Bonds
Floating-rate notes
A note on which interest payments are not fixed, but instead vary from period to period depending on the current level of a reference interest rate.
Bondholders
A person who loans a corporation money by buying debt securities.
mutual funds
A pool of money used by a company to purchase a variety of stocks, bonds or money market instruments. Provides diversification and professional management for investors.
equity
Amount of owners' or shareholders' portion of a business.
pension funds
Amounts of money put aside by corporations, nonprofit organizations, or unions to cover part of the financial needs of members when they retire
Above par
An interest rate quoted that would give a credit to the borrower.
Below par
An interest rate quoted that would require a charge to the borrower.
Investment grade
Bonds rated BBB or above.
gilts
British and Irish government securities
investors
Groups of individuals who invest their money in various types of companies in search of making a profit
Junk bonds
High-risk, high-interest bonds
Issue bonds
Loans from investors to government or company, to be paid back in set period of time plus interest
Measure the risk
Mierzyć ryzyko
bid prices
Prices at which a dealer is willing to buy an asset or a security, typically qualified by a maximum quantity (bid size).
offer prices
Prices at which a dealer is willing to sell an asset or a security, typically qualified by a maximum quantity (ask size). Also called ask price.
Represent the problem
Restate or visually represent the problem
principal
The amount of money borrowed
Treasury bonds
United States government bond with maturity of 30 years
Treasury notes
United States government obligation with a maturity of 2 to 10 years
creditor
a person who believes that he will be paid back the money that he loaned
insolvent
bankrupt
Corporate bonds
bonds issued by corporations
gilt - edged stock
bonds issued by some national governments. British origin. referred to the debt securities issued by the bank of England on behalf of His/Her Majesty treasury.
Convertibles
bonds or preferred stocks that can be exchanged for common stock at the option of the holder
Fallen angels
bonds that drop into junk territory
Zero coupon bonds
bonds that pay no annual interest but are sold at a discount below par, thus compensating investors in the form of capital appreciation
cash flows
cash payments to the holder of a security
Fluctuations
changes-- often from highs to lows and back again
dividends
earnings distributed to stockholders
Default
failure to pay back a loan
bond yield
rentowność obligacji
market makers
securities dealers that make a commitment to continuously offer to buy and sell the stock of a specific corporation listed on the NASDAQ exchange or traded in the OTC market
Treasury Bills
short-term United States government obligation with a maturity of 4, 13, 26, or 52 weeks and a minimum denomination of $100
yield
the annual rate of return on a bond if the bond were held to maturity
Liquidity
the ease with which an asset can be converted into cash
coupon rate
the interest rate that a bond issuer will pay to a bondholder
coupon
the stated interest payment made on a bond
maturity
the time at which payment to a bondholder is due
Allocate money
to give a share of available money to a person or organization
secondary bond market
when investors buy and sell previously issued bonds before their maturity date