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Bid
Form
A form used in a competitive municipal bond underwriting in which a firm
can submit a bid to the issuer.
See: Issuer;
Underwrite
Big
Board
Industry lingo for the New York Stock Exchange.
See: New
York Stock Exchange
Black
Friday
Industry lingo that has come to connote a sharp drop in the financial
markets. The first Black Friday occurred on September 24, 1869. A group
of financiers attempted to corner the gold market, which caused a panic
and then an economic depression. The panic of 1873 also began on Friday.
See: Bear
Market; Black Monday; Cornering
the Market; Depression;
Volatility
Black
Monday
Monday, October 19, 1987--the day when the Dow Jones Industrial Average
fell a record 508 points. This drop was on top of a series of sharp drops
that occurred the previous week. The drop may have represented investors'
apprehensions about inflated stock prices, the federal budget and trade
deficits. However, there are many who blame program trading for the extreme
volatility.
See: Bear
Market; Black Friday; Dow
Jones Industrial Average; Overvalued;
Program
Trading; Volatility
Blanket
Recommendation
A recommendation made by a brokerage firm to buy or sell a particular
stock or stocks in a specific industry. The advice is intended for investors
without regard to their investment objectives or portfolio size.
See: Broker;
Portfolio
Block
A large quantity of a security that is either held or traded. Generally,
a block is considered to be 10,000 shares or more of stock and 200,000
or more bonds.
See: Block
Trade
Block
Trade
A large amount of a stock's shares sold as a single unit.
See: Block
Blotter
A log in which daily activities are recorded. Such daily activities include
orders placed and executed and, securities received or delivered.
Blowout
A hot issue--shares of a new securities offering that are sold very quickly.
Investors usually do not obtain all the shares they want. During a blowout,
a corporation is most likely to obtain a higher price for their securities.
See: Hot
Issue; Initial
Public Offering; New
Issue
Blue
Chip
A publicly traded company known for the quality and wide acceptance of
its products, services and management, and for its ability to profit and
pay dividends to shareholders. Examples of blue chip stocks are IBM and
General Electric. The term originates from blue poker chips--the most
valuable chips.
Board
Broker
Employees of the Chicago Board Options Exchange who handle orders that
cannot be immediately executed. These types of orders are called "away
from the market orders."
See: Away
From The Market; Chicago
Board Options Exchange; Options
BOM
(Branch Office Manager)
Individual who is in charge of a branch office of a brokerage firm or
a bank. BOMs who supervise the activities of at least three brokers must
pass supervisory tests given by the exchanges and the NASD.
See: Broker
Bond
A certificate of indebtedness in which the issuer (borrower) promises
to pay the bondholder (creditor) a specified amount of interest for a
specified time period and to repay the debt at maturity. Obligations that
are due in more than one year are classified as bonds whereas if the debt
is for less than one year, it is called a "note." Bondholders
are creditors of the issuer and they do not have ownership privileges.
A bond may be registered either by issuing certificates in the bondholder's
name, book-entry or in bearer certificates.
There are
many different kinds of bonds and different methods of evidencing bond
ownership. The most common types are:
* Secured
bonds are backed by collateral that may be sold if the issuer fails to
pay interest and principal when they are due.
* Unsecured
bonds or debentures are only backed by the full faith and credit of the
issuer. There is no specific collateral.
* Convertible
bonds give holders the right to exchange the bonds for other securities
of the issuer at a future date, under prescribed conditions.
See: Bearer
Bond; Book-Entry Securities; Collateral;
Convertible
Bond; Debenture;
Debt
Security; Full
Faith And Credit; General
Obligation Bond; Indenture;
Maturity
Date; Municipal
Bond; Principal;
Registered
Security; Treasuries;
Unsecured
Debt; Zero
Coupon Security
Bond
Anticipation Note (BAN)
A short-term debt instrument that is issued by a municipality or a state.
At maturity, the debt is paid from the proceeds of a new bond issue.
BANs usually
provide an investor with a tax-free yield that may be higher than other
comparable tax-exempt debt instruments of the same maturity.
See: Debt
Instrument; Maturity
Date; New
Issue; Short
Term Debt; Tax
Exempt Security; Yield
Bond
Broker
Broker who trades bonds on an exchange floor or in fixed-income markets.
"Bond
Buyer, The"
Daily newspaper that provides statistics and indexes that are utilized
in fixed-income markets. The publication also lists long term government
bonds and compares their after-tax yield with tax-free municipal yields.
See: Bond
Buyer's Indexes; Fixed
Income Investment; Government
Bond; Long
Term Debt; Municipal
Bond; Tax
Exempt Security; Yield
Bond
Buyer's Indexes
Municipal bond indexes that are published daily in "The Bond Buyer,"
a newspaper that reports on the fixed-income markets. The indexes are
a standard by which municipal bond yields are measured. Investors use
Bond Buyer Indexes to plot interest rate patterns.
See: "Bond
Buyer, The"; Fixed
Income Investment; Government
Bond; Long
Term Debt; Municipal
Bond; Tax
Exempt Security; Yield
Bond
Counsel
A law firm or attorney who reviews a new municipal issue and then issues
the legal opinion.
See: Legal
Opinion; Qualified
Legal Opinion
#006699
A section on the floor of an exchange in which members gather to transact
bond orders. Because this area is separate from stock traders, it is called
a "bond crowd."
See: Cabinet
Crowd; Floor
Bond
Fund
A mutual fund whose objective is to seek high income and preservation
of capital by investing mainly in bonds. Some funds may aim to achieve
a proper mix between short-term, intermediate-term and long-term maturities.
The fund can be taxable or tax-free.
See: Bond;
Intermediate
Term; Long
Term Debt; Maturity
Date; Mutual
Fund; Short
Term Debt; Tax
Exempt Security
Bond
Power
A form used in the transfer of registered bonds from one owner to another.
A bond power replicates the assignment form on the back of the bond certificate,
but it is separated from the certificate. Hence, a bond power is sometimes
called an "assignment separate from certificate." Although both
achieve the same goal, a bond power has a safety advantage in being separate.
See: Certificate;
Registered
Security; Stock
Power
Book-Entry
Securities
Securities that are registered to an owner without the issuance of a physical
certificate. Ownership is reflected by an entry in the issuer's books.
This method of registering securities has grown in popularity because
investors need not worry about the location of their certificates and
it requires less paperwork for a brokerage firm.
See: Certificate;
Certificateless
Municipal; Registered
Security
Book
Value
An accounting term that states the equity value of an outstanding share
of stock. A stock's book value is determined by dividing the amount of
stockholders' equity by the number of common shares outstanding. A company's
book value may be of no relevance to its to market value.
See: Outstanding
Stock; Fair
Market Value
Borrowing
Power
Dollar amount that clients can buy securities on margin. The margin limit
is dependent on the type of security--usually 50% of a stock's value,
30% of a bond's value and 100% of a cash equivalent's value (i.e., money
market funds). Buying power can also refer to securities hypothecated
(pledged) to a lender as loan collateral. The lender's policies and the
type of security determine the collateral's loan value.
See: Cash
Equivalent; Collateral;
Hypothecation;
Margin
BOT
(Bought)
An abbreviation for the word "bought." The abbreviation for
"sold" is SL.
Bottom
A security's lowest market price or the market's lowest level as determined
by any of the major indexes. The bottom can either be for a particular
trading day, year or cycle.
See: Historical
Trading Range; Range
Bottom
Fisher
Person who looks for investments that have fallen to what they perceive
to be the security's bottom prices before it starts to turn upward.
See: Bottom;
Bottom-Up Approach to Investing
Bottom-Up
Approach to Investing
An investment approach whereby an investor will search for individual
stocks that are performing well. This approach assumes that individual
corporations can do well even though its industry is not doing well.
See: Bottom
Fisher
Box
The physical location in a brokerage house where securities or other documents
are held in safekeeping. These securities may qualify for stock loans
or as bank loan collateral. The determination is dependent upon regulations
concerned with the safety and segregation of clients' securities.
See: Collateral;
Selling
Short Against The Box; Transfer
And Hold
Box
Spread
An option position composed of four different contracts--a long call/short
put with identical exercise prices and expiration dates, combined with
a short call/long put with identical exercise prices and expiration dates.
See: Call
Option; Expiration Date; Exercise
Price; Long Position; Options;
Option Spread; Put
Option; Short Position; Spread
Position
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