| S |
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying a beneficial
interest. |
| S Corporation |
A corporation that elects not to be taxed as a corporation. That
is, the corporation does not directly pay federal income tax on
its earnings. Similar to a partnership, it passes its income or
losses and other tax items on to its shareholders. |
| S&P |
Standard & Poor's Corporation. |
| S&P 500 Composite Index |
Index of 500 widely held common stocks that measures the general
performance of the market. |
| S&P phenomenon |
Tendency of stocks newly added to the S&P composite index to
rise in price due to a large number of buyorders as S&P-related
index funds add the stock to their portfolios. |
| S&P Rating |
Rating service provided by S&P that indicates the amount of risk
involved with different securities. |
| SA |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SAUDI ARABIA. |
| SACE |
The Italian export creditagency. |
| Safe harbor |
Often used in risk arbitrage as a form of shark repellent. A
target companyacquires a business so onerously regulated that it
makes the target less attractive, giving it, in effect, a safe
harbor. |
| Safe harbor lease |
A lease to transfer tax benefits of ownership (depreciation and
debttax shield) from the lessee, if the lessee could not use
them, to a lessor that could use them. |
| Safekeep |
Holding by a bank of bonds and money market instruments. For a
fee, the bank clips coupons and presents for payment at
maturity. |
| Safety cushion |
In a contingent immunizationstrategy, the difference between the
initially available immunization level and the safety-net
return. |
| Safety-net return |
The minimum available return that will trigger an immunization
strategy in a contingent immunization strategy. |
| SAIF |
See: Savings Association Insurance Fund |
| Salary |
Regular wages and benefits an employee receives from an
employer. |
| Salary freeze |
A temporary halt to increases in salary due to financial
difficulties experienced by a company. |
| Salary reduction plan |
A plan allowing employees to contribute pre-tax income to a tax-deferredretirement
plan. |
| Salary Reduction Simplified Employee Pension Plan (SARSEP) |
A low-cost, no-frills version of a 401(k) employee savings plan
available to companies with 25 or fewer employees. It allows
employees to make pretax contributions to their IRAs through
salary reduction each year. The Small Business Job Protection
Act of 1996 replaced SARSEPs with SIMPLE (Savings Incentive
Match Plan for Employees) plans. Existing SARSEPs were allowed
to add new participants, but new plans could not be formed after
December 31, 1996. |
| Sale |
An agreement between a buyer and a seller on the price to be
paid for a security, followed by delivery. |
| Sale and leaseback |
A sale of property which is immediately leased back to the
seller by the buyer. Often undertaken to release capital back to
the tenant, where the tenant has good covenant strength. |
| Sale and lease-back |
Sale of an existing asset to a financial institution that then
leases it back to the user. Related: Lease. |
| Sales charge |
The fee charged by a mutual fund at purchase of shares, usually
payable as a commission to a marketing agent, such as a
financial adviser, who is thus compensated for assistance to a
purchaser. It represents the difference, if any, between the
share purchase price and the share net asset value. |
| Sales completion |
In the context of project financing, the state in which the
project has reached physical completion and has delivered
product or generated revenues in satisfaction of a sales
completion test. |
| Sales Contract |
Contract between a seller and buyer for the sale of goods,
services, or both. |
| Sales forecast |
A key input to a firm'sfinancial planning process. External
salesforecasts are based on historical experience, statistical
analysis, and consideration of various macroeconomicfactors. |
| Sales literature |
Material written by an institution selling a product, which
informs potential buyers of the product and its benefits. |
| Sales load |
See: Sales charge |
| Sales tax |
A percentage tax on the selling price of goods and services. |
| Sales-type lease |
The leasing out of a firm's own equipment, such as a printing
company leasing its own presses, thereby competing with an
independent leasing company. |
| Sallie Mae |
See: Student Loan Marketing Association |
| Salomon Brothers Non-U.S. Dollar World Government Bond Index |
A benchmarkindex that includes institutionally traded bonds
other than U.S. issues that have a fixed rate and a remaining
maturity of one year or longer. |
| Salomon Brothers World Equity Index (SBWEI) |
A top-down, floatcapitalization-weighted index used to measure
the performance of fixed-income and equity markets. It includes
approximately 6000 companies in 22 countries. |
| Salvage value |
Scrap value of plant and equipment. |
| Same-Day Funds Settlement (SDFS) |
A method of settlement used in trading between
well-collateralized parties in good-the-same-day federal funds
used by the Depository Trust Company for transactions in US
government securities, short-term municipal notes, medium-term
commercial paper notes, CMOs, and other instruments. |
| Same-day substitution |
Offsetting changes in a margin account during the day that
result in no overall change in the balance of the account. |
| Samurai bond |
A yen-denominatedbond issued in Tokyo by a non-Japanese
borrower. Related: Bulldog bond and Yankee bond. |
| Samurai market |
The foreign market in Japan. |
| Santa Claus Rally |
Seasonal rise in stock prices in the last week of the calendar
year, between Christmas and New Year's Day. |
| Sao Paulo Stock Exchange |
See: Bolsa de Valores de Sao Paulo |
| SAPCO |
Single asset property company. Used in the past to try and
create liquidity in property markets. Their popularity may
increase due to the difference between stamp duty on shares and
that on larger land transactions. See envelope transaction. |
| SAR |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Saudi Arabian Riyal. |
| Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002 |
Legislation passed largely as a result of a number of accounting
scandals. Among the many features is the creation of the Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board. This board is charged to:
The Board shall: 1) register public accounting firms; 2)
establish, or adopt, by rule, auditing, quality control, ethics,
independence, and other standards relating to the preparation of
audit reports for issuers; (3) conduct inspections of accounting
firms; (4) conduct investigations and disciplinary proceedings,
and impose appropriate sanctions; (5) perform such other duties
or functions as necessary or appropriate; (6) enforce compliance
with the Act, the rules of the Board, professional standards,
and the securities laws relating to the preparation and issuance
of audit reports and the obligations and liabilities of
accountants with respect thereto; (7) set the budget and manage
the operations of the Board and the staff of the Board. |
| Saturday night special |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Sudden attempt by one company to
take over another by making a publictender offer. |
| SATURNS |
See Structured Asset Trust Unit Repackagings. |
| Saucer |
Technical chart pattern depicting a security whose price has
reached bottom and is moving up. |
| Savings and loan association |
National- or state-chartered institution that accepts savings
deposits and invests the bulk of the funds thus received in
mortgages. |
| Savings Association Insurance Fund (SAIF) |
A government organization that replaced the Federal Savings and
Loan Insurance Corporation as the provider of deposit insurance
for thrift institutions. |
| Savings bank |
An institution that primarily accepts consumer savings deposits
and to make home mortgage loans. |
| Savings bond |
A government bond issued in face valuedenominations from $50 to
$10,000, with local and state tax-free interest and semiannually
adjusted interest rates. |
| Savings deposits |
Accounts that pay interest, typically at below-market interest
rates, that do not have a specific maturity, and that usually
can be withdrawn upon demand. |
| Savings element |
Used in the context of life insurance, the cash value built up
in a policy, which equals the amount of premium paid minus the
cost of protection. This excess is invested by the insurance
company, and the returns are tax-deferred inside the policy. |
| Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees (SIMPLE) 401(k)
plan |
A tax-deferred retirement savings plan similar to a conventional
401(k) plan, redesigned with specific rules to meet the needs of
small employers. The Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996
created these plans for companies with fewer than 100 employees.
An employee's contributions are indexed for inflation, and
employers must make annual annual matching contributions. |
| Savings rate |
Personal savings as a percentage of disposable personal income. |
| SAVP |
A statement of asset valuation practice issued by the RICS. |
| SB |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SOLOMON ISLANDS. |
| SBD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Solomon Islands Dollar. |
| SC |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SEYCHELLES. |
| Scale |
Payment of different rates of interest on CDs of varying
maturities. A bank is said to "post a scale." Commercial
paperdealers also post scales. |
| Scale in |
Gradually taking a position in a security or market over time. |
| Scale order |
Order to buy (sell) a security that specifies the total amount
to be bought (sold) and the amount to be bought (sold) at
successively decreasing (increasing) price intervals; often
placed in order to average the price. |
| Scale-enhancing |
Describes a project that is in the same riskclass as the whole
firm. That is, the project allows the firm to grow larger in the
context of their current business rather than diversify into new
businesses. |
| Scaling |
How the characteristics of an object change as you change the
size of your measuring device. For a three dimensional object,
it could be the volume of an object covered as you increase the
radius of a covering sphere. In a times series, it could be the
change in the amplitude of the time series as you increase the
increment of time. |
| Scalp |
To trade for small gains. Scalping normally involves
establishing and liquidating a position quickly, usually within
the same day. |
| Scalping |
Buying up the good IPOs. |
| Scattered |
Used for listed equity securities. Unconcentrated buy or sell
interest. |
| Scenario analysis |
The use of horizon analysis to project total returns under
different reinvestment rates and future marketyields. |
| Schedule 13d |
Disclosure form required when more than 5% of any class of
equitysecurities in a publicly held corporation is purchased. |
| Schedule C |
Describes membership requirements and procedures of NASD, in its
bylaws. |
| Scheduled cash flows |
The mortgageprincipal and interest payments due to be paid under
the terms of the mortgage, not including possible prepayments. |
| Scheme of arrangement |
A court sanctioned arrangement between a company and its members
or creditors. The procedure can be used to avoid problems of
financial assistance in the context of envelope transactions. |
| Scorched-earth policy |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Any technique a company that has
become the target of a takeover attempt uses to make itself
unattractive to the acquirer. For example, it may agree to sell
off its crown jewels, or schedule all debt to become due
immediately after a merger. |
| SCR |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Seychelles Rupee. |
| Screen stocks |
To analyze various stocks in search of stocks that meet
predetermined criteria. For example, a simple value screen would
sort all stocks by their price-to-book ratio and pick the stocks
with the lowest ratios as candidates for the value portfolio. |
| Scrip |
A temporary document that represents a portion of a share of
stock, often issued after a stock split or spin-off. |
| Scripophily |
Collecting stock and bondcertificates for their scarcity, rather
than for their value as securities. |
| SD |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SUDAN. |
| SDD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Sudanese Dinar. |
| SDR |
See: Special drawing rights |
| SE |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SWEDEN. |
| SEAQ |
See: Stock Exchange Automated Quotation System |
| Search costs |
Costs associated with locating a counterparty to a trade,
including explicit costs (such as advertising) and implicit
costs (such as the value of time). Related: Information costs. |
| Seasonally adjusted |
Mathematically adjusted by moderating a macroeconomicindicator
(e.g., oil prices/imports) so that relative comparisons can be
drawn from month to month all year. |
| Seasoned |
In the case of equity, having gained a reputation for quality
with the investingpublic and enjoying liquidity in the secondary
market; in the case of convertibles, having traded for at least
90 days after issue in Europe, and thus available for sale
legally to U.S. investors. |
| Seasoned datings |
Extended credit for customers who order goods in periods other
than peak seasons. |
| Seasoned issue |
Issue of a security for which there is an existing market.
Related: Unseasoned issue. |
| Seasoned new issue |
A new issue of stock after the company'ssecurities have
previously been issued. A seasoned new issue of common stock can
be made using a cash offer or a rights offer. |
| Seat |
Position of membership on a securities or commodityexchange,
bought and sold at market prices. |
| SEC |
See: Securities & Exchange Commission |
| SEC fee |
Small fee the SEC charges to sellers of equitysecurities on an
exchange. |
| Secert Ballot |
In the context of corporate governance, this is also known as
confidential voting. An independent third party or employees
sworn to secrecy are used to count proxy votes, and the
management usually agrees not to look at individual proxy cards.
This can help eliminate potential conflicts of interest for
fiduciaries voting shares on behalf of others, or can reduce
pressure by management on shareholder-employees or
shareholder-partners. |
| Second market |
The OTC market. |
| Second mortgage lending |
Loanssecured by real estate previously pledged in a first
mortgage. |
| Second pass regression |
A cross-sectionalregression of portfolioreturns on betas. The
estimated slope is the measurement of the reward for bearing
systematic risk during the period analyzed. |
| Second round |
Stage of venture capital financing following the start-up and
first round stages and before the mezzanine level stage. |
| Secondary |
Property which is likely to be of interest to some institutional
purchasers but lacks the characteristics of prime property, for
example non-FRI lease, poor specification or location. |
| Secondary distribution/offering |
Publicsale of previously issuedsecurities held by large
investors, usually corporations or institutions, as
distinguished from a primary distribution, where the seller is
the issuing corporation. The sale is handled off the NYSE, by a
securities firm or a group of firms, and the shares are usually
offered at a fixed price related to the current market price of
the stock. |
| Secondary issue |
(1) Procedure for selling blocks of seasoned issues of stocks.
(2) More generally, sale of already issued stock. |
| Secondary market |
The market in which securities are traded after they are
initially offered in the primary market. Most trading occurs in
the secondary market. The New York Stock Exchange, as well as
all other stock exchanges and the bond markets, are secondary
markets. Seasoned securities are traded in the secondary market. |
| Secondary mortgage market |
Buying and selling existing mortgage loans, which are often
pooled and traded as mortgage-backed securities. |
| Secondary Offering |
An IPO in which privately held shares in a corporation are sold
to the public. |
| Secondary stocks |
Stocks with smaller market capitalization, less quality and more
risk than blue chipissues that behave differently than larger
corporations' stocks. |
| Second-preferred stock |
Preferred stockissue that has less priority in claiming
dividends and assets in liquidation than another issue of
preferred stock. |
| Second-to-die insurance |
Insurance policy that, on the death of the spouse dying last,
pays a death benefit to the heirs that is designed to cover
estate taxes. |
| Section 104 agreement |
An agreement under section 104 of the Water Industry Act 1991
(previously section 18 of the Public Health Act 1936) by which a
developer agrees to construct sewers to a specified standard and
the local water company, or its agent, agrees to maintain them
after completion of construction and expiry of a 12 month
maintenance agreement. On adoption the sewer will become a
public sewer. |
| Section 106 agreement |
An agreement governing planning gain made under section 106 of
the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. A section 106 agreement
binds owners of the land as if they were parties to it. A
section 106 agreement entered into prior to the date of a charge
will bind the land in priority to that charge and any sale by a
mortgagee will be subject to it. The agreement is entered into
contemporaneously with the grant of a planning consent and
should be drafted so as to bind the land to which the consent
relates only if the planning consent is implemented. Whether the
effect of the section 106 agreement is contingent on
implementation of the planning consent will depend on the
drafting. |
| Section 16(a) |
Provision of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 that requires
company insiders to file periodic reportsdisclosing their
holdings and changes in beneficial ownership of the
company'sequity securities. |
| Section 16(b) |
Provision of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 that requires
that any profit realized by a company insider from the purchase
and sale, or sale and purchase, of the company'sequity
securities within a period of less than six months must be
returned to the company. It is also known as the "short-swing
profit" rule. |
| Section 278 agreement |
An agreement under section 278 of the Highways Act 1980 where a
person who derives special benefit from highway works enters
into an agreement with the highway authority to fund them. |
| Section 38 agreement |
An agreement under section 38 of the Highways Act 1980 by which
a developer agrees to construct a road to a specific standard
and the Highways Authority agrees to adopt and maintain the road
after completion of construction, and the expiry of a 12 month
maintenance period. On adoption the road will become a public
highway. |
| Section 42 relief |
Relief from stamp duty under section 42 of the Finance Act 1930
where property of any description is transferred between
companies which have at least 75% common ownership. |
| Section 423 |
The government agency responsible for the supervision and
regulation of the securities industry and markets, as well as
public securities offerings and the ongoing disclosure
obligations of public companies. |
| Section 482 |
US Department of Treasury regulations governing transfer prices. |
| Section 52 agreement |
The fore runner to section 106 agreements. These can no longer
be entered into, but will continue to bind the land to which
they relate. |
| Section 83(b) Election |
A tax filing within 30 days of grant that allows employees
granted stock to pay taxes on the grant date instead of on the
date restrictions lapse. If an employee files the election,
taxes are based on the fair market value on the grant date, with
any future appreciation taxed as a capital gain. If the employee
does not file an election, taxes are based on the fair market
value on the date the restrictions lapse, which will be higher
assuming the stock has appreciated in value. |
| Section 9 consent |
Consent required by registered social landlords to enable
registered social landlords to enter into legal charges and make
disposals. |
| Sector |
Used to characterize a group of securities that are similar with
respect to maturity, type, rating, industry, and/or coupon. |
| Sector allocation |
Investment of certain proportions of a portfolio in certain
sectors. See: Industry allocation. |
| Sector diversification |
Constituting of a portfolio of stocks of companies in each major
industry group. |
| Sector fund |
A mutual fund that concentrates on a relatively narrow market
sector. These funds can experience higher share price volatility
than some diversified funds because sector funds are subject to
common market forces specific to a given sector. |
| Sector rotation |
An active asset management strategy certain sectors, that
tactically overweights and underweights depending on expected
performance. Sometimes called rotation. |
| Secular |
Long-term time frame (10-50 years or more). |
| Secured bond |
A bond backed by the pledge of collateral, a mortgage, or other
lien, as opposed to an unsecured bond, called a debenture . |
| Secured debt |
Debt that has first claim on specified assets in the event of
default. |
| securities |
Paper certificates (definitive securities) or electronic records
(book-entry securities) evidencing ownership of equity (stocks)
or debt obligations (bonds). |
| Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) |
A federal agency that regulates the US financial markets. The
SEC also oversees the securities industry and promotes full
disclosure in order to protect the investingpublic against
malpractice in the securities markets. |
| Securities Act of 1933 |
First law designed to regulate securitiesmarkets, requiring
registration of securities and disclosure. |
| Securities Acts Amendments of 1975 |
Legislation to encourage the establishment of a national market
system together with a system for nationwide clearing and
settlement of securitiestransactions. |
| Securities analysts |
Related: Financial analysts |
| Securities and commodities exchanges |
Exchanges on which securities, options, and futurescontracts are
traded by members for their own accounts and for the accounts of
customers. |
| Securities and Exchange Commission Rules |
Rules enacted by the SEC to assist in the regulation of US
financialmarkets. |
| Securities Exchange Act of 1934 |
Legislation that created the SEC, outlawing dishonest practices
in the trading of securities. |
| Securities Exchange of Thailand (SET) |
The only stock market in Thailand, based in Bangkok. |
| Securities Industry Association (SIA) |
An association of broker-dealers who sell taxable securities,
which lobbies the government, records industrytrends, and keeps
records of brokerprofits. |
| Securities Industry Committee on Arbitration (SICA) |
A private group that provides mediation services in case of
customer complaints against securitiesfirms. |
| Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) |
A nonprofit corporation that insures customers' securities and
cash held by member brokerage firms against the failure of those
firms. |
| Securities loan |
The loan of securities between brokers, often to cover a
client's short sale; or a loan secured by marketable securities. |
| Securities markets |
Organized exchanges plus over-the-countermarkets in which
securities are traded. |
| Securitisation |
A process of packaging cash flows from groups of assets such as
mortgages and refinancing by raising a new debt in a
transferable form secured on those assets. |
| Securitization |
Creating a more or less standard investmentinstrument such as
the mortgagepass-through security, by poolingassets to back the
instrument. Also refers to the replacement of nonmarketable
loans and/or cash flows provided by financial intermediaries
with negotiable securities issued in the publiccapital markets. |
| Security |
Piece of paper that proves ownership of stocks, bonds, and other
investments. |
| Security characteristic line |
A plot on a graph of the excess return on a security over the
risk-free rate as a function of the excess return on the market.
The slope of this line is the security's beta. |
| Security deposit (initial) |
Synonymous with the term margin. A cash amount that must be
deposited with the broker for each contract as a guarantee of
fulfillment of the futures contract. It is not considered as
part payment or purchase. Related: Margin. |
| Security deposit (maintenance) |
Related: Maintenance margin |
| Security Industry Automated Corporation (SIAC) |
Entity that executes automated DOTorders. |
| Security interest |
The creditor's right to take property or a portion of property
offered as security. |
| Security market line |
Line representing the relationship between expected return and
market risk or beta. The slope of this line is the risk premium
for beta. |
| Security Market Line |
The linear relationship between expected assetreturns and betas
posited by the Capital Asset Pricing Model. |
| Security market plane |
A plane that shows the relationship between expected return and
the beta coefficient of more than one factor. |
| Security ratings |
Commercial rating agencies' assessment of the credit and
investment risk of securities. |
| Security selection |
See: Security selection decision |
| Security selection decision |
Choosing the particular stocks or bonds or other investment
instruments to include in a portfolio. |
| SED |
See: Shipper's Export Declaration |
| Seed money |
The first contribution by a venture capitalist toward the
financing of a new business, often using a loan or purchase of
convertible bonds or preferred stock. See: Mezzanine level and
second round. |
| Seek a market |
Search for a securitiesbuyer or seller. |
| Segmented Market |
A market in which there are impediments to the free flow of
labor, capital, and information. |
| Segmented market |
A market that is partially or wholly isolated from other markets
by one or more market imperfections. |
| Segregation of securities |
SEC rules to dictate how customers' securities may be used by
broker-dealers in broker loans. |
| SEHK |
See: Stock Exchange of Hong Kong |
| Seigniorage |
The amount of goods and services that the government obtains by
printing new money in a given period. Often we consider this in
real terms, by dividing the new money by the price level. |
| SEK |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Swedish Krona. |
| Select ten portfolio |
A unit investment trust that buys and holds for one year the ten
stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average with the highest
dividendyields. |
| Selected dealer agreement |
The set of rules governing the selling group in an underwriting. |
| Selective hedging |
Protecting investments during some time periods and not during
others. |
| Self Tender |
A companybuys back a certain percentage of its own shares
through a tender offer. |
| Self-amortizing mortgage |
Mortgage whose entire principal is paid off in a specified
period of time with regular interest and principal payments. |
| Self-directed IRA |
An IRA that the account holder can after appointing a custodian
manager to carry out investment instructions. |
| Self-employed income |
Taxable income of a person involved in a sole proprietorship or
other sort of free-lance work. |
| Self-employment tax |
A tax self-employed people must pay to qualify them to receive
Social Security benefits at retirement. |
| Self-liquidating loan |
Loan to financecurrent assets. The sale of the current assets
provides the cash to repay the loan. |
| Self-regulatory organization (SRO) |
Organizations that enforce fair, ethical, and efficient
practices in the securities and commodityfutures industries,
including all national securities and commoditiesexchanges and
the NASD. |
| Self-selection |
Consequence of a contract that induces only one group to
participate. |
| Self-Similar |
When small parts of an object are qualitatively the same, or
similar to the whole object. In certain deterministic fractals,
like the Sierpinski Triangle, small pieces look the same as the
entire object. In random fractals, small increments of time will
be statistically similar to larger increments of time. See:
Fractal. |
| Self-supporting debt |
Bonds sold to finance a project that will produce enough revenue
through tolls or other charges to retire the debt . See: revenue
bond. |
| Self-tender offer |
A company that tenders for its own shares. |
| Sell hedge |
Related: short hedge. |
| Sell limit order |
Conditional trading order that indicates that a security may be
sold at the designated price or higher. Related: Buy limit
order. |
| Sell off |
Sale of securities under pressure. See: Dumping. |
| Sell order |
An order that may take many different forms by an investor to a
broker to sell a particular stock, bond, option, future, mutual
fund, or other holding. |
| Sell out |
Liquidation of a margin account after a customer has failed to
bring an account to a required level by producing additional
equity after a margin call. The selling of securities by a
broker when a customer fails to pay for them.
The complete sale of all securities in a new issue. |
| Sell plus order |
Market or limit order to sell a stated amount of stock provided
that the price to be obtained is not lower than the last sale if
the last sale was a plus, or zero plus tick, and is not lower
than the last sale plus the minimum fractional change in the
stock if the last sale was a minimum or zero minimum tick. (In a
limit order, sale cannot be lower than the limit, regardless of
tick.) |
| Sell price |
See: Redemption price |
| Sell the book |
Used for listed equity securities. Order to a broker by the
holder of a large quantity of shares of a security to sell all
that can be absorbed at the current bid price. The term derives
from the specialist's book - the record of all the buy and sell
orders members have placed in the stock one handles. In this
scenario, the buyers potentially include those in the
specialist's book, the specialist for its own account, and
broker-dealers. |
| Seller financing |
Funding a purchase by a seller's loan to the buyer, the buyer
takes full title to the property when the loan is fully repaid. |
| Seller's market |
Market in which demand exceeds supply. As a result, the seller
can dictate the price and the terms of sale. |
| Seller's option |
Delayed settlement/delivery in a transaction. |
| Seller's points |
In reference to a loan, seller's points consist of a lump sum
paid by the seller to the buyer'screditor to reduce the cost of
the loan to the buyer. This payment is either required by the
creditor or volunteered by the seller, usually in a loan to buy
real estate. Generally, one point equals one percent of the loan
amount. |
| Selling climax |
A sudden drop in security prices as sellers dump their holdings. |
| Selling concession |
The discountunderwriters offer the selling group on securities
in a new issue. |
| Selling dividends |
Inducing a prospective customer tobuyshares in order to profit
from a dividend scheduled in the near future. |
| Selling group |
All banks involved in selling or marketing a new issue of stock
or bonds. |
| Selling on the good news |
A strategy of selling stock shortly after a company announces
good news and the stock price rises. Investors believe that the
price is as high as it can go and is on the brink of going down. |
| Selling short |
Selling a stock not actually owned. If an investor thinks the
price of a stock is going down, the investor could borrow the
stock from a broker and sell it. Eventually, the investor must
buy the stock back on the openmarket. For instance, you borrow
1000 shares of XYZ on July 1 and sell it for $8 per share. Then,
on Aug. 1, you purchase 1000 shares of XYZ at $7 per share.
You've made $1000 (less commissions and other fees) by selling
short. |
| Selling short against the box |
Selling shortstock that is actually owned by the seller but held
in the box, meaning it is held in safekeeping. The seller
borrowssecurities needed to cover as the stockin the box may be
inaccessible, or the seller may not wish to disclose ownership.
The traditional motive for this transaction was to defer capital
gains taxes. However, this method became infeasible under the
Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997. |
| Selling Syndicate |
A group of underwriters that issues a firm'ssecurities by buying
them from the issuing firm and reselling them to a group of
smaller brokerage firms for eventual sale to individual
investors. |
| Selling the spread |
A spread whose option to be sold is trading at a higher premium
than the option to be bought. |
| Selling, general, and administrative (SG&A) expenses |
Expenses such as salespersons' salaries and commissions,
advertising and promotion, travel and entertainment, office
payroll and expenses, and executives' salaries. |
| Sell-side analyst |
A financial analyst who works for a brokerage firm and whose
recommendations are passed on to the brokerage firm's customers.
Also called Wall Street analyst. |
| Semistrong-form efficiency |
A form of pricing efficiency that profits the price of a
security fully reflects all public information (including, but
not limited to, historical price and trading patterns). Compare
weak-form efficiency and strong-form efficiency. |
| Senior debt |
The part of a loan that is served by a first ranking charge.
Often mezzanine debt is secured by a second charge. |
| Senior debt |
Debt whose terms in the event of bankruptcy, require it to be
repaid before subordinated debt receives any payment. |
| Senior mortgage bond |
A bond that, in the event of bankruptcy, will be redeemed before
any other bonds are repaid. |
| Senior refunding |
Replacement by the issuer of securities with 5-to 12-year
maturities with securities of 15-year or longer maturities, in
order to delay, reduce, or consolidate payment. |
| Senior security |
A security that, in the event of bankruptcy, will be redeemed
before any other securities. |
| Seniority |
The order of repayment. In the event of bankruptcy, senior debt
must be repaid before subordinated debt is repaid. |
| Sensitive market |
A market that reacts to a great extent to good or bad news. |
| Sensitivity analysis |
Analysis of the effect on a project'sprofitability of changes in
sales, cost, and so on. |
| Sentiment indicators |
The general feeling of investors about the state of the market,
such as whether they are bullish or bearish. |
| Separate customer |
Method of allocating insurance by the Securities Investor
Protection Corporation. Each account that is under the name of a
different person or group of people is entitled to maximum
protection. |
| Separate tax returns |
Tax returns of married persons who choose to file their returns
individually, usually because this approach produces lower
overall tax payments. |
| Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal
Securities (STRIPS) |
Long-termnotes and bonds divided into principal and
interest-paying components, which may be transferred and sold in
amounts as small as $1000. STRIPS are sold at auction at a
minimum par amount, varying for each issue. The amount is an
arithmetic function of the issue's interest rate. |
| Separation property |
The property that portfolio choice can be divided into two
independent tasks: (1) Determination of the optimal
riskyportfolio, which is a purely mathematical problem, and (2)
the personal choice of the best mix of the optimal risky
portfolio and the risk-free asset, which depends on a person's
degree of risk aversion. |
| Separation theorem |
Theory that the value of an investment to an individual is not
dependent on consumption preferences. That is, investors will
want to accept or reject the same investment projects by using
the NPV rule, regardless of personal preference. |
| Serial bonds |
Corporate bonds arranged so that specified principal amounts
become due on specified dates. Related: Term bonds. |
| Serial covariance |
The covariance between a variable and the lagged value of the
variable; the same as autocorrelation. |
| Serial entrepreneur |
Business person that successfully starts (does not kill) a
number of different businesses. |
| Serial redemption |
The redemption of a serial bond. |
| Series |
Options: All option contracts of the same class that also have
the same unit of trade, expiration date, and exercise price.
Stocks: shares that have common characteristics, such as rights
to ownership and voting, dividends, or par value. In the case of
many foreign shares, one series may be owned only by citizens of
the country in which the stock is registered. |
| Series bond |
Bond that may be issued in several series under the same
indenture document. |
| Series E bond |
A local and state tax-free bond issued by the U.S. government
from 1941 to 1979, which was then replaced by Series HH bonds. |
| Series EE bond |
See: Savings bond |
| Series HH bond |
See: Savings bond |
| Service charge |
A component of some finance charges, such as the fee for
triggering an overdraft checking account into use. |
| Servient tenement |
The name given to land which is the subject of a right or
covenant benefiting other land called the dominant tenement. |
| Set of contracts perspective |
View of corporation as a set of contracting relationships among
individuals who have conflicting objectives, such as
shareholders or managers. The corporation is a legal construct
that serves as the nexus for the contracting relationships. |
| Set up |
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Arbitrage involving
going long the convertible and short a certain percentage of the
underlying common. Antithesis of Chinese hedge. |
| Set-aside |
A percentage of a municipal or corporate bondunderwriting that
is allocated for handling by a minority-owned broker/dealerfirm. |
| Setoff |
Money held on behalf of a borrower that may be applied to repay
the loan, but usually without the permission of the borrower. |
| Set-off |
The right for a lender to apply credit balances on a borrower’s
account against debit balances on another account of the
borrower. A bank inherently has a right of set-off arising from
the bank/customer relationship but most facility letters contain
an express right. |
| Settle price |
An average of the trading prices in the futures market during
the last few minutes of trading. |
| Settlement |
When payment is made for a trade. |
| Settlement date |
The date on which payment is made to settle a trade. For stocks
traded on US exchanges, settlement is currently three business
days after the trade. For mutual funds, settlement usually
occurs in the US the day following the trade. In some regional
markets, foreign shares may require months to settle. |
| Settlement options |
The various possibilities open to a beneficiary under a life
insurance policy as to how the benefit will be paid out. |
| Settlement price |
A figure determined by the closing range that is used to
calculate gains and losses in futuresmarket accounts. Settlement
prices are used to determine gains, losses, margin calls, and
invoice prices for deliveries. Related: Closing range. |
| Settlement rate |
The rate suggested in Financial Accounting Standards Board
(FASB) 87 for discounting the obligations of a pension plan. The
rate at which the pension benefits could be effectively settled
if the company sponsoring the pension plan wishes to terminate
its pension obligation. |
| Settlement risk |
The risk that one party will deliver and the counterparty will
not be able to pay and vice versa. |
| Severally but not jointly |
An agreement between members of an underwriting group buy a new
issue (severally), but not to assume joint liability for shares
left unsold by other members. |
| Severance |
A settlement received after being released from a corporation.
In the context of corporate governance, an agreement that
assures high-level executives of their postions or some
compensation and are not contingent upon a change in control. |
| SG |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SINGAPORE. |
| SGD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Singapore Dollar. |
| SH |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SAINT HELENA. |
| Shadow calendar |
A backlog of securitiesissues registered with the SEC, awaiting
the determination of an offer date. |
| Shadow stock |
First, a publiccompany may create a stock that strips out the
market wide movements for the purpose of rewarding managers.
That is, the management might have done a great job - but the
traded stock plummets because the market as a whole plummets. A
second interpretation of shadow stock is a phantom stock that is
created by a private company (i.e. that does not have stock
traded either on exchange or over the counter) again for the
purpose of performance evaluation and rewards. |
| Shadows |
The thin lines above and below the real body on a candlestick
line. |
| Shakeout |
A dramatic change in market conditions that forces speculators
to sell their positions, often at a loss. |
| Sham |
A business transaction, such as a limited partnership, that is
entered into for the sake of avoiding tax. |
| Shanghai Stock Exchange |
One of two major securities markets in China. |
| Share broker |
A discountbroker who charges per sharetraded, and reduces the
per unit charge as the number of sharestraded increases, as
opposed to a dealer who charges a percentage of the dollar
amount of the trade. |
| Share repurchase |
Program by which a corporationbuys back its own shares in the
openmarket. It is usually done when shares are undervalued.
Since repurchase reduces the number of shares outstanding and
thus increases earnings per share, it tends to elevate the
market value of the remaining shares held by stockholders. |
| Shared Appreciation Mortgage (SAM) |
A mortgage with a low rate of interest, offset by giving the
lender some portion of the appreciation in the value of the
underlying property. |
| Shared ownership lease |
A long lease granted by a housing association at a premium which
represents a proportion of the equity. The association retains
the balance and the tenant pays a rent calculated to reflect the
equity retained by the association. |
| Shareholder |
Person or entity that owns shares or equity in a corporation. |
| Shareholders' equity |
This is a company's total assetsminus total liabilities. A
company'snet worth is the same thing. |
| Shareholders' letter |
A section of an annual report where one can find general overall
discussion by management of successful and failed strategies.
Provides guidance for looking at specific parts of the report. |
| Shares |
Certificates or book entries representing ownership in a
corporation or similar entity. |
| Shares authorized |
The maximum number of shares of stock of a company allowed in
the articles of incorporation, which may be changed only by a
shareholder vote. See: Issued and outstanding. |
| Shark repellant |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Examples are golden parachutes,
poison pills, safe harbor, and scorched-earth policy. Porcupine
provision. Amendment to companycharter intended to protect it
against takeover. |
| Shark watcher |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Firm specializing in the early
detection of takeover activity. Such a firm, whose primary
business is usually the solicitation of proxies for client
corporations, monitors trading patterns in a client's stock and
attempts to determine the identity of parties
accumulatingshares. |
| Sharpe benchmark |
A statistically created benchmark that adjusts for a manager's
index-like tendencies. Named after William Sharpe, Nobel
Laureate, and developer of the capital asset pricing model. |
| Sharpe ratio |
A measure of a portfolio'sexcess return relative to the total
variability of the portfolio. Related: Treynor index. Named
after William Sharpe, Nobel Laureate, and developer of the
capital asset pricing model. |
| Shelf offering |
Offering of registered securities covered by a prospectus whose
distribution is not underwritten on a firm commitment basis. The
shares may be sold in one block or in small amounts from time to
time in agency or principaltransactions. See: Rule 415. |
| Shelf registration |
A procedure that allows firms to file one registration statement
covering several issues of the same security. SECRule 415,
adopted in the 1980s, allows a corporation to comply with
registration requirements up to two years prior to a public
offering of securities. With the registration "on the shelf,"
the corporation, by simply updating regularly filed annual,
quarterly, and related reports to the SEC, can go to the market
as conditions become favorable with a minimum of administrative
preparation and expense. |
| Shell and core |
The construction of a building to a stage where the structure is
complete but all interior works remain to be done. This is a
common way of constructing shops and more recently office
premises, as it provides flexibility for the occupier which is
likely to want to fit out the premises to its own specification. |
| Shell corporation |
An incorporated company with no significant assets or
operations, often formed to obtain financing before beginning
actual business, or as a front tax evasion. |
| Shenzhen Stock Exchange |
One of two major securities markets in China. |
| Shipper's Export Declaration (SED) |
Document required by the U.S. Department of Commerce for exports
of certain controlled items, and/or shipments to certain
countries, and/or shipments anywhere that exceed certain dollar
amounts. This document is used to monitor shipments of
controlled goods. |
| Shipping Documents |
A generic term for the various typesof forms required for
overseas shipments, such as commercial invoices, transport
documents, packing lists, origin certificates, etc. |
| Shirking |
The tendency to do less work when the return is smaller. Owners
may have more incentive to shirk if they issueequity as opposed
to debt, because they retain less ownership interest in the
company and therefore may receive a smaller return. Thus,
shirking is considered an agencycost of equity. |
| Shock absorbers |
See: Circuit breakers |
| Shogun bond |
Dollar bond issued in Japan by a nonresident. |
| Shootout |
Venture capital jargon. Refers to two or more venture capital
firms fighting for the startup. |
| Shop |
Wall Street slang for a firm. |
| Shopped stock |
Sell inquiry that has been seen by or shown to other dealers
before coming to an investment bank. |
| Shopping |
Seeking to obtain the best bid or offer available by calling a
number of dealers and/or brokers. |
| Short |
One who has sold a contract to establish a marketposition and
who has not yet closed out this position through an
offsettingpurchase; the opposite of a long position. Related:
Long. |
| Short against the box |
A short sale of a stock is where the seller actually owns the
stock, but does not want to close out the position. |
| Short Bias |
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management where part
or all of the fund consists of short sales. |
| Short bonds |
Bonds with short (not much time to maturity) current maturities. |
| Short book |
See: Unmatched book. |
| Short coupon |
A bond payment covering less than six-months' interest, because
the original issue date is less than six months from the first
scheduled interest payment. A bond with a short time to
maturity, usually two years or less. |
| Short covering |
Used in the context of general equities. Actual purchase of
securities by a short seller to replace those borrowed at the
time of a short sale. |
| Short exempt |
Used for listed equity securities. A special trading situation
where a short sale is allowed on a minustick. The owners of a
convertible trading at parity can sell the equivalent amount of
common short on a minus tick, assuming they have the firm
intention to convert. |
| Short hedge |
The sale of futures contracts to eliminate or lessen the
possible decline in value of an approximately equal amount of
the actual financialinstrument or physical commodity. Related:
Long hedge. |
| Short interest |
Total number of shares of a security that investors have sold
short and that have not been repurchased to close out the short
position. Usually, investors sell short to profit from price
declines. As a result, the short interest is often an indicator
of the amount of pessimism in the market about a particular
security, although there are other reasons to short that are not
related to pessimism. For example, hedgingstrategies for mergers
and acquisition as well as derivativepositions may involve short
sales. |
| Short interest theory |
The theory that a large interest in short positions in stocks
will precede a rise in the market prices, because the short
positions must eventually be covered by purchases of the stock. |
| Short position |
Occurs when a person sells stocks he or she does not yet own.
Shares must be borrowed, before the sale, to make "good
delivery" to the buyer. Eventually, the shares must be bought
back to close out the transaction. This technique is used when
an investor believes the stock price will drop. |
| Short ratio(or short interest ratio) |
Number of shares of a security that investors have sold short
divided by average daily volume of the security (measured over
30 days or 90 days). There are various interpretations of this
ratio. When people short, it is usually (but not always) because
they are pessimistic about the security's future performance.
Shorting involves buying at at some point however. Hence, some
would interpret a high short ratio as an indicator that there
will be some buying pressure on the security that would increase
its price. |
| Short sale |
Selling a security that the seller does not own but is committed
to repurchasing eventually. It is used to capitalize on an
expected decline in the security's price. |
| Short selling |
Establishing a marketposition by selling a security one does not
own in anticipation of the price of that security falling. |
| Short settlement |
Trade settlement made prior to the standard five-day period due
to customer request. |
| Short squeeze |
When a lack of supply tends to force prices upward. In
particular, when prices of a stock or commodityfutures contracts
start to move up sharply and many traders with short positions
are forced to buystocks or commodities in order to cover their
positions and prevent (limit) losses. This sudden surge of
buying leads to even higher prices, further aggravating the
losses of short sellers who have not covered their positions. |
| Short straddle |
A straddle involves both purchase and sale. In short straddle
one put and one call are sold. |
| Short tender |
Practice prohibited by SEC that involves the use of
borrowedstock to respond to a tender offer. |
| Shortage cost |
Costs that fall with increases in the level of investment in
current assets. |
| Shortfall risk |
The risk of falling short of any investment target. |
| Short-Form Registration |
A procedure that allows a firm to condense its registration
statement and prospectus by referencing financial data already
on file with the SEC. |
| Short-run operating activities |
Events and decisions concerning the short-termfinance of a firm,
such as how much inventory to order and whether to offer
cashterms or creditterms to customers. |
| Short-sale rule |
An SEC rule requiring that short sales be made only in a market
that is moving upward; this means either on an uptick from the
last sale, or showing no downward movement. |
| Short-short test |
A repealed IRS restriction, that used to limit profits from
short-termtrading, which three months, to 30% of gross income.
The penalty for exceeding this limit would be the loss of
certain tax-free benefits. |
| Short-term |
Any investments with a maturity of one year or less. |
| Short-term bond fund |
A bond mutual fund holdingshort to intermediate-term bonds that
have maturities of three to five years. |
| Short-term capital gain |
A profit on the sale of a security or mutual fund share that has
been held for one year or less. A short-termcapital gain is
taxed as ordinary income. |
| Short-term debt |
Debtobligations, recorded as current liabilities, requiring
payment within the year. |
| Short-term financial plan |
A financial plan that covers the coming fiscal year. |
| Short-term gain (or loss) |
A profit or loss realized from the sale of securities held for
less than a year that is taxed at normal income tax rates if the
net total is positive. |
| Short-term interest rates |
Interest rates on loan contracts-or debt instruments such as
Treasury bills, bank certificates of deposit or commerical
paper-having maturities of less than one year. Often called
money market rates. |
| Short-term investment services |
Services that assist firms in making short-terminvestments. |
| Short-term reserves |
Investments in interest-bearing bank deposits, money
marketinstruments, U.S. Treasury bills, and short-termbonds. |
| Short-term solvency ratios |
Ratios used to judge the adequacy of liquid assets for meeting
short-term obligations as they come due, including (1) the
current ratio, (2) the acid test ratio, (3) the inventory
turnover ratio, and (4) the accounts receivable turnover ratio. |
| Short-term tax exempts |
Short-termsecuritiesissued by states, municipalities, and
quesi-government entities such as local housing and urban
renewal agencies. |
| Short-term trend |
Erratic price movements that last less than three weeks. |
| Show and tell list |
Used in the context of general equities. Block list which is
full of real customer indications (rather than profile). |
| Show me buyer/seller |
Used in the context of general equities. Customer who has not
placed a firm order to buystock but has requested that the
salesperson propose available stock for sale or purchase, along
with the asking/bid price. See: Bidding buyer. |
| Show stopper |
A legal barrier, such as a scorched-earth policy or shark
repellant system, that firms use to prevent a takeover. |
| SHP |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Saint Helena Pound. |
| Shrinkage |
Discrepancy between a firm's actual inventory and its recorded
inventory due to theft, deterioration, loss, or clerical
problems. |
| Shut out the book |
Used for listed equity securities. Exclude a public bid or offer
from participation in a print. |
| SI |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SLOVENIA. |
| SIAC |
See: Security Industry Automated Corporation |
| SIC |
See: Standard Industrial Classification |
| Side effects |
Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm. |
| Side-by-side trading |
Trading a security and an option on the same security on the
same exchange. |
| Sidelines |
Hypothetical position referring to noninvolvement in a stock;
merely watching. |
| Sideways market |
See: Horizontal price movement |
| Sight draft |
Demand for immediate payment. |
| Sight Letter of Credit |
A letter of credit made payable to a beneficiary upon
presentation to the opener of conforming documents. |
| Signal |
To convey information through a firm's actions. The more costly
it is to provide a signal, the more credibility it has. For
example, to call a press conference and tell everyone that the
firm's prospects have improved is less effective than saying the
same thing and raising the dividend. |
| Signaling approach |
Notion that insiders in a firm have information that the market
does not have, and that the choice of capital structure by
insiders can signal information to outsiders and change the
value of the firm. This theory is also called the asymmetric
information approach. |
| Signaling approach (on dividend policy) |
The argument that dividend changes are important signals to
investors about changes in management's expectation about future
earnings. |
| Signature guarantee |
The authentication of a signature in the form of a stamp, seal,
or written confirmation by a bank or member of a domestic stock
exchange (or other acceptable guarantor). A notary public cannot
provide a signature guarantee. A signature guarantee is a common
requirement when transferring or redeemingshares or changing the
ownership of an account. |
| Signature loan |
A good faith loan that is unsecured and requires only the
borrower's signature on the loan application. |
| Signatures on Proxies |
The basic rule of acceptability is that if the signature reads
as the proxy is printed, it is acceptable. If an individual
signs on behalf of another individual and states a legal
representation, it is acceptable. Examples: executor, guardian,
power of attorney; but not husband, wife, next of kin, etc. On
corporate registrations, a manual signature in the name of the
corporation is acceptable. A facsimile signature is also
acceptable, but a rubber-stamp signature with a signature line
is acceptable only if signed on that line. With joint tenancy,
one signature is sufficient, as in the case of one trustee
signing for two or more. |
| Significant influence |
The holding of a large portion of the equity of a corporation,
usually at least 20%, which gives the holder a significant
amount of control over the corporation. This degree of holding
must be recorded in a firm's financial statements. |
| Significant order |
An order to buy or sell a large enough quantity of securities
that the price of the security may be affected. Institutional
investors usually spread out such an order over a few days or
weeks to avoid adverse pressures on the buy or sell price. |
| Significant order imbalance |
A large number of buy or sell orders for a stock that cause an
abnormally wide spread between bid and offer prices, and often
causes the exchange to halt the sale of the stock until
significant balance has been reestablished. |
| Silent partner |
A partner in a business who has no role in management but shares
in the liability, tax responsibility, and cash flow. |
| Silver Parachutes |
These provisions are similar to Golden Parachutes in that they
provide severance payments upon a change in corporate control,
but unlike Golden Parachutes, a large number of a firm's
employees are eligible for these benefits. |
| SIMEX |
See: Singapore International Monetary Exchange |
| Simple compound growth method |
Calculating a growth rate by relating terminal value to initial
value and assuming a constant percentage annual rate of growth
between the two values. |
| Simple interest |
Interest calculated as a simple percentage of the original
principal amount. Compare to compound interest. |
| Simple IRA |
A salarydeduction plan for retirement benefits provided by some
small companies with no more than 100 employees. |
| Simple linear regression |
A regression analysis between only two variables, one dependent
and the other explanatory. |
| Simple linear trend model |
An extrapolative statistical model that asserts that earnings
have a base level and grow at a constant amount each period. |
| Simple moving average |
The mean, calculated at any time over a past period of fixed
length. |
| Simple prospect |
An investment opportunity in which only two outcomes are
possible. |
| Simple rate of return |
The return from investments figured by dividing income plus
capital gains by the amount of capital invested. The effect of
compounding is not taken into account. |
| Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) plan |
A pension plan in which both the employee and the employer
contribute to an individual retirement account. Also available
to the self-employed. |
| Simulation |
The use of a mathematical model to imitate a situation many
times in order to estimate the likelihood of various possible
outcomes. See: Monte Carlo simulation. |
| Singapore International Monetary Exchange (SIMEX) |
A leading futures and optionsexchange in Singapore. |
| Single European Act |
Act intended to eliminate barriers on trade and capital flows
between and among European countries. |
| Single life annuity |
An annuity covering one person. A straight life annuity provides
payments until death, while a life annuity with a guaranteed
period provides payments until death or continues payments to a
beneficiary for a guaranteed term, such as ten years. |
| Single option |
A single put option or call option, as opposed to a spread or
straddle, which involves multiple puts and calls. |
| Single-buyer policy |
Ex-Im Bank practice allows the exporter to insure certain
transactions selectively. |
| Single-country fund |
A mutual fund that invests in individual countries outside the
United States. |
| Single-factor model |
A model of securityreturns that acknowledges only one common
factor. The single factor is usually the market return. See:
Factor model. |
| Single-index model |
A model of stockreturns that decomposes influences on returns
into a systematicfactor, as measured by the return on the broad
marketindex, and firm specific factors. Related: Market Model |
| Single-payment bond |
A bond that makes only one payment of principal and interest. |
| Single-Premium Deferred Annuity (SPDA) |
An IRA-like annuity into which an investor makes a lump-sum
payment that is invested in either a fixed-returninstrument or a
variable-returnportfolio, which is taxed only when distributions
are taken. |
| Single-premium life insurance |
A whole life insurance policy requiring one premium payment,
which accrues cash value much more quickly than a policy paid in
installments. |
| Single-state municipal bond fund |
A mutual fundinvesting only in government obligations within a
single state, with state tax-free dividends, but taxed capital
gains. |
| Sinker |
A bond with interest and principal payments coming from the
proceeds of a sinking fund. |
| Sinking fund |
A fund to which money is added on a regular basis that is used
to ensure investor confidence that promised payments will be
made and that is used to redeemdebt securities or preferred
stockissues. |
| Sinking fund requirement |
A condition included in some corporate bond indentures that
requires the issuer to retire a specified portion of debt each
year. Any principal due at maturity is called the balloon
maturity. |
| SIT |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Slovenian Tolar. |
| Sit tight |
Directive from the trader to the customer to be patient,
emphasizing that one's piece of business will be executed. |
| Size |
Refers to the magnitude of an offering, an order, or a trade.
Large as in the size of an offering, the size of an order, or
the size of a trade. Size is relative from market to market and
security to security. "I can buy size at 102-22," means that a
trader can buy a significant amount at 102-22. Small is <10,000
shares. Medium is 15,000-25,000 shares. Good is 50,000 shares.
Size is 100,000 shares. Good six-figure size is 200,000-300,000
shares. Multiple six-figure size is >300,000 shares. Size of the
market is actual number of shares represented in one's market,
or bid and offering; unless specified, assumed to be at least
500 to 1000 shares, depending on the stock. |
| Size out the book |
Overt action to exclude a public bid or offer from participation
in a print through trading a larger size in the book. Can never
size out a market order. See: Priority, shut out the book. |
| SJ |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SVALBARD AND JAN
MAYEN. |
| SK |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SLOVAKIA. |
| Skewed distribution |
Probability distribution in which an unequal number of
observations lie below (negative skew) or above (positive skew)
the mean. |
| Skewness |
Negative skewness means there is a substantial probability of a
big negative return. Positive skewness means that there is a
greater-than-normal probability of a big positive return. |
| Skill |
The ability to accurately forecast returns. We measure skill
using the information coefficient. |
| Skim |
The profit made by a bank trading loans by selling on a loan or
retaining part of the margin when participating in the loan. |
| Skip-day settlement |
Settling a trade one business day beyond what is normal. |
| Skip-payment privilege |
A mortgagecontract clause giving borrowers the right to skip
payments if they are ahead of schedule. |
| SKK |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Slovak Republic Koruna. |
| Skort-Swing Transaction |
Any purchase and sale, or sale and purchase, of the issuer's
equitysecurities by an insider within a period of less than six
months, See: Section 16(b) above. |
| SL |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SIERRA LEONE. |
| SLD last sale |
Shortened version of "sold last sale," which shows up on the
consolidated tape when a large change (one point for lower
priced securities and two points for higher-priced securities)
occurs between transactions. |
| Sleeper |
Stock in which there is little investor interest but that has
significant potential to gain in price once its attractions are
recognized. Antithesis of high flyer. |
| Sleeping beauty |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Potential takeovertarget that has
not yet been approached by an acquirer. Such a company usually
has particularly attractive features, such as a large amount of
cash, or undervalued real estate or other assets. |
| Slippage |
The difference between estimated transactions costs and actual
transactions costs. The difference usually represents revisions
to price difference or spread and commissioncosts. |
| SLL |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Sierra Leone Leone. |
| SLOC |
Standby letter of credit. |
| Slump |
A temporary fall in performance, often describing consistently
falling security prices for several weeks or months. |
| SM |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SAN MARINO. |
| Small business policy |
Insurance coverage available to new exporters and small
businesses. |
| Small investor |
An individual person investing in small quantities of stock or
bonds. This group of investors makes up a minimal fraction of
total stock ownership. |
| Small issues exemption |
Securitiesissues that involve less than $1.5 million are not
required to file a registration statement with the SEC. Instead,
they are governed by Regulation A, for which only a brief
offering statement is needed. |
| Small Order Execution System (SOES) |
Three-tiered system of automatic execution of an order at the
best price. Size is either 200, 500, or, most often, 1000
shares. |
| Small-cap |
A stock with a small capitalization, meaning a total equity
value of less than $500 million. |
| Small-capitalization (small cap) stocks |
The stocks of companies whose market value is less than $1
billion. Small-cap companies tend to grow faster than large-cap
companies and typically use any profits for expansion rather to
pay dividends. They also are more volatile than large-cap
companies, and have a higher failure rate. |
| Small-capitalization (small-cap) fund |
A mutual fund that invests primarily in stocks of companies
whose market value is less than $1 billion. Small-cap stocks
historically have been more volatile than large-cap stocks, and
often perform differently from the overall market. |
| Small-firm effect |
The tendency of small firms (in terms of total market
capitalization) to outperform the stock market (consisting of
both large and small firms). |
| Smart money |
Investors who make consistent profits in the market, regardless
of the investing environment, by making wise, educated moves. |
| SMBS |
See: Stripped mortgage backed securities |
| Smidge |
Small amount of price, usually +/- 1/8 or 1/4. |
| Smithsonian Agreement |
A revision to the Bretton Woodsinternational monetary system
that was signed at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington,
D.C., in December 1971. Included were a new set of par values,
widened bands to +/- 2.25% of par, and an increase in the
official value of gold to US$38.00 per ounce. |
| SN |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SENEGAL. |
| Snake |
Arrangement established in 1972, that ties European currencies
to each other within specified limits. |
| Snowballing |
Used in the context of general equities. Process by which the
exercise of stop orders in a declining or advancingmarket causes
further downward or upward pressure on prices, thus triggering
more stop orders and more price pressure, and so on. |
| SO |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SOMALIA. |
| Social housing grant |
Grants paid to registered social landlords in connection with
the provision of social housing and other housing activities. |
| Social Security benefits |
Monthly government payments to retired workers or their families
who have paid Social Security taxes for a total of 40 quarters
or 10 years. |
| Social Security Disability Income Insurance |
Program financed by the Social Security tax to provide
assistance to disabled individuals with disabilities expected to
last at least one year, to compensate for lost income. |
| Socially conscious mutual fund |
A mutual fund that does not invest in companies that have
interests in socially unacceptable markets or produce harmful
products or by-products, such as high levels of environmental
pollution. |
| Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications
(SWIFT) |
A dedicated computer network to support funds transfer messages
internationally between over 900 member banks world-wide. |
| SOES |
See: Small Order Execution System |
| Soft currency |
The money of a country that is expected to drop in value
relative to other currencies. |
| Soft dollars |
The value of research services that brokerage houses supply to
investment managers "free of charge" in exchange for the
investment manager's business commissions. |
| Soft landing |
A term describing a growth rate high enough to keep the economy
out of recession, but also slow enough to prevent high inflation
and interest rates. |
| Soft market |
A buyer'smarket in which supply exceeds demand, causing little
trading activity and wide bid-askspreads. |
| Soft spot |
Stocks or groups of stocks that remain weak in a strong market. |
| Softs |
Tropical commodities such as coffee, sugar, and cocoa. |
| Sold away |
Refers to over-the-countertrading. Having sold stock to another
dealer before making the present offering. |
| Sold-out market |
Unavailability of a futurescontract in a particular commodity or
maturity date because of contractexecutions and limited
offerings. |
| Sole proprietorship |
A business owned by a single individual. A sole proprietor pays
no corporate income tax but has unlimited liability for business
debts and obligations. |
| Solvency |
Ability to meet obligations. |
| SOS |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Somalian Shilling. |
| Sour bond |
A bondissue that has defaulted on interest or principal
payments, and will thus trade at a large discount and a poor
credit rating. |
| Source of funds seller |
Customer seller of stock for the purpose of raising cash for
other purchases. Such a seller will sell only at advantageous
prices, and not aggressively. |
| Sources and applications of funds statement |
See: Statement of cash flows |
| South African Futures Exchange (SAFEX) |
Electronic futures and optionsexchange based in South Africa. |
| Sovereign risk |
The risk that a central bank will impose foreign
exchangeregulations that will reduce or negate the value of
foreign exchange contracts. Also refers to the risk of
government default on a loan made to a country or guaranteed by
it. The government's part of political risk. |
| SOXS |
See: Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002 |
| Span |
To cover all contingencies within a specified range. |
| SPDR |
The Standard and Poor's depositary receipt. This is a tracking
stock which trades like an index mutual fund which follows the
S&P 500. It trades continuously. |
| SPDRs |
SPDRs (Spiders) are designed to track the value of the Standard
& Poor's 500 Composite Price Index. Stands for Standard & Poor's
Depositary Receipt. They trade on the American Stock Exchange
under the symbol SPY. SPDRs are similar to closed-end funds but
are formally known as, a unit investment trust. One SPDR unit is
valued at approximately one-tenth (1/10) of the value of the S&P
500. Dividends are disbursed quarterly, and are based on the
accumulatedstock dividends held in trust, less any expenses of
the trust. See: Mid-cap SPDR. |
| Spec |
Speculative. |
| Special arbitrage account |
A margin account with lower cash requirements, reserved for
transactions that are hedged by an offsettingposition in futures
or options. |
| Special assessment bond |
A municipal bond with interest paid by the taxes of the
community benefiting from the bond-funded project. |
| Special bid |
A method of purchasing a large block of stock on the NYSE by
advertising a client's large buyorder, and matching it up with a
number of other traders' smaller sell orders. |
| Special bond account |
A special brokermargin account used only for transactions in US
government bonds, municipals, and eligible listed and unlisted
non-convertiblecorporate bonds. |
| Special Claim on Residual Equity (SCORE) |
A certificate that entitles the owner to the capitalappreciation
of an underlying security, but not to the dividend income from
the security. |
| Special dividend |
Also referred to as an extra dividend. Dividend that is unlikely
to be repeated. |
| Special Drawing Rights (SDR) |
A form of international reserveassets, created by the IMF in
1967, whose value is based on a portfolio of widely used
currencies. |
| Special Meeting |
Refers to a meeting of shareholders outside the usual annual
general meeting. In the context of corporate governance, some
limitations either increase the level of shareholder support
required to call a special meeting beyond that specified by
state law or eliminate the ability to call one entirely. Such
provisions add an extra time delay to many proxy fights, since
bidders must wait until the regularly scheduled annual meeting
to replace board members or dismantle takeover defenses. |
| Specialist |
On an exchange, the member firm that is designated as the market
maker (or dealer for a listedcommon stock). Member of a stock
exchange who maintains a "fair and orderly market" in one or
more securities. Only one specialist can be designated for a
given stock, but dealers may be specialists for several stocks.
In contrast, there can be multiple market makers in the OTC
market. Major functions include executinglimit orders on behalf
of other exchange members for a portion of the floor
broker'scommission, and buying or selling for the specialist's
own account to counteract temporary imbalances in supply and
demand and thus prevent wide swings in stock prices. |
| Specialist block purchase and sale |
Purchase of a large number of securities by a specialist for
himself or to pass on to another floor trader or blockbuyer. |
| Specialist market |
Market in a stock made solely by the specialist, as no
publicorders, and henceforth no depth, exist in the market. |
| Specialist unit |
A specialist who maintains a stable market by acting as a
principal and agent for other brokers in one or many stocks. |
| Specialist's book |
Chronological record maintained by a specialist that includes
the specialist's own inventory of securities, market orders to
sell short, and limit orders and stop orders that other stock
exchange members have placed with the specialist. |
| Specialist's short-sale ratio |
The percentage of the total short sales of stock sold short by
specialists. |
| Special-Purpose Entity |
A financing technique in which a company decreases its risk by
creating separate partnerships, rather than subsidiaries, for
certain holdings and solicits outside investors to take on the
risk. In order to qualify as a special-purpose entity, whose
financial results are not carried on the company'sbooks, the
unit must meet strict accounting guidelines. Compare to
subsidary. |
| Specific issues market |
The market in which dealers reverse in securities they wish to
short. |
| Specific Return |
The part of the excess return not explained by common factors.
The specific return is independent of (uncorrelated with) the
common factors and the specific returns to other assets. It is
also called the idiosyncratic return. |
| Specific risk |
See: Unique risk |
| Spectail |
A dealer doing business with retail but concentrating more on
acquiring and financing its own speculativepositions. |
| Speculation |
Purchasing riskyinvestments that present the possibility of
large profits, but also pose a higher-than-average possibility
of loss. A profitablestrategy over the long term if undertaken
by professionals who hedge their portfolios to control the
amount of risk. |
| Speculative |
Securities that involve a high level of risk. |
| Speculative demand (for money) |
The need for cash to take advantage of investment opportunities
that may arise. |
| Speculative motive |
A desire to holdcash in order to be poised to exploit any
attractive investment opportunity requiring a cash expenditure
that might arise. |
| Speculative stock |
Very riskystock. |
| Speculative-grade bond |
Bond rated Ba or lower by Moody's, or BB or lower by S&P, or an
unrated bond. |
| Speculator |
One who attempts to anticipate price changes and, through buying
and selling contracts, aims to make profits. A speculator does
not use the market in connection with the production,
processing, marketing, or handling of a product. See: Trader. |
| Speed |
Related: Prepayment speed |
| Spider |
See: SPDRs |
| Spike |
Order ticket that shows the stock, price, number of shares,
type, and account of the order. Origin: Practice of placing the
ticket on a metal spike upon execution or cancellation. Spike is
also a sudden, drastic increase in a company's share price. |
| Spinning |
In investment banking, the practice of an investment bank
setting aside portions of a corporation's Initial Public
Offering for senior management of that corporation. Ethically
questionable practice which appears to be a form of bribery. |
| Spin-off |
A company can create an independent company from an existing
part of the company by selling or distributing new shares in the
so-called spin-off. |
| SPINs |
Stands for Standard & Poor's 500 Index Subordinated Notes. |
| Split |
Sometimes companies split their outstandingshares into more
shares. If a company with 1 million shares executes a
two-for-one split, the company would have 2 million shares. An
investor with 100 shares before the split would hold 200 shares
after the split. The investor's percentage of equity in the
company remains the same, and the share price of the stock owned
is one-half the price of the stock on the day prior to the
split. |
| Split commission |
A commission shared between a broker and a financial adviser or
other professional who brought the customer to the broker. |
| Split offering |
A municipal bondissue that is made up of serial bonds and term
maturity bonds. |
| Split order |
A large securitiestransaction that is divided into smaller
orders that are spread out over some period of time to avoid
large fluctuations in the market price. |
| Split print |
Block trade printed at two different prices. Often used in
dividend rolls to get an average price equal to the dividend. |
| Split rating |
Two different ratings given to the same security by two
important rating agencies. |
| Split stock |
(1) Purchases or sales shared with others. (2) Division of the
outstandingshares of a corporation into a large number of
shares. Ordinarily, splits must be proposed by directors and
approved by shareholders. |
| Split-coupon bond |
A bond that begins as a zero-coupon bond paying no interest and
converts to an interest paying bond on a future date. |
| Split-fee option |
An option on an option. The buyer generally executes the split
fee with first an initial fee, with a window period at the end
of which (upon payment of a second fee) the original terms of
the option may be extended to a later predetermined final
notification date. |
| Split-rate tax system |
A tax system that taxes retained earnings at a higher rate than
earnings that are distributed as dividends. |
| Spoken for |
Amount of opposite demand (placement) or supply (availability)
the trader has in efforts to cross the stock. Not open. |
| Sponsor |
An underwritinginvestmentcompany that offers shares in its
mutual funds, or an influential institution that highly values a
particular security and thus creates additional demand for the
security. In the context of project financing, a developer of
the project or a party poviding financial support. |
| Spontaneous Current Liabilities |
Short-termobligations that automatically increase and decrease
in response to financing needs, such as accounts payable. |
| Spontaneous Liabilities |
Obligations that arise automatically in the course of operating
a business when a firmbuys goods and services on credit. |
| SPOT |
Single property ownership trust - another attempt to create a
liquid market based on property. |
| Spot commodity |
A commodity that is traded with the expectation of actual
delivery, as opposed to a commodityfuture that is usually not
delivered. |
| Spot exchange rates |
Exchange rate on currency for immediate delivery. Related:
Forward exchange rate. |
| Spot futures parity theorem |
Describes the theoretically correct relationship between spot
and futures prices. Violation of the parity relationship gives
rise to arbitrage opportunities. |
| Spot interest rate |
Interest rate fixed today on a loan that is made today. Related:
Forward interest rates. |
| Spot lending |
Originating mortgages by processing applications taken directly
from prospective borrowers. |
| Spot markets |
Related: Cash markets |
| Spot month |
The nearest delivery month on a futures contract. |
| Spot price |
The current market price of the actual physical commodity. Also
called cash price. Current delivery price of a commodity traded
in the spot market, in which goods are sold for cash and
delivered immediately. Antithesis of futures price. |
| Spot rate |
The theoretical yield on a zero-coupon Treasury security. |
| Spot rate curve |
The graphical depiction of the relationship between the spot
rates and maturity. |
| Spot secondary |
Secondary distribution that may not require an SECregistration
statement and may be attempted without delay. An
underwritingdiscount is normally included in these offerings. |
| Spot trade |
The purchase and sale of a foreign currency, commodity, or other
item for immediate delivery. |
| Spot transaction |
A foregin exchange transaction in which each party promises to
pay a certain amount of currency to the other on the same day or
within one or two days. |
| Spousal IRA |
An individual retirement account in the name of an unemployed
spouse. |
| Spousal remainder trust |
A fixed-term trust from which income is distributed to the
beneficiary (such as a child of the grantor) to take advantage
of a lower tax bracket, and that at the end of the term passes
to the grantor's spouse. |
| Spread |
The difference between the rate of interest at which a lender
borrows and the rate of interest at which it lends. |
| Spread |
(1) The gap between bid and askprices of a stock or other
security. (2) The simultaneous purchase and sale of separate
futures or options contracts for the same commodity for delivery
in different months. Also known as a straddle. (3) Difference
between the price at which an underwriterbuys an issue from a
firm and the price at which the underwriter sells it to the
public. (4) The price an issuer pays above a benchmark
fixed-income yield to borrowmoney. |
| Spread income |
Also called margin income, the difference between income and
cost. For a depository institution, the difference between the
assets it invests in (loans and securities) and the cost of its
funds (deposits and other sources). |
| Spread option |
A position consisting of the purchase of one option and the sale
of another option on the same underlying security with a
different exercise price and/or expiration date. |
| Spread order |
An order listing the series of options that the customer wants
to buy and sell and the desired spread between the premiums paid
and received for the options. |
| Spread position |
The status of an account after a spreadorder has been carried
out. |
| Spread strategy |
A strategy that involves a position in one or more options so
that the cost of buying an option is funded entirely or in part
by selling another option in the same underlying. Also called
spreading. |
| Spreadsheet |
A computer program that organizes numerical data into rows and
columns in order to calculate and make adjustments based on new
data. |
| Sprinkling trust |
A trust in which the trustee decides how to distributetrust
income among a group of designated people. |
| SPV |
Single (or special) purpose vehicle. A company set up for a
particular project or to hold an asset or assets. An SPV is
often used to contain insolvency risk or to make it easier to
give a lender the floating charge it will normally seek. |
| SPX |
Applies to derivative products. Symbol for the S&P 500 index. |
| Squeeze |
Period when stocks or commoditiesfutures increase in price and
investors who have sold short must cover their short positions
to prevent loss of large amounts of money. |
| SR |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SURINAME. |
| SRG |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Surinam Guilder. |
| SS1 |
Securities sales speaker box that transmits to all investment
banks' regional trading and sales desks. |
| SSAP |
Statement of standard accounting practice. A series of rules by
which accounts are to be drawn up. A borrower is expected to
comply with all relevant SSAPs and to ensure they are
consistently applied to its accounts. This is to allow the
lender to assess the borrower’s financial standing during the
loan. |
| ST |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SAO TOME AND
PRINCIPE. |
| Stability |
The relative steadiness or safety of a security or fund compared
to the market as a whole. For example, money market funds and
other short-terminvestments offer more stability than funds that
invest in growth stocks. |
| Stabilization |
The action undertakes a country when it buys and sells its own
currency to protect its exchange value. Actions registered
competitive traders undertake by on the NYSE to meet the
exchange requirement that 75% of their traded be stabilizing,
meaning that sell orders follow a plus tick and buyorders a
tick.
Actions a managing underwriter undertake so that the market
price does not fall below the public offering price during the
offering period. |
| Stable Paretian, or Fractal Hypothesis |
In the characteristic function of the fractal family of
distributions, the characteristic exponent alpha can range
between one and two. See: Alpha, Fractal Distributions,
Gaussian. |
| Stag |
Speculator who buys and sells stocks to hold for short intervals
to make quick profits. |
| Stagflation |
A period of slow economic growth and high unemployment with
rising prices (inflation). |
| Staggered board of directors |
Occurs when a portion of directors are elected periodically,
instead of all at once. Board terms are often staggered in order
to thwart unfriendly takeover attempts, since potential
acquirers would have to wait longer before they could take
control of a company's board through the normal voting
procedure. |
| Staggering maturities |
Hedging against interest rate movements by investment in short-,
medium-, and long-termbonds. |
| Stagnation |
A period of slow economic growth, or, in securitiestrading, a
period of inactive trading. |
| Stakeholders |
All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise, in a
firm-stockholders, creditors, bondholders, employees, customers,
management, the community, and the government. |
| Stale price |
An old price of the asset that does not reflect the most recent
information. |
| Stale price arbitrage |
For a number of assets, the most recent transaction price at 4PM
ET does not fully reflect all available market information. One
example is international equities that trade on exchanges that
are located in different time zones and close 2-15 hours before
U.S. markets. In addition, domestic small-capitization equities
and high-yield and convertible bonds often trade infrequently
and have wide bid-ask spreads. This can cause the most recent
transaction price to be much different from the price that one
would see in a liquid market at 4 PM, even for assets that trade
on exchanges that are open at that time. Investors can take
advantage of mutual funds that calculate their NAVs using stale
closing prices by trading based on recent market movements. For
example, if the U.S. market has risen since the close of
overseas equity markets, investors can expect that overseas
markets will open higher the following morning. Investors can
buy a fund with a stale-price NAV for less than its current
value, and they can likewise sell a fund for more than its
current value on a day that the U.S. market has fallen. Similar
opportunities exist when the values of infrequently or
illiquidly-traded domestic assets have recently changed. Also
referred to as Net Asset Value Arbitrage or NAV Arbitrage. |
| Stalking horse |
In bankruptcy proceedings, this refers to the company that first
bids for the companies assets. |
| Stalking horse bid |
In bankruptcy proceedings, this refers to first bid for the
companiesassets. This is the bid to beat. If there are multiple
bids, often there is a bankruptcy auction. |
| Stamp duty |
Taxation paid on documents transferring title to shares, land or
debts based on the value transferred. |
| Stamp duty |
Applies mainly to international equities. Taxes on foreign
transactions, usually a percentage of total transaction amount,
that can be unilateral or bilateral in nature. |
| Stamp tax |
Tax on a financialtransaction. |
| Stand up to |
Make a good-sized market in the trader's own bid and
offeringprices. Hence, "standing up" to the bid signifies the
trader's willingness to buy size (i.e., 50m) volume at the
advertised bid, even if the customer buyer/seller falls down. |
| Stand-alone principle |
Investment approach that advocates a firm should accept or
reject a project by comparing it with securities in the same
riskclass. |
| Standard & Poor's MidCap 400 Index |
A market capitalization-weighted benchmark index made up of 400
securities with market values between $200 million and $5
billion. |
| Standard & Poor's SmallCap 600 Index |
A small-capitalization benchmarkindex made up of 600 domestic
stocks chosen for market size, liquidity, and industry group
representation. |
| Standard deduction |
The IRS-specified amount by which a taxpayer is entitled to
reduce income an alternative to itemizing deductions. |
| Standard deviation |
The square root of the variance. A measure of dispersion of a
set of data from its mean. |
| Standard error |
In statistics, a measure of the possible error in an estimate.
Plus or minus 2 standard errors usually provides a 95%
confidence interval. |
| Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) |
A code system that designates a unique business activity
classified by industry. |
| Standard security |
A mortgage under Scottish land law. |
| Standardized normal distribution |
A normal distribution with a mean of 0 and a standard deviation
of 1. |
| Standardized value |
Also called the normal deviate, the distance of one data point
from the mean, divided by the standard deviation of the
distribution. |
| Standby agreement |
In a rights issue, agreement that the underwriter will purchase
any stock not purchased by investors. |
| Standby commitment |
An agreement between a corporation and investmentfirm that the
firm will purchase whatever part of a stockissue that is offered
in a rights offering that is not subscribed to in the two- to
four- week standby period. |
| Stand-by facility |
A facility which provides for payment to the beneficiary on
receipt by the issuer of a demand eg a standby letter of credit. |
| Standby fee |
Amount paid to an underwriter who agrees to purchase any stock
that is not purchased by publicinvestors in a rights offering. |
| Standby Letter of Credit |
Documents evidencing failure of the bank's customer (the
applicant) to pay an obligation when due. |
| Standby letter of credit |
Agreement to guaranteeinvoice payments to a supplier; a standby
LOC promises to pay the seller if the buyer fails to pay. |
| Standing |
Level of priority in the trading crowd. |
| Standstill |
An agreement with a borrower revising the original facility
letter providing a grace period for payments to be made or
granting other concessions. |
| Standstill agreement |
Contract by which the bidding firm in a takeover attempt agrees
to limit its holdings of another firm. |
| Start-up |
The earliest stage of a new business venture. |
| State and local government series (SLUGs) |
Special nonmarketablecertificates, notes, and bonds offered to
state and local governments as a means to investproceeds from
their own tax-exempt financing. Interest rates and maturities
comply with IRSarbitrage provisions. Slugs are offered in both
time deposit and demand deposit forms. Time deposit certificates
have maturities of up to one year. Notes mature in one to ten
years and bonds mature in more than ten years. Demand deposit
securities are one-day certificates rolled over with a rate
adjustment daily. |
| State bank |
A bank authorized in a specific state by a state-based charter,
with generally the same functions as a national bank. |
| State tax-exempt income fund |
A mutual fund that seeks current income exempt from federal and
a specific state's income taxes. |
| Stated annual interest rate |
The interest rate expressed as a per year percentage, by which
interest payments are determined. See: Annual percentage rate. |
| Stated conversion price |
At the time of issuance of a convertible security, the price the
issuer effectively grants the securityholder to purchase the
common stock, equal to the par value of the convertible security
divided by the conversion ratio. |
| Stated maturity |
For the CMOtranche, the date the last payment would occur at
zero CPR. |
| Stated value |
A monetary worth figure that bears no relation to market value
that is assigned, for accounting purposes, to stock for use
instead of par value. |
| Statement billing |
Billing method in which the sales for a period such as a month
(for which a customer also receives invoices) are collected into
a single statement, and the customer must pay all the invoices
represented on the statement. |
| Statement of Additional Information (SAI) |
A document provided as a supplement to a mutual fundprospectus.
It provides more detailed information about fund policies,
operations, and risks. Also known as a Part B prospectus. |
| Statement of Cash Flows |
A financial statement showing a firm'scashreceipts and cash
payments during a specified period. |
| Statement of condition |
A document describing the status of assets, liabilities, and
equity of a person or business at a particular time. |
| Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 52 |
The currency translation standard currently used by US firms. It
mandates the use of the current rate method. See: Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards No. 8. |
| Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 8 |
The is a currency translation standard once used by U.S.
accounting firms. See: Statement of Accounting Standards No. 52. |
| Statement-of-Cash-Flows Method |
A method of cash budgeting that is organized along the lines of
the statement of cash flows. |
| Static theory of capital structure |
Theory that the firm'scapital structure is determined by a
trade-off of the value of tax shields against the costs of
bankruptcy. |
| Stationary time series |
A longitudinal measure in which the process generating returns
is identical over time. |
| Statistical Arbitrage |
In the context of hedge funds, a style of management that
employs complex statistical models that try to capture small
abnormalities in a security's intraday return. |
| Statistical tracking error |
Used in the context of general equities. Standard deviation of
the difference between the portfolioreturn and the desired
investment benchmark return. |
| Statutory debt limit |
The cap that Congress imposes on the amount of publicdebt that
may be outstanding whether temporary or permanent. When this
limit is reached, the Treasury may not sell new debtissues until
Congress raises the limit. For a detailed listing of changes in
the limit since 1941, see Budget of the United States
Government. See: Debt outstanding subject to limitation. |
| Statutory investment |
An investment that a trustee is authorized to make under state
law. |
| Statutory merger |
A merger in which one corporation remains as a legal entity,
instead of a new legal entity being formed. |
| Statutory surplus |
The surplus of an insurance company determined by the accounting
treatment of both assets and liabilities as established by state
statutes. |
| Statutory tenancy |
A right to occupy residential property that comes into existence
on the termination of the original tenancy agreement to which
the Rent Act 1977 applies. Not a true tenancy, but a statutory
right to remain. |
| Statutory voting |
The standard rule in most corporations that there is one vote
per share in elections of the Board of Directors. |
| Staying power |
The ability of an investor to stay in the market and not to sell
out of a position when an investment has fallen in value. |
| STD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Sao Tome & Principe Dobra. |
| Steady state |
As an MBSpool ages, or four to six months after component
mortgages have passed at least once the threshold for
refinancing, the prepayment speed tends to stabilize within a
fairly steady range. |
| Steenth |
1/16 (0.0625) of one full point in price. Often used in
negotiations to compromise an eighth difference, and in
optionstrading. |
| Steepening of the yield curve |
A change in the yield curve where the spread between the yield
on a long-term and short-termTreasury has increased. Compare
flattening of the yield curve and butterfly shift. |
| Step aside |
Allow a block to trade at a price at which you do not care to
participate in the trade. |
| Step up |
To increase, as in step up the tax basis of an asset. |
| Step-down note |
A floating-rate note whose interest rate declines after a
specified period of time. |
| Step-in rights |
A right for a financier of a development to step-in and take
over the development in order to complete it. For example, if a
developer becomes insolvent entitling the contractor to
terminate the building contract the contractor will be asked to
agree that the financier can step-in as the employer of the
contractor. |
| Step-up bond |
A bond that pays a lower coupon rate for an initial period, and
then increases to a higher coupon rate. Related:
Deferred-interest bond, payment-in-kind bond. |
| Step-up swap |
An interest rate swap on which the notional principal increases
according to a predetermined schedule. |
| Sterilized intervention |
Foreign exchangemarket activity by which monetary authorities
insulate their domestic money supplies from the foreign exchange
transactions with offsettingsales or purchases of domestic
assets. |
| Sticky deal |
A new securitiesissue that may be difficult to sell because of
problems in the market or underlying problems with the
corporation. |
| Stochastic models |
Liability-matching models that assume that the liability
payments and the assetcash flows are uncertain. Related:
Deterministic models. |
| Stochastics index |
A computerized tool measuring overbought and oversold conditions
in a stock over a certain period. |
| Stock |
Ownership of a corporationindicated by shares, which represent a
piece of the corporation's assets and earnings. |
| Stock ahead |
When two or more orders for a stock at a certain price arrive
about the same time, and the exchange'spriority rules take
effect. NYSE rules stipulate that the bid made first should be
executed first, or, if two bids come in at once, the bid for the
larger number of shares receives priority. The bid that is not
executed is then turned to the broker, who informs the customer
that the trade was not completed because there was "stock
ahead.". |
| Stock Appreciation Right (SAR) |
A contractual right, often granted in tandem with an option that
allows an individual to receive cash or stock of a value equal
to the appreciation of the stock from the grant date to the date
the SAR is exercised. |
| Stock Appreciation Rights |
An incentive scheme for employees similar to stock options. The
employee get the increase in the stock price from the date of
the grant to the date of the exercise. However, in contrast to
options, there is no dillutive effect. That is, no shares are
issued. Similar to options, if the company's stock falls in
value, the appreciation right is worthless. |
| Stock bonus plan |
A plan used as an incentive that rewards employee performance
with stock in the company. |
| Stock buyback |
A corporation'spurchase of its own outstandingstock, usually in
order to raise the company'searnings per share. |
| Stock certificate |
A document representing the number of shares of a corporation
owned by a shareholder. |
| Stock dividend |
Payment of a corporate dividend in the form of stock rather than
cash. The stock dividend may be additional shares in the
company, or it may be shares in a subsidiary being spun off to
shareholders. Stock dividends are often used to conserve cash
needed to operate the business. Unlike a cash dividend, stock
dividends are not taxed until sold. |
| Stock Exchange Automated Quotation System (SEAQ) |
London's Nasdaq system. |
| Stock Exchange of Hong Kong (SEHK) |
Only stock exchange located in Hong Kong. |
| Stock Exchange of Singapore (SES) |
The only stock exchange in Singapore. |
| Stock Exchange of Thailand |
The major securities market of Thailand. |
| Stock Exchange, Mumbai (BSE) |
Formerly the Bombay stock exchange, the BSE accounts for more
than one-third of Indian tradingvolume. |
| Stock exchanges |
Formal organizations, approved and regulated by the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC), that are made up of members who
use the facilities to exchange certain common stocks. The two
major national stock exchanges are the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) and the American Stock Exchange (ASE or AMEX). Five
regional stock exchanges include the Midwest, Pacific,
Philadelphia, Boston, and Cincinnati. The Arizona Stock Exchange
is an after-hours electronic marketplace where anonymous
participants trade stocks via personal computers. |
| Stock index |
Index like the Dow Jones Industrial Average that tracks a
portfolio of stocks. |
| Stock Index Future |
A security that uses composite stock indexes to allow investors
to speculate on the performance of the entire market, or to
hedge against losses in long or short positions. The settlement
of the contracts is in cash. |
| Stock index option |
An option in which the underlying is a common stock index. |
| Stock index swap |
A swap involving a stock index. The other asset involved in a
stock index swap can be another stock index (a stock-for-stock
swap), a debt index (a debt-for-stock swap), or any other
financial asset or financial price index. |
| Stock insurance company |
An insurance company owned by a group of stockholders, who are
not necessarily policyholders. |
| Stock jockey |
A stockbroker who frequently buys and sells shares in a client's
portfolios. |
| Stock list |
The department within a stock exchange that oversees compliance
with listing requirements and exchange regulations. |
| Stock market |
Also called the equity market, the market for tradingequities. |
| Stock option |
An option whose underlying asset is the common stock of a
corporation. |
| Stock power |
A power of attorney form giving ownership of a security to
another person, brokerage firm, bank, or lender after it has
been sold or pledged to that party. |
| Stock purchase plan |
A plan allowing employees of a company to purchaseshares of the
company, often at a discount or with matching employer funds. |
| Stock rating |
An evaluation by a rating agency of the expected financial
performance or inherent risk of common stocks. |
| Stock record |
The accounting a brokerage firm keeps of all securities held in
inventory. |
| Stock replacement strategy |
A strategy for enhancing a portfolio'sreturn, used when the
futures contract is expensive according to its theoretical
price. The strategy involves a swap between the futures and a
Treasury bill and stockportfolio. |
| Stock repurchase |
A firm's repurchase of outstanding shares of its common stock. |
| Stock right |
Another terminology for a stock option. |
| Stock selection |
An active portfoliomanagement technique that focuses on
advantageous selection of particular stock rather than on broad
asset allocation choices. |
| Stock split |
Occurs when a firmissues new shares of stock and in turn lowers
the current market price of its stock to a level that is
proportionate to pre-split prices. For example, if IBM trades at
$100 before a two-for-one split, after the split it will trade
at $50, and holders of the stock will have twice as many shares
as they had before the split. See: Split. |
| Stock symbol |
See: Ticker symbol |
| Stock ticker |
A letter designation assigned to securities and mutual funds
that trade on US financial exchanges. |
| Stock watcher (NYSE) |
A computerized service that monitors and investigates trading
activity on the NYSE in order to identify any unusual activity
or security movement that might be caused by rumors or illegal
activities. |
| Stockbroker |
See: Registered representative |
| Stockholder |
See: Shareholder. |
| Stockholder books |
Set of books kept by firmmanagement for its annual report that
follows Financial Accounting Standards Board rules. The tax
books follow IRS tax rules. |
| Stockholder equity |
Balance sheet item that includes the book value of ownership in
the corporation. It includes capitalstock, paid-in surplus, and
retained earnings. |
| Stockholder of record |
Stockholder whose name is registered on the books of a
corporation and thus will receive dividends from the
corporation. |
| Stockholder's equity |
The residual claims that stockholders have against a firm's
assets, calculated by subtracting all current liabilities and
debt liabilities from total assets. |
| Stockholder's report |
The annual report and other reports given to stockholders to
inform them of the company'sfinancial standing and developments. |
| Stockholm Stock Market (Stockholm Börsen) |
The major securities market of Sweden. |
| Stockout |
Running out of inventory. |
| StockWatch |
A stock surveillance program offered by proxy solicitation
firms, and selected transfer agents, to track and monitor sales
and purchases of a corporation's shares and provide valuable
information at the beneficial owner level. |
| Stop basis |
Refers to over-the-countertrading. Method of entering an OTC
trade into the trader'sposition without reporting the trade on
the OTCtape. |
| Stop order (or stop) |
An order to buy or sell at the market when a definite price is
reached, either above (on a buy) or below (on a sell) the price
that prevailed when the order was given. |
| Stop payment |
An order given a depository institution not to pay out cash for
a check; often used when the check has been stolen or lost. |
| Stop Transfer |
A block placed against a security reported lost or stolen (an
adverse claim), so it cannot be transferred. |
| Stop-limit order |
A stop order that designates a price limit. Unlike the stop
order, which becomes a market order once the stop is reached,
the stop-limit order becomes a limit order. |
| Stop-loss order |
An order to unwind a position when the price moves against you.
For example, you had purchased a stock, the stop-loss order
would be to sell the stock when the price falls to a specified
level. If you were short the asset, the stop-loss would trigger
a purchase. |
| Stop-out price |
The lowest auction price at which Treasury bills are sold. |
| Stopped |
Guaranteed a specific price on the customer's working order
while the dealer tries to obtain a better one. Stopped against
one's self involves a customer order and a firm's own account,
not two customers. One can cancel an order even after being
stopped by another party. |
| Stopped out |
A purchase or sale that is executed under a stop order at the
stop price specified by the customer. |
| Stopping curve |
A curve showing the refunding rates for different times at which
the expected value of refunding immediately equals the expected
value of waiting to refund. |
| Stopping curve refunding rate |
A refunding rate that falls on the stopping curve. |
| Story stock/bond |
A highly complex security that requires a long "story" so that
investors may understand the corporation and be persuaded of its
merits. |
| Straddle |
Purchase or sale of an equal number of puts and calls with the
same terms at the same time. Related: Spread. |
| Straight |
Direct telephone line, compared to an outside line that requires
a telephone number to be dialed. |
| Straight Bill of Lading |
A bill of lading that is cosigned to a specific party and is
therefore non negotiable. |
| Straight Discount |
The rate applied to the face value of the promissory note to
calculate present value without compounding. For example, a note
with a face value in three years of 100, with a straight
discount of 10% per annum has a present value of 70. |
| Straight term insurance policy |
Term life insurance policy providing a fixed-amount death
benefit over a certain number of years. |
| Straight value |
Also called investment value, the value of a convertible
security without the conversionoption. |
| Straight voting |
Allows shareholder to cast all of the shareholder's votes for
each candidate for the Board of Directors. |
| Straight-line depreciation |
Amortizing or apportioning an equal dollar amount of
depreciation in each accounting period. |
| Strange Attractor |
An attractor in phase space, where the points never repeat
themselves, and orbits never intersect, but they stay within the
same region of phase space. Unlike limit cycles or point
attractors, strange attractors are non-periodic, and generally
have a fractal dimension. They are a picture of a non-linear,
chaotic system. See: Attractor, Chaos, Limit Cycle, Point
Attractor. |
| Strangle |
Buying or selling an out-of-the-moneyput option and call option
on the same underlyinginstrument, with the same expiration.
Profits are made only if there is a drastic change in the
underlyinginstrument's price. |
| Strategic alliance |
Collaboration between two or more companies designed to achieve
some corporate objective. May include international licensing
agreements, management contracts, or joint ventures. |
| Strategic buyout |
Acquisition of another firm in order to realize some operational
benefits which will result in increased earnings. |
| Strategy |
The general or specific approach to investing that an
individual, institution, or fund manager employs. |
| Stratified equity indexing |
A method of constructing a replicating portfolio that classifies
the stocks in the index into strata, and represents each stratum
in the portfolio. |
| Stratified sampling approach to indexing |
Dividing an index into cells, each representing a different
characteristic of the index, such as duration or maturity. |
| Stratified sampling bond indexing |
A method of bondindexing that divides the index into cells, each
cell representing a different characteristic, and that buys
bonds to match those characteristics. |
| Stray |
(1) Not a member of the participating party in the trade at
hand; (2) not a meaningful indication of a customer's desire to
take a sizable position or be involved in a stock. |
| Street |
Means Wall Streetfinancial community; brokers, dealers,
underwriters, and other knowledgeable participants. |
| Street name |
Registration under which securities maybe held by a broker on
behalf of a client but be registered in the name of the Wall
Street firm. |
| Strike index |
For a stock index option, the index value at which the buyer of
the option can buy or sell the underlyingstock index. The strike
index is converted to a dollar value by multiplying by the
option's contract multiple. Related: Strike price. |
| Strike price |
The stated price per share for which underlyingstock may be
purchased (in the case of a call) or sold (in the case of a put)
by the option holder upon exercise of the option contract. |
| Striking price |
The price at which an option can be exercised. See: Exercise
price. |
| Striking Price Intercal |
The distance between striking prices on a particular underlying
security. Normally, the interval is 2-1/2 points for stocks
under $25, 5 points for stocks selling over $25 per share, and
10 points (or greater) is acceptable for stocks over $200 per
share. There are, however, exceptions to this general guideline. |
| Strip |
Variant of a straddle. A strip is two puts and one call on a
stock. A strap is two calls and one put on a stock. The puts and
calls have the same strike price and expiration date. See:
Strap. |
| Strip mortgage participation certificate (strip PC) |
Ownership interests in specified mortgagespurchased by Freddie
Mac from a single seller in exchange for separate instruments
representing interests in the same mortgages. |
| Stripped bond |
Bond that can be subdivided into a series of zero-coupon bonds. |
| Stripped mortgage-backed securities (SMBS) |
Securities that redistribute the cash flows from the underlying
generic MBScollateral into the principal and interest components
of the MBS to enhance their attractiveness to different groups
of investors. |
| Stripped yield |
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Return on the debt
portion of a bond/warrantunit after subtracting the value of the
issued warrant segment. |
| Strong Currency |
A currency whose value compared to other currencies is
improving, as indicated by a decrease in the direct exchange
rates for the currency. |
| Strong dollar |
When the dollar can be exchanged for a large amount of foreign
currency, benefiting travelers but hurting exporters. |
| Strong form of the EMT |
Theory that market prices reflect all relevant publicly and
privately available information. Defined by Eugene F. Fama in
1970. |
| Strong-form efficiency |
A form of pricing efficiency, that posits that the price of a
security reflects all information, whether or not it is publicly
available. Related: Weak-form efficiency, semi-strong form
efficiency. |
| Structural Adjustment Loan Facility (SAL) |
World Bank program established in 1980 to enhance a country's
long-term economic growth through financing projects. |
| Structure |
The description of how a project financing is drawdown, repaid,
and collateralized secured. |
| Structured arbitrage transaction |
A self-funding, self-hedgedseries of transactions that usually
use mortgage-backed securities (MBS), commercial mortgage backed
securities, and collateralized debt obligations as the primary
assets. |
| Structured Asset Trust Unit Repackagings |
A synthetic security linked or weak-linked to underlying
collateral. Ratings usually reflect the credit quality of the
underlying securities. |
| Structured debt |
Debt that has been customized for the buyer, often by
incorporating unusual options. |
| Structured finance |
Often refers to a group within an investment bank that deals
with mortgage-backed securities (MBS), commercial mortgage
backed securities, and collateralized debt obligations,and real
estate. |
| Structured note |
A derivativeinvestment that will change in value with movements
of an underlyingindex; or a note whose issuer makes swap
arrangements to alter its required cash flows. |
| Structured portfolio strategy |
Designing a portfolio to achieve a level of performance that
matches some predetermined liabilities that must be paid out in
the future. |
| Structured settlement |
An agreement in settlement of a lawsuit involving specific
payments made over a period of time. Property and casualty
insurancecompanies often buylife insurance products to pay the
costs of such settlements. |
| Stub |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Piece of equitysecurity left over
from a major cash or security distribution from a
recapitalization. |
| Student Loan Marketing Association (SLMA) |
A publiclytradedcorporation established by federal action that
increases availability of educational loans by guaranteeing
student loanstraded in the secondary market. Also known as
Sallie Mae. |
| Subaccount |
A term used in bookkeeping. For example, the insurance expense
account may have various different subcategories such as
building and property insurance, auto/fleet insurance, general
liability, environmental, professional liability, law
enforcement, and other insurance. |
| Subchapter M |
An IRS regulation dealing with investment companies and real
estate investment trusts that avoid double taxation by
distributing interest, dividends, and capital gains directly to
shareholders, who are taxed individually. |
| Subchapter S |
IRSregulation that gives a corporation with 35 or fewer
shareholders the option of being taxed as a partnership to
escape corporate income taxes. |
| Subject |
Refers to a bid or offer that cannot be executed without
confirmation from the customer. In other words, not firm, but a
bid/offer that needs additional information/confirmation before
becoming firm and is therefore still negotiable. |
| Subject market |
Quote in which prices are subject to confirmation. See: Fast
market. |
| Subject to a (NY) can |
Contingent upon trader's ability to cancel an order (on the
indicatedexchange). |
| Subject to a print/execution/trading |
Contingent on execution of a trade because the picture in the
stock has not been materially altered. |
| Subject to opinion |
An auditor's opinion reflecting acceptance of a
company'sfinancial statements subject to pervasive uncertainty
that cannot be adequately measured, such as information relating
to the value of inventories, reserves for losses, or other
matters open to judgment. |
| Subjective probabilities |
Probabilities that are determined subjectively (for example, on
the basis of judgment rather than statistical sampling). |
| Sub-mortgage |
A charge granted over a mortgage or charge held by the
sub-mortgagor from a third party. |
| Subordinated |
A claim ranked lower in priority than other claims. Common stock
claims are always subordinated to debt. |
| Subordinated bonds |
Securities that fall after others in priority of claims on the
entity in the case of financial distress. |
| Subordinated debenture bond |
An unsecured bond that ranks after secured debt, after debenture
bonds, and often after some general creditors in its claim on
assets and earnings. Related: Debenture bond, mortgage bond,
collateral trust bonds. |
| Subordinated debt |
Debt over which senior debt takes priority. In the event of
bankruptcy, subordinated debtholders receive payment only after
senior debt claims are paid in full. |
| Subordination |
The process by which priorities between lenders are regulated.
The lender subordinating its loan will be paid after the lender
in whose favour the loan has been subordinated. Banks often
require that director’s loans are subordinated to the bank’s
loan. These are to be contrasted with priority agreements which
regulate the order in which different mortgagees having security
over the same asset are to be paid. |
| Subordination clause |
A provision in a bond indenture that restricts the issuer's
future borrowing by subordinating future lenders' claims on the
firm to those of the existing bondholders. |
| Subpart F |
Special category of foreign-source "unearned" income that is
currently taxed by the IRS whether or not it is remitted to the
US |
| Sub-participation |
A bank sharing a loan where it has no direct contractual
relationship with the borrower. The bank takes a share in the
loan by placing funds with the lender for on-lending to the
borrower or simply replacing funds previously lent. The borrower
usually has no idea that the sub-participant is involved. |
| Subperiod return |
The return of a portfolio over a shorter period of time than the
evaluation period. |
| Subrogation |
In the context of property finance, the right for a person who
has discharged the obligations of a borrower under a mortgage to
enjoy the benefit of the mortgage. For example a guarantor who
discharges the borrower’s debt to a mortgagee is entitled to
have the mortgage assigned to him. |
| Subrogation |
An insurance process whereby a company that has paid out to a
policyholder for a loss incurred recovers the amount of the loss
from the party that is legally liable. |
| Sub-sale |
Where a purchaser of a property contracts to sell it to a
sub-purchaser before the original purchase contract is
completed. The transfer is usually completed by the purchaser
directing the vendor to transfer directly to the sub-purchaser.
It should be noted that the original purchase contract will
often prohibit this. Stamp duty is normally only chargeable on
the price paid by the sub-purchaser. |
| Subscription |
Agreement to buy new issue of securities. |
| Subscription agreement |
An application reviewed by the general partner to join a limited
partnership. |
| Subscription price |
Price that current shareholders pay for a share of stock in a
rights offering. |
| Subscription privilege |
The right of current shareholders of a corporation to buy newly
issuedshares before they are available to the public. |
| Subscription right |
See: Subscription privilege |
| Subscription warrant |
Applies to derivative products. Type of security, usually issued
with another security, such as a bond or stock, that entitles
the holder to buy a proportionate amount of common stock at a
specified price, usually higher than the market price at the
time of issuance. Warrant. |
| Subsidiary |
A wholly or partially owned company that is part of a large
corporation. A foreign subsidiary is a separately incorporated
entity under the host country's law. A subsidiary's financial
results are carried on the parent company'sbooks. |
| Subsidized financing |
Funding provided by a government or other entity that is
available at a below-marketinterest rate. |
| Substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP) |
A method of distribution from IRA account assets that under
certain conditions is not subject to the IRS's 10% premature
withdrawal penalty for those under age 59-1/2. |
| Substitute sale |
A method for hedgingprice risk that uses debt marketinstruments,
such as interest ratefutures, or that involves selling
borrowedsecurities as the primary assets. |
| Substitution |
The right of a borrower to charge alternative security to a
lender in return for a release of property originally charged.
Such a clause is common in a revolving facility where a borrower
will wish to be able to buy and sell properties subject to
agreed parameters. |
| Substitution right |
The right for the borrower to provide properties of equal or
greater value in place of the property originally charged. |
| Substitution swap |
A swap in which a money manager exchanges one bond for another
bond that is similar in terms of coupon, maturity, and credit
quality, but that offers a higher yield. |
| Success tax |
A 15% excise tax on "excess" distributions from tax-deferred
retirement plans that was repealed by the Taxpayer Relief Act of
1997. In essence, the tax had penalized "successful" investors
who accumulated large retirement accounts and took distributions
that exceeded an annual limit deemed excessive by the tax code. |
| Suicide pill |
A hostile takeover prevention tactic that could destroy the
target company. Taking on a large amount of debt to prevent the
takeover might cause bankruptcy, for example. |
| Suitability |
A requirement that any investing strategy fall within the
financial means and investment objectives of an investor. |
| Suitability rules |
Policies and guidelines that brokers must use to ensure that
investors have the financial means to assume risks that they
wish to undertake. These are enforced by the NASD and other
self-regulatory organizations. |
| Suitable |
Describing a strategy or trading philosophy in which the
investor is operating in accordance with his(her) financial
means and investment objectives. |
| Summary plan description (SPD) |
A document that explains the fundamental features of an
employer's defined benefit or defined contribution plan,
including eligibility requirements, contribution formulas,
vesting schedules, benefit calculations, and distribution
options. ERISA requires that the SPD be easy to understand and
that each participant receive a copy within 90 days of joining
the plan. |
| Sum-of-the-years'-digits depreciation |
Method of accelerated depreciation. |
| Sunk costs |
Costs that have been incurred and cannot be reversed. |
| Sunrise industries |
Growth industries in an economy that may become leaders in the
market in the future. |
| Super Bowl indicator |
A theory that if a team from the old American Football League
pre-1970 wins the Super Bowl, the stock market will decline
during the coming year. If a team from the old pre-1990 National
Football League wins the Super Bowl, stock prices will increase
in the coming year. |
| Super DOT |
Super DOT provides faster execution than regular DOT and focuses
on large-size trades and baskets. See: Program trading. |
| Super Majority |
A proposal requiring more than a simple majority of the votes
eligible to be cast at an annual or special meeting. A super
majority is often a 2/3 (66.66%) vote, but it can be as high as
3/4 (75%) or 4/5 (80%). |
| Super message |
See: Autex |
| Super sinker bond |
Usually a home financing bond, but also any other bond that has
long-termcoupons but shortmaturity; the mortgages may be
prepaid, and the holders may receive the long-term yield after a
short period of time. |
| Supermajority |
Provision in a company'scharter requiring a majority of, say,
80% of shareholders to approve certain changes, such as a
merger. |
| Supermajority amendment |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Corporate amendment requiring that
a substantial majority (usually 67% to 90%) of stockholders
approve important transactions, such as mergers. |
| Supervisory analyst |
An analyst who is qualified to approve publicly distributed
research reports on the NYSE. |
| Supervisory board |
The board of directors that represents stakeholders in the
governance of the corporation. |
| Supplemental Security Income |
A Social Security program established to help the blind,
disabled, and poor. |
| Supplier credit |
Self-financing of a supplier's operations. Also the agreement of
a supplier of goods or services to deferred repayment terms. |
| Supply risk |
The risk associated with a change in raw materials or input to a
project from those assumed or projected. In the context of a
resources production project, this is called reserves risk. |
| Supply shock |
An event that influences production capacity and costs in an
economy. |
| Supply-side economics |
A theory of economics that reductions in tax rates will
stimulate investment and in turn will benefit the entire
society. |
| Support |
An effective lower bound on prices supported because of many
willing buyers at that price level. |
| Support level |
A price level below which it is supposedly difficult for a
security or market to fall. That is, the price level at which a
security tends to stop falling because there is more demand than
supply; can be identified on a technical basis by seeing where
the stock has bottomed out in the past. |
| Surcharge |
An additional levy added to some charge. |
| Surety |
A guarantor. |
| Surety |
An individual or corporation that guarantees the performance or
actions of another. |
| Surplus funds |
Cash flow available after payment of taxes in a project. |
| Surplus management |
Related: Assetmanagement |
| Surtax |
A tax added to the normal tax paid by corporations or
individuals who have earned income above a certain level. |
| Surveillance department of exchanges |
A department that monitors trading activity on an exchange in
order to identify any unusual activity that may indicate illegal
practices. |
| Survivorship bias |
Usually pertaining to fund manager or individual investor
performance. Suppose we examined the performance over the last
ten years of a group of managers that exist today. This
performance is biased upwards because we are only considering
those that survived for 10 years. That is, some dropped out
because of poor performance. Hence, in evaluating performance,
one has to be careful to include both the current and the
managers that dropped out of the sample due to poor performance. |
| Sushi bond |
A Eurobondissued by a Japanese corporation. |
| Suspended trading |
Temporary halt in trading in a particular security, in advance
of a major news announcement or to correct an imbalance of
orders to buy and sell. |
| Suspense account |
An account used temporarily to record receipts and disbursements
that have yet to be classified. |
| Sustainable growth rate |
Maximum rate of growth a firm can sustain without increasing
financial leverage. |
| SV |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for EL SALVADOR. |
| SVC |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the El Salvador Colon. |
| Swap |
See interest rate swap |
| Swap |
An arrangement in which two entities lend to each other on
different terms, e.g., in different currencies, and/or at
different interest rates, fixed or floating. |
| Swap arrangements |
Short-term reciprocal lines of credit between the Federal
Reserve and 14 foreign centeral banks as well as the Bank for
International Settlements. Through a swap transactions, the
Federal Reserve can, in effect, borrowforeign currency in order
to purchase dollars in the foreign exchange market. In doing so,
the demand for dollars and the dollar's foreign exchange value
are increased. Similarly, the Federal Reserve can temporarily
provide dollars to foreign central banks through swap
arrangments. |
| Swap assignment |
Related: Swap sale |
| Swap book |
A swap bank's portfolio of swaps, usually arranged by currency
and maturity. |
| Swap buy back |
The sale of an interest rate swap by one counterparty to the
other, effectively ending the swap. |
| Swap fund |
See: Exchange fund |
| Swap option |
See: Swaption. Related: Quality option. |
| Swap rate |
The difference between spot and forward rates expressed in
points, e.g., $0.0001 per pound sterling. |
| Swap reversal |
An interest rate swap designed to end a counterparty's role in
another interest rate swap, accomplished by counterbalancing the
original swap in maturity, reference rate, and notional amount. |
| Swap sale |
Also called a swap assignment, a transaction that ends one
counterparty's role in an interest rate swap by substituting a
new counterparty whose credit is acceptable to the other
original counterparty. |
| Swaption |
An option on an interest rate swap. The buyer of a swaption has
the right to enter into an interest rate swap agreement by some
specified date in the future. The swaption agreement will
specify whether the buyer of the swaption will be a fixed rate
receiver or a fixed rate payer. The writer of the swaption
becomes the counterparty to the swap if the buyer exercises. |
| Swaption |
Options on interest rate swaps. The buyer of a swaption has the
right to enter into an interest rate swap agreement by some
specified date in the future. The swaption agreement will
specify whether the buyer of the swaption will be a fixed-rate
receiver or a fixed-rate payer. The writer of the swaption
becomes the counterparty to the swap if the buyer exercises. |
| Sweat equity |
An increase in equity created by the labor of the owner. |
| Sweep |
The act of using all available cash flow for the repayment of
debt service. |
| Sweep account |
Account providing that a bank invest all the excess available
funds at the close of each business day for the firm. |
| Sweetener |
A feature of a security that makes it more attractive to
potential purchasers. |
| SWIFT |
See: Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunications |
| Swing Trading |
Refers to a type of short term (one day to a couple of weeks)
trading, triggered by technical analysis, for example, momentum.
Swing trading is distinguished by the notion thatthe trades are
executed while the assets is moving in upward or downward
momentum. That is, you are riding the momentum. |
| Swingline facility |
Bank borrowing facility to provide finance while the firm
replaces US commercial paper with eurocommercial paper. |
| Swiss Electronic Bourse (EBS) |
Computer linking system between the former stock
exchangetradingfloors in Zurich, Geneva, and Basel, Switzerland
so that trades can be carried out among traders on all three of
the tradingfloors. |
| Swiss Exchange |
The major securities market of Switzerland. |
| Swiss Options and Financial Futures Exchange (SOFFEX) |
The Swiss derivatives market with the first fully electronic
trading system in the world, now called Eurex Zurich AG. |
| Swissy |
Slang for the Swiss franc. |
| Switch order |
Order for the purchase (sale) of one stock and the sale
(purchase) of another stock at a stipulated price difference.
Contingent order, swap. |
| Switching |
Liquidating a position and simultaneously reinstating a position
in another futures contract of the same type. |
| Switching options |
A sequence of transactions in which exercise of one option
creates one or more additional options.
Investment-disinvestment, entry-exit, expansion-contraction, and
suspension-reactivation decisions are switching options. |
| SY |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SYRIAN ARAB
REPUBLIC. |
| Sydney Futures Exchange (SFE) |
The derivativesmarket of Australia. |
| Symbol |
Letters used to identify companies on the consolidated tape and
other locations. |
| Symbol book special |
Illiquid, inactively tradedstock not familiar market |
| Symmetric cash matching |
An extension of cash flow matching that allows for the short-termborrowing
of funds to satisfy a liability prior to the liability due date,
reducing the cost of funding liabilities. |
| Synchronous data |
Information available at the same time. To test option-pricing
models, the price of the option and of the underlying should be
synchronous and reflect the same moment in the market. |
| Syndicate |
A group of banks that acts jointly, on a temporary basis, to
loanmoney in a bank credit (syndicated credit) or to underwrite
a new issue of bonds. |
| Syndicate manager |
See: Managing underwriter |
| Syndicated Eurocredit loans |
Funding provided by a group (or syndicate) of banks in the
Eurocreditmarket. |
| Syndicated Loan |
A large Eurocurrencyloan from a group of international banks. |
| Syndicated loan facility |
A facility in which a number of lenders participate. Often the
facility is offered by a lead bank which organises the syndicate
to share risk on the lending amongst other financiers. |
| Syndication |
The selling of a project finance to a group of prospective
participants, the syndicate. |
| Synergistic effect |
A violation of value-additivity in that the value of a
combination is greater than the sum of the individual values. |
| Synergy |
Describes a combination whose value is greater than the sum of
the separate individual parts. |
| Synthetic convertible |
Combination of usable bonds and warrants (that expire on or
after the bonds' maturity) that resembles convertible bond. |
| Synthetic forward position |
A forward position constructed through borrowing in one
currency, lending in another currency, and offsetting these
transactions in the spot exchange market. |
| Synthetic Lease |
When a company creates a special-purpose entity to arrange for a
loan to purchase property, and then leases the property from the
entity.The synthetic lease therefore keeps the loan off the
company's balance sheet, while the company provides enough
income to the special-purpose entity to cover the interest rate
on the loan. |
| Synthetic put |
A strategy equivalent in risk to purchasing a put option where
an investor sells stock short and buys a call. |
| Synthetic stock |
An option strategy that is equivalent to the underlying stock. A
long call and a short put is synthetic long stock. A long put
and a short call is sythetic short stock. |
| Synthetics |
Customized hybridinstruments created by blending an underlying
price on a cash instrument with the price of a derivative
instrument. It is a combination of security holdings that mimics
the price movement of another single security (i.e., synthetic
call: long position in a stock combined with a put on that
position; a protected longsale; synthetic put:short position in
a stock combined with a call on that position; a protectedshort
sale). |
| SYP |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Syrian Pound. |
| System Noise |
See: Dynamical Noise |
| Systematic |
Common to all businesses. |
| Systematic investment plan |
An approach involving regular investments in order to take
advantage of dollar-cost averaging. |
| Systematic Return |
The part of the return dependent on the benchmarkreturn. We can
break excess returns into two components: systematic and
residual. The systematic return is the beta times the
benchmarkexcess return. |
| Systematic risk |
Also called undiversifiable risk or market risk. |
| Systematic risk principle |
Only the systematic portion of risk matters in large,
well-diversified portfolios. Thus, expected returns must be
related only to systematic risks. |
| Systematic withdrawal plan |
A provision of certain mutual funds to pay out to the
shareholder specified amounts after specified periods of time. |
| Systemic Risk |
Risk common to a particular sector or country. Often refers to a
risk resulting from a particular "system" that is in place, such
as the regulator framework for monitoring of
financial_institutions. |
| SZ |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SWAZILAND. |
| SZL |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Swaziland Lilangeni. |