Glossary Flashcards
Analyst
Analyst: person who studies an industry sector and makes BUY, HOLD and SELL recommendations. Also, a different term referring to entry-level career position in many investment banks.
Asset
Asset: an item with economic value that is owned or controlled by an individual, business or government.
Bear
Bear: investor who sells believing prices will fall.
Bid price
Bid price: the price at which the market maker will buy.
Bonds
Bonds: a government, or company can raise capital by issuing a bond. Bondholders receive interest (a ‘coupon’) and the capital is repaid at maturity. The difference between bonds and loans is that bonds can be traded between investors (who are lending to the issuer).
Broker
Broker: intermediary between a buyer and a seller, receiving commission on the trade.
Brokerage
Brokerage: the payment from the client to the broker.
Bull
Bull: investor who buys believing prices will rise.
Capital markets
Capital markets: the market for long-term funding, eg bonds and equity.
Casino banking/finance
Casino banking/finance: a colloquial term used to describe an investment approach in which investors at commercial banks employ risky financial strategies to earn large rewards.
Chinese walls
Chinese walls: information barriers within investment banks to manage potential compliance and conflict of interest issues.
Clearing
Clearing: the mechanism for making transactions happen: matching the buyer and seller, making sure the buyer has the cash and the seller has the securities.
Commodities
Commodities: goods such as oil, petrol, metal or grain.
Credit crunch
Credit crunch: the term that has come into common usage to refer to a severe shortage of money or credit. The start of the global credit crunch can be dated to August 2007 when default rates on sub-prime loans in the US housing market rose to record levels.
Credit default swap
Credit default swap: insurance-like contract that transfers credit risk. The buyer of the swap makes payments to the seller in exchange for protection in the event of a default. Banks and other institutions have used credit default swaps to cover the risk of mortgage holders defaulting.
Debt capital markets (DCM)
Debt capital markets (DCM): investment bank division responsible for issuance and pricing of debt securities (eg bonds).
Derivatives
Derivatives: the group term for financial contracts between buyers and sellers of commodities or securities. Includes futures, options or swaps. Derivatives allow profit from the rise (or fall) of a commodity or security, without actually buying the underlying good.
Equity
Equity: otherwise referred to as shares. Shareholders own a percentage of the company, and have a share in profits, as well as control via voting rights.
Equity capital markets (ECM)
Equity capital markets (ECM): investment bank division responsible for structuring and pricing the issuance of equities, such as at IPO (Initial Public Offering – flotation of the company on the stock exchange).
FTSE 100/250 index
FTSE 100/250 index: the index of the 100/250 largest companies on the UK stock market.
Futures
Futures: contract between two parties to trade a commodity or security at a fixed price and a fixed future date.
Gilts
Gilts: bonds issued on behalf of the UK government to fund spending. Known as ‘gilt-edged securities’ because the bond contracts used to have gold round the edge.
Hard market
Hard market: a scarcity of a product or service for purchase, as opposed to a soft market, in which the product or service is readily available.