Glossary
Catalyst—an internally or externally instigated corporate event that results in security holders realizing some or all of a company’s underlying value
Chapter 11—a section of the federal bankruptcy code whereby a debtor is reorganized as a going concern rather than liquidated (see bankruptcy)
Closed-end mutual fund—mutual fund having a fixed number of outstanding shares that trade based on supply and demand at prices not necessarily equal to underlying net asset value (see open-end mutual fund)
Collateralized bond obligation (CBO)—diversified investment pools of junk bonds that issue their own securities, usually in several tranches, each of which has risk and return characteristics that differ from those of the underlying junk bonds themselves
Commercial paper—short-term loans from institutional investors to businesses
Commission—a charge for transacting in securities
Complex securities—securities with unusual cash flow characteristics
Contingent-value rights—tradable rights that are redeemable for cash if a stock fails to reach specified price levels
Convertible arbitrage—arbitrage transactions designed to take advantage of price discrepancies between convertible securities and the securities into which they are convertible
Convertible bonds—bonds that can be exchanged for common stock or other assets of a company at a specified price
Coupon—the specified interest payment on a bond expressed as a percentage
Covered-call writing—the practice of purchasing common stocks and then selling call options against them
Cram-down security—security distributed in a merger transaction, not sold by an underwriter
Credit cycle—the ebb and flow in the availability of credit
Debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing—loan to a bankrupt company operating in Chapter 11
Debt-to-equity ratio—the ratio of a company’s outstanding debt to the book value of its equity; a measure of a company’s financial leverage
Default—the status of a company that fails to make an interest or principal payment on a debt security on the required date
Default rate of junk bonds—calculated by many junk-band-market participants as the dollar volume of junk-bond defaults occurring in a particular year divided by the total volume of junk bonds outstanding
Depreciation—an accounting procedure by which long-lived assets are capitalized and then expensed over time
Discount rate—the rate of interest that would make an investor indifferent between present and future dollars
Diversification—ownership of many rather than a small number of securities; the goal of diversification is to limit the risk of company-specific events on one’s portfolio as a whole
Dividend—cash distributed by a company to its shareholders out of after-tax earnings
Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA)—a nonsensical number thought by some investors to represent the cash flow of a business
Earnings per share—a company’s after-tax earnings divided by the total number of shares outstanding
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