Test 2
Repurchase agreement
An agreement that one firm sells another firm some of its financial assets, and promises to repurchase them at a later date
Certificate of Deposit (CD)
An interest earning time deposit at a bank or other financial intermediary
Classified Stock
Common stock that is given a special designation such as Class A and Class B, and so on and so fourth, to meet special needs of the company
Features of a preferred stock
Control of the Firm: Most preferred stock is nonvoting, but preferred stock holders are often given the right to vote for directors if the company does not pay the preferred dividend Convertibility: Most preferred stock issued is convertible in to common stock. Call Provision: the right to call in the preferred stock for a redemption Sinking fund: Call for the repurchase of and retirement of a given percentage of preferred stock each year. (basically a maturity option) Participating: Preferred stock participates with common stock in sharing the firms earnings
Bond Yield
Current yield + Capital gains yield
Government bonds
Debt issued by a federal, state, or local government
Foreign debt
Debt sold by a foreign narrower but denominated in the currency where it is sold (An example of this form of debt is issued by a German borrower, sold in the United States, and denominated in U.S. dollars.)
Coupon rate
Interest rate paid on a bon or other debt instrument. Stated as a percentage of it's face value (PMT)
Another name for par value when dealing with a preferred stock
Liquidation preference (or value)
Corporate
Long term debt indenture issued by corporations
Current Yield
The portion of a bondholder's return that results from a bond's interest payment, calculated by dividing the bond's interest payment by its market value.
Relevant risk
The portion of a security's risk that cannot be diversified away. The securities market risk. It reflects the security's contribution to the risk of a portfolio
Risk Premium
The portion of an asset's total expected return required by investors as compensation for assuming the additional risks associated with the security, the issuer, and the marketplace.
Market price value
The price at which a stock currently is traded at in the market
Intrinsic (theoretical) value
The value of an asset that, in the mind of a particular investor, it justified by the facts
Short-term debt securities have
A maturity of one year or less.
beta coefficient
A measure of the extend to which the returns on a given stock move with the stock market
Stand alone risk
A measure of the sensitivity of a security's returns to fluctuations in the return earned by the market portfolio.
Standard Deviation
A measure of tightness of variability, or a set of outcome
Cumulative devidas
A protective feature of preferred stock that requires preferred dividends that were not paid in previous years to be disbursed before any common stock dividends can be paid
Call provision
A provision in a bond contract that gives the issuer the right to redeem the bonds under specified terms prior to the normal maturity date
Preemptive right
A provision that gives existing common stockholders the right to purchase new issues of common stock on a prorate basis before any shares can be offered to the investors
Sinking fund
A required annual payment designed to amortize a bond issue.
Coefficient of variation
A standardized measure of risk per unit of return. It is calculated by dividing the STANDARD DEVIATION by EXPECTED RETURN
Preferred Stock
A stock somewhere in-between a common stock and a bond
Revenue bond
A type of bond generally issued by state and local governmental entities and whose interest and maturity payments are raised and paid using income generated by the project being financed.
Callable bonds
A type of bond that allows the bond issuer to retain the privilege of redeeming it at a pre-specified price at some time prior to its normal maturity date.
Probability distribution
A listing of all possible outcomes or events with a probability (Change of occurrence) assigned to each outcome
Potable bond
A bond that can be redeemed at the bondholder's option when certain circumstances exist (for example, debt is increasing substantially)
Zero coupon bond
A bond that pays no annual interest but sells at a discount below par. (NO DIVIDEND, JUST CAPITAL GAINS (APPRECIATION))
Eurodollar Deposit
A deposit in a foreign bank that is denominated in U.S. Dollars (Debt sold in a country other than the one in whose currency the debt is denominated)
Indenture
A formal agreement (contract) between the issuer and the bondholders
Junk bond
A high risk, high yield bond; used to finance mergers, leverage buyouts, and trouble companies
Commercial paper
A legal IOU
Municipal bonds
Bonds issued by a state or local government
Euro Stock and Yankee Stock
Euro Stock: Stock traded in countries other than it's home country, not including the U.S. Yankee Stock: Stock used by foreign companies and traded in the U.S.
Do corporate debt holders (Bond holders) have voting rights?
No, but they can effect management and operations by placing restrictions on where the funds can be used
Federal Funds
Overnight loans from one bank to another bank
Conversion feature
Permits bondholdes to exchange their investments for a fixed number of shares of common stock
Money Market Mutual Funds
Pools of funds management by investment companies primarily invested in short term financial assets.
Market risk premium
The addition return over the risk-free rate needed to compensate investors for assuming an average amount of risk
Risk Aversion
Risk-averse investors require higher rates of return to invest in higher-risk securities
Founders shares
Stock, owned by the firm's founders that has sole boring rights, but generally pays out only restricted dividends (if any) for a specified number of years.
Income stocks
Stocks of firms that traditionally pay large, relatively constant dividends each year
Growth stocks
Stocks that generally pay little or no dividends so they can retain as much of their earnings as possible in order to expand.
TOTAL RISK =
Systematic risk + Unsystematic risk
Market risk
That portion of an investment's risk calculated as the difference between its total risk and its firm-specific risk.
Risk
That portion of an investment's risk calculated as the difference between its total risk and its firm-specific risk.
Yield to call
The average return earned by a bondholder, given the assumptions that the bond is called on its first call date and that the bondholder receives the eligible interest payments and the call price between the date of purchase and the call date.
Risk
The chance that an outcome other than the expected will occur
Equilibrium
The condition of price stability that results from the equality of a security's expected and required returns.
Coupon
The interest payment paid on a bond, calculated by multiplying the bond's interest rate by its face (par) value. (Coupon=Face Value×Coupon Rate)
SML Line
The line that shows the relationship between risk as measured by bets and the required rate of return for individual securities
CAPM (Capital Asset Pricing Model)
The model used to determine the required return on an asset, which is based on the proposition that an asset's return should be qual to the rRF+ a risk premium that reflects the asset's nondiversiable risk
Yield to maturity
The name given to the return earned by an investor who purchases a bond for its market price, holds it until it matures, and receives all interest and the maturity payment in accordance with the terms contained in the indenture.
Market Risk (nondiversifiable risk)
The part of a security's risk associated with economic, or market, factors that systematically affect all firms to some extent. It cannot be eliminated through diversification
Expected rate of return (r HAT)
The rate of return expected to be realized from an investment which is the mean value of the probability distribution of possible outcome
Expected rate of return
The rate of return expected to be realized from an investment, calculated as the mean of the probability distribution of its possible returns.
Diversification
The result of adding additional assets to a portfolio, when the returns of the individual assets are non-correlated.
Realized rate of return
The return that is actually earned
Stand alone risk
The risk associated with an investment that is held by itself (in isolation) it is the TOTAL RISK ASSOCIATED WITH INVESTMENT
Investment-Grade bond
The term applied to bonds that are judged by their rating agency as being likely to pay their interest and maturity obligations.
Beta Coefficient
The term applied to the risk of an asset that is measured by the standard deviation of the asset's expected returns.
Debenture
The term used to describe an unsecured, or non-collateralized, bond.
Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
This model determines the appropriate required return on a security as the sum of the market's risk-free rate and a risk premium based on the market's risk premium and the security's beta coefficient.
Coefficient of variation
This statistical value provides a standardized measure of a security's risk per unit of return, and is useful in comparing the expected returns of different investments.
Term Loan
This type of debt transaction is privately negotiated between a corporate borrower and a financial institution to be repaid using a series of payments containing interest and principal over a period of two to thirty years.
Do Corporate debt holders have priority over stockholders with regards to distribution of earnings and liquidation of assets.
Yes, they must be paid before stock holders are paid
Bond
a long-term debt instrument
correlation coefficient
a measure of the degree of relationship between two variables
Can a firm be forced in to bankruptcy if it misses a preferred stock dividend payment
no
Does preferred stock have a higher priority claim to distributions made by the firm than common stock holders
yes