January
Barometer
Market forecasting tool whose statistics show that the market rises in years
when the Standard & Poor's 500 Index is up in January and will drop
when the index is down for that month.
See: Forecasting; Standard
& Poor's 500; Technical
Analysis
January Effect
Event that starts on the last day of December and ends on the fourth trading
day of January--stock prices have historically tended to rise considerably.
The January Effect is caused by year end selling for tax losses, recognizing
capital gains, or effecting portfolio window dressing. Even though the
sell off depresses the stocks, it has nothing to do with their basic worth.
Bargain hunters may quickly buy in and thus, cause the January rally.
See: Capital Gain; Technical
Analysis
Joint Account
An account that is owned jointly by two or more clients. Joint accounts
may be set up two ways.
See: Joint Account Agreement; Joint
Tenancy
Joint Account
Agreement
Form used to establish a joint account at a brokerage firm or a bank.
It must be signed by all account owners.
See: Joint Account; Joint
Tenancy
Joint
and Survivor Annuity
Annuity that makes payments for the lifetime of two or more beneficiaries
(frequently husband and wife). If one annuitant passes away, payments
continue to the survivor as specified in the contract.
See: Annuitant; Annuity;
Beneficiary
Joint Bond
Bond that is guaranteed by a party other than the issuer or has more than
one obligator--also called "joint and several bond". Prevalent
use of joint bonds can be found when a parent corporation wants to guarantee
the bonds of a subsidiary.
See: Debt Instrument; Guaranteed
Bond; Obligator
Joint Tenancy (JT)
An account or ownership of property where there are two or more owners.
There are several types of joint tenancy. State laws and the relationship
between the owners will determine the type of joint account one will want
to establish.
See: Joint Account; Joint
Tenants By Entirety; Joint Tenants
In Common; Joint Tenants
With Rights of Survivorship
Joint Tenants
By Entirety
Ownership of assets by a married couple where the husband or wife automatically
acquires the other's share upon death.
See: Joint Tenancy; Probate
Joint Tenants
In Common (JTIC)
Ownership of assets by two or more individuals. A specific ownership percentage
is assigned to each individual. In the event of the death of one party,
the deceased's interest passes to their estate and not to the surviving
tenant(s).
See: Joint Tenancy
Joint
Tenants with Right of Survivorship (JTWROS)
Ownership of assets by two or more individuals where there is not specific
fractional financial interest. In the event of the death of one party,
the survivor(s) receives total ownership.
See: Joint Tenancy; Probate
JT (Joint Tenancy)
An account or ownership of property where there are two or more owners.
See: Joint Account; Joint
Tenants By Entirety; Joint Tenants
In Common; Joint Tenants
With Rights Of Survivorship
JTIC (Joint Tenants In Common)
Ownership of assets by two or more individuals. A specific ownership percentage
is assigned to each individual. In the event of the death of one party,
the deceased's interest passes to their estate and not to the surviving
tenant(s).
See: Joint Tenancy
JTWROS (Joint Tenants With
Right Of Survivorship)
Ownership of assets by two or more individuals where there is not specific
fractional financial interest. In the event of the death of one party,
the survivor(s) receives total ownership.
See: Joint Tenancy; Probate
Jumbo
Certificate of Deposit
Certificate with a minimum denomination of $100,000.
See: Certificate Of Deposit
Junior Issue
Debt or equity issue of a corporation that is subordinate in claim to
another issue of the same corporation in regard to dividends, interest,
principal, or security in the event of liquidation.
See: Junior Security; Liquidation;
Preferred Stock; Principal
Junior Refunding
The refinancing of government debt maturing in one to five years by issuing
new securities that mature in five or more years.
See: Debt Instrument; Government
Obligations
Junior Securities
Security that has a subordinate claim on assets to that of a "senior
security". For instance, a preferred stock is junior to a debenture,
but a debenture, being an unsecured bond, is junior to all corporate securities.
See: Debenture; Junior
Issue; Preferred Stock; Senior
Securities; Unsecured Debt
Junk Bond
Bonds that have little or no collateral or liquidation value and are typically
very risky. For this risk, they offer a high rate of return. They are
issued by corporations without sales and earnings track records, or by
those with questionable credit. Moreover, in the 1980s, junk bonds were
popular instruments for corporate mergers and acquisitions. The bonds
usually have a credit rating of BB or lower. Because the term has an unfavorable
connotation, issuers and holders prefer the bonds to be called "high
yield bonds."
See: Acquisition; Collateral;
High Yield Bond; Liquidation;
Merger; Rate
of Return; Risk; Risk/Reward
Ratio
Justified Price
Fair market price an educated buyer will pay for an asset.
See: Fair Market Value