| W |
Fifth letter of a Nasdaqstock symbol indicating that this
particular stock is a warrant. |
| W-8 |
Certificate of Foreign Status form required by the IRS to tell
the payer, transfer agent, broker or other middleman that an
employee is a nonresident alien or foreign entity that is not
subject to U.S. tax reporting or backup withholding rules. |
| W-9 |
Request for Taxpayer Identification Number and Certification
form required by the IRS to furnish the payer, transfer agent,
broker or other middleman with an employee's social security or
taxpayer identification number, in order that the employee not
be subject to backup withholding because of under-reporting of
interest and dividends on his or her tax return. |
| W-9 |
A form used to certify a shareholder's social security or tax
identification number as true and correct, in order to avoid
federal tax withholding. |
| WACC |
See: Weighted average cost of capital |
| Wage assignment |
A loan agreement provision allowing the lender to deduct
payments from an employee's wages in case of default. |
| Wage-push inflation |
Inflation caused by skyrocketing wages. |
| Waiting period |
Time during which the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
studies a firm's registration statement. During this time the
firm may distribute a preliminary prospectus. |
| Waiver of premium |
A provision in an insurance policy that allows payment of
insurance premiums to be permanently or temporarily stopped in
the event the policyholder becomes incapacitated. |
| Walk away |
To take and maintain a position in a stock after going to the
floor to consummate a trade. Antithesis of trade me out, buy
them back. |
| Wall Street |
Generic term for the securities industry firms that buy, sell,
and underwritesecurities. |
| Wall Street analyst |
Related: Sell-side analyst |
| Wallflower |
Stock that has fallen out of favor with investors; stock that
tends to have a low P/E (price-to-earnings ratio). |
| Wallpaper |
A security with no monetary value. |
| Wanted for cash |
A statement displayed on market tickers indicating that a bidder
will pay cash for same-day settlement of a block of a specified
security. |
| War babies |
Slang term for the stocks and bonds of corporations in the
defense industry. |
| War chest |
Cash kept aside for a takeover or for defense against a
takeoverbid. |
| War Risk Insurance |
Separate insurance coverage against loss or damage due to acts
of war (including objects left over from previous wars). |
| Warehouse receipt |
Evidence that a firm owns goods stored in a warehouse. |
| Warehousing |
The interim holding period from the time of the closing of a
loan to its subsequent marketing to capital market investors. |
| Warrant |
A security entitling the holder to buy a proportionate amount of
stock at some specified future date at a specified price,
usually one higher than current market price. Warrants are
traded as securities whose price reflects the value of the
underlying stock. Corporations often bundle warrants with
another class of security to enhance the marketability of the
other class. Warrants are like call options, but with much
longer time spans-sometimes years. And, warrants are offered by
corporations, while exchange-tradedcall options are not issued
by firms. |
| Warranty |
A guarantee by a seller to a buyer that if a product requires
repair or remedy of a problem within a certain period after its
purchase, the seller will repair the problem at no cost to the
buyer. |
| Warsaw Stock Exchange |
The major securities market of Poland. |
| Wash |
Gains equal losses. |
| Wash sale |
Purchase and sale of a security either simultaneously or within
a short period of time, often in order to recognize a tax loss
without altering one's position. See: Tax selling. |
| Wasting asset |
An asset that has a limited life and thus decreases in value
(depreciates) over time. Also applies to consumed assets, such
as oil or gas, and termed "depletion." |
| Watch list |
A list of securities selected for special surveillance by a
brokerage, exchange, or regulatory organization; firms on the
list are often takeover targets, companies planning to issue new
securities, or stocks showing unusual activity. |
| Watered stock |
A stock representing ownership in a corporation that is worth
less than the actual invested capital, resulting in problems of
low liquidity, inadequate return on investment, and low market
value. |
| Waybill |
A document (that looks like a bill of lading) issued by a
carrier that describes the goods to be transported and that
details the shipping particulars. Waybills are issued by both
air carriers (air waybills) and ship lines (sea waybills). They
merely indicate that the stated goods were received by the
carrier for transport, they do not convey title. |
| Weak dollar |
A depreciated dollar with respect to other currencies, meaning
that more dollars are needed to buy a unit of foreign currency.
Antithesis of strong dollar. |
| Weak market |
A market with few buyers and many sellers and a declining trend
in prices. |
| Weak-form efficiency |
A pricing theory that the price of a security reflects the past
price and trading history of the security. Theory implies that
security prices follow a random walk. Related: Semistrong-form
efficiency, strong-form efficiency. |
| WEBS |
See: World Equity Benchmark Series |
| Wedge |
A chart pattern composed of two converging lines connecting
peaks and troughs. In the case of falling wedges, the pattern
indicates temporary interruptions of upward price rallies. In
the case of rising wedges, indicates interruptions of a falling
price trend. |
| Weekend effect |
The common recurrent low or negative average return from Friday
to Monday in the stock market. |
| Weight |
Either Gross Weight, Net Weight, or Tare Weight. |
| Weighted average cost of capital (WACC) |
Expected return on a portfolio of all a firm's securities. Used
as a hurdle rate for capital investment. Often the weighted
average of the cost of equity and the cost of debt The weights
are determined by the relative proportions of equity and debt in
a firm's capital structure. |
| Weighted average Coupon |
The weighted average of the gross interest rates of
mortgagesunderlying a pool as of the pool issue date; the
balance of each mortgage is used as the weighting factor. |
| Weighted average life |
See: Average life |
| Weighted average maturity |
The weighted average maturity of an MBS is the weighted average
of the remaining terms to maturity of the mortgages underlying
the collateral pool at the date issue, using as the weighting
factor the balance of each of the mortgages as of the issue
date. |
| Weighted average portfolio yield |
The weighted average of the yield of all the bonds in a
portfolio. |
| Weighted average remaining maturity |
The average remaining term of the mortgages underlying a MBS. |
| Well-diversified portfolio |
A portfolio that includes a variety of securities so that the
weight of any security is small. The risk of a well-diversified
portfolio closely approximates the systematic risk of the
overall market, and the unsystematic risk of each security has
been diversified out of the portfolio. |
| WF |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for WALLIS AND FUTUNA. |
| When distributed |
When issued. |
| When issued (W.I.) |
Refers to a transaction made conditionally, because a security,
although authorized, has not yet been issued. Treasury
securities, new issues of stocks and bonds, stocks that have
split, and in-merger situations after the time the proxy has
become effective but before completion are all traded on a
when-issued basis. With ice. |
| Whipsawed |
Buying stocks just before prices fall and selling stocks just
before prices rise in a volatilemarket, often as the result of
misleading signals. |
| Whisper number or forecast |
An unofficial earnings estimate of a company given to clients by
a securityanalyst if there is more optimism or pessimism about
earnings than shown in the published number. These are often
found on the Internet. |
| Whisper stock |
A stock rumored to be the target of a takeoverbid, drawing
speculators who hope to make a profit after the takeover is
completed. |
| Whistle blower |
A person who has knowledge of fraudulent activities inside a
firm or government agency, who is protected from the employer's
retribution by federal law. |
| White knight |
A friendly potential acquirer sought out by a target firm that
is threatened by a less welcome suitor. |
| White Noise |
The audio equivalent of Brownian motion. Sounds that are
unrelated and sound like a hiss. The video equivalent of white
noise is "snow" in television reception. |
| White sheets |
Lists of prices published by the National Quotation Bureau for
Market Makers. |
| White squire |
White knight who buys less than a majority interest. |
| Whitemail |
Sale of a large amount of stock by a company that is the target
of a takeoverbid to a friendly party at below-market prices, so
that the raider is forced to buy more of highly priced shares to
accomplish the takeover. |
| White's rating |
A rating of municipal securities, that uses marketfactors rather
than credit considerations to find appropriate yields. |
| White-shoe firm |
Broker-dealer firms that disdain practices such as hostile
takeovers. |
| Whitewash |
The procedure under section 155 of the Companies Act 1985
whereby the prohibition on financial assistance is relaxed in
relation to private companies. |
| Whole life insurance |
A contract with both insurance and investment components: (1) It
pays off a stated amount upon the death of the insured, and (2)
it accumulates a cash value that the policyholder can redeem or
borrow against. |
| Whole loan |
A term that distinguishes an investment representing an original
mortgage loan from a loan representing a participation with one
or more lenders. |
| Wholesale mortgage banking |
The purchasing of loans originated by others, for the
acquisition of the servicing rights. |
| Wholesaler |
An underwriter or a broker-dealer who trades with other
broker-dealers, rather than with the retail investor. |
| Wholly owned subsidiary |
A subsidiary whose parent company owns virtually 100% of its
common stock. |
| Whoops |
A nickname for the Washington Public Power Supply System, which
in the 1970s raised billions of dollars through municipal
bondofferings, the projects that never materialized. WPPSS
defaulted on the payments to bondholders. |
| WI |
See: When issued |
| WI WI |
Come from when issued. Treasury bills trade on a WI basis
between the day they are auctioned and the day settlement is
made. Bills traded before they are auctioned are said to be
traded WI WI |
| Wide opening |
Abnormally wide spread between the bid and asked prices of a
security at the opening of a trading session. |
| Widow-and-orphan stock |
A stock paying high dividends with a low beta and noncyclical
business, that is an extremely safe investment. |
| Wiener Börse (Austrian Stock Exchange) |
Established in 1771, the major securities market of Austria. |
| Wild card option |
The right of the seller of a Treasury bondfutures contract to
give notice of intent to deliver at or before 8:00 p.m. Chicago
time after the closing of the exchange (3:15 p.m. Chicago time)
when the futuressettlement price has been fixed. Related: Timing
option. |
| Williams Act |
Federal legislation enacted in 1968 (and now constituting Rules
13d and 14d of the Security Exchange Act of 1934) that imposes
requirements with respect to public tender offers. |
| Wilshire indexes |
Widely followed performance measurementindexes measuring
performance of all U.S.-headquartered equitysecurities with
readily available price data, created by Wilshire Associates,
Inc. |
| Windfall profit |
A sudden unexpected profit uncontrolled by the profiting party. |
| Window |
A brokerage firm's cashier department, where delivery of
securities and settlement of transactions take place. |
| Window contract |
A guaranteed investment contract purchased with deposits over
some future designated time period (the "window"), usually
between 3 and 12 months. All deposits made are guaranteed the
same credit rating. Related: Bullet contract. |
| Window dressing |
Trading activity near the end of a quarter or fiscal year that
is designed to improve the appearance of a portfolio to be
presented to clients or shareholders. For example, a portfolio
manager may sell losing positions so as to display only
positions that have gained in value. |
| Winner's curse |
Problem faced by uninformed bidders. For example, in an initial
public offering uninformed participants are likely to receive
larger allotments of issues that informed participants know are
overpriced. |
| Winnipeg Commodity Exchange |
Canada's only agricultural futures and optionsexchange, located
in Manitoba. |
| Wire house |
A firm operating a private wire to its own branch offices or to
other firms, commission houses, or brokerage houses. |
| Wire room |
A department within a brokerage firm that receives customers'
orders and transmits the orders to the exchange floor or the
firm's trading department. |
| Wire transfer |
Electronic transfer of funds; usually involves large dollar
payments. |
| With Average (W.A.) |
Marine cargo insurance coverage providing for partial loss or
damage to goods, either with or without a deductible. Also
called With particular average. |
| With dividend |
Purchase of shares that entitle the buyer to the forthcoming
dividend. Related: Ex-dividend. |
| With ice |
When issued. |
| With Particular Average (WPA) |
See: With Average |
| With rights |
Shares sold accompanied by entitlement the buyer to buy
additional shares in the company's rights issue. |
| Withdrawal plan |
Agreement that a mutual fund will disburse automatic periodic
redemptions to the investor. |
| Withholding |
Used in the context of securities, the illegal practice of a
public offering participant keeping some shares in a private
account or with a family member, employee, or dealer to profit
from the higher market price of a hot issue. Used in the context
of taxes, the withholding by an employer of a certain amount of
an employee's income in order to cover the employee's tax
liability. Also used to refer to the withholding by corporations
and financial institutions of a flat 10% of interest and
dividend payments due to security holders. |
| Withholding tax |
A legal requirement on the payer to deduct tax and pay it to the
relevant tax authority. In the UK interest payments are subject
to withholding tax at the basic rate of income tax if paid to
anyone who is non-resident or by a company to someone other than
a UK bank. Agents who manage properties are very conscious of
this in respect of rent payments to overseas owners. |
| Withholding tax |
A tax levied by a country of source on income paid, usually on
dividends remitted to the home country of the firm operating in
a foreign country. |
| Without |
Indicates a one-way market if 70 were bid in the market and
there was no offer, the quote would be "70 bid without.". |
| Without recourse |
Giving the lender no right to seek payment or seize assets in
the event of nonpayment from anyone other than the party
specified in the debtcontract (such as a special-purpose
entity). |
| Without Recourse Financing |
Financing in which the right of recourse to the party receiving
funds is forfeited to the party advancing funds. This may be
evidenced by conditions added to the endorsement of a draft
being sold by an exporter in order to protect the exporter, if
the instrument is not paid at maturity by the original obligor. |
| Woody |
Slang to describe a market moving strongly upward, as in, "This
market has a woody." |
| Working |
Attempting to complete the remaining part of a trade, by finding
either buyers or sellers for the rest. |
| Working away |
Transacting with another broker/dealer. |
| Working capital |
Defined as the difference between current assets and current
liabilities. There are some variations in how working capital is
calculated. Variations include the treatment of short-term debt.
In addition, current assets may or may not include cash and cash
equivalents, depending on the company. |
| Working capital management |
The deployment of current assets and current liabilities so as
to maximize short-term liquidity. |
| Working capital ratio |
Working capital expressed as a percentage of sales. |
| Working control |
Control of a corporation by a shareholder or shareholders having
less than 51% voting interest because of the wide dispersion of
share ownership. |
| Working order |
Standingorder in the marketplace, through which a brokerbids or
offers to fill the order in a series of lots at opportune times
in hopes of obtaining the best price. |
| Workout |
Informal repayment or loan forgiveness arrangement between a
borrower and creditors. |
| Workout market |
Marketindicating prices at which it is believed a security can
be bought or sold within a reasonable length of time. |
| Workout period |
Realignment of a temporarily misaligned yield relationship that
sometimes occurs in fixed income markets. |
| World Bank |
A multilateral development finance agency created by the 1944
Bretton Woods, (New Hampshire) negotiations. It makes loans to
developing countries for social overhead capital projects that
are guaranteed by the recipient country. See: International Bank
for Reconstruction and Development. |
| World Equity Benchmark Series (WEBS) |
The World EquityBenchmarkSeries are similar to SPDRs. WEBS trade
on the AMEX, and track the Morgan Stanley Capital International
(MSCI) country indexes. WEBS are available for: Australia,
Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy,
Japan, Malaysia Free, Mexico, the Netherlands, Singapore, Spain,
Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. |
| World investible wealth |
The part of world wealth that is traded and is therefore
accessible to investors. |
| World Trade Organization (WTO) |
A multilateral agency that administers world trade agreements,
fosters trade relations among nations, and solves trade disputes
among member countries. |
| Wrap |
Credit enhancement insurance often used in securitisation to
enhance the covenant strength of the company securitising its
income flow. |
| Wrap account |
An investment consulting relationship for management of a
client's funds by one or more money managers, that bills all
fees and commissions in one comprehensive fee charged quarterly. |
| Wraparound |
A financing device that permits an existing loan to be
refinanced and new money to be advanced at an interest rate
between the rate charged on the old loan and the current market
interest rate. The creditor combines or "wraps" the remainder of
the old loan with the new loan at the intermediate rate. |
| Wraparound annuity |
An investment that allows the annuitant the choice of
underlyinginvestmentstax-deferred. |
| Wraparound mortgage |
A second mortgage that leaves the original mortgage in force.
The wraparound mortgage is held by the lending institution as
security for the total mortgage debt. The borrower makes
payments on both loans to the wraparound lender, which in turn
makes payments on the original senior mortgage. |
| Wrinkle |
A feature of a new product or security intended to entice a
buyer. |
| Write |
Sell an option. Applies to derivative products. |
| Write out |
The procedure used when a specialist makes a trade involving his
own inventory, on one hand, and a floor broker'sorder, on the
other. The broker must first complete the trade with the
specialist, who then transacts a separate trade with the
customer. |
| Write-down |
Reducing the book value of an asset if its is overstated
compared to current market values. |
| Write-off |
Charging an asset amount to expense or loss, such as through the
use of depreciation and amortization of assets. |
| Writer |
The seller of an option, usually an individual, bank, or company
that issues the option and consequently has the obligation to
sell the asset (if a call) or to buy the asset (if a put) on
which the option is written if the option buyer exercises the
option. |
| Writing cash-secured puts |
An option strategy to avoid using a margin account. Instead of
depositing margin with a broker, a put writer can deposit a cash
balance equal to the optionexercise price, and can avoid
additional margin calls. |
| Writing naked |
See: Naked option |
| Writing puts to acquire stock |
Selling a put option at an exercise price that would represent a
good investment by an option writer who believes a stock's value
will fall, so that the writer cannot lose. If the stock price
unexpectedly goes up, the option will not be exercised and the
writer is at least ahead the amount of the premium received. If
the stock loses value, as expected, the option will be
exercised, and the writer has the stock at what he had earlier
decided was originally a good buy, and he has the premium income
in addition. |
| Written-down value |
The book value of an asset after allowing for depreciation and
amortization. |
| Wrong-way risk |
This type of risk occurs when exposure to a counterparty is
adversely correlated with the credit quality of that
counterparty. There are two types of wrong-way risk. Specific
wrong way risk arises through poorly structured transactions,
for example, those collateralized by own or related party
shares. General or conjectural wrong way risk arises where the
credit quality of the counterparty may for non-specific reasons
be held to be correlated with a macroeconomic factor which also
affects the value of derivatives transactions. An example of
conjectural wrong way risk is that fluctuations in the interest
rate causes changes in the value of the derivative transactions
but could also impact the credit worthiness of the counterparty.
Another example might occur with an emerging-market
counterparty, where there is country and possibly currency risk
associated with the counterparty (however creditworthy it might
otherwise be). |
| WS |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SAMOA. |
| WST |
Western Samoa Tala currency |
| W-type bottom |
A double bottom pattern in a price history that looks like the
letter W. See: Technical analysis. |