Welcome to Ameritrade Plus University
  Library
Lessons:
1
  Setting priorities
2
  Making a budget
3
  Basics of banking
4
  Basics of investing
5
  Investing in stocks
6
  Investing in bonds
7
  Buying a home
8
  Investing in mutual funds
9
  Controlling debt
10
  Employee stock options
11
  Saving for college
12
  Kids and money
13
  Planning for retirement
14
  Investing in IPOs
15
  Asset allocation
16
  Hiring financial help
17
  Health insurance
18
  Buying a car
19
  Taxes
20
  Home insurance
21
  Life insurance
22
  Futures and options
23
  Family law
24
  Estate planning
25
  Auto insurance

|> About Money 101

investing 101

  Glossary
A comprehensive A-to-Z listing of 2,500 financial terms
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A.B.C.D.E.F.G.H.I.J.K.L.M.N.O.P.Q.R.S.T.U.V.W.X.Y.Z
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A
Haircut
The margin or difference between the actual market value of a security and the value assessed by the lending side of a transaction (ie. a repo).

Handle
The whole-dollar price of a bid or offer is referred to as the handle (ie. if a security is quoted at 101.10 bid and 101.11 offered, 101 is the handle). Traders are assumed to know the handle.

Hard capital rationing
Capital rationing that under no circumstances can be violated.

Hard currency
A freely convertible currency that is not expected to depreciate in value in the foreseeable future.

Harmless warrant
Warrant that allows the user to purchase a bond only by surrendering an existing bond with similar terms.

Head & shoulders
In technical analysis, a chart formation in which a stock price reaches a peak and declines, rises above its former peak and again declines and rises again but not to the second peak and then again declines. The first and third peaks are shoulders, while the second peak is the formation's head. Technical analysts generally consider a head and shoulders formation to be a very bearish indication.

Hedge
A transaction that reduces the risk of an investment.

Hedge fund
A fund that may employ a variety of techniques to enhance returns, such as both buying and shorting stocks based on a valuation model.

Hedge ratio (delta)
The ratio of volatility of the portfolio to be hedged and the return of the volatility of the hedging instrument.

Hedged portfolio
A portfolio consisting of the long position in the stock and the short position in the call option, so as to be riskless and produce a return that equals the risk-free interest rate.

Hedgie
Slang for a hedge fund.

Hedging
A strategy designed to reduce investment risk using call options, put options, short selling, or futures contracts. A hedge can help lock in existing profits. Its purpose is to reduce the volatility of a portfolio, by reducing the risk of loss.

Hedging demands
Demands for securities to hedge particular sources of consumption risk, beyond the usual mean-variance diversification motivation.

Hell-or-high-water contract
A contract that obligates a purchaser of a project's output to make cash payments to the project in all events, even if no product is offered for sale.

Herstatt risk
The risk of loss in foreign exchange trading that one party will deliver foreign exchange but the counterparty financial institution will fail to deliver its end of the contract. It is also referred to as settlement risk.

High-coupon bond refunding
Refunding of a high-coupon bond with a new, lower coupon bond.

High price
The highest (intraday) price of a stock over the past 52 weeks, adjusted for any stock splits.

High-yield bond
See:junk bond.

Highly leveraged transaction (HLT)
Bank loan to a highly leveraged firm.

Historical cost
Teminology for the accounting cost that is carried in the books for a current cost of the item.

Historical exchange rate
An accounting term that refers to the exchange rate in effect when an asset or liability was acquired.

Hit
A dealer who agrees to sell at the bid price quoted by another dealer is said to "hit" that bid.

Holder-of-record date
The date on which holders of record in a firm's stock ledger are designated as the recipients of either dividends or stock rights. Also called date of record.

Holding company
A corporation that owns enough voting stock in another firm to control management and operations by influencing or electing its board of directors.

Holding period
Length of time that an individual holds a security.

Holding period return
The rate of return over a given period.

Homemade dividend
Sale of some shares of stock to get cash that would be similar to receiving a cash dividend.

Homemade leverage
Idea that as long as individuals borrow (or lend) on the same terms as the firm, they can duplicate the affects of corporate leverage on their own. Thus, if levered firms are priced too high, rational investors will simply borrow on personal accounts to buy shares in unlevered firms.

Homogeneity
The degree to which items are similar.

Homogeneous
Exhibiting a high degree of homogeneity.

Homogenous expectations assumption
An assumption of Markowitz portfolio construction that investors have the same expectations with respect to the inputs that are used to derive efficient portfolios: asset returns, variances, and covariances.

Horizon analysis
An analysis of returns using total return to assess performance over some investment horizon.

Horizon return
Total return over a given horizon.

Horizontal acquisition
Merger between two companies producing similar goods or services.

Horizontal analysis
The process of dividing each expense item of a given year by the same expense item in the base year. This allows for the exploration of changes in the relative importance of expense items over time and the behavior of expense items as sales change.

Horizontal merger
A merger involving two or more firms in the same industry that are both at the same stage in the production cycle; that is two or more competitors.

Horizontal spread
The simultaneous purchase and sale of two options that differ only in their exercise date.

Host security
The security to which a warrant is attached.

Hot money
Money that moves across country borders in response to interest rate differences and that moves away when the interest rate differential disappears.

Hubris
An arrogance due to excessive pride and an insolence toward others.

Human capital
The unique capabilities and expertise of individuals.

Hurdle rate
The required return in capital budgeting.

Hybrid
A package containing two or more different kinds of risk management instruments that are usually interactive.

Hybrid security
A convertible security whose optioned common stock is trading in a middle range, causing the convertible security to trade with the characteristics of both a fixed-income security and a common stock instrument.

 


 

Glossary created by Campbell R. Harvey, Professor of Finance,
Fuqua School of Business at Duke University


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