Lessons:
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Glossary
A comprehensive A-to-Z listing of 2,500 financial terms
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- Unbiased predictor
- A theory that spot
prices at some future date will be equal to
today's forward rates.
- Unbundling
- When a multinational firm unbundles its transfer
of funds into separate flows for specific purposes.
See: bundling.
- Uncovered call
- A short
call option
position in which
the writer does not
own shares of underlying
stock represented by his option
contracts. Also called a "naked" call, it is much riskier for
the writer than a covered call, where the writer owns the underlying stock.
If the buyer of a call exercises
the option to call, the writer would be forced to buy the stock
at market price.
- Uncovered put
- A short
put option
position in which the
writer does not have a
corresponding short stock position or has not deposited,
in a cash account, cash or cash equivalents equal to the
exercise value of the
put. Also called "naked" puts,
the writer has pledged to buy the stock at a certain price if the
buyer of the options chooses to exercise it. The nature of
uncovered options means the writer's risk
is unlimited.
- Underfunded pension plan
- A pension plan
that has a negative surplus (i.e.,
liabilities exceed assets).
- Underinvestment problem
- The mirror image of the
asset
substitution problem, wherein
stockholders refuse to
invest in low-risk assets to avoid shifting wealth from themselves
to the debtholders.
- Underlying
- The "something" that the parties agree to exchange in a
derivative
contract.
- Underlying asset
- The asset
that an option gives the
option holder the right to buy or to sell.
- Underlying security
- Options: the security
subject to being purchased or sold upon
exercise of an
option
contract.
For example, IBM stock is the
underlying security to IBM options. Depository receipts:
The class, series
and number of the foreign shares
represented by the depository receipt.
- Underperform
- When a security is expected to appreciate at a slower rate than the overall market.
- Underpricing
- Issue of securities
below their market value.
- Underwrite
- To guarantee, as to guarantee the
issuer of securities a
specified price by entering into a
purchase and sale
agreement. To bring securities to market.
- Underwriter
- A party that guarantees the proceeds to the firm
from a security sale,
thereby in effect taking ownership of the securities.
Or, stated differently, a firm,
usually an investment
bank, that buys an issue of securities from a company
and resells it to investors.
- Underwriting
- Acting as the underwriter
in a purchase and sale.
- Underwriting fee
- The portion of the
gross underwriting spread that compensates the securities firms that
underwrite a public offering for
their underwriting risk.
- Underwriting income
- For an insurance company, the difference between
the premiums earned and the
costs of settling claims.
- Underwriting syndicate
- A group of investment
banks that work together to sell new
security offerings to investors.
The underwriting syndicate
is led by the lead underwriter. See also:
lead underwriter.
- Underwritten offering
- A purchase and
sale.
- Undiversifiable risk
- Related: Systematic risk
- Unemployment rate
- The ratio of the number of people classified as unemployed
to the total labor force.
- Unfunded debt
- Debt maturing within one year (short-term debt).
See: funded debt.
- Unilateral transfers
- Items in the current account
of the balance of payments
of a country's accounting books that corresponds to gifts from
foreigners or pension payments to foreign residents who once
worked in the country whose balance of payments is being considered.
- Unique risk
- Also called unsystematic risk or
idiosyncratic risk.
Specific company risk that can be eliminated through
diversification.
See: diversifiable risk
and unsystematic risk.
- Unit benefit formula
- Method used to determine a participant's benefits
in a defined benefit
plan by multiplying years of service by the percentage of
salary.
- Unit investment trust
- Money invested in a portfolio
whose composition is fixed for the life of the fund. Shares in a unit
trust are called redeemable trust certificates, and they are
sold at a premium above net
asset value.
- Universal life
- A whole
life insurance product whose investment component pays a
competitive interest rate
rather than the below-market
crediting rate.
- Unleveraged beta
- The beta of
an unleveraged
required return (i.e. no debt)
on an investment when the investment is financed
entirely by equity.
- Unleveraged
required return
- The required return
on an investment when the investment is financed
entirely by equity (i.e. no debt).
- Unlimited liability
- Full liability for the debt
and other obligations of a legal entity.
The general partners
of a partnership have
unlimited liability.
- Unmatched book
- If the average
maturity of a bank's
liabilities is less than that of its
assets, it is said to be running
an unmatched book. The term is commonly used with the
Euromarket. Term also refers to the condition when a firm
enters into OTC derivatives
contracts and chooses to hedge
that risk by not making trades in the opposite
direction to another financial intermediary. In this case, the firm
with an unmatched book hedges its net market risk with futures and
options, usually. Related expressions:
open book and
short book.
- Unseasoned issue
- Issue of a security
for which there is no existing market.
See: seasoned issue.
- Unsecured debt
- Debt that does not identify specific
assets that can be taken
over by the debtholder in
case of default.
- Unsterilized intervention
- Foreign exchange
market intervention in which the monetary authorities have not
insulated their domestic money supplies from the foreign exchange
transactions.
- Unsystematic risk
- Also called the
diversifiable risk
or residual risk. The risk that
is unique to a company such as a strike, the outcome of unfavorable
litigation, or a natural catastrophe that can be eliminated
through diversification.
Related: Systematic
risk
- Upstairs market
- A network of trading desks for the major brokerage
firms and institutional
investors that communicate with each other by means of
electronic display systems and telephones to facilitate
block trades and program
trades.
- Uptick
- A term used to describe a transaction that took place at
a higher price than the preceding transaction involving the
same security.
- Uptick trade
- Related:Tick-test rules
- U.S. Treasury bill
- U.S. government debt
with a maturity of less
than a year.
- U.S. Treasury bond
- U.S. government debt with
a maturity of more than 10 years.
- U.S. Treasury note
- U.S. government debt
with a maturity of one to
10 years.
- Utility
- The measure of the welfare or satisfaction of an
investor or person.
- Utility value
- The welfare a given investor
assigns to an investment with a particular
return and
risk.
- Utility function
- A mathematical expression that assigns a value to all
possible choices. In portfolio
theory the utility function expresses the preferences of economic
entities with respect to perceived risk
and expected return.
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