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July 3, 2007

Best Bid

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 11:34 pm

Best Bid

The highest quoted bid for a particular stock among all those offered by competing market makers.

Simply put, this is the highest price someone is willing to pay for an asset.

July 2, 2007

Ben Bernanke

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 4:58 pm

Ben Bernanke

The chairman of the Board of Governors of the U.S. Federal Reserve who took over the helm from Alan Greenspan on February 1, 2006, ending 18 years of Greenspan’s leadership at the Fed. A former Fed governor, Bernanke was chairman of the U.S. President’s Council of Economic Advisers prior to being nominated as Greenspan’s successor in late 2005.

Born Benjamin Shalom Bernanke on December 13, 1953, he was the son of a pharmacist and a schoolteacher, and raised in southeastern United States. A high-achieving student, Bernanke completed his undergrad summa cum laude at Harvard University, then went on to complete his Ph.D. at MIT in 1979 by the age of 26. He taught economics at Stanford and then Princeton University until 2002, leaving his academic work for public service.

June 28, 2007

Bear Trap

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 5:32 pm

Bear Trap

A false signal that the rising trend of a stock or index has reversed when it has not.

This can occur during a bear market reversal when short sellers believe the markets will sink back to its declining ways. If the market continues to rise, the short sellers get trapped and are forced to cover their positions at higher prices.

June 27, 2007

Assets Under Management – AUM

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 3:09 pm

Assets Under Management – AUM

In general, the market value of assets an investment company manages on behalf of investors.

There are widely differing views on what the term means. Some financial institutions include bank deposits, mutual funds and institutional money in their calculations. Others limit it to funds under discretionary management where the client delegates responsibility to the company.

June 26, 2007

Arm’s Length Transaction

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 2:42 pm

Arm’s Length Transaction

A transaction in which the buyers and sellers of a product act independently and have no relationship to each other. The concept of an arm’s length transaction is to ensure that both parties in the deal are acting in their own self interest and are not subject to any pressure or duress from the other party.

The concept of an arm’s length transaction commonly comes into play in the real estate market. When determining the fair market value of a piece of property, the price for the property must be obtained through a potential buyer and seller operating through an arm’s length transaction, otherwise, the agreed-upon price will likely differ from the actual fair market value of the property.

For example, if two strangers are involved in the sale and purchase of a house, it is likely that the final agreed-upon price will be close to market value (assuming that both parties have equal bargaining power and equal information about the situation). This is because the seller would want a price that is as high as possible and the buyer would want a price that is as low as possible.

This contrasts with a situation in which the two parties are not strangers. For example, it is unlikely that the same transaction involving a father and his son would yield the same result, because the father may choose to give his son a discount.

June 24, 2007

CHINA SHARES

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 11:20 am

A shares: companies incorporated in mainland China and are traded in the mainland A-share markets. The prices of A shares are quoted in Renminbi, and currently only mainlanders and selected foreign institutional investors are allowed to trade A shares.

B shares: companies incorporated in mainland China and are traded in the mainland B-share markets (Shanghai and Shenzhen). B shares are quoted in foreign currencies. In the past, only foreigners were allowed to trade B shares. Starting from March 2001, mainlanders can trade B shares as well. However, they must trade with legal foreign currency accounts.

H shares: companies incorporated in mainland China and are listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange and other foreign stock exchanges.

June 22, 2007

Zero-Coupon Bond

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 4:38 pm

Zero-Coupon Bond

A debt security that doesn’t pay interest (a coupon) but is traded at a deep discount, rendering profit at maturity when the bond is redeemed for its full face value.

Also known as an “accrual bond”.

Some zero-coupon bonds are issued as such, while others are bonds that have been stripped of their coupons by a financial institution and then repackaged as zero-coupon bonds. Because they offer the entire payment at maturity, zero-coupon bonds tend to fluctuate in price much more than coupon bonds.

June 20, 2007

Year -To-Date

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 11:18 pm

Year -To-Date

Definition

YTD. For the period starting January 1 of the current year and ending today.

June 19, 2007

Year Over Year – YOY

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 9:39 pm

Year Over Year – YOY

A method of evaluating two or more measured events that compares the results of measurement at one time period with those from another time period (or series of time periods), on an annualized basis. Year-over-year comparisons are a popular way to evaluate the performance of investments. Any measurable events that recur annually can be compared on a year-over-year basis – from annual performance, to quarterly performance, to daily performance.

Year-over-year performance is frequently used by investors seeking to gauge whether a company’s financial performance is improving or worsening. For example, a business may report that its revenues have increased for the third quarter on a year-over-year basis for the last three years. This means that revenues at that company in the third quarter of year 3 were higher than revenues in the third quarter in year 2, which were higher than revenues in the third quarter of year 1.

As another example, a mutual fund that returned 50% last year may have a YOY return of 12%, as the year-over-year return takes into account each annual return since the fund’s inception.

June 18, 2007

yield curve

Filed under: Financial Glossary — alkapocino @ 5:04 pm

yield curve
Definition

A curve that shows the relationship between yields and maturity dates for a set of similar bonds, usually Treasuries, at a given point in time.

Related Terms

flat yield curve, normal yield curve, inverted yield curve

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