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Financial glossary
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
IBC's money fund report average
Report giving the average yield of all major money market funds.
I-bonds
Treasury savings bonds with a 30-year maturity indexed to account for
inflation. Financial glossary.
Identified shares
Stock or mutual fund whose purchase date and price may be identified for
capital gains and tax purposes when shares sold.
Idiosyncratic Risk
Unsystematic risk or risk that is uncorrelated to the overall market risk.
In other words, the risk that is firm-specific and can be diversified through
holding a portfolio of stocks.
I-I page
In over-the-counter trading, same as H-H page, but exclusively for OTC
stocks. Financial glossary.
Illegal dividend
A corporation's dividend that is declared in violation of its charter and/or
of state laws, typically because of the way it is calculated.
Imbalance of orders
Used for listed equity securities. Too many market orders of one kind-buy or
to sell or limit orders to buy up or sell down, without matching orders of the
opposite kind. An imbalance usually follows a dramatic event such as a takeover,
research recommendation or death of a key executive or a government ruling that
will significantly affect the company's business. If it occurs before the stock
exchange opens, trading in the stock is delayed. If it occurs during the trading
day, the specialist halts and then suspends trading (with floor governor's
approval) until enough matching orders can be found to make an orderly market.
Financial glossary.
Immediate or canceled order
Market or limited price order that is to be executed in whole or in part as
soon as such order is represented in the trading crowd. The portion not executed
is to be treated as canceled. A stop is considered an execution in this
context. Financial glossary.
Immediate family
Term used in the NASD rules of fair practice to refer to one's parents,
brothers, sisters, children, relatives supported financially, father-in-law,
mother-in-law, sister-in-law and brother-in-law.
Immediate payment annuity
An annuity contract paid by a single payment and with a specified payment
plan that starts immediately after the contract is purchased. Financial
glossary.
Immediate settlement
Delivery and settlement of securities within five business days.
Immunization
The construction of an asset and a liability match that benefits from
offsetting changes in value.
Immunization strategy
A bond portfolio strategy whose goal is to eliminate the portfolio's risk,
in case of a general change in the rate of interest, through the use of
duration. Financial glossary.
Impaired capital
When a company's total capital is less than the par value of all its capital
stock.
Impaired credit
Result of a borrower's reduced credit rating.
Imperfect market
Economic environment in which the costs of labor and other resources used
for production encourage firms to use substitute inputs that less costly.
Financial glossary.
Implicit Bankruptcy Costs
Opportunity costs incurred prior to the bankruptcy process such as the loss
of sales or financing.
Implicit tax
Lower or higher before-tax required returns on assets that are subject to
lower or higher tax rates. Financial glossary.
Implied call
The right of the homeowner to prepay or call a mortgage at any time.
Implied repo rate
The rate that a seller of a futures contract can earn by buying an issue and
then delivering it at the settlement date. Financial glossary.
Implied volatility
The expected volatility in a stock's return derived from its option price,
maturity date, exercise price and riskless rate of return, using an option
pricing model such as Black-Scholes.
Import/export letters of credit
Bank or financial institution issuance's of funds in a certain amount
provided to facilitate international trade.
Import Quota
Puts limits on the quantity of certain products that can be legally imported
into a particular country during a particular time frame. There is a Fixed
quota, which is a maximum quantity not to be exceeded and tariff rate surcharge,
which permits additional quantities but at much higher duty. Financial glossary.
Import substitution development strategy
A development strategy followed by many Latin American countries and other
LDCs that emphasize import substitution-accomplished through protectionism-as
the route to economic growth.
Imputation tax system
Arrangement by which investors who receive a dividend also receive a tax
credit for corporate taxes that the firm has paid.
Imputed interest
Used in accounting to refer to interest that has effectively been paid to a
bondholder, even though no money has actually been paid. Financial glossary.
Imputed value
Refers to the value of an asset, service or company that is not physically
recorded in any accounts but is implicit in the product, e.g. the opportunity
cost of cash remaining in a savings account and not invested.
In between
Used in the context of general equities. Priced higher than the bid price
but lower than the offer price.
In the box
Means that a dealer has a wire receipt for securities, indicating that
effective delivery on them has been made. Financial glossary.
In competition
Indication that the customer has revealed trading interest to multiple
brokers and that the trade will take place with the firm having the highest bid
or lowest offer.
In hand
Used in the context of general equities. Firm indicating control of a bid,
offer or order.
In the hole
Used in the context of general equities. Below the inside market when one is
attempting to sell the stock; at a significant discount.
In-house processing float
The time it takes the receiver of a check to process a payment and deposit
it in a bank for collection. Financial glossary.
In-line
Used in the context of general equities. (a) An order or market in a
specific security within the inside market; (b) any announcement that adheres
closely to Wall Street analysts expectations.
In the middle
Used in the context of general equities. At a price exactly in between the
bid and offer prices.
In the money
A put option that has a strike price higher than the underlying futures
price or a call option with a strike price lower than the underlying futures
price. For example, if the March COMEX silver futures contract is trading at $6
an ounce, a March call with a strike price of $5.50 would be considered in the
money by $0.50 an ounce. Financial glossary.
In play
Often used in risk arbitrage. Company that has become the target of a
takeover and whose stock has now become a speculative issue.
In the money option
An option that has value.
In & out
Refers to over-the-counter trading. Trade in which the trader has both the
buyers and sellers lined up for a clean trade. Financial glossary.
In and out trader
A daytrader or a speculator who buys and sells the same security on the same
day.
In the tank
Used in the context of general equities. Slang expression meaning
marketprices are dropping rapidly.
In touch with
Used in the context of general equities. Having a sell inquiry in a stock
(not a firm customer sell order), often entailing a capital commitment.
In substance defeasance
Process through which debt is removed from the balance sheet but not
canceled.
Inactive asset
Asset not used in a productive manner at all times.
Inactive post
Trading post on NYSE floor where inactive, lightly traded stocks are traded
in 10-share lots as opposed to 100-share lots. Financial glossary.
Inactive stock/bond
A security that trades in very small volume on a daily basis.
Incentive fee
Compensation paid to commodities trading advisers or to any practitioner who
achieves above-average returns.
Incentive Stock Option
An Option that has met certain tax requirements entitling the optionee to
favorable tax treatment. Such an option is free from regular tax at the date of
grant and the date of exercise (when a non-qualified option would become
taxable). If two holding period tests are met (two years between grant date and
sale date and one year between the exercise date and sale date), the profit on
the option qualifies as a long term capital gain rather than ordinary income. If
the holding periods are not met, there has been a "disqualifying disposition".
Financial glossary.
Incestuous share dealing
Trading of shares between companies in order to create a tax or financial
benefit for the companies involved.
Income baskets
Category to which certain income is allocated. Losses in one basket may not
be used to offset gains in another basket. Specified in U.S. tax code. Financial
glossary.
Income beneficiary
One who receives income from a trust.
Income bond
A bond whose payment of interest is contingent on sufficient earnings. These
bonds are commonly used during the reorganization of a failed or failing
business.
Income dividend
Any payout to mutual fund shareholders resulting from interest, dividends or
other income.
Income exclusion rule
The IRS rule that excludes certain types of income from taxation, e.g.
welfare payments.
Income fund
A mutual fund that seeks to provide to liberal current income from
investments.
Income immunization strategies
Methodologies adopted to insure adequate future cash flow.
Income investment company
A management company focused on managing a mutual fund whose primary purpose
is income generation, typically investing in bonds and high dividend yielding
stocks. Financial glossary.
Income property
Real estate purchased for the reasons of income generation.
Income risk
The possibility that a portfolio's dividends will decline as a result of
falling interest rates. Income risk is generally greatest for money market
instruments and short-term bonds and least for long-term bonds. Financial
glossary.
Income statement
A statement showing the revenues, expenses and income (the difference
between revenues and expenses) of a corporation over some period of time.
Income stock
Common stock with a high dividend yield and few profitable investment
opportunities.
Income tax
A state or federal government's levy on individuals as personal income tax
and on the earnings of corporations as corporate income tax. Financial glossary.
Incontestability clause
Clause in a life insurance contract preventing the insurer from revoking the
policy after it has been in force for a year or two. If the life insurance
company discovers any important facts that the policyholder may have concealed,
such as experiencing a stroke.
Incorporation
A legal process through which a company receives a charter and the state in
which it is based allows it to operate as a corporation.
Incoterms
Trade terms used worldwide to specify seller and buyer obligations in
shipments against international sales contracts. These terms are adopted by the
International Chamber of Commerce for international movement of merchandise.
Since they in themselves are not law, they must be specified if desired in
quotations, sales contracts, purchase orders and commercial invoices. Financial
glossary.
Inconvertibility
The inability of a local currency to be exchanged for another currency.
Often includes transfer risk.
Incorporated joint venture
A joint venture in which the legal means of dividing the project's equity by
share holdings in a company.
Incremental cash flows
Difference between the firm's cash flows with and without a project.
Incremental cost of capital
Average cost applicable to the issue of each additional unit of debt and
equity.
Incremental costs and benefits
Costs and benefits that would occur if a particular course of action is
taken, compared to those that would have obtained if that course of action had
not been taken. Financial glossary.
Incremental internal rate of return
Internal rate of return on the incremental investment from choosing a larger
instead of a smaller project.
Indemnify
Used in insurance policy agreements as to compensation for damage or loss.
Hold harmless
Indemnification
Used in insurance policy agreements as to compensation for damage or loss.
In the context of corporate governance, Director Indemnification uses the bylaws
and/or charter to indemnify officers and directors from certain legal expenses
and judgements resulting from lawsuits pertaining to their conduct. Financial
glossary.
Indemnity
A legal obligation to cover a liability, however arising.
Indenture
Agreement between lender and borrower that details specific terms of the
bond issuance. Specifies legal obligations of bond issuer and rights of
bondholders. An indenture spells out the specific terms of a bond, as well as
the rights and responsibilities of both the issuer of the security and the
holder. Financial glossary.
Independent auditor
A certified public accountant operating outside the company who can provide
an accountant's opinion.
Independent broker
NYSE member who executes orders for floor brokers and firms other than its
own.
Independent investments
Investments available to a firm that may be selected individually or in
groups because each investment is different in its nature and purpose. Financial
glossary.
Independent project
A project whose acceptance or rejection is independent of the acceptance or
rejection of other projects.
Independent variable
Term used in regression analysis to represent the element or condition that
is expected to influence another (so-called dependent) variable.
Index
Statistical composite that measures changes in the economy or in financial
markets, often expressed in percentage changes from a base year or from the
previous month. Indexes measure the ups and downs of stock, bond and some
commodities markets, in terms of market prices and weighting of companies in the
index. Financial glossary.
Index arbitrage
An investment trading strategy that exploits divergences between actual and
theoretical futures prices. An example is the simultaneous buying (selling) of
stock index futures (i.e. S&P 500) while selling (buying) the underlying stocks
of that index, capturing as profit the temporarily inflated basis between these
two baskets. Often, the point at which profitability exists is expressed at the
block call as the number of points the future must be over or under the
underlying basket for an arbitrage opportunity to exist. Financial glossary.
Index fund
Investment fund designed to match the returns on a stock market index.
Mutual fund whose portfolio matches that of a broad-based index such as the S&P
500 and whose performance therefore mirrors the market as represented by that
index.
Index futures
A futures contract on an index (such as a foreign stock index) in the
futures market.
Index method
Technique to calculate rates of return that is based on initial and terminal
values.
Index model
A model of stock returns using a market index such as the S&P 500 to
represent common or systematic risk factors.
Index option
A call or put option based on a stock market index.
Index swap
A swap of a market index for some other asset, such as a stock-for-stock or
debt-for-stock swap.
Index warrant
A stock index option issued by either a corporate or a sovereign entity as
part of a security offering and guaranteed by an option clearing corporation.
Indexed bond
Bond whose payments are linked to an index, e.g. the consumer price index.
Indexed rate
An interest rate linked to an index, usually the CPI.
Indexed Stock Options
Options that have an exercise price which may fluctuate above or below
market value at performance options in that the exercise price of indexed
options typically remains variable until the option is exercised.
Indexing
A passive instrument strategy calling for construction of a portfolio of
stocks designed to track the total return performance of an index of stocks.
Financial glossary.
Indicated dividend
Total amount of dividends that would be paid on a share of stock over the
next 12 months if each dividend were the same amount as the most recent
dividend. Usually represented by the letter "e" in stock tables.
Indicated yield
The yield, based on the most recent quarterly rate times four. To determine
the yield, divide the annual dividend by the price of the stock. The resulting
number is represented as a percentage.
Indication
(a) Notice given by a dealer (through Autex) or customer of an interest in
buying or selling stock, sometimes including specific volume and price; (b)
approximation of where a specialist sees buy and sell interest to tighten the
range to an opening price. Financial glossary.
Indication of interest
A dealer's or investor's interest in purchasing (not commitment to buy)
securities that are still in the underwriting stage and are being registered by
the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Indication pricing schedule
A statement of rates for an interest rate or currency swap.
Indicator
Used in the context of general equities. Technical or fundamental
measurement that securities analysts use to forecast the market's direction,
such as investment advisory sentiment, volume of stock trading, direction of
interest rates and buying or selling by corporate insiders. Financial glossary.
Indifference curve
The expression in a graph of a utility function, where the horizontal axis
measures risk and the vertical axis measures expected return. The curve connects
all portfolios with the same utility.
Indirect Claim
Claim of a financial intermediary; the intermediary relends funds to the
deficitunit to enable it to acquire real assets.
Indirect costs of financial distress
Costs such as lost business as a result of bankruptcy or liquidation.
Indirect diversification benefits
Diversification benefits provided by the multinational corporation that are
not available to investors through their portfolio investment. Financial
glossary.
Indirect Exchange Rate
The foreign currency price of one unit of the home currency.
Indirect quote
For foreign exchange, the number of units of a foreign currency needed to
buy one US dollar.
Indirect terms
The price of a unit of domestic currency in foreign currency terms.
Individual Retirement Account (IRA)
A retirement account that may be established by an employed person. IRA
contributions are tax deductible according to certain guidelines and the gains
in the account are tax-deferred.
Individual Retirement Account (IRA) rollover
A provision of the law governing IRA's that enables a retiree or anyone
receiving a lump-sum payment from a pension, profit-sharing or salary reduction
plan to transfer the amount into an IRA. Financial glossary.
Individual tax return
A tax return filed by an individual to account for their personal income and
taxes payable.
Inductive reasoning
The attempt to use information about a specific situation to draw a
conclusion.
Industrial production
A statistic determined by the Federal Reserve Board focusing on the total
output of all US factories and mines on a monthly basis. Used as an economic
indicator. Financial glossary.
Industrial revenue bond
A bond issued by local government agencies on behalf of corporations.
Industrials
General term used in the financial markets to refer to companies
manufacturing, producing or distributing goods and services.
Industry
The category describing a company's primary business activity. This category
is usually determined by the largest portion of revenue. Financial glossary.
Industry allocation
Investment of certain proportions of a portfolio in certain industries.
Sometimes called sector allocation.
Inefficient portfolio
Group of assets dominated by at least one other portfolio under the mean
variance rule. For example, if A has both lower return and higher volatility
than B, we say A is dominated by B.
Infant industry argument
Argument that industries in the developing and emerging sectors of the
economy need protection against international competition in order to establish
themselves.
Inflation
The rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services is
rising.
Inflation accounting
Accounting practices allowing for the effects of inflation.
Inflation-escalator clause
A clause in a contract providing for increases or decreases in inflation
depending on fluctuations in the cost of living, production costs and so forth.
Inflation hedge
Investments designed to hedge against inflation and the loss of purchasing
power associated with it.
Inflation-indexed securities
Securities such as bonds or notes that guarantee a return higher than the
rate of inflation if the security is held to maturity.
Inflation risk
Also called purchasing power risk, the risk that changes in the real return
the investor will realize after adjusting for inflation will be negative.
Financial glossary.
Inflation uncertainty
The fact that future inflation rates are not known. It is a possible
contributing factor to the makeup of the term structure of interest rates.
Inflexible expenses
Expenses that cannot be adjusted or eliminated such as car payments or
rental payments.
Information Agent
Agent whose primary task is to disseminate and explain the details of
capital transactions. Financial glossary.
Information asymmetry
Condition that information is known to some, but not all, participants.
Information Coefficient (IC)
The correlation between predicted and actual stock returns, sometimes used
to measure the contribution of a financial analyst. An IC of 1.0 indicates a
perfect linear relationship between predicted and actual returns, while an IC of
0.0 indicates no linear relationship. Financial glossary.
Information content effect
The rise in the stock price following a dividend signal or publication of
some other related news.
Information costs
Transactions costs that include the assessment of the investment merits of a
financial asset.
Information memorandum
A document detailing the project and project financing, usually in
connection with a syndication.
Infrastructure risk
The risk associated with the impact on project cash flows from
infrastructure problems.
Information motivated trades
Trades in which an investor believes he or she possesses pertinent
information not currently reflected in the stock's price.
Information Ratio
The ratio of annualized expected residual return to residual risk. A central
measurement for active management, value added is proportional to the square of
the information ratio. Financial glossary.
Information services
Organizations that furnish investment and other types of information, such
as information that helps a firm monitor its cash position.
Informational efficiency
The speed and accuracy with which prices reflect new information.
Information Signaling
Conveying intelligence through a firm's actions. A firm's dividend policy,
for example, provides signals to investors concerning the value of the firm's
stock.
Informational efficiency
The degree to which market prices correctly and quickly reflect information
and thus the true value of an underlying asset.
Informationless trades
Trades that are the result of either a reallocation of wealth or an
implementation of an investment strategy that acts only on existing information.
That is, an investor might sell a large block of stock - not because they have
information that leads them to think the stock will fall in value - but because
they might need the cash for some other investment. Financial glossary.
Infrastructure
A country's fundamental system of transportation, communications and other
aspects of its physical capabilities.
Ingot
A bar of metal such as the type that the Federal Reserve System uses to
store gold reserves.
Inheritance tax return
Tax form required to determine the amount of state tax due on an
inheritance.
Initial filing
Has various meanings. It could refer to a form that is filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission in advance of a major event, such as a public
offering or a share repurchase. It could also refer to filings that occur before
legal inside transactions. Financial glossary.
Initial margin
(a) Amount of money deposited by both buyers and sellers of futures
contracts to ensure performance of the terms of the contract; (b) amount of cash
or eligible securities required to be deposited with a broker before engaging in
margin transactions. Financial glossary.
Initial margin requirement
When buying securities on margin, the proportion of the total market value
of the securities that the investor must pay for in cash. The Security Exchange
Act of 1934 gives the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve the
responsibility to set initial margin requirements, but individual brokerage
firms are free to set higher requirements. In futures contracts, initial margin
requirements are set by the exchange.
Initial public offering (IPO)
A company's first sale of stock to the public. Securities offered in an IPO
are often, but not always, those of young, small companies seeking outside
equity capital and a public market for their stock. Investors purchasing stock
in IPOs generally must be prepared to accept considerable risks for the
possibility of large gains. IPOs by investment companies (closed-end funds)
usually include underwriting fees that represent a load to buyers. Financial
glossary.
Initial Public Offering Spinning
The practice of an investment bank setting aside portions of a corporation's
Initial Public Offering for senior management of that corporation.
Input-output tables
Tables that indicate how much each industry requires of the production of
each other industry in order to produce each dollar of its own output.
Inquiry
Used in the context of general equities. In-line expression of interest in a
particular stock, usually asking the firm to bid for or offerstock.
In-service withdrawal
A participant-initiated withdrawal from an employer-sponsored retirement
plan while the participant is still employed by the company.
Inside market
Refers to over-the-counter trading. Best (highest) bid and best (lowest)
offer, often used in the O.T.C. Market.
Insider information
Material information about a company that has not yet been made public. It
is illegal for holders of this information to make trades based on it, however
received.
Insider trading
Trading by officers, directors, major stockholders or others who hold
private inside information allowing them to benefit from buying or selling
stock.
Insider Trading Sanctions Act of 1984
Act imposing civil and criminal penalties for insider trading violations.
Insider Trading & Securities Fraud Enforcement Act of 1988
Federal legislation that greatly increased the penalties for trading on
material inside information.
Insiders
These are directors and senior officers of a corporation-in effect, those
who have access to inside information about a company. An insider also is
someone who owns more than 10% of the voting shares of a company. Financial
glossary.
Insolvency risk
The risk that a firm will be unable to satisfy its debts. Also known as
bankruptcy risk.
Insolvent
A firm that is unable to pay debts (its liabilities exceed its assets).
Inspector of Election
The person appointed by the Corporation to act as a judge on voting matters
brought before a shareholder meeting. The inspector determines which proxies and
ballots are in good form, and acceptable to be voted. They also count and record
the votes, supervise and inspect the counting process and attest to the final
results. They cannot be overruled on these matters, although they have no voice
in the procedural aspects of the meeting itself. Financial glossary.
Inspector's or Judge's Certificate
A form provided by the Corporation and completed by the Inspectors of
Election, attesting to the final voting results and percentages of a shareholder
meeting.
Installment payments
Distribution of plan assets to beneficiaries based upon a regular schedule.
Installment sale
The sale of an asset in exchange for a specified series of payments (the
installments).
Instinet (Institutional Networks Corporation)
Computerized subscriber service that serves as a vehicle for the fourth
market. "Instinet" is registered with the SEC. As a stock exchange it numbers
among its subscribers a large number of mutual funds and other institutional
investors linked to each other by computer terminals. The system permits
subscribers to display bids and offers (which are exposed system wide for
whatever length of time the initiating party specifies) and to consummate trades
electronically. Instinet is largely used by market makers, but, nonmarket makers
and customers have equal access. Financial glossary.
Institutions
Insurance companies, pension funds, trusts, foundations, mutual funds, funds
managers, bank investment departments.
Institutional broker
A broker who buys and sells securities for institutional investors such as
banks and mutual funds, pensions.
Institutional Brokers' Estimate System
Service that assembles analysts' estimates of future earnings for thousands
of publicly traded companies, detailing how many estimates are available for
each company and the high, low and average estimates for each.
Institutional investors
Organizations that invest, including insurance companies, depository
institutions, pension funds, investment companies, mutual funds and endowment
funds. Financial glossary.
Institutionalization
The gradual domination of financial markets by institutional investors, as
opposed to individual investors. This process has occurred throughout the
industrialized world.
Instrumentality
Notes issued by a federal agency whose obligations are guaranteed by the
full-faith-and-credit of the government, even though the agency's
responsibilities are not necessarily those of the US government.
Instruments
Financial securities, such as money market instruments or capital market
instruments.
Insurable interest
An insurance term referring to the relationship between a policy's insured
person or property and the potential beneficiary. The beneficiary must have an
insurable interest in the insured person or property to receive payment of the
policy if the insured died while the policy was in force.
Insurance
Guarding against property loss or damage making payments in the form of
premiums to an insurance company, which pays an agreed-upon sum to the insured
in the event of loss.
Insurance agent
The insurance company representative and adviser who sells insurance
policies.
Insurance broker
A broker, independent of any insurance company, who represents the interests
of the buyer in searching for insurance coverage at the lowest cost and
providing the highest benefit to the buyer.
Insurance claim
A claim for reimbursement from the insurance company when the insured has
suffered a loss that is covered under an insurance policy. Financial glossary.
Insurance dividend
Money paid annually to policy holders participating in cash value life
insurance policies.
Insurance policy
A contract detailing an insurance policy and outlining what risks are
insured, what insurance premiums are to be paid by the policyholder, what
deductibles prevail and all the details associated with a policy.
Insurance premium
Payments calculated by the insurance company based on risk factors that must
be made by the insured to guarantee protection of property loss under an
insurance policy.
Insurance principle
The law of averages. The average outcome for many independent trials of an
experiment will approach the expected value of the experiment. Financial
glossary.
Insurance settlement
The payment of proceeds by an insurance company to the insured to settle an
insurance claim within the guidelines stipulated in the insurance policy.
Insured account
A bank or financial account that is insured for the benefit of the
depositor, protecting against loss in the event that the savings institution
becomes insolvent.
Insured bond
A municipal bond backed both by the credit of the municipal issuer and by
commercial insurance policies.
Insured plans
Defined benefit pension plans that are guaranteed by life insurance
products.
Insured Trade Acceptance
A trade acceptance where the buyer's ability to pay is insured.
Intangible asset
A legal claim to some future benefit, typically a claim to future cash.
Goodwill, intellectual property, patents, copyrights and trademarks are examples
of intangible assets.
Integer programming
Variant of linear programming in which the solution values must be integers.
Integrated financial market
A market in which there are no barriers to financial flows and the same risk
asset commands the same expected return, irrespective of domicile.
Intellectual property rights
Patents, copyrights and proprietary technologies and processes that may be
the basis of a company's competitive advantage.
Interbank market
Financial institutions exchange of currencies between and among themselves.
Interbank spread
The difference between a bank's offer and bid rates for deposits in the
Eurocurrency market.
Intercommodity spread
In the commodities market, a spread consisting of a long position and a
short position in different but related commodities for example, speculating
that the price relationship between the two commodities will change, e.g.
platinum and gold. Financial glossary.
Intercompany loan
Loan made by one unit of a corporation to another unit of the same
corporation.
Intercompany transaction
Transaction carried out between two units of the same corporation.
Interdelivery spread
Used in futures or options market to refer the purchase of one month of a
contract and selling another month in the same contract, in the hope that the
price difference will widen or narrow, depending on the investment.
Interfund transactions
Financial arrangements effected by payments made from one fund group to
another group.
Interest
The price paid for borrowing money. It is expressed as a percentage rate
over a period of time and reflects the rate of exchange of present consumption
for future consumption.
Interest coverage ratio
The ratio of earnings before interest and taxes to annual interest expense.
This ratio measures a firm's ability to pay interest.
Interest coverage test
A debt limitation that prohibits the issuance of additional long-term debt
if the issuer's interest coverage would, as a result of the issue, fall below
some specified minimum.
Interest deduction
An interest expense, such as interest on a margin account, that is allowed
as a deduction for tax purposes.
Interest during construction
Interest accumulated during construction period, which usually equals
capitalized interest.
Interest equalization tax
Tax on foreign investment by residents of the US which was abolished in
1974.
Interest expense
Interest expense is the money the corporation or individual pays out in
interest on loans.
Interest in Arrears
Interest that is due only at the maturity date rather than periodically over
the life of the loan.
Interest on interest
Interest earned on reinvestment of each interest payment on money invested.
Interest-only loan
A loan in which payment of principal is deferred and interest payments are
the only current obligation.
Interest-only strip (IO)
A security based solely on the interest payments from a pool of mortgages,
Treasury bonds or other bonds. Once the principal on the mortgages or bonds has
been repaid, interest payments stop and the value of the IO falls to zero.
Financial glossary.
Interest payments
Contractual debt payments based on the coupon rate of interest and the
principal amount.
Interest rate
The monthly effective interest rate. For example, the periodic rate on a
credit card with an 18% annual percentage rate is 1.5% per month.
Interest rate agreement
An agreement whereby one party, for an up-front premium, agrees to
compensate the other at specific time periods if a designated interest rate is
different from a predetermined leve.
Interest rate cap
An interest rate agreement in which payments are made when the reference
rate exceeds the strike rate.
Interest rate on debt
The firm's cost of debt capital.
Interest rate floor
An interest rate agreement in which payments are made when the reference
rate falls below the strike rate.
Interest rate futures contract
A futures contract based on an interbank deposit rate or an underlying debt
security. The value of the contract rises and falls inversely to changes in
interest rates.
Interest rate parity theorem
Expression that the interest rate differential between two countries is
equal to the difference between the forward foreign exchange rate and the spot
rate.
Interest rate parity line
Diagonal line on a graph that characterizes interest rate parity.
Interest rate risk
The chance that a security's value will change due to a change in interest
rates. For example, a bond's price drops as interest rates rise. For a
depository institution, also called funding risk. The risk that spread income
will suffer because of a change in interest rates. Financial glossary.
Interest rate swap
A binding agreement between counterparties to exchange periodic interest
payments on some predetermined dollar principal, which is called the notional
principal amount. For example, one party will pay fixed and receive variable.
Financial glossary.
Interest sensitive insurance policy
A cash value life insurance policy whose insurance dividend rates vary with
respect to inflation, enabling the policyholder to avoid the loss of purchasing
power associated with inflation.
Interest sensitive stock
Stocks whose earnings are dependent upon and change with the interest rate,
e.g. bank stocks.
Interest subsidy
The value of a firm's deduction of the interest payments on its debt from
its earnings before calculation of its tax bill under current tax law.
Interest tax shield
The reduction in income taxes that results from the tax-deductibility of
interest payments.
Interim dividend
The declaration and payment of a dividend prior to annual earnings
determination.
Interim financing
A short-termloan made to a company on the condition that a takeout will
follow with long-term or intermediate financing.
Interim rate of return
The rate of return earned between cash flows.
Interim statement
A financial statement that reflects only a limited period of a company's
financial statement, not the entire fiscal year.
Interlocking directorate
Describes cross-memberships of directors on each other's company Board of
Directors.
Intermarket sector spread
The spread between the interest rate offered in two sectors of the bond
market for issues of the same maturity.
Intermarket spread swaps
An exchange of one bond for another based on the manager's projection of a
realignment of spreads between sectors of the bond market.
Intermarket Surveillance Information System
A database that distributes information from all the major stock exchanges
in the United States.
Intermarket Trading System (ITS)
Electronic communications network linking the trading floors of seven
registered exchanges to permit trading among them in stockslisted on either the
NYSE or AMEX and one or more regional exchanges. Through ITS, any broker or
market maker on the floor of any participating exchange can reach other
participants for an execution whenever the nationwide quote shows a better price
available. A floor broker on the exchange can enter an ITS order to assure
excecution of all of an offering or bid, instead of splitting it with competing
brokers. Financial glossary.
Intermediate targets
An intermediate target is a variable (such as the money supply) that is not
directly under the control of the central bank, but that does respond fairly
quickly to policy actions, is observable frequently and bears a predictable
relationship to the ultimate goals of policy. Financial glossary.
Intermediate term
Typically one-ten years.
Intermediate trend
General movement in price data that lasts from three weeks to six months.
Intermediated market
A financial market in which some financial institution stands between
counterparties to financial transactions.
Intermediation
Investment through a financial institution.
Intermittency
When a non-linear dynamical system alternates between periodic and chaotic
behavior.
Internal auditor
An employee of a company who analyzes the company's accounting records to
that the company is following and complying with all regulations.
Internal expansion
Growth of assets resulting from internal financing or internally generated
cash flow.
Internal finance
Finance generated within a firm by retained earnings and depreciation.
Internal growth rate
Maximum rate a firm can expand without outside sources of funding. Growth
generated by cash flows retained by company.
Internal market
The mechanisms for issuing and trading securities within a nation, including
its domestic market and foreign market. Financial glossary.
Internal measure
The number of days that a firm can finance operations without additional
cash income.
Internal rate of return
Dollar-weighted rate of return. Discount rate at which net present value
(NPV) investment is zero. The rate at which a bond's future cash flows,
discounted back to today, equal its price.
Internal Revenue Code
The various statutes and regulations making up federal tax law.
Internal Revenue Service
The federal agency responsible for the collection of federal taxes,
including personal and corporate income taxes, Social Security taxes and excise
and gift taxes.
International arbitrage
Simultaneous buying and selling of foreign securities and ADRs to capture
the profit potential created by time, currency and settlement inconsistencies
that vary across international borders.
International Asset Pricing Model
The international version of the CAPM assuming that investors in each
country share the same consumption basket and purchasing power parityholds.
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD)
IBRD or World Bank makes loans at nearly conventional terms to countries for
projects of high economic priority.
International Banking Facility
A branch that an American bank establishes in the United States to do
Eurocurrency business.
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
Also commonly called the World Bank. It is a United Nations affiliated
institution that assists in the development of its poorer members by
facilitating private investments and by making and guaranteeing loans. Financial
glossary.
International bonds
A collective term that refers to global bonds, Eurobonds and foreign bonds.
International Chamber of Commerce
A business organization with membership from over 80 countries. They work to
harmonize trade practices worldwide by establishing agreed upon rules such as
Incoterms and Uniform Customs and Procedures for Documentary Credits. Financial
glossary.
International Depository Receipt (IDR)
A receipt issued by a bank as evidence of ownership of one or more shares of
the underlying stock of a foreign corporation that the bank holds in trust. The
advantage of the IDR structure is that the corporation does not have to comply
with all the issuing requirements of the foreign country where the stock is to
be traded. The US version of the IDR is the American Depository Receipt (ADR).
Financial glossary.
International Development Association
Association established to stimulate country development; it was especially
suited for less prosperous nations, since it provided loans at low interest
rates.
International diversification
The attempt to reduce risk by investing in more than one nation. By
diversifying across nations whose economic cycles are not perfectly correlated,
investors can typically reduce the variability of their returns.
International Finance Corporation
A corporation owned by the World Bank that produces a number of well-known
stock indexes for emerging markets. Its major role is to provide financing for
projects in less developed countries.
International finance subsidiary
A subsidiary incorporated in the US, usually in Delaware, whose sole purpose
once was to issue debentures overseas and invest the proceeds in foreign
operations, with the interest paid to foreign bondholders not subject to US
withholding tax. Elimination of the corporate withholding tax has ended the need
for this type of subsidiary.
International Fisher effect
States that the interest rate differential between two countries should be
an unbiased predictor of the future change in the spot rate.
International Fisher relationship
Theory that nominal interest rates and inflation rates in different
countries are connected. The Fisher equation says the nominal interest rate is
the product of one plus the real interest rate times one plus the expected rate
of inflation.
International fund
A mutual fund that can invest only outside the United States.
International market index
An indexlisted on the American Stock Exchange tracking the performance of 50
American Depository Receiptstraded on the AMEX, NYSE and NASDAQ. Financial
glossary.
International Monetary Fund
An organization founded in 1944 to oversee exchange arrangements of member
countries and to lend foreign currency reserves to members with
short-termbalance of payment problems.
International Monetary Market
A division of the CME established in 1972 for trading financial futures.
International monetary system
The global network of government and commercial institutions within which
currency exchange rates are determined.
International mutual fund
A mutual fund that invests strictly in securities markets throughout the
world, excluding the United States. A global fund, on the other hand, invests in
both foreign and domestic securities.
International Organization for Standardization
ISO is not an acronym but the name of a standards setting organization
chartered by the United Nations. The name ISO is derived from Greek and connotes
equality, i.e. each member country regardless of size or wealth gets only one
vote. The ISO 4217 are the standard three letter currency codes. These codes are
usually composed of the ISO 3166 two letter country code plus a third letter
representing the name of the currency. Financial glossary.
International Petroleum Exchange
Energy futures and options exchange based in London.
International Security Market Association
Swiss law association located in Zurich that regroups all the participants
on the Eurobond primary and secondary markets. Establishes uniform trading
procedures in the international bond markets.
International Swap Dealers Association
Formed in 1985 to promote uniform practices in the writing, trading and
settlement of swaps and other derivatives.
Interpolation
A method of approximating a price or yield that is unknown by using numbers
that are known.
Interpositioning
The practice of using a second broker in a securities transaction, which is
considered illegal it is if used to generate additional commission. Financial
glossary.
Inter vivos trust
A trust created between living persons.
Intrabudgetary transactions
Effected when payment and receipt both occur within the budget or when
payment is made from off-budget federal entities whose budget authority and
outlays are excluded from the budget totals.
Intracommodity spread
Used in the context of futures trading to refer to a trader holding, buying
and selling contracts in the same commodity on the same exchange, but for
different months.
Intracompany trade
Transactions between or among subsidiaries that are part of the same parent
company.
Intraday
Term meaning "within the day," often to refer to the high and the low price
of a stock.
Intramarket sector spread
The spread between two issues of the same maturity within a market sector.
For instance, the difference in interest rates offered for five-year industrial
corporate bonds and five-year utility corporate bonds.
Intrastate offering
A securities offering limited to just one state in the United States.
Intrinsic value
The value of an option if it were to expire immediately with the underlying
stock at its current price; the amount by which an option is in-the-money. For
call options, this is the difference between the stock price, if that difference
is a positive number or zero otherwise. For put options it is the difference
between the striking price and the stock price, if that difference is positive
and zero otherwise.
Intrinsic value of an option
The amount by which an option is in the money. An option that is not in the
money has no intrinsic value.
Intrinsic value of a firm
The present value of a firm's expected future netcash flows discounted by
the required rate of return.
Inventory
For companies: Raw materials, items available for sale or in the process of
being made ready for sale. They can be individually valued by several different
means, including cost or current market value and collectively by FIFO (First
in, first out), LIFO (Last in, first out) or other techniques. The lower value
of alternatives is usually used to preclude overstating earnings and assets.
Financial glossary.
Inventory financing
Used in the context of factoring and general finance to refer to loans to
consumer product producers that use inventory as collateral.
Inventory loan
A secured short-term loan to purchase inventory. The three basic forms are a
blanket inventory lien, a trust receipt and field warehousing financing.
Inventory turnover
A measure of how often the company sells and replaces its inventory. It is
the ratio of annual cost of sales to the lastest inventory. One can also
interpret the ratio as the time to which inventory is held. For example a ratio
of 26 implies that investory is held, on average, for two weeks. It is best to
use this ratio to compare companies within an industry (high turnover is a good
sign) because there are huge differences in this ratio across industries.
Financial glossary.
Inverse floater
A derivative instrument whose coupon rate is linked to the market rate of
interest in an inverse relationship.
Inverse floating-rate note
A variable-rate security whose coupon rate increases as a benchmark interest
rate declines.
Inverse order
In the context of periodic repayment schedules, beginning from the end,
expected maturity.
Inverted market
A futures market in which the nearer months are selling at price premiums to
the more-distant months.
Inverted scale
A serial bond offering whose bonds with earlier maturity dates have higher
yields than bonds with later maturity dates.
Inverted yield curve
When short-term interest rates are higher than long-term rates.
Investible Indices
Usually refers to the Standard and Poors/International Finance Corporation
emerging market indices which are weighted by the amount of market
capitalization that foreigners can obtain in each company. The IFCG (Global)
index weights each stock by total capitalization. The IFCI (Investible) index
weighs by investible capitalization.
Investment
The creation of more money through the use of capital.
Investment adviser
A person or an organization that makes the day-to-day decisions regarding a
portfolio's investments. Also called a portfolio manager.
Investment Advisers Act
Legislation passed in 1940 requiring financial advisers to register with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. The measure was enacted to protect the
public from fraud or misrepresentation by investment advisers.
Investment advisory service
A business that specializes in providing investment advice for a fee. All
advisers of an advisory service must be registered with the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
Investment agreement
An contract specifying the rights and responsibilities of a host government
and a corporation in the structure and operation of an investment project.
Investment bank
Financial intermediaries who perform a variety of services, including aiding
in the sale of securities, facilitating mergers and other corporate
reorganizations, acting as brokers to both individual and institutional clients
and trading for their own accounts. Financial glossary.
Investment certificate
A document that serves as proof that an individual has an investment in a
savings and loan association.
Investment climate
Factors such as economic, monetary and other conditions that affect the
performance of investments.
Investment club
A group of people who combine their money into a larger pool, then invest
collectively in stocks and bonds, making decisions as a group.
Investment company
A firm that that invests the funds of investors in securities appropriate
for their stated investment objectives in return for a management fee.
Investment Company Act of 1940
Legislation that requires investment companies to register with the SEC and
that outlines standards by which they must operate.
Investment Company Institute
A national industry group of investment companies, including mutual funds,
founded in 1940.
Investment decisions
Decisions concerning the asset side of a firm's balance sheet, such as the
decision to offer a new product.
Investment grade
In the context of bond ratings, the rating level above which institutional
investors have been authorized to invest.
Investment history
The history of a member firm that establishes certain norms in respect of
its investment practice.
Investment income
The revenue from a portfolio of invested assets.
Investment letter
A letter of intent between the issuer of new securities and the buyer, in
the private placement of these new securities. The letter of intent establishes
that the securities are being bought for a minimum time period and are treated
as an investment, not for resale. If no such letter exists, the securities must
be registered with Securities and Exchange Commission. Financial glossary.
Investment management
The process of managing money. Also called portfolio management and money
management.
Investment manager
The individual who manages a portfolio of investments. Also called a
portfolio manager or a money manager.
Investment opportunity set
The universe of choices as to investments available to an individual or
corporation.
Investment philosophy
The style and general ideology of investment practiced by an investor.
Certain investors favor small capitalization stocks, while others prefer large
blue-chip stocks, for example.
Investment policy
Statement of objectives and constraints for an individual's or
organization's approach.
Investment product line
The line of required returns for investment projects as a function of beta.
Investment Risk
Uncertainty about the future benefits to be realized from an investment.
Investment Valuation Model
The basic mathematical technique of finance that calculates the value of an
investment as the present value of all future cash flows expected to be
generated by the investment.
Investments
As a discipline, the study of financial securities, such as stocks and
bonds, from the investor's viewpoint.
Investment software
Computer software that helps investors make investment decisions by
identifying situations that meet programmed parameters.
Investment strategy
A strategy or plan of attack, an investor uses when deciding how to allocate
capital among several options including stocks, bonds, cash equivalents,
commodities and real estate. The strategy should take into account the
investor's tolerance for risk as well as future needs for capital. Financial
glossary.
Investment strategy committee
A committee within a brokerage firm that conducts research and makes
recommendations on the firm's stated investment strategy.
Investment trust
A closed-end fund regulated by the Investment Company Act of 1940. These
funds have a fixed number of shares that are traded on the secondary markets,
like corporate stock. The market price may exceed the asset value per share, in
which case shares are selling at a premium. When the market price falls below
the (NAV)/share, shares are selling at a discount. Many closed-end funds are of
a specialized nature; the portfolio represents a particular industry or country.
These funds are usually listed on US and foreign exchanges. Financial glossary.
Investment value
Applies mainly to dealer securities. Fixed income value of a convertible,
the price at which the convert would have to sell as a straight debt instrument
relative to the yield of other bonds of like maturity or size and quality;
represents a presumed floor to the bond, assuming the continued creditworthiness
of the issuer and the general level of interest rates.
Investor
The owner of a asset.
Investor fallout
In the mortgage pipeline, risk that occurs when the originator commits loan
terms to the borrowers and gets commitments from investors at the time of
application or if both sets of terms are made at closing.
Investor relations
The process by which the corporation communicates with its investors.
Investor's equity
The balance of a margin account.
Investors service bureau
NYSE service that deals with all general inquiries concerning securities
investments.
Invoice
Bill written by a seller of goods or services and submitted to a purchaser
for payment.
Invoice billing
Billing system in which invoices are sent off at the time of customer orders
and are all separate bills to be paid.
Invoice date
Usually the date when goods are shipped. Payment dates are set relative to
the invoice date.
Invoice price
The price that the buyer of a futures contract must pay the seller when a
Treasury bond is delivered.
Involuntary liquidation preference
A premium that must be paid to preferred or preference stockholders if the
issuer of the stock is forced into involuntary liquidation.
IRA/Keogh accounts
Special accounts that allow saving taxes deferred until money is withdrawn.
These plans are subject to frequent changes in law with respect to the
deductibility of contributions. Withdrawals of tax-deferred contributions are
taxed as income, including the capital gains from such accounts.
Irredeemable bond
A bond lacking a call feature or a right of redemption. Financial glossary.
Irrational call option
The implied call imbedded in a MBS. Irrational because the call is sometimes
not exercised when it is in the money (interest rates are below the threshold to
refinance) and sometimes exercised when it is not in the money. Option exercise
like this affects payments on the MBS.
Irrelevance result
The Modigliani and Miller theorem that a firm's capital structure is
irrelevant to the firm's value.
Irrevocable letter of credit
Assurance of funds issued by a bank that cannot be canceled or amended
without the beneficiary's approval. Financial glossary.
Irrevocable trust
A trust that is unable to be amended, altered or revoked.
Islamic Loan
A loan that interest cannot be charged on. Instead, the loan is structured
using discounts, sale or lease, profit participation or repurchase agreements.
Issue
A particular financial asset.
Issued share capital
Total amount of shares that have been issued.
Issuer
An entity that puts a financial asset in the marketplace.
Issuing bank
Bank that issues a letter of credit.
Istanbul Stock Exchange
The sole securities exchange in Turkey.
Italian Derivatives Market
A derivatives market operated by the Italian Stock Exchange Council. It
trades futures and options on the 30 index and individual stock options.
Financial glossary.
Italian Exchange (Borsa Italiana)
Italy's major securities exchange.
Italian Stock Exchange
The Milan-based stock exchange, which came into effect after the unification
of Italy's ten national exchanges in 1991. All listed securities are traded
electronically. The main indexes are the MIB and the MIBTEL, based on the prices
of all listed shares and the MIB 30, based on a sample of the 30 most liquid and
highly capitalized shares. Financial glossary.
Itemized deduction
Specific deductions allowed by the IRS outlined in the tax return.
"It's us,"
Used in the context of general equities. "The firm and not a customer, is
the party involved."
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