Glossary
Puttable bond—bond with embedded put features allowing holders to sell the bonds back to the issuer at a specified price and time (see callable bond)
Recapitalization—financial restructuring of a company whereby the company borrows against its assets and distributes the proceeds to shareholders
Relative-performance orientation—the tendency to evaluate investment results by comparing one’s investment performance with that of the market as a whole
Return—potential gain
Rights offering—a financing technique whereby a company issues to its shareholders the preemptive right to purchase new stock (or bonds) in the company or occasionally in a subsidiary company
Risk—amount and probability of potential loss
Risk arbitrage—a specialized area involving investment in far-from-risk-free takeovers as well as spinoffs, liquidations, and other extraordinary corporate transactions
Secured debt—debt backed by a security interest in specific assets
Security—a marketable piece of paper representing the fractional ownership of a business or loan to a business or government entity
Self-tender—an offer by a company to repurchase its own securities
Senior-debt security—security with the highest priority in the hierarchy of a company’s capital structure
Sensitivity analysis—a method of ascertaining the sensitivity of business value to small changes in the assumptions made by investors
Share buybacks—corporate stock repurchases
Shareholder’s (owner’s) equity—the residual after liabilities are subtracted from assets
Short-selling—the sale of a borrowed security (see going long)
Short-term relative-performance derby—manifestation of the tendency by institutional investors to measure investment results, not against an absolute standard, but against broad stock market indices resulting in an often speculative orientation
Sinking fund—obligation of a company to periodically retire part of a bond issue prior to maturity
Speculation—an asset having no underlying economics and throwing off no cash flow to the benefit of its owner (see investment)
Spinoff—the distribution of the shares of a subsidiary company to the shareholders of the parent company
Stock—a marketable piece of paper representing the fractional ownership of an underlying business
Stock index Futures—contracts for the future delivery of a market basket of stocks
Stock market proxy—estimate of the price at which a company, or its subsidiaries considered separately, would trade in the stock market
Subordinated-debt security - security with a secondary priority in the hierarchy of a company’s capital structure
Tactical-asset allocation—computer program designed to indicate whether stocks or bonds are a better buy
Takeover multiple— multiple of earnings, cash flow, or revenues paid to acquire a company
Tangible asset—an asset physically in existence
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