INVESTMANT
TERMS
Ask Price (or "offer" price): The price at which
a Market Maker is willing to sell a security.
Assets: Any possessions that have value on an exchange.
Assets include tangible items such as inventories, equipment, real
estate, as well as intangible items such as property rights or goodwill.
Bear Market: A bear market is one in which prices are low
or declining.
Blue-chip stocks: A term generally applied to stocks of
well-established companies that are known for their long-standing
track records.
Broker: An individual or a firm that brings together buyers
and sellers but does not take a position in the asset to be exchanged.
Bull Market: A bull market is one in which stock prices
are high or rising.
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA): The Dow Jones Industrial
Average Index (DJIA) is a price-weighted average of 30 actively
traded blue chip stocks, primarily industrials but including American
Express, AT&T, and as of 2000, Microsoft. Prepared and published
by Dow Jones & Co., it is the oldest and most widely quoted
of all the market indicators. The components, which change from
time to time, represent between 15 and 20 percent of the market
value of NYSE stocks. The DJIA is calculated by adding the closing
prices if the component stocks and by using a divisor that is adjusted
for splits and stock dividends equal to 10 percent or more of the
market value of an issue, as well as substitutions and mergers.
The average is quoted in points, not in dollars.
IPO: A company's first sale of stock to the public. Companies
making an IPO are seeking outside equity capital and a public market
for their stock.
Earnings: Income of a business (revenue minus expenses).
Earnings per share or EPS: Income (or earnings) for a specific
period (usually a quarterly or a fiscal year period) divided by
the average number of shares outstanding during that period.
Market Maker: A broker/dealer that maintains a firm bid
and offer price in a given security by standing ready to buy or
sell at publicly quoted prices.
Stock: Ownership of a company or corporation, represented
by "shares" of stock that claim ownership on the company's
earnings and assets.
The Over-The Counter Market:
Over-The-Counter Stock: A stock that is traded electronically
among a group of broker/dealers instead of an exchange like the
NYSE or AMEX.
The NASDAQ National Market: This the trading venue for the
largest, most liquid stocks, like Intel or Yahoo!
The NASDAQ Smallcap Market: This market hosts up-and-coming
companies. Both NASDAQ Smallcap and NASDAQ National Markets offer
wide distribution of quotes, news, and company information.
The OTC Bulletin Board: (OTCBB) Offers electronic distribution
of quotes, but is considered to be a lower-level tier.
The Pink Sheets: These are the bottom-tier stocks, with
limited distribution of electronic quotes. Companies that trade
here aren't required to file financial information with the SEC.
Exchanges, Indexes and averages:
Exchange: An organized marketplace in which stocks, common
stock equivalents, and bonds are traded by members of the exchange,
acting both as brokers and dealers/traders. Such exchanges have
a physical location where brokers and dealers meet to execute orders
from institutional and individual investors and to buy and sell
securities.
NYSE: New York Stock Exchange. The NYSE is the oldest, largest
and most honored exchange in the United States. The NYSE is sometimes
referred to as the Big Board. Thousands of larger companies are
listed on this exchange and it has many operating divisions composed
of marketers, legal experts, developers, planners, and economists.
The NYSE is considered to be one of the more economic "indicators."
AMEX: The American Stock ExchangeŠ is the second largest
floor-based securities exchange in the United States. It has significant
presence in both listed equities and derivative securities. Amex
had long been on the leading edge of exchanges worldwide in trading-floor
technology, service to its listed companies, and innovative new
product development. The National Association of Securities Dealers,
Inc., in 1998, acquired it.
NASDAQ: The National Association of Security Dealers Automated
Quotations. The NASDAQ is a computer operated and owned by NASDAQ
that provides dealers with price quotations for stock and securities
traded on the NASDAQ. Stocks on the NASDAQ feature many new and
volatile corporations and many of them relatively new.
INDEX: A market indicator, such as the NASDAQ Composite
or the Dow Jones, that represents a measure of the relative value
of a combined group of stocks.
S&P 500: (Standard & Poor's Corporation) A company
well known for its rating of stocks and bonds according to investment
risk (the standard and Poor's Rating) and for compiling the Standard
& Poor's Index-commonly called the Standard & Poor's 500-that
tracks 400 industrial stocks, 20 transportation stocks, 40 financial
stocks, and 40 public utilities as a measurement indicative of broad
changes in the market.
Dow Jones Averages: The Dow Jones Industrial Average or
(DJIA) is a price-weighted average of 30 actively traded blue chip
stocks, primarily industrials but including American Express Co.
and AT&T. Prepared and published by Dow Jones & Co., it
is the oldest and most widely quoted of all the market indicators.
The average is quoted in points, not in dollars.
Dividends, splits and adjustments:
Dividend: Distribution to shareholders of cash or stock
declared by the company's board of directors
Stock Split: The division of outstanding shares of a corporation
into a larger number of shares. For example: in a 3-for-1 spilt,
each holder of 100 shares before would now have 300 shares, although
the proportionate equity in the company would remain the same.
Reverse Stock Split: A proportionate decrease in the shares
of stock held by stockholders. For example, a 1-for-3 split would
result in the stockholders owning 1 share for every 3 shares owned
before the split. A company generally institutes a reverse split
in order to increase the market price of its stock.
Mutual Funds
Mutual Fund: Fund operated by an investment company that
raises money from shareholders and invests it in stocks, bonds,
options, commodities or money market securities.
Portfolio: The combined holdings of more than one stock,
bond commodity, real estate investment, or other assets by an individual
or institutional investor.
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