Personal Finance Investing Test
Current (Dividend) Yield
100 (annual dividend/sell price) = current dividend yield
Where to purchase mutual funds?
Brokerage firm (Charles Schwab, Scottrade, E-Trade, etc.) Contact the investment company
Statistical Averages
Dow Jones Industrial Average - DJIA National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations -NASDAQ Standard & Poor's 500 - S & P 500
3 ways to earn money with a mutual fund
Income dividends Capital gain distributions Capital gains
IRA's
Individual Retirement Account (up to $5,500 if < 50 years; up to $6,500 if 50 and over)
Securities exchanges
NYSE AMEX NASDAQ
How to purchase mutual funds?
Regular account transactions- $ cost average Payroll deduction plans Reinvestment plans
Saving vs. Investing
SAVING objective- short term needs or emergencies products- savings account, CD's money-market account risk- none if FDIC indured, inflation risk return- interest paid benefit- money is liquid drawback- returns have not outpaced inflation INVESTING objective- long term growth products- stocks, bonds , mutual funds, ETF's risk- varies-business failure, financial market risk return- interest, dividends, capital gains/losses benefit- returns have outpaced inflation drawback- risk of losing money if securities decline in value
Prospectus
all financial information on a company
Mutual fund
an investment created by pooling the money of many people and investing it in a collection of securities
Expense ratio
annual charge that is a fixed percent of the fund's asset value
Securities
any stocks and bonds
Why do investors purchase common stock? (2 ways)
appreciation of stock value (capital gain) income from dividends
Bull vs. Bear Market
bull market- investors are optimistic about the economy and buy stocks bear market- investors are pessimistic about the economy and sell stocks
2 Long Term Investing Techniques
buy and hold strategy- buy and hold for a long period of time and reinvest dividends dollar cost averaging- same dollar amount invested in regular intervals
2 Short Term Investing Techniques
buying on margin- borrow money to invest selling short- you hope the price of stock goes down
Portfolio
collection of stocks/investments
Load fund ("A" shares and "B" shares)
commissions at purchase or at sell
Retained Earnings
company reinvesting in itself instead of offering dividends
Investment Liquidity
converting investments to cash without losing value
Cyclical vs. defensive stock
cyclical- luxuries defensive- necessities
Income dividends
earnings a fund pays to shareholders
Why buy a mutual fund?
easier than managing individual shares (@anyone studying this I don't know the answer this is just a guess ¯\_(ツ)_/¯)
403b/401k
employee sponsored retirement plan - tax deferred
12b-1 fees
fee for marketing and distributing charge
Types of brokerage firms
full-service, discount, online; differences in service & cost
ETF's (Exchange Traded Funds)
funds that are traded on a stock exchange and track indexes
Ms. Mueller's top 2 pieces of advice when starting investing life
if employer offers a match on a 401K or 403 B, contribute up to the match open up a roth IRA
Income vs. growth stock
income stock- history of paying high dividends growth stock- doesn't pay dividends
IPO
initial public offering
Sources for evaluating stocks
internet, newspaper, company's annual report
Types of low risk(safe) investments vs. types of high risk(speculative) investments vs. types that can vary
low risk- savings account, short term CDs, US savings bonds high risk- commodities, options, collectibles varying- stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs
Market order; limit order
market order- request to buy/sell stock at market value limit order- request to buy/sell stock at specified price or better
Equity Capital
money that businesses gets from its owners to operate
Risk vs. Reward
must take on more risk to get more reward
Target Retirement Fund
mutual funds that hols a group of other mutual funds run by the same company; automatically adjust their asset allocation toward more conservative investments as the retirement date draws near; automatically rebalance the portfolio on a regular basis to ensure that the investor's asset allocation is appropriate for their age
No load fund
no commissions and no help
Compute capital gain or capital loss
number of shares (sell price - original price) = capital gain/loss
Diversification
owning many different types of stocks in order to spread out the risk
Parent Company vs. Subsidiary Company
parent company- owns subsidiary company- is owned
Capital gain distributions
payments made to shareholders that result from the sale of securities inside the mutual fund
Roth IRA
post (after) tax money - it can be withdrawn tax free after age 59.5 Original contributions may be withdrawn at any time without taxes or penalties
Traditional IRA
pre (before) tax money - taxed as income after age 59.5
Net asset value (NAV)
price of one share of a mutual fund
Primary market vs. secondary market
primary market- when a company issues an IPO, the stock is purchased through an investment bank or brokerage firm. it is then sold to the public in the secondary market secondary market- where securities are traded among investors
Private vs. Public corporation
private- closely held, issues stock to a small group of people, not traded on the stock exchanges public- sells shares n the open markets, anyone can purchase shares and own a part of the corperation
Capital gains
profit earned by selling shares
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
provids deposit insurance to depositors in US banks
Blue-chip stocks
reliable, well known companies that have been around for a long time and offer dividends
ROI
return on investment 100 [(sell price - original price)/original price] = ROI
Dollar Cost Averaging
same dollar amount invested in regular intervals monthly amount/cost per share = number of shares purchased
SEC
security and exchange commission (make sure people follow the rule of the stock market)
Dividends
share in a company's profits
Rule of 72
shortcut to tell how quickly your money will double 72/# of years = ROI needed to double money 72/ROI = # of years needed to double money
Stock split
splitting stocks and prices to attract more investors ex: 200 shares at $100 =400 shares at $50
3 main asset groups of mutual funds
stock blended/mixed/balanced bond
Stock (common)
stock- ownership in a company common stock- to raise money for a business and help pay for ongoing activities; price is base on the market; voting rights, may offer dividends- not mandatory
Why do corporations issue common stock?
to raise money fro their business and to help pay for ongoing activities
Capitalization (Large, Mid, Small)
total value of how large a company is equal to current price, number of outstanding shares large > 10B mid < 10B, >2B small <2B
Index Fund
type of mutual fund with a portfolio constructed to match or track the components of a market index
Asset allocation
where your assets are and in what percent