| T |
Fifth letter of a Nasdaqstock symbol indicating that the stock
has warrants or rights. |
| T+3 |
The settlement date for securitiestransactions such as a stock
sale. It refers to the obligation in the brokerage business to
settle securities trades by the third day following the trade
date. The settlement occurs when the seller receives the sales
price (the broker's commission) and the buyer receives the
shares. |
| TAA |
See: Tactical asset allocation |
| TABs |
See: Tax anticipation bill |
| Tabulation Report |
A proxy tally report detailing the current quorum and vote
figures on each proposal. |
| TAC bonds |
See: Targeted amortization class bond. |
| Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA) |
Portfolio strategy that allows active departures from the normal
asset mix according to specified objective measures of value.
Often called active management. It involves forecasting asset
returns, volatilities, and correlations. The forecastedvariables
may be functions of fundamental variables, economic variables,
or even technical variables. |
| Tail |
The remaining reserves after a project financing has been
repaid. Sometimes refers to the residual value. |
| Tailgating |
Purchase of a security by a broker after the broker places an
order for the same security for a customer. The broker hopes to
profit either because of information which the customer has or
because the customer's purchase is of sufficient size to affect
security prices. This is an unethical practice. |
| Taiwan Stock Exchange (TSEC) |
Established in 1961, the only centralized securities market in
Taiwan. |
| Take |
(1) To agree to buy. A dealer or customer who agrees to buy at
another dealer's offered price is said to take the offer. (2)
Euro bankers speak of taking deposits rather than buying money. |
| Take a bath |
To sustain a loss on either a speculation or an investment. |
| Take a flier |
To speculate on highly riskysecurities. |
| Take a position |
To buy or sell short; that is to own or to owe some amount on an
asset or derivative security. |
| Take a powder |
Temporarily cancel an order or indication in a stock, while
unrepresented interest still exists. See: Back on the shelf,
sidelines. |
| Take a swing |
Execute a trade at a price that the trader feels is higher or
more risky than would normally be acceptable, in order to gain
market share in the institutional arena. |
| Take off |
A sharp increase in the price of a stock, or a positive movement
of the market as a whole. |
| Take the offer |
Buystock by accepting a floor broker's (listed) or dealer's
(OTC) offer at an agreed-upon volume. Antithesis of hit the bid. |
| Take-and-pay contract |
An agreement that obligates the purchaser to take any product
that is offered (and pay the cash purchase price) and pay a
specified amount if the product is not taken. |
| Takedown |
The share of securities of each participatinginvestment banker
in a new or a secondary offering, or the price at which the
securities are distributed to the different members of an
underwriting group. |
| Takeout |
A financing to refinance or take out another loan. |
| Take-out |
A cashsurplus generated by the sale of one block of securities
and the purchase of another, e.g., selling a block of bonds at
99 and buying another block at 95. Also, a bid made to a seller
of a security that is designed (and generally agreed) to take
the seller out of the market. |
| Takeover |
General term referring to transfer of control of a firm from one
group of shareholders to another group of shareholders. Change
in the controlling interest of a corporation, either through a
friendly acquisition or an unfriendly, hostile, bid. A hostile
takeover (with the aim of replacing current existing management)
is usually attempted through a publictender offer. |
| Takeover target |
A company that is the object of a takeover attempt, friendly or
hostile. |
| Takes a call |
Requires a phone call to an account in order for a trade to be
completed. See: Show me. |
| Takes price |
Requiring some price movement or concession on behalf of the
initiating party before a trade can be consummated. See: Price
give. |
| Take-up fee |
A fee paid to an underwriter in connection with an
underwrittenrights offering or an underwritten forced
conversion. Represents compensation for each share of common
stock the underwriter obtains and must resell upon the exercise
of rights or conversion of bonds. |
| Taking a view |
A London expression; means forming an opinion as to where market
prices are headed and acting on it. |
| Taking delivery |
When the buyer actually assumes possession from a seller of
assets agreed upon in a forward contract or a futures contract. |
| Tandem programs |
Ginnie Mae mortgage funds provided at below-market rates to
residential MBS buyers with FHA Section 203 and 235 loans and to
developers of multifamily projects with Section 236 loans
initially and later with Section 221(d)(4) loans. |
| Tangibility |
Characteristic that an assets can be used as collateral to
secure debt. |
| Tangible asset |
An asset whose value depends on particular physical properties.
These include reproducible assets such as buildings or machinery
and non-reproducible assets such as land, a mine, or a work of
art. Also called real assets. Converse of: Intangible asset |
| Tangible net worth |
Total assetsminusintangible assets, which include patents and
copyrights, and total liabilities. |
| TANs |
See: Tax anticipation notes |
| Tape |
(1) Service that reports prices and sizes of transactions on
major exchanges-ticker tape. (2) Dow Jones and other news wires.
See: Consolidated tape. |
| Tape is late |
When the tradingvolume is so heavy that trades appear on the
tape more than a minute behind the timer they actually take
place. |
| Tare Weight |
The weight of an empty container and any packaging materials
used in the container. |
| TARGET |
Trans European Real Time Gross Settlement System. |
| Target cash balance |
Optimal amount of cash for a firm to hold, considering the
trade-off between the opportunity costs of holding too much cash
and the trading costs of holding too little cash. |
| Target company |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Firm chosen as an attractive
takeover candidate by a potential acquirer. The acquirer may buy
up to 5% of the target'sstock without publicdisclosure, but it
must report all transactions and supply other information to the
SEC, the exchange the target company is listed on, and the
target company itself once the 5% threshold is hit. See: Raider. |
| Target firm |
A firm that is the object of a takeover by another firm. |
| Target investment mix |
The percentage mix of stocks, bonds, and short-termreserves that
an investor considers appropriate based on his/her personal
objectives, time horizon, risk tolerance, and financial
resources. |
| Target Leverage Ratio |
The ratio of the market value of debt to the total market value
of the firm that management seeks to maintain. |
| Target payout ratio |
A firm's long-run dividend-to-earnings ratio. The firm's policy
is to attempt to pay out a certain percentage of earnings, but
it pays a stated dollar dividend and adjusts it to the target as
base line increases in earnings occur. |
| Target price |
In the context of takeovers, the price at which an acquirer aims
to buy a target firm. In the context of options, the price of
the underlying security at which an option will become in the
money.
In the context of stocks, the price that an investor hopes a
stock will reach in a certain time period.
|
| Target zone arrangement |
A monetary system under which countries pledge to maintain their
exchange rates within a specific margin around agreed-upon,
fixed central exchange rates. |
| Target zones |
Implicit boundaries on exchange rates established by central
banks. |
| Targeted Amortization Class (TAC) bonds |
Bonds offered as a trancheclass of some CMOs, according to a
sinking fund schedule. They differ from PAC bonds whose
amortization is guaranteed as long as prepayments on the
underlyingmortgages do not exceed certain limits. A TAC's
schedule is met at only one prepayment rate. |
| Targeted registered offerings |
Securitiesissues sold to "targeted" foreign
financial_institutions according to U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission guidelines. These foreign institutions then maintain
a secondary market in the foreign market. |
| Targeted repurchase |
Buying back of a firm'sstock from a potential acquirer, usually
at a substantial premium, to forestall a takeover attempt.
Related: Greenmail. |
| Tariff |
A tax on imports or exports. |
| Tax and loan account |
An account at a private bank, held in the name of the district
Federal Reserve Bank, which holds operating cash for the
business of the US Treasury. |
| Tax anticipation bills (Tabs) |
Special bills that the Treasury occasionally issues that mature
on corporate quarterlyincome tax dates and can be used at face
value by corporations to pay their tax liabilities. |
| Tax Anticipation Notes (Tans) |
Notes issued by states or municipalities to finance current
operations in anticipation of future tax receipts. |
| Tax arbitrage |
Trading that takes advantage of a difference in tax rates or tax
systems as the basis for profit. |
| Tax audit |
Audit by the IRS or other tax-collectingagency to determine
whether a taxpayer has paid the correct amount of tax. |
| Tax avoidance |
Minimizing tax burden through legal means such as tax-free
municipal bonds, tax shelters, IRA accounts, and trusts. Compare
with tax evasion. |
| Tax base |
The assessed value of the taxable property, assets, and income
within a specific geographic area. |
| Tax basis |
In the context of finance, the original cost of an asset less
depreciation that is used to determine gains or losses for tax
purposes. V |
| Tax books |
Records kept by a firm'smanagement that follow IRS rules. The
books follow Financial Accounting Standards Board rules. |
| Tax bracket |
The percentage of tax obligation for a particular taxable
income. |
| Tax clawback agreement |
An agreement to contribute as equity to a project the value of
all previously realized project-related tax benefits not already
clawed back. Exercised to the extent required to cover any cash
deficiency of the project. |
| Tax clientele |
Categories of investors who have specific preferences for debt
or equity because of differences in their personal tax rates. |
| Tax credit |
A direct dollar-for-dollar reduction in tax allowed for expenses
such as child care and R&D for building low-income housing.
Compare tax deduction. |
| Tax deduction |
An expense that a taxpayer is allowed to deduct from taxable
income. |
| Tax deferral option |
Allowing the capital gains tax on an asset to be payable only
when the gain is realized by selling the asset. |
| Tax differential view (of dividend policy) |
The view that shareholders prefer capital gains over dividends,
and hence low payout ratios, because capital gains are
effectively taxed at lower rates than dividends. |
| Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA) |
Legislation to increase tax revenue by eliminating various
taxation loopholes and instituting tougher enforcement
procedures in collecting taxes. |
| Tax evasion |
Illegal by reducing tax burden by underreporting income,
overstating deductions, or using illegal tax shelters. |
| Tax free acquisition |
A merger or consolidation in which (1) the acquirer'stax basis
on each asset whose ownership is transferred in the transaction
is generally the same as the acquiree's, and (2) each seller who
receives only stock does not have to pay any tax on the gain
realized until the shares are sold. |
| Tax haven |
A nation with a moderate level of taxation and/or liberal tax
incentives for undertaking specific activities such as exporting
or investing. |
| Tax haven affiliate |
A wholly owned entity in a low-tax jurisdiction that is used to
channel funds to and from a multinational's foreign operations.
The tax benefits of tax haven affiliates were largely removed in
the US by the Tax Reform Act of 1986. |
| Tax holiday |
A reduced tax rate that a government provides as an inducement
to foreign direct investment. |
| Tax liability |
The amount in taxes a taxpayer to the government. |
| Tax lien |
The right of the government to enforce a claim against the
property of a person owing taxes. |
| Tax loss carryback, carryforward |
A tax benefit that allows business losses to be used to reduce
tax liability in previous and or following years. |
| Tax planning |
Devising strategies throughout the year in order to minimize tax
liability, for example, by choosing a tax filing status that is
most beneficial to the taxpayer. |
| Tax preference item |
Items that must be included when calculating the alternative
minimum tax. |
| Tax preparation services |
Firm that prepare tax returns for a fee. |
| Tax rate |
The percentage of tax paid for different levels of income. |
| Tax Reduction Strategy |
A source of competitive advantage that depends on differences in
the tax rates imposed in different locations. |
| Tax Reform Act of 1976 |
Legislation aimed at tightening provisions relating to taxation,
including changes in the capital gains tax laws. |
| Tax Reform Act of 1984 |
Legislation enacted as part of the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984
to reduce the federal budget deficit. Among its provisions are a
decrease in the minimum holding period for assets to qualify for
long-termcapital gains treatment from one year to six months. |
| Tax Reform Act of 1986 |
A 1986 law involving a major overhaul of the US tax code. |
| Tax Reform Act of 1993 |
See: Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993 |
| Tax refund |
Money back from the government when too much tax has been paid
or withheld from a salary. |
| Tax schedules |
Tax forms used to report itemized deductions, dividend and
interest income, profit or loss from a business, capital gains
and losses, supplemental income and loss, and self-employment
tax. |
| Tax selling |
Selling of securities to realize losses that will offset capital
gains and reduce tax liability. See: Wash sale. |
| Tax shelter |
Legal methods taxpayers can use to reduce tax liabilities. An
example is the use of depreciation of assets. |
| Tax shield |
The reduction in income taxes that results from taking an
allowable deduction from taxable income. |
| Tax software |
Computer software designed to assist taxpayers in filling out
tax returns and minimizing tax liability. |
| Tax status election |
The decision of the status under which to file a tax return. For
example, a corporation may file as a C corporation or an S
corporation. |
| Tax straddle |
Technique used in futures and optionstrading to create tax
benefits. For example, an investor with a capital gain takes a
position creating an artificial offsettingloss in the current
tax year and postponing a gain from the position until the next
tax year. |
| Tax swap |
Swapping two similar bonds to receive a tax benefit. |
| Tax transparency |
A legal structure is tax transparent if it results in the same
tax consequences for the ultimate investors whether they invest
directly in the asset or through the legal structure by which
the asset is held. An example is a limited partnership. |
| Tax umbrella |
Tax loss carryforwards from previous business losses that form a
tax shelter for profits earned in current and future years. |
| Taxable acquisition |
A merger or consolidation that is not a acquisition. The selling
shareholders are treated as having sold their shares. |
| Taxable equivalent yield |
The return from a higher-paying but taxable investment that
would equal the return from a tax-free investment. This depends
on the investor'stax bracket. |
| Taxable estate |
That portion of a deceased person's estate that is subject to
transfer tax. |
| Taxable event |
An event or transaction that has a tax consequence, such as the
sale of stockholding that is subject to capital gains taxes. |
| Taxable income |
Gross income less a variety of deductions. |
| Taxable municipal bond |
Taxed private-purpose bonds issued by the state or local
government to finance prohibited projects such as sports
stadiums. |
| Taxable transaction |
Any transaction that is not tax-free to the parties involved,
such as a taxable acquisition. |
| Taxable year |
The 12-month period an individual uses to report income for
income tax purposes. For most individuals, their tax year is the
calendar year. |
| Tax-deductible |
The effect of creating a tax deduction, such as charitable
contributions and mortgageinterest. |
| Tax-deferred income |
Dividends, interest, and unrealized capital gains on investments
in an account such as a qualified retirement plan, where income
is not subject to taxation until a withdrawal is made. |
| Tax-deferred retirement plans |
Employer-sponsored and other plans that allow contributions and
earnings to be made and accumulate tax-free until they are paid
out as benefits. |
| Tax-equivalent yield |
The pre-tax yield required from a taxable bond in order to equal
the tax-free yield of a municipal bond. |
| Tax-exempt bond |
A bond usually issued by municipal, county, or state governments
whose interest payments are not subject to federal and, in some
cases, state and local income tax. |
| Tax-exempt income |
Dividends and interest not subject to federal and, in some
cases, state and local income taxes. |
| Tax-exempt income fund |
A mutual fund that seeks income that is exempt from federal and,
in some cases, state and local income taxes. |
| Tax-exempt money market fund |
A money market fund that invests in short-term tax-exempt
municipal securities. |
| Tax-exempt sector |
The municipal bond market where state and local governments
raise funds. Bonds issued in this sector are exempt from federal
income taxes. |
| Tax-exempt security |
An obligation whose interest is tax-exempt, often called a
municipal bond, offered by a country, state, town, or any
political district. |
| Tax-neutrality |
Characteristic that taxes do not interfere with the natural flow
of capital toward its most productive use. |
| Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 |
Legislation forming part of a larger act designed to balance the
federal budget. Some of the legislation's provisions included
tax credits for taxpayers supporting children, an increase in
the amount that could be excluded from estate taxes, and a lower
capital gains tax rate. |
| Tax-sheltered annuity |
A type of retirement plan under Section 403(b) of the Internal
Revenue Code that permits employees of public educational
organizations or tax-exempt organizations to make before-tax
contributions via a salary reduction agreement to a
tax-sheltered retirement plan. Employers are also allowed to
make direct contributions on behalf of employees. |
| Tax-timing option |
The option to sell an asset and claim a loss for tax purposes or
not sell the asset and defer the capital gains tax. |
| TBA |
See: To be announced |
| TC |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TURKS AND CAICOS
ISLANDS. |
| TD |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for CHAD. |
| Tear sheet |
A page from an S&Pstock that provides information on thousands
of stocks, often sent to prospective purchasers. |
| Teaser rate |
A low initial interest rate on an adjustable-rate mortgage to
entice borrowers, that is later eliminated and replaced by a
market-level rate. |
| Technical analysis |
Security analysis that seeks to detect and interpret patterns in
past securityprices. |
| Technical analysts |
Also called chartists or technicians, analysts who use
mechanical rules to detect changes in the supply of and demand
for a stock, and to capitalize on the expected change. |
| Technical condition of a market |
Demand and supply factors affecting price, in particular, the
net position, either long or short, of the dealer community. |
| Technical descriptors |
Variables that are used to describe the market in terms of
patterns in historical data. |
| Technical forecasting |
A forecasting method that uses historical prices and trends. |
| Technical Information |
Information related to the momentum of a particular variable. In
market analysis, technical information is information related to
market dynamics and crowd behavior only. |
| Technical insolvency |
Default on a legal obligation of the firm. Technical insolvency
occurs when a firm doesn't pay a bill on time. |
| Technical rally |
Short rise in securities or commoditiesfutures prices in the
face of a general declining trend. Such a rally may result
because investors are bargain hunting or because analysts have
noticed a particular support level at which securities usually
bounce up. Antithesis of correction. |
| Technical sign |
A short-termtrend in the price movement of a security that
analysts recognize as significant. |
| Technician |
Related: Technical analysts |
| TED spread |
Difference between US Treasury bill rate and Eurodollar rate;
used by some traders as a measure of investor/trader anxiety or
credit quality. |
| Teeny |
1/16 or 0.0625 of one full point in price. Steenth. |
| TEFRA (Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1983) |
The law requiring federal income tax withholding on payments of
dividend and interest to accounts without a certified tax
identification number on file. See: W-9. |
| Tel Aviv Stock Exchange |
Israel's only stock exchange. |
| Telephone switching |
Moving one's assets from one mutual fund or variable annuity to
another by telephone. |
| Temporal method |
A currency translation method under which the choice of exchange
rate depends on the underlying method of valuation. Assets and
liabilities valued at historical cost (marketcost) are
translated at the historical (current market) rate. |
| Temporary Assets |
That portion of a firm'scurrent assets that fluctuates in
response to seasonal or anticipated short-term. |
| Temporary Financing |
The sum of negotiated current liabilities and temporary
spontaneous current liabilities. |
| Temporary investment |
A short-terminvestment, such as a money market fund, Treasury
bills, or short-term CD, which is usually held a year or less. |
| Ten largest holdings |
The percentage of a portfolio's total net assets or
equityholdings in its ten largest securitiespositions. As this
percentage rises, a portfolio'sreturns are likely to be more
volatile because they are more dependent on the fortunes of
fewer companies. |
| Tenant |
A partial owner of a security, or the holder of some property.
See: Lessee. |
| Tenants by Entireties (TEN ENT) |
Joint ownership of property or securities by a husband and wife
where, upon the death of one, the property goes to the survivor. |
| Tenants in common |
Account registration in which two or more individuals own a
certain proportion of an account. Each tenant's proportion is
distributable as part of the owners estate, so that if one of
the account holders dies, that owner's heirs are entitled to
that proportional share of the account. |
| Tenbagger |
A stock that grows in value ten-fold. |
| Ten-Day Rule |
The New York Stock Exchange rule permitting member firms
(brokers) to vote in favor of management ten days or less before
the meeting, provided that the member firm mailed proxy material
to beneficial owners at least 15 business days before the
meeting. The rule allows many shares to be voted, which would
otherwise not be, to reach a quorum, approve the choice of
directors and auditors and handle other routine matters. This
rule does not apply to banks, their nominees or their depository
positions, nor to non-routine proposals such as approval for the
corporation to issue more shares. |
| Tender |
To offer for delivery against futures. |
| Tender offer |
General offer made publicly and directly to a firm'sshareholders
to buy their stock at a price well above the current value
market price. |
| Tender offer premium |
The premium offered above the current market price in a tender
offer. |
| Tenor |
The length of time until a loan is due. For example, a loan is
taken out with a two year tenor. After one year passes, the
tenor of the loan is one year. |
| Tenure |
The basis of a person’s ownership of land. Tenure is usually,
therefore, freehold or leasehold. |
| Term |
The period of time during which a contract is in force. |
| Term bonds |
Bonds whose principal is payable at maturity. Often referred to
as bullet-maturitybonds or simply bullet bonds. Related: Serial
bonds. |
| Term certificate |
A certificate of deposit with a longer time to maturity. |
| Term Fed funds |
Fed funds sold for a period of time longer than overnight. |
| Term insurance |
Provides a death benefit only, no build up of cash value. |
| Term life insurance |
A contract that provides a death benefit but no cash build up or
investment component. The premium remains constant only for a
specified term of years, and the policy is usually renewable at
the end of each term. |
| Term loan |
A loan that is repayable over the agreed term. Contrast with a
demand facility where the lender may require repayment at any
time. With a term loan, provided the borrower keeps to its
terms, the lender is only entitled to repayment in accordance
with the facility letter. |
| Term loan |
A bank loan, typically with a floating interest rate, for a
specified amount that matures in between one and ten years, and
requires a specified repayment schedule. |
| Term premiums |
Excess of the yields to maturity on long-termbonds over those of
short-term bonds. |
| Term repo |
A repurchase agreement with a term of more than one day. |
| Term structure of interest rates |
Relationship between interest rates on bonds of different
maturities, usually depicted in the form of a graph often called
a yield curve. Harvey shows that inverted term structures (long
rates below short rates) have preceded every recession over the
past 30 years. |
| Term to maturity |
The time remaining on a bond's life, or the date on which the
debt will cease to exist and the borrower will have completely
paid off the amount borrowed. See: Maturity. |
| Term trust |
A closed-end fund that has a fixed termination or maturity date. |
| Terminal value |
The value of a bond at maturity, typically its par value, or the
value of an asset (or an entire firm) on some specified future
valuation date. Usually, a perpetuity formula is used. For
example, suppose we forecast cash flows through year 10. We make
an assumption that year 11 and beyond will be no growth (except
for inflation). If the cash flow forecast for year 11 is 100,
the firm's discount rate is 12%, and inflation is expected to be
2%, we use the formula V10 = CF11/(disc rate-inflation). Hence,
the value is 100/(0.12 - 0.02) that is 1,000. This cash flow
needs to be brought back to present value using the formula
1000/(1.12)10, which is 321.97. Note the importance of the
inflation assumption. |
| Terms of Delivery |
The part of a salescontract that indicates the point at which
title and risk of loss of merchandise pass from the seller to
the buyer. See: Incoterms. |
| Terms of sale |
Conditions under which a firm proposes to sell its goods or
services for cash or credit. |
| Terms of trade |
The weighted average of a nation's export prices relative to its
import prices. |
| Territorial tax system |
A tax system that taxes domestic income but not foreign income.
Territorial tax regimes are found in Hong Kong, France, Belgium,
and the Netherlands. |
| Test |
The event of a price movement that approaches a support level or
a resistance level established earlier by the market. A test is
passed if prices do not go below the support or resistance
level, and the test is failed if prices go on to new lows or
highs. |
| Testamentary trust |
A trust created by a will, that is scheduled to occur after the
maker's death. |
| TF |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for FRENCH SOUTHERN
TERRITORIES. |
| TG |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TOGO. |
| TH |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for THAILAND. |
| THB |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Thai Baht. |
| The Curb |
Another name for the American Stock Exchange (AMEX). |
| The Curb |
Another name for the American Stock Exchange (AMEX). |
| The Desk |
The trading desk at the Federal REserve Bank of New York through
which open market purchases and sales of government and federal
agancy securities are made. The desk maintains direct telephone
communication with major government securities dealers. A
"foreign desk" at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York conducts
transactions in the foregin exchange market. |
| The Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System |
Commonly known as Harmonized System. It isa a classification
system devised by the Customs Cooperation Council to provide
uniformity in tariff classification, trade statistics, and
transport documentation among cooperating countries. |
| The Public |
Individual investors who trade single securities independently
or invest in intermediaries such as mutual funds, as opposed to
professional investors. |
| Theoretical futures price |
The equilibriumfutures price. Also called the fair price. |
| Theoretical spot rate curve |
A curve derived from theoretical considerations as applied to
the yields of actually tradedTreasurydebt securities, because
there are no zero-coupon Treasury debtissues with a maturity
greater than one year. Like the yield curve, this is a graphic
depiction of the term structure of interest rates. |
| Theoretical value |
Applies to derivative products. Mathematically determined value
of a derivative instrument as dictated by a pricing model such
as the Black-Scholes model. |
| Theta |
The ratio of the change in an option price to the decrease in
time to expiration. Also called time decay. |
| Thin market |
A market in which tradingvolume is low, and consequently bid and
asked quotes are wide and the instrumenttraded is not very
liquid. Very little stock to buy or sell. |
| Thinly traded |
Infrequently traded. |
| Third market |
Exchange-listedsecuritiestrading in the OTC market. |
| Thirty-day visible supply |
The total volume in dollars of municipal bonds with maturities
of 13 months or more that should reach the market within 30
days. |
| Thirty-day wash rule |
IRS rule stating that losses on a sale of stock may not be used
as tax shelter if equivalent stock is purchased 30 days or less
before or after the sale of the stock. |
| Three steps and a stumble rule |
A rule predicting that stock and bond prices will fall following
three increases in the discount rate by the Federal Reserve.
This is a result of increased costs of borrowing for companies
and the increased attractiveness of money market funds and CDs
over stocks and bonds as a result of the higher interest rates. |
| Three-phase DDM |
A version of the dividend discount model that applies a
different expected dividend rate depending on a
company'slife-cycle phase: growth phase, transition phase, or
maturity phase. |
| Threshold for refinancing |
The point when the weighted-average coupon of an MBS is at a
level to induce homeowners to prepay the mortgage in order to
refinance to a lower-rate mortgage, generally reached when the
weighted-average coupon of the MBS is 2 percentage points or
more above currently available mortgage rates. |
| Thrift institution |
An organization formed as a depository for primarily consumer
savings. Savings and loan associations and savings banks are
thrift institutions. |
| Thrift Institution Advisory Council (TIAC) |
A council, established following the passage of the Monetary
Control Act of 1980, whose purpose is to provide information and
views on the special needs and problems of thrifts. The group is
comprised of representatives of savings banks, savings and loan
associations, and creditor unions. |
| Thrift plan |
A defined contribution plan in which an employee contributes,
usually on a before-tax basis, toward the ultimate benefits that
will be provided. The employer usually agrees to match all or a
portion of the employee's contributions. |
| Throughput agreement |
An agreement to put a specified amount of product per period
through a particular facility. An example is an agreement to
ship a specified amount of crude oil per period through a
particular pipeline. |
| Tick |
Refers to the minimum change in price a security can have,
either up or down. Related: Point. |
| Tick indicator |
A marketindicator based on the number of stocks whose last trade
was an uptick or a downtick. Used as an indicator of market
sentiment or psychology to try to predict the market's trend. |
| Ticker symbol |
An abbreviation assigned to a security for trading purposes. |
| Ticker tape |
Computerized device that relays to investors around the world
the stock symbol and the latest price and volume on securities
as they are traded. |
| Ticket |
An abbreviation of order ticket. |
| Tick-test rules |
SEC-imposed restrictions on when a short sale may be executed,
intended to prevent investors from destabilizing the price of a
stock when the market price is falling. A short sale can be made
only when either (1) the sale price of the particular stock is
higher than the last trade price (referred to as an uptick
trade) or (2) if there is no change in the last trade price of
the particular stock, the previous trade price must be higher
than the trade price that preceded it (referred to as a zero
uptick). |
| Tier 1 and Tier 2 |
Descriptions of the capital adequacy of banks. Tier 1 refers to
core capital while Tier 2 refers to items such as undisclosed
resources. |
| TIGER |
See: Treasury Investors Growth Receipt |
| Tight |
In line with or extremely close to the inside market or last
sale in a stock (+/- 1/8). On the money. |
| Tight market |
A market in which volume is high, trading is active and highly
competitive, and consequently spreads between bid and ask prices
are narrow. |
| Tight money |
When a restricted money supply makes credit difficult to secure.
The antithesis of tight money is easy money. |
| TIIS |
See: Treasury inflation-indexed securities |
| Tiki |
Tick of Dow Jones Industrial Average component issues. |
| Tilted portfolio |
An indexingstrategyy that is linked to active management through
the emphasis of a particular industrysector, selected
performance factors such as earningsmomentum, dividend yield,
price-earnings ratio, or selected economic factors such as
interest rates and inflation. |
| Time decay |
Related: Theta |
| Time deposit |
Interest-bearing deposit at a savings institution that has a
specific maturity. Related: Certificate of deposit. |
| Time draft |
Demand for payment at a stated future date. |
| Time horizon |
The period, usually expressed in years, for which an investor
expects to hold an investment. |
| Time Letter of Credit |
See: Usance Letter of Credit. |
| Time order |
Order that becomes a market or limited price order or is
canceled at a specific time. |
| Time premium |
Also called time value, the amount by which an option price
exceeds its intrinsic value. The value of an option beyond its
current exercise value representing the optionholder's control
until expiration, the risk of the underlying asset, and the
riskless return. |
| Time series models |
Systems that examine series of historical data; sometimes used
as a means of technical forecasting, by examining moving
averages. |
| Time spread strategy |
Buying and selling puts and calls with the same exercise price
but different expiration dates, and trying to profit from the
different premiums of the options. |
| Time to maturity |
The time remaining until a financialcontract expires. Also
called time until expiration. |
| Time until expiration |
The time remaining until a financialcontract expires. Also
called time to maturity. |
| Time value |
Applies to derivative products. Portion of an option price that
is in excess of the intrinsic value, due to the amount of
volatility in the stock; sometime referred to as premium. Time
value is positively related to the length of time remaining
until expiration. |
| Time value of an option |
The portion of an option's premium that is based on the amount
of time remaining until the expiration date of the option
contract, and the idea that the underlying components that
determine the value of the option may change during that time.
Time value is generally equal to the difference between the
premium and the intrinsic value. Related: In the money. |
| Time value of money |
The idea that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar in the
future, because the dollar received today can earn interest up
until the time the future dollar is received. |
| Time value permium |
The amount by which an option's total premium exceeds its
intrinsic value. |
| Timeliness |
A source of competitive advantage that depends on being the
first to enter a given market with a product or service. |
| Time-series analysis |
Assessment of relationships between two or among more variables
over periods of time. |
| Times-interest-earned ratio |
Earnings before interest and tax, divided by interest payments. |
| Time-weighted rate of return |
Related: Geometric meanreturn |
| Time-Zone Arbitrage |
A form of stale price arbitrage where the pricing discrepencies
are due to the primary markets for the underlying securities
being closed at the times that the fund is traded. Note that
time zone arbitrage is sometimes mistakenly used if it were a
pure synonym for stale price arbitrage. These are not synonyms
since stale prices can also be due to illiquid stocks or bonds
that are not traded frequently. |
| Timing |
See: Market timing |
| Timing option |
The seller's choice of when in the delivery month to deliver. A
Treasury Bond or notefutures contract. |
| Tip |
Information given by one trader to another, which is used in
making buy or sell decisions but is not available to the general
public. |
| TIPS |
See: Treasury inflation-proteced securities |
| Tired |
Has been strong for a while and will probably fall due to
increased supply at current price level (due to e.g. profit
taking, technical analysis). Heavy. |
| TITAL |
See: Transaction insured trade acceptance locator |
| Title insurance |
Insurance policy that protects a policyholder from future
challenges to the title claim a property that may result in loss
of the property. |
| TJ |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TAJIKISTAN. |
| TJR |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Tajikistan Rouble. |
| TK |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TOKELAU. |
| TM |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TURKMENISTAN. |
| TMM |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Turkmenistan Manet. |
| TN |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TUNISIA. |
| TND |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Tunisian Dinar. |
| TO |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TONGA. |
| To be announced (TBA) |
A contract for the purchase or sale of an MBS to be delivered at
an agreed-upon future date but does not include a specified pool
number and number of pools or precise amount to be delivered. |
| Tobin's Q |
Market value of assets divided by replacement value of assets. A
Tobin's Q ratio greater than 1 indicates the firm has done well
with its investment decisions. Named after James Tobin, Yale
University economist. |
| Toehold purchase |
Often used in risk arbitrage. Accumulation by an acquirer of
less than 5% of the shares of a target company. Once 5% is
acquired, the acquirer must file with the SEC and other agencies
to explain its intentions and notify the acquiree. See: Rule
13d. |
| TOGC |
See transfer as a going concern. |
| Tokyo Commodity Exchange (TOCOM) |
Tokyo exchange for tradingfutures on gold, silver, platinum,
palladium, rubber, cotton yarn, and woolen yarn. |
| Tokyo International Financial Futures Exchange |
Exchange that trades Euroyen futures and options, and futures on
the one-year Euroyen, three-month eurodollar, and US
dollar/Japanese yen currency. |
| Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) |
The largest stock exchange in Japan with the some of the most
activetrading in the world. |
| Toll revenue bond |
A municipal bond that is repaid with revenues from tolls that
are paid by users of the public project built with the bond
revenue. |
| Tolling agreement |
An agreement to put a specified amount of raw material per
period through a particular processing facility. For example, an
agreement to process a specified amount of alumina into aluminum
at a particular aluminum plant. |
| Tom next |
Means to "tomorrow next". In the interbank market in Eurodollar
deposits and the foreign exchange market, the value (delivery)
date on a tom next transaction is the next business day. |
| Tombstone |
Advertisement listing the underwriters of a securityissue. |
| Ton |
$100 million in bondtrader'sterms. |
| too-big-too-fail |
Government practices that protect large banking organizations
from the normal discipline of the marketplace because of
concerns that such institutions are so important to markets and
their positions so intertwined with those of other banks that
their failure would be unaccrptably disruptive, financially and
economically. |
| TOP |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Tonga Pa'anga. |
| Top |
Indicates the higher price one is willing to pay for a stock in
an order; implies a not held order. |
| Top-down approach |
A method of security selection that starts with asset allocation
and works systematically through sector and industry allocation
to individual security selection. |
| Top-down equity management style |
Investment style that begins with an assessment of the overall
economic environment and makes a general asset allocation
decision regarding various sectors of the financial markets and
various industries. The bottom-up manager, in contrast, selects
specific securities within the particular sectors. |
| Top-heavy |
At a price level where supply is exceeding demand. See:
Resistance level. |
| Topline growth |
Growth in revenues. Also see: Bottomline growth. |
| Topping out |
Denoting a market or a security that is at the end of a period
of rising prices and can now be expected to stay on a plateau or
even to decline. |
| Toronto Stock Exchange (TSE) |
Canada's largest stock exchange, trading approximately 1,200
company stocks and 33 options. |
| Total |
Complete amount of buy or sell interest, as opposed to having
more behind it. See: Partial. |
| Total asset turnover |
The ratio of net sales to total assets. |
| Total capitalization |
The total long-termdebt and all types of equity of a company
that constitutes its capital structure. |
| Total cost |
The price paid for a security plus the broker'scommission and
any accrued interest that is owed to the seller (in the case of
a bond). |
| Total debt-to-equity ratio |
A capitalization ratio comparing current liabilities plus
long-termdebt to shareholders' equity. |
| Total dollar return |
The dollar return on a nondollar investment, which includes the
sum of any dividend/interest income, capital gains or losses,
and currencygains or losses on the investment. See also: Total
return. |
| Total Market Capitalization |
The total market value of all of a firm'soutstandingsecurities. |
| Total return |
In performance measurement, the actual rate of return realized
over some evaluation period. In fixed income analysis, the
potential return that considers all three sources of return
(coupon interest, interest on coupon interest, and any capital
gain/loss) over some investment horizon. |
| Total return for calendar year |
The profit or loss realized by an investment at the end of a
specified calendar year, stated as the percentage gained or lost
per dollar invested on January 1. |
| Total revenue |
Total sales and other revenue for the period shown. Known as
"turnover" in the U.K. |
| Total risk |
The sum of systematic and unsystematic risk. |
| Total volume |
The total number of shares or contractstraded on national and
regional exchanges in a stock, bond, commodity, future, or
option on a certain day. |
| Touch, the |
Mainly applies to international equities. Inside market in
London terminology. |
| Tough on price |
Firm price mentality at which one wishes to transact stock,
often at a discount/premium that is not available at the time. |
| Tout |
To promote a security in order to attract buyers. |
| Toxic Convertible |
Used by companies that are in such bad shape, that there is no
other way to get financing. This instrument is similar to a
convertible bond, but convertible at a discount to the share
price at issuance and for a fixed dollar amount rather than a
specific number of shares. The further the stock falls, the more
shares you get. Popular in the mid to late 1990s. Also known as
death spiral convertibles or floorless convertibles. |
| TP |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for EAST TIMOR. |
| T-period holding-period return |
The percentage return over the T-year period an investment is
held. |
| TR |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TURKEY. |
| Tracers |
Refers to investment trusts which are populated by corporate
bonds. In October 2001, Morgan Stanley's Tradable Custodial
Receipts (Tracers) was launched. Tracers contain a number of
coporate bonds and credit default swaps which are selected for
liquidity and diversity. Lehman Brothers launched a similar
product, Targeted Return Index Securities (Trains) in January
2002. Both contain investment grade bonds. If a bond falls out
of the investment grade category, it is either liquidated from
the trust or delivered to the investor. Both Tracers and Trains
are 144a trust structures and are only available to qualified
buyers because they are considered private securities due to the
trust structure. |
| Tracking error |
In an indexingstrategy, the standard deviation of the difference
between the performance of the benchmark and the replicating
portfolio. |
| Tracking stock |
Best defined with an example. Suppose Company A purchases a
business from Company B and pays B with 1 million shares of A's
stock. The agreement provides that B cannot sell the 1 million
shares for 60 days, and also prohibits B from hedging by
purchasingput options on A's shares or short-selling A's shares.
B is worried that the market may fall in the next 60 days. B
could hedge by purchasing put options or selling the futures on
the S&P 500. However, it is possible that A's business is much
more cyclical than the S&P 500. One solution to this problem is
to find a tracking stock. This is a stock that has high
correlation with A. Let us call it Company C. The solution is to
sell short or buy protective put options on this tracking stock
C. This protects B from fluctuations in the price of A's stock
over the next 60 days. Because the degree of the protection is
related to the correlation of A and C's stock, it is extremely
unlikely that the protection is perfect. Multidivisional firms
have used a form of restructuring called tracking stock since
1984 to segment the performance of a particular division --
similar to a spin-off or carve-out, except that the parent firm
does not relinquish control of the tracked division. Previously,
this was known as alphabet stock, but the technically correct
name is tracking stock (e.g., EDS traded for years as a tracking
stock of GM). This is a way to reward managers for good
divisional performance with an equity that is tied to their
division-rather than potentially penalizing them compensation
for bad performance in a division they have no control over. |
| Trade |
An oral (or electronic) transaction involving one party buying a
security from another party. Once a trade is consummated, it is
considered "done" or final. Settlement occurs 1-5 business days
later. |
| Trade acceptance |
Written demand that has been accepted by an industrial company
to pay a given sum at a future date. Related: Banker's
acceptance. |
| Trade away |
Tradeexecution by another broker/dealer. |
| Trade balance |
Overall result of a country's exports. |
| Trade credit |
Credit one firm grants to another firm for the purchase of goods
or services. |
| Trade date |
The date that the counterparties in an interest rate swap commit
to the swap. Also, the day on which a security or a commodity
future trade actually takes place. Trades generally settle (are
paid for) 1-5 business days after a trade date. With stocks,
settlement is generally 3 business days after the trade. The
settlement date usually follows the trade date by five business
days, but varies depending on the transaction and method of
delivery used. |
| Trade debt |
Accounts payable. |
| Trade deficit or surplus |
The difference in the value of a nation's imports over exports
(deficit) or exports over imports (surplus). |
| Trade draft |
A draft addressed to a commercial enterprise. See: Draft. |
| Trade flat |
For convertibles, trade without accrued interest. Preferred
stock always "trades flat," as do bonds on which interest is in
default or is in doubt. In general, trade in and out of a
position at the same price, neither making a profit nor taking a
loss. |
| Trade house |
A firm that deals in actual commodities. |
| Trade Lanes |
The direction of trade, e.g. US to Europe. |
| Trade on the wire |
Immediately give a bid or offer to a salesperson without
checking the floor conditions (listed), dealer depth (OTC) or
customer interest. An aggressivetrading posture. |
| Trade on top of |
Trade at a narrow speed or no spread in basis points relative to
some other bond yield, usually Treasury bonds. |
| Trade reporting |
Dealer: In a trade between two registered Market Participants
(MP), only the sell side reports the trade. Auction: In a trade
between two member firms, only the sell side reports the trade.
Dealer: In a trade between a registered MP and a non-registered
MP (Market Maker not registered in a particular stock, an ECN,
etc.), the registered MP reports the trade as a buy or sell.
Auction: Trading can occur ONLY between two member firms. (Thus,
a buy is never reported.) |
| Trade Surplus |
A nation's excess of exports over imports during a given time
frame. |
| Trademark |
A distinctive name or symbol used to identify a product or
company and build recognition. Trademarks may be registered with
the US Patent and Trademark Office. |
| Traders |
Individuals who take positions in securities and their
derivatives with the objective of making profits. Traders can
make markets by trading the flow. When they do this, their
objective is to earn the bid/askspread. Traders can also take
proprietarypositions in which they seek to profit from the
directional movement of prices or spreadpositions. |
| Trades by appointment |
A stock that is very difficult to trade to because of
illiquidity. |
| Trade-weight value of the dollar |
The value of the dollar pegged to, a market basket of selected
foreign currencies. The Federal Reserve calculates a
trade-weighted value of the dollar based on the weighted-average
exchange value of the dollar against the currencies of 10
industrial countries. |
| Trading |
Buying and selling securities. |
| Trading Ahead |
A New York Stock Exchange rule violation. Basically, in this
situation the specialist puts their firm's interest ahead of the
investor's interest. Consider an example. Suppose that the
specialist simultaneously receives orders from two investors,
one to sell 5,000 shares of XYZ and one to buy 5,000 shares of
XYZ. Normally, these orders are matched. However, suppose that
the specialist substitutes (matches) her own firm's 5,000 shares
of XYZ. That is, the firm's own shares are sold instead of the
order that came in previously. This disadvantages the buyer
because the very next transaction will be the order to sell
5,000 shares of XYZ (which will likely put downward pressure on
the price). Notice that the firm has bailed out of XYZ at a
higher price than if the order was reversed (the specialist's
firm selling afterwards). Trading ahead is part of what is known
as negative obligation. Trading ahead should not be confused
with front_running. |
| Trading authorization |
A document (power of attorney) a customer gives to a broker in
order that the broker may buy and sell securities on behalf of
the customer. |
| Trading costs |
Costs of buying and selling marketable securities and borrowing.
Tradingcosts include commissions, slippage, and the
bid/askspread. See: Transactions costs. |
| Trading desk (dealing desk) |
Personnel at an international bank who tradespot and
forwardforeign exchange. |
| Trading dividends |
Maximizing a firm's revenues by purchasing stock in other firms
in order to collect the maximum amount of dividends of which 70%
is tax-free. |
| Trading halt |
When trading of a stock, bond, option or futures contract is
stopped by an exchange while news is being broadcast about the
security. See: Suspended trading. |
| Trading limit |
The exchange-imposed maximum daliy price change that a futures
contract or futures option contract can undergo. |
| Trading paper |
CDspurchased by accounts that are likely to resell them. The
term is commonly used in the Euromarket. |
| Trading pattern |
Long-range direction of a security or commodityfutures price,
charted by drawing one line connecting the highest prices the
security has reached and another line connecting the lowest
prices at which the security has traded over the same period.
See: Technical analysis. |
| Trading posts |
The positions on the floor of a stock exchange where the
specialists stand and securities are traded. |
| Trading price |
The price at which a security is currently selling. |
| Trading profit |
The profit earned on short-termtrades of securities held for
less than one year, subject to tax at normal income tax rates. |
| Trading range |
The difference between the high and low pricestraded during a
period of time; for commodities, the high/low price limit an
exchange establishes for a specific commodity for any one day's
trading. |
| Trading symbol |
See: Ticker symbol |
| Trading unit |
The number of shares of a particular security that is used as
the acceptable quantity for trading on the exchanges. |
| Trading variation |
The increments to which securities prices are rounded up or
rounded down. |
| Trading volume |
The number of shares transacted every day. As there is a seller
for every buyer, one can think of the trading volume as half of
the number of shares transacted. That is, if A sells 100 shares
to B, the volume is 100 shares. |
| Traditional IRA |
A tax-deferred individual retirement account that allows
annualcontributions of up to $2000 for each income earner.
Contributions are fully deductible for all individuals who are
not active participants in employer-sponsored plans or for plan
participants within certain income ranges. |
| Traditional view (of dividend policy) |
An argument that, "within reason," investors prefer higher
dividends to lower dividends because the dividend is sure but
future capital gains are uncertain. |
| Trailing earnings |
Past earnings. Often used in the context of the price earnings
ratio. This ratio is usually distinguished as price to trailing
earnings (today's price divided by the most recent 12 months of
earnings) versus price to prospective earnings (today's price
divided by consensus forecast earnings for the next 12 months). |
| Trailing sales |
Past sales. Often used in the valuation of companies that have
negative cash flows or earnings. The company is said to be
valued at some multiple of past sales - usually, the last 12
months sales. |
| Trains |
Refers to investment trusts which are populated by corporate
bonds. In October 2001, Morgan Stanley's Tradable Custodial
Receipts (Tracers) was launched. Tracers contain a number of
coporate bonds and credit default swaps which are selected for
liquidity and diversity. Lehman Brothers launched a similar
product, Targeted Return Index Securities (Trains) in January
2002. Both contain investment grade bonds. If a bond falls out
of the investment grade category, it is either liquidated from
the trust or delivered to the investor. Both Tracers and Trains
are 144a trust structures and are only available to qualified
buyers because they are considered private securities due to the
trust structure. |
| Tranche |
Part of a loan to be drawn down or repaid. |
| Tranche |
One of several related securities offered at the same time.
Tranches from the same offering usually have different risk,
reward, and/or maturity characteristics. |
| Tranching |
The segregation of a pool of loans by level of risk. |
| Transaction |
The delivery of a security by a seller and its acceptance by the
buyer. |
| Transaction account |
A checking or similar account from which transfers can be made
to third parties. Demand-deposit accounts, negotiable order of
withdrawal NOW accounts, automatic transfer service (ATS)
accounts, and credit union share draft accounts are examples of
transaction accounts at banks and other depository institutions. |
| Transaction demand (for money) |
The money needed to accommodate a firm's expected
cashtransactions. |
| Transaction exposure |
Risk to a firm with known future cash flows in a foreign
currency, that arises from possible changes in the exchange
rate. Related: Translation exposure. |
| Transaction fee |
A charge an intermediary, such as a broker-dealer or a bank,
assesses for assisting in the sale or purchase of a security. |
| Transaction Insured Trade Acceptance Locator (TITAL) |
A trade acceptance through an insurance entity (rather than a
bank) which is conditional upon exporter performance. |
| Transaction loan |
A loan extended by a bank for a specific purpose. Lines of
credit and revolving credit agreements involve by contrast loans
that can be used for various purposes. |
| Transaction risk |
The risk of changes in the home currency value of a specific
future foreign currencycash flow. |
| Transaction tax |
Applies mainly to international equities. Levies on a deal that
foreign governments sometimes charge. |
| Transactions costs |
The time, effort, and money necessary, including such things as
commission fees and the cost of physically moving the asset from
seller to buyer. Transcationscosts should also include the
bid/ask spread as well as price impact costs (for example a
large sell order could lower the price). Related: Round-trip
transactions costs, information costs, search costs. |
| Transactions motive |
A desire to holdcash in order to conduct cash-based
transactions. |
| Transcript of Account |
A listing of all prior and present registered securityholder
account information. |
| Transfer |
A change of ownership from one person or party to another. |
| Transfer agent |
Individual or institution a company appoints to look after the
transfer of securities. |
| Transfer as a going concern |
A transfer of a business that is outside the scope of VAT. Most
transfers of investment properties can be treated as TOGCs if
they are income producing provided certain conditions are
fulfilled. No VAT changes hands. |
| Transfer On Death (TOD) |
The process of changing title of a security from one name to
another upon the death of one of the titleholders. |
| Transfer payments |
Payments from a government to its citizens, such as welfare and
other government benefits. |
| Transfer price |
The price at which one unit of a firm sells goods or services to
another unit of the same firm. |
| Transfer risk |
The risk associated with the possibility of a currency not being
able to be sent out of the country, usually due to central bank
restrictions or a national debt rescheduling. |
| Transfer tax |
A small federal tax on the movement of ownership of all bonds
(except obligation of the US, foreign governments, states, and
municipalities) and all stocks. |
| Transferable letter of credit |
Document that allows the first beneficiary on a standby bank
assurance of funds to transfer all or part of the original
letter of credit to a third party. |
| Transferable put right |
An optionissued by a firm to its shareholders to sell the firm
one share of its common stock at a fixed price (the strike
price) within a stated period (the time to maturity). The put
right is "transferable" because it can be traded in the capital
markets. |
| Transferable Stock Options |
Options that provide by their terms that they may be transferred
by the optionee, generally only to a family member or to a
trust, limited partnership or other entity for the benefit of
family members, or to a charity. |
| Transferee |
The party who has received the benefits of a letter of credit by
action of a transfer. |
| Transferor |
The beneficiary of a transferable letter of credit who causes a
bank to transfer the credit to another party. |
| Transition phase |
A stage of development when a company begins to mature and its
earnings decelerate to the rate of growth of the economy as a
whole. Related: Three-phase DDM. |
| Translation exposure |
Risk of adverse effects on a firm'sfinancial statements that may
arise from changes in exchange rates. Related: Transaction
exposure. |
| Translation Risk |
The risk of changes in the reported home currency accounting
results of foreign operations due to changes in currency
exchange rates. |
| Transmittal letter |
A letter describing the contents and purpose of a transaction
delivered with a security that is changing ownership. |
| Transshipment |
The passing goods from one ocean vessel to another. |
| Travel and entertainment expense |
Funds spent on business travel and entertainment that qualify
for a tax deduction of 50% of the amount claimed. |
| Treasurer |
The corporate officer responsible for designing and implementing
a firm's financing and investing activities. |
| Treasurer's check |
A check issued by a bank to make a payment. Treasurer's checks
outstanding are counted as part of a bank's reservable deposits
and as part of the money supply. |
| Treasuries |
Related: Treasury securities |
| Treasury |
US Department of the Treasury, which issues all Treasury bonds,
notes, and bills as well as overseeing agencies. Also, the
department within a corporation that oversees its financial
operations including the issuance of new shares. |
| Treasury bills |
Debtobligations of the US Treasury that have maturities of one
year or less. Maturities for T-bills are usually 91 days, 182
days, or 52 weeks. Treasury bills are sold at a discount from
face value and do not pay interest before maturity. The interest
is the difference between the purchase price of the bill and the
amount that is paid to you either at maturity (this amount is
the face value) or when you sell the bill prior to maturity. |
| Treasury bonds |
Debtobligations of the US Treasury that have maturities of more
than 10 years. |
| Treasury certificates |
From 1963 to 1975, the Treasury issued something called a
"Treasury Certificates". It was a nonmarketable, public issue
with a short maturity, usually three months and never more than
a one year. They were issued once or twice every month with odd
interest rates (such as 5.471% and 6.053%) and sold at par. |
| Treasury direct |
A system allowing an individual investor to make a
noncompetitive bid on US Treasurysecurities and thus avoid
broker-dealer fees. |
| Treasury Inflation-Indexed Securities (TIIS) |
Refers to a broad range of U.S. Treasury securities that are
inflation indexed. The most popular are the TIPS. The index for
measuring the inflation rate is the non-seasonally adjusted U.S.
City Average All Items Consumer Price Index for All Urban
Consumers (CPI-U), published monthly by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS). |
| Treasury Inflation-Protected Security (TIPS) |
First issued by the U.S. Treasury in 1997, these Treasury bonds
attempt to protect investors against fluctuations in inflation
by linking the principal amount to the consumer price index.
Each year, the principal is adjusted by the inflation rate
during the previous year. The index for measuring the inflation
rate is the non-seasonally adjusted U.S. City Average All Items
Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U), published
monthly by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). These bonds are
taxable. Indeed, one must pay tax on both the interest and the
increase in principal. TIPS are one of two types of
inflation-indexed securities sold by the U.S. Treasury; the
other type is Series I Savings Bonds. |
| Treasury Investors Growth Receipt (TIGER) |
US government-backed bonds without coupons, meaning that the
bondholders do not receive the periodic interest payments. The
principal of the bond and the individual coupons are sold
separately. |
| Treasury notes |
Debtobligations of the US Treasury that have maturities of more
than one year, but not more than 10 years. |
| Treasury securities |
Securitiesissued by the US Department of the Treasury. |
| Treasury Shares |
Shares issued in the name of the corporation. The shares are
considered issued, but not outstanding.Usually refers to stock
that was once traded in the market but has since been
repurchased by the corporation. Treasury stock not considered
when calculating dividends or earnings per share. |
| Treasury stock |
Common stock that has been repurchased by the company and held
in the company's treasury. |
| Trend |
The general direction of the market. |
| Trend Ratio Analysis |
The comparison of the successive values of each ratio for a
single firm over a number of years. |
| Trendline |
A technical chart line that depicts the past movement of a
security and that is used in an attempt to help predict future
price movements. |
| T-Rex Fund |
A large venture capital fund (over one billion dollars). Such
funds are known for imposing strong discipline on the firms they
fund. |
| Treynor Index |
A measure of the excess return per unit of risk, where excess
return is defined as the difference between the portfolio's
return and the risk-free rate of return over the same evaluation
period and where the unit of risk is the portfolio's beta. Named
after Jack Treynor. |
| Triangular arbitrage |
Striking offsetting deals among three markets simultaneously to
obtain an arbitrageprofit. |
| Trickle down |
An economic theory that the support of businesses that allows
them to flourish will eventually benefit middle- and
lower-income people, in the form of increased economic activity
and reduced unemployment. |
| TRIN |
Name derived from TRading INdex. Also known as an ARMS index.
The index is usually calculated as the number of advancing
issues divided by the number of declining issues. This, in turn,
is divided by the advancing volume divided by the declining
volume. If there is considerably more advancing volume relative
to declining volume this will tend to reduce the index (i.e.
increase the denominator). Hence, a value less than 1.0 is
bullish while values greater than 1.0 indicate bearish demand.
The index often is smoothed with a simple moving average. |
| Triple net lease |
A lease providing that the tenant pay for all maintenance
expenses, plus utilities, taxes, and insurance. This results in
lower risk for investors, who usually form a limited
partnership. |
| Triple tax-exempt |
Municipal bonds featuring federal, state, and local tax-free
interest payments. |
| Triple witching hour |
The four times a year that the S&Pfutures contractexpires at the
same time as the S&P 100 index option contract and option
contracts on individual stocks. It is the last trading hour on
the third Friday of March, June, September, and December, when
stock options, futures on stock indexes, and options on these
futures expire concurrently. Massive trades in indexfutures,
options, and underlyingstock by hedge strategists and
arbitrageurs cause abnormal activity (noise) and volatility. |
| TRL |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Turkish Lira. |
| Trough |
The transition point between economic recession and recovery. |
| True interest cost |
For a security such as commercial paper that is sold on a
discount basis, true interestcost is the coupon rate required to
provide an identical return assuming a coupon-bearing instrument
of like maturity that pays interest in arrears. |
| True lease |
A contract that qualifies as a valid lease agreement under the
Internal Revenue Code. |
| Trust |
A fiduciary relationship calling for a trustee to hold the title
to assets for the benefit of the beneficiary. The person
creating the trust, who may or may not also be the beneficiary,
is called the grantor. |
| Trust company |
An organization that acts as a fiduciary and administers trusts. |
| Trust deed |
Agreement between trustee and borrower setting out terms of a
bond. |
| Trust fund transaction |
An intra budgetary financial arrangement in which both payments
and receipts occur within the same trust fund group. |
| Trust Indenture Act of 1939 |
A law that requires all corporate bonds and other debt
securities to be issued subject to indenture agreements and
comply with certain indenture provisions approved by the SEC. |
| Trust receipt |
Receipt for goods that are to be held in trust for the lender. |
| Trustee |
Agent of a bondissuer who handles the administrative aspects of
a loan and ensures that the borrower complies with the terms of
the bond indenture. |
| Trustee in bankruptcy |
An appointed trustee who supervises and administers the affairs
of a bankrupt company or individual. |
| Truth in lending law |
Legislation governing the granting of credit, that requires
lenders to disclose the true cost of loans and the actual
interest rates and terms of the loans in a manner that is easily
understood. |
| TSE 300 (Toronto Stock Exchange 100 index) |
Canadian form of a S&P 500. |
| TT |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO. |
| TT&L account |
Treasury tax and loan account at a bank. |
| TTD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Trinidad and Tobago Dollar. |
| TTM |
Trailing 12 months. Often used with Earnings Per Share. |
| Turkey |
A losing investment. |
| Turn |
In the equities market, a reversal; unwind. |
| Turnaround |
Securities bought and sold for settlement on the same day. Also
describes a firm that has been performing poorly, but changes
its financial course and improves its performance. |
| Turnaround time |
Time available or needed to effect a turnaround. |
| Turnkey construction contract |
A type of construction contract under which the construction
firm is obligated to complete a project according to
prespecified criteria for a price that is fixed at the time the
contract is signed. |
| Turnover |
For mutual funds, a measure of trading activity during the
previous year, expressed as a percentage of the average total
assets of the fund. A turnover rate of 25% means that the value
of trades represented one-fourth of the assets of the fund. For
finance, the number of times a given asset, such as inventory,
is replaced during the accounting period, usually a year. For
corporate finance, the ratio of annualsales to net worth,
representing the extent to which a company can grow without
outside capital. For markets, the volume of sharestraded as a
percent of total shares listed during a specified period,
usually a day or a year. For Great Britain, total revenue.
Percentage of the total number of sharesoutstanding of an issue
that trades during any given period. |
| Turnover rate |
Measures trading activity during a particular period. Portfolios
with high turnover rates incur higher transactioncosts and are
more likely to distribute capital gains, which are taxable to
nonretirement accounts. |
| Turnover rent |
Rent which varies in relation to a tenant’s turnover. Used
mainly in shopping centres where the rent is related to what
goes through the till. Often the tenant is obliged to pay a
basic rent with a top-up element related to actual turnover. |
| TV |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TUVALU. |
| TW |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TAIWAN, PROVINCE OF
CHINA. |
| TWD |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Taiwan Dollar. |
| Twenty bond index |
A benchmarkindicator of the level of municipal bondyields. It
consists of the yields on 20 general obligationmunicipal bonds
with 20-year maturities with an average rating equivalent to
a1l. |
| Twenty-day period |
The period during which the SEC inspects registration statement
and preliminary prospectus prior to a new issue or secondary
distribution. |
| Twisting |
Convincing a customer that trades are necessary in order to
generate a commission. This is an unethical practice. |
| Two dollar broker |
Floor broker of the NYSE, who executesorders for other brokers
having more business at that time than they can handle with
their own private floor brokers or who do not have their
exchangemember on the floor. |
| Two-factor model |
Usually, Fischer Black's zero-beta version of the capital asset
pricing model. It may also refer to another type of model
whereby expected returns are generated by any two factors. |
| Two-fund separation theorem |
The theoretical result that all investors will hold a
combination of the risk-free asset and the market portfolio. |
| Two-sided market |
A market in which both bid and asked prices, good for the
standard unit of trading, are quoted. When customers or market
makers are lined up on both sides (buy and sell) of a stock. |
| Two-state option pricing model |
A pricing equation allowing an underlying asset to assume only
two possible (discrete) values in the next time period for each
value it can take on in the preceding time period. Also called
the binomial option pricing model. |
| Two-tier bid |
Takeoverbid in which the acquirer offers to pay more for the
shares needed to gain control than for the remaining shares, or
to pay the same price but at different times in the merger
period; contrasts with any-or-allbid. |
| Two-tier tax system |
Taxation system that results in taxing the income going to
shareholders twice. |
| Type |
The classification of an option contract as either a put or a
call. |
| TZ |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for TANZANIA, UNITED
REPUBLIC OF. |
| TZS |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Tanzania Shilling. |