retirement plan established by employers for their employees
that meets the requirements of Internal Revenue Code Section
401(a) or 403(a) and is eligible for special tax considerations.
The plan may provide for employer contributions, as in a pension
or profit-sharing plan, as well as employee contributions.
Employers can deduct plan contributions made on behalf of
eligible employees on the business's tax return as business
expenses. Plan earnings are not taxed to the employee until
withdrawn. |
| Qualified Terminable Interest Property Trust (Q-TIP) |
A trust that allows a surviving spouse to receive income
generated from the trust, while the actual distribution of the
trust's assets is made to other beneficiaries such as the
grantor's children. |
| Qualified total distribution |
A payment representing an employee's interest in a qualified
retirement plan. The payment must be prompted by retirement (or
other separation from service), death, disability, or attainment
of age 59-1/2. Payment can be in installments as long as the
complete distribution is made within a single tax year. |
| Qualifying annuity |
An annuity allowable as investment for a qualified plan or
trust. |
| Qualifying bank |
A lender that is entitled to receive interest gross. Practically
this means that the borrower does not have to deduct tax and
account for it to the Inland Revenue which would in turn bring
the grossing-up clause into effect. |
| Qualifying share |
Shares of common stock that a person must hold in order to
qualify as a director of the issuingcorporation. |
| Qualifying stock option |
A benefit granted by a corporation that allows employees to
purchase shares at a discount price. |
| Qualitative analysis |
An analysis of the qualities of a company that cannot be
measured concretely, such as management quality or employee
morale. |
| Qualitative research |
Traditional analysis of firm-specific prospects for future
earnings. It may be based on data collected by the analysts,
there is no formal quantitative framework used to generate
projections. |
| Quality of earnings |
Increased earnings due to increased sales and cost controls, as
compared to artificial profits created by inflation of inventory
or other asset prices. |
| Quality option |
Gives the seller choice of deliverables in Treasury bond and
Treasury notefutures contracts. Also called the swap option.
Related: Cheapest to deliver issue. |
| Quality spread |
Difference between Treasury securities and non-Treasury
securities that are identical in all respects except for quality
rating. For instance, the difference between yields on
Treasuries and those on single A-rated industrial bonds. Also
called credit spread. |
| Quant |
A person with numerical and computer skills who carries out
quantitative analyses of companies. |
| Quantitative analysis |
An assessment of specific measurable securities or
investmentfactors, such as cost of capital, value of assets; and
projections of sales, costs, earnings, and profits. Combined
with more subjective or qualitative considerations (such as
management effectiveness), quantitative analysis can enhance
investment decisions and portfolios. |
| Quantitative analysis |
An analysis of the mathematically measurable figures of a
company, such as the value of assets or projected sales. |
| Quantitative research |
Use of advanced econometric and mathematical valuation models to
identify the firms with the best possible prospectives.
Antithesis of qualitative research. |
| Quantity risk |
Occurs when the quantity of an asset to be hedged is uncertain. |
| Quantize |
To convert an asset or liability into a currency other than the
regular trading currency. |
| Quanto swap |
See: Differential swap |
| Quantos |
Currency options with a guaranteed exchange rate that enable
buyers who like an asset, German bonds for example, but not the
asset's pricing currency, to arrange payment in a different
currency for a fee. |
| Quarter stock |
Stock with a par value of $25 per share. |
| Quarterly |
Occurring every three months. |
| Quarterly financing |
February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15, or next working
day offerings of several "coupon" securityissues.
Quarterlyissues currently consist of a 3-year note, a 10-year
note, and a 30-year bond. The Treasury sometimes offers
additional amounts of outstandinglong-termnotes or bonds, rather
than selling new security issues. See: Reopening. |
| Quasi-public corporation |
A corporation that is operated privately, but is supported by
the government in its operations and that often traded publicly. |
| Quay |
A landing place or pier, usually of solid construction, where
vessels berth to load or unload cargo. |
| Quick assets |
Current assetsminusinventories. |
| Quick ratio |
Indicator of a company's financial strength (or weakness).
Calculated by taking current assets less inventories, divided by
current liabilities. This ratio provides information regarding
the firm's liquidity and ability to meet its obligations. Also
called the Acid test ratio. |
| Quid pro quo |
An arrangement allowing a firm to use research from another firm
at no cost in exchange for executing all of its trades with the
firm that provides the research. |
| Quiet period |
Time period an issuer is "in registration" with the SEC and may
not promote its forthcoming issue. |
| Quorum |
The minimum number of people who must be present or must provide
a proxy to vote at a meeting in order to make a valid decision. |
| Quota |
See Import Quota |
| Quotation |
Highest bid and lowest offer (asked) price currently available
on a security or a commodity. |
| Quotation board |
The electronic board at a brokerage firm displaying prices other
financial data. |
| Quote rule |
Rule requiring market makers to publish quotations for any
listed security when a quotation represents more than 1% of the
aggregatetrading volume for that security. |
| Quoted price |
The price at which the last trade of a particular security or
commodity took place. |