Research
Glossary
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Accrued interest: Interest
that has been earned but not received.
Accumulation plan: An
arrangement which enables an investor to purchase mutual fund shares
regularly in large or small amounts.
Annual Report: A financial
report sent yearly to a publicly held firm's shareholders. This report
must be audited by independent auditors.
Annuitant: An individual who
purchases an annuity and will receive payments from that annuity.
Annuity: A contract that
guarantees a series of payments in exchange for a lump sum investment.
Ask price: A proposal to sell a specific quantity of securities at a
named price.
Assets: What a firm or individual owns.
Back-end load: A sales charge levied when mutual fund units are
redeemed.
Balance sheet: A financial statement showing the nature and
amount of a company's assets, liabilities and shareholders' equity.
Balanced fund: A mutual fund which has an investment policy of
"balancing" its portfolio generally by including bonds and shares in
varying proportions influenced by the fund's investment outlook.
Bank Rate: The rate at which the Bank of Canada makes short-term
loans to chartered banks and other financial institutions, and the
benchmark for prime rates set by financial institutions.
Bankers' Acceptance: Short-term bank paper with the repayment of
principal and payment of interest guaranteed by the issuer's bank.
Bear market: A declining financial market.
Beta: A statistical term used to illustrate the relationship of
the price of an individual security or mutual fund unit to similar
securities or financial market indexes.
Bid price: A proposal to buy a specific quantity of securities
at a named price.
Blue chip: A descriptive term usually applied to high grade
equity securities. Board lot: A standard number
of shares for trading transactions. The number of shares in a board lot
varies with the price level of the security, although in most cases a
board lot is 100 shares.
Board of directors: A committee elected by the
shareholders of a company, empowered to act on their behalf in the
management of company affairs. Directors are normally elected each year
at the annual meeting.
Bond: A long-term debt instrument with the promise
to pay a specified amount of interest and to return the principal amount
on a specified maturity date.
Bond fund: A mutual fund whose portfolio consists
primarily of bonds.
Book value: The value of net assets that belong to
a company's shareholders, as stated on the balance sheet.
Broker: An agent who handles the public's orders
to buy and sell securities, commodities, or other property. A commission
is generally charged for this service.
Bull market: An advancing financial market.
Buying on margin: Purchasing a security partly
with borrowed money.
Canada Savings
Bond: A bond issued each year by the federal government. These bonds
can be cashed in at any time for their full face value.
Capital:
Generally, the money or property used in a business. The term is also used
to apply to cash in reserve, savings, or other property of value.
Capital cost
allowance: A taxation term, equivalent to depreciation, that makes
allowance for the wearing away of a fixed asset.
Capital loss:
The loss that results when a capital asset is sold for less than its
purchase price.
Capital stock:
All ownership shares of a company, both common and preferred.
Capitalization:
The total amount of all securities, including long-term debt, common and
preferred stock, issued by a company.
Cash equivalent:
Assets that can be quickly converted to cash. These include receivables,
Treasury bills, short-term commercial paper and short-term municipal and
corporate bonds and notes.
Cash surrender
value: The amount of cash a person may obtain by voluntarily
surrendering a life insurance policy.
Certificate: A
document providing evidence of ownership of a security such as a stock or
bond.
Closed-end
fund: A fund company that issues a fixed number of shares. Its shares
are not redeemable, but are bought and sold on stock exchanges or the
over-the-counter market.
Commercial paper:
A negotiable corporate promissory note with a term of a few days to a
year. It is generally not secured by company assets.
Common stock: A
security representing ownership of a corporation's assets. Voting rights
are normally accorded to holders of common stock.
Compounding: The
process by which income is earned on income that has previously been
earned. The end value of the investment includes both the original amount
invested and the reinvested income.
Consumer price
index: A statistical device that measures the change in the cost of
living for consumers. It is used to illustrate the extent that prices have
risen or the amount of inflation that has taken place.
Contractual plan:
An arrangement whereby an investor contracts to purchase a given amount of
a security by a certain date and agrees to make partial payments at
specified intervals.
Convertible: A
security that can be exchanged for another. Bonds or preferred shares are
often convertible into common shares of the same company.
Corporation: A
legal business entity created under federal or provincial statutes.
Because the corporation is a separate entity from its owners, shareholders
have no legal liability for its debts.
Coupon rate: The
annual interest rate of a bond.
Current asset: An
asset that could be converted into cash within 12 months.
Current
liability: A liability that has to be paid within 12 months.
Current yield:
The annual rate of return that an investor purchasing a security at its
market price would realize. This is the annual income from a security
divided by the current price of the security. It is also known as the
return on investment.
Custodian: A
financial institution, usually a bank or trust company, that holds a
mutual fund's securities and cash in safekeeping.
Debenture: A bond
unsecured by any pledge of property. It is supported by the general credit
of the issuing corporation.
Debt: An
obligation to repay a sum of principal, plus interest. In corporate terms,
debt often refers to bonds or similar securities.
Deferral: A form
of tax sheltering that results from an investment that offers deductions
during the investor's high-income years, and/or postpones capital gains or
other income until after retirement or during another period when the
income level is expected to change.
Deferred Profit
Sharing Plan: A plan that allows an employer to set aside a portion of
company profits from the benefit of employees. A corporation makes a
contribution to the plan on behalf of an employee.
Defined benefit
pension plan: A registered pension plan that guarantees a specific
income at retirement, based on earnings and the number of years worked.
Defined contribution
pension plan: a registered pension plan that does not promise an
employee a specified benefit upon retirement. Benefits depend on the
performance of investments made with contributions to the plan.
Denomination: The
principal amount, or value at maturity, or a debt obligation. Also known
as the par value or face value.
Depreciation:
Charges made against earnings to write off the cost of a fixed asset over
its estimated useful life. Depreciation does not represent a cash outlay.
It is a bookkeeping entry representing the decline in value of an asset
that is wearing out.
Discount: The
amount by which a bond sells on the secondary market at less than its par
value or face value.
Distributions:
Payments to investors by a mutual fund from income or from profit realized
from sales of securities.
Diversification:
The investment in a number of different securities. This reduces the risks
inherent in investing. Diversification may be among types of securities,
companies, industries or geographic locations.
Dividend: A
per-share payment designated by a company's board of directors to be
distributed among shareholders. For preferred shares, it is generally a
fixed amount. For common shares, the dividend varies with the fortunes of
the company and the amount of cash on hand. It may be omitted if business
is poor or the directors withhold earnings to invest in plant and
equipment.
Dividend fund: A
mutual fund that invests in common shares of senior Canadian corporations
with a history of regular dividend payments at above average rates, as
well as preferred shares.
Dividend tax
credit: An income tax credit available to investors who earn dividend
income through investments in the shares of Canadian Corporations.
Dollar cost
averaging: A principle of investing which entails the use of equal
amounts for investment at regular intervals in the hope of reducing
average share cost by acquiring more shares in periods of lower securities
prices and fewer shares in periods of higher securities prices.
Earned income:
For tax purposes, earned income is generally the money made by an
individual from employment. It also includes some taxable benefits. Earned
income is used as the basis for calculating RRSP maximum contribution
limits.
Earnings
statement: A financial statement showing the income and expenses of a
business over a period of time. Also known as an income statement or
profit and loss statement.
Equity: The net
worth of a company. This represents the ownership interest of the
hareholders (common and preferred) of a company. For this reason, shares
are often known as equities.
Equity fund: A
mutual fund whose portfolio consists primarily of common stocks.
Face value: The
principal amount, or value at maturity, of a debt obligation. Also known
as the par value or denomination.
Fair market
value: The price a willing buyer would pay a willing seller if neither
was under any compulsion to buy or sell. The standard at which property is
valued for a deemed disposition.
Fiduciary: An
individual or institution occupying a position of trust. An executor,
administrator or trustee. Hence, "fiduciary" duties.
Fiscal policy: The
policy pursued by government to manage the economy through its spending
and taxation powers.
Fixed assets:
Assets of a long-term nature, such as land and buildings.
Fixed dollar
withdrawal plan: A plan that provides the mutual fund investor with
fixed-dollar payments at specified intervals, usually monthly or
quarterly.
Fixed liability:
Any corporate liability that will not mature within the following fiscal
period. For example, long-term mortgages or outstanding bonds.
Fixed income
investments: Investments that generate a fixed amount of income that
does not vary over the life of the investment.
Fixed-period
withdrawal plan: A plan through which the mutual fund investor's
holdings are fully depleted through regular withdrawals over a set period
of time. A specific amount of capital, together with accrued income, is
systematically exhausted.
Front-end load: A
sales charge levied on the purchase o mutual fund units.
Fundamental
analysis: A method of evaluating the future prospects of a company by
nalyzing its financial statements. It may also involve interviewing the
management of the company.
Growth stocks:
Shares of companies whose earnings are expected to increase at an
above-average rate. Growth stocks are often typified by their low yields
and relatively high price/earnings rations. Their prices reflect
investors' belief in their future earnings in growth.
Guaranteed investment
certificates: A deposit instrument paying a predetermined rate of
interest for a specified term, available from banks, trust companies and
other financial institutions.
Income funds:
Mutual funds that invest primarily in fixed-income securities such as
bonds, mortgages and preferred shares. Their primary objective is to
produce income for investors, while preserving capital.
Index fund: A
mutual fund that matches its portfolio to that of a specific financial
market index, with the objective of duplicating the general performance of
the market in which it invests.
Inflation: A
condition of increasing prices. In Canada, inflation is generally measured
by the Consumer Price Index.
Interest: Payments
made by a borrower to a lender for the use of the lender's money. A
corporation pays interest on bonds to its bondholders.
International
fund: A mutual fund that invests in securities of a number of
countries.
Intrinsic value:
The amount by which the price of a warrant or call option exceeds the
price at which the warrant or option may be exercised.
Investment
adviser: Investment counsel to a mutual fund. Also may be the manager
of a mutual fund.
Investment
company: A corporation or trust whose primary purpose is to invest the
funds of its shareholders.
Investment
counsel: A firm or individual which furnishes investment advice for a
fee.
Investment
dealer: A securities firm.
Investment fund:
A term generally interchangeable with "mutual fund."
Investment Funds
Institute of Canada (IFIC): The mutual fund industry trade association
set up to serve its members, co-operate with regulatory bodies, and
protect the interests of the investing public that use mutual funds as a
medium for their investments.
Issued shares: The
number of securities of a company outstanding. This may be equal to or
less than the number of shares a company is authorized to issue.
Letter of intent:
An agreement whereby an investor agrees to make a series of purchases of
mutual fund units.
Leverage: The
financial advantage of an investment that controls property of greater
value than the cash invested. Leverage is usually achieved through the use
of borrowed money.
Liabilities: All
debts or amounts owing by a company in the form of accounts payable,
loans, mortgages and long-term debts.
Life annuity: An
annuity under which payments are guaranteed for the life of the annuitant.
Life expectancy
adjusted withdrawal plan: A plan through which a mutual fund
investor's holdings are fully depleted while providing maximum periodic
income over the investor's lifetime.
Liquidity: Refers
to the ease with which an investment may be converted to cash at a
reasonable price.
Load: Commissions
charged to holders of mutual fund units. (See sales charge.)
Long-term asset:
A mutual fund that charges a commission to purchase its shares.
Long-term debt:
Debt that becomes due after more than one year.
Management
company: The entity within a mutual fund complex responsible for the
investment of the fund's portfolio and/or the administration of the fund.
It is compensated on a percentage of the fund's total assets.
Management expense
ratio: A measure of the total costs of operating a fund as a
percentage of average total assets.
Management fee:
The sum paid to the investment company's adviser or manager for
supervising its portfolio and administering its operations.
Margin: An
investor's equity in the securities in his or her account. The margin
purchaser puts up a portion of the value of the securities, borrowing the
remainder from the investment dealer.
Marginal tax
rate: The rate of tax on the last dollar of taxable income.
Market index: A
vehicle used to denote trends in securities markets. The most popular in
Canada is the Toronto Stock Exchange 300 Composite Index (TSE 300).
Market price: In
the case of a security, market price is usually considered the last
reported price at which the stock or bond is sold.
Maturity: The
date at which a loan or bond or debenture comes due and must be redeemed
or paid off.
Money market: A
sector of the capital market where short term obligations such as Treasury
bills, commercial paper and bankers' acceptances are bought and sold.
Money market
fund: A type of mutual fund that invests primarily in treasury bills
and other low-risk, short-term investments.
Money purchase
pension plan: Another term for defined contribution pension plan.
Mortgage fund: A
mutual fund that invests in mortgages. Portfolios of mortgage funds
usually consist of first mortgages on Canadian residential property,
although some funds alsoinvest in commercial mortgages.
Mortgage-backed
securities: Certificates that represent ownership in a pool of
mortgages. The holders of these securities receive regular payments of
principal and interest.
Mutual fund: An
investment entity that pools shareholder or unitholder funds and invests
in arious securities. The units or shares are redeemable by the fund on
demand by the investor. The value of the underlying assets of the fund
influences the current price of units.
Net asset value:
The value of all the holdings of a mutual fund, less the fund's
liabilities.
Net asset value per
share: Net asset value of a mutual fund divided by the number of
shares or units outstanding. This represents the base value of a share of
unit of a fund and is commonly abbreviated to NAVPS.
No-load fund: A
mutual fund that does not charge a fee for buying or selling its shares.
Odd lot: Any
number of securities that represents less than a board lot.
Open-end fund: An
open-end mutual fund continuously issues and redeems units, so the number
of units outstanding varies from day to day. Most mutual funds are
open-ended.
Option: The
right or obligation to buy or sell a specific quantity of a security at a
specific price within a stipulated period of time.
Over-the-counter
market: A securities market that exists for securities not listed on
stock exchanges. Bonds, money market securities and many stocks are traded
on the over-the-counter market.
Par value: The
principal amount, or value at maturity, of a debt obligation. It is also
known as the denomination or face value. Preferred shares may also have
par value, which indicates the value of assets each share would be
entitled to if a company were liquidated.
Pension
adjustment: An amount that reduces the allowable contribution limit to
an RRSP based on the benefits earned from the employee's pension plan or
deferred profit sharing plan.
Pension plan: A
formal arrangement through which the employer, and in most cases the
employee, contribute to a fund to provide the employee with a lifetime
income after retirement.
Permanent life
insurance: Life insurance coverage for which the policyholder pays an
annual premium, generally for the life of the insured. This type of policy
features a savings component, known as the cash surrender value.
Portfolio: All
the securities which an investment company or an individual investor owns.
Preferred share:
An ownership security, senior to the common stock of a corporation, with
preferred claim on assets in case of liquidation and a specified annual
dividend.
Premium: The
amount by which a bond's selling price exceeds its face value. Also, the
amounts paid to keep an insurance policy in force.
Present value:
The current worth of an amount to be received in the future. In the case
of an annuity, present value is the current worth of a series of equal
payments to be made in the future.
Price earnings
ratio: The market price of a common share divided by its earnings per
share for 12 months.
Primary
distribution: A new security issue, or one that is made available to
investors for the first time.
Principal: The
person for whom a broker executes an order, or a dealer buying or selling
for his or her own account. Also, an individual's capital or the face
amount of a bond.
Prospectus: The
document by which a corporation or other legal entity offers a new issue
of securities to the public.
Ratio withdrawal
plan: A type of mutual fund withdrawal plan that provides investors
with an income based on a percentage of the value of units held.
Real estate fund:
A mutual fund that invests primarily in residential and/or commercial real
estate to produce income and capital gains for its unitholders.
Real estate
investment trust: A closed-end investment company that specializes in
real estate or mortgage investments.
Redeemable:
Preferred shares or bonds that giver the issuing corporation an option to
repurchase securities at a stated price. These are also known as callable
securities.
Registered Education
Savings Plan (RESP): A plan that enables a contributor, on a tax
deferral basis, to accumulate assets on behalf of a beneficiary to pay for
a post secondary education.
Registered Retirement
Income Fund (RRIF): A maturity option available for RRSP assets to
provide a stream of income at retirement.
Registered Retirement
Savings Plan (RRSP): A retirement savings plan to hold amounts
deducted from taxable income, within certain limits, in a tax deferred
state. There are various investment options and a tax deferral on
investment income and gains. Available to individuals to and including 69
years of age, but must be collapsed by the end of the year in which the
holder turns 69 years of age.
Retained earnings:
The accumulated profits of a company. These may or may not be reinvested
in the business.
Retractable:
Bonds or preferred shares that allow the holder to require the issuer to
redeem the security before the maturity date.
Rights: Options
granted to shareholders to purchase additional shares directly from the
company concerned. Rights are issued to shareholders in proportion to the
securities they may hold in a company.
Risk: the
possibility of loss; the uncertainty of future returns.
Sales charge: In
the case of mutual funds, these are commissions charged to holder of fund
units, usually based on the purchase or redemption price. Sales charges
are also known as "loads."
Securities Act:
Provincial legislation regulating the underwriting, distribution and sale
of securities.
Shares: A document
signifying part ownership in a company. The terms "share" and "stock" are
often used interchangeably.
Shareholders'
equity: The amount of a corporation's assets belonging to its
shareholders (both common and preferred) after allowance for any prior
claim.
Short selling:
The sale of a security made by an investor who does not own the security.
The short sale is made in expectation of a decline in the price of a
security, which would allow the investor to then purchase the shares at a
lower price in order to deliver the securities earlier sold short.
Simplified
prospectus: An abbreviated and simplified prospectus distributed by
mutual fundsto purchasers and potential purchasers of units or shares (see
prospectus).
Specialty fund: A
mutual fund that concentrates its investments on a specific industrial or
economic sector or a defined geographical area.
Spread: The
difference between the rates at which money is deposited in a financial
institution and the higher rates at which the money is lent out. Also, the
difference between the bid and ask price for a security.
Stock options:
Rights to purchase a corporation's stock at a specified price.
Strip bonds: The
capital portion of a bond from which the coupons have been stripped. The
holder of the strip bond is entitled to its par value at maturity, but not
the annual interest payments.
Systematic withdrawal
plan: Plans offered by mutual fund companies that allow unitholders to
receive payment from their investment at regular intervals.
Tax credit: An
income tax credit that directly reduces theamount of income tax paid by
offsetting other income tax liabilities.
Tax deduction: A
reduction of total income before the amount of income tax payable is
calculated.
Technical
analysis: A method of evaluating future security prices and market
directions based on statistical analysis of variables such as trading
volume, price changes, etc., to identify patterns.
Term insurance:
Temporary life insurance that covers the policyholder for a specific time.
Term to 90
annuity: An annuity that pays a fixed amount each year until it is
exhausted in the year that the annuitant turns 90.
Trade: A
securities transaction.
Treasury bill
(T-bill): Short-term government debt. Treasury bills bear no interest,
but are sold at a discount. The difference between the discount price and
par value is the return to be received by the investor.
Trust: An
instrument placing ownership of property in the name of one person, called
a trustee, to be held by the trustee for the use and benefit of some other
person.
Underwriter: An
investment firm that purchases a security directly from its issuer for
resale to other investment firms or the public or sells for such issuer to
the public.
Unit trust: An
unincorporated fund whose organizational structure permits the conduit
treatment of income realized by the fund.
Universal life
insurance: A life insurance term policy that is renewed each year and
which has both an insurance component and an investment component. The
investment component invests excess premiums and generates returns to the
policyholder.
Variable life
annuity: An annuity providing a fluctuating level of payments,
depending on the performance of its underlying investments.
Vesting: In
pension terms, the right of an employee to all or part of the employer's
contributions, whether in the form of cash or as a deferred pension.
Voluntary accumulation
plan: A plan offered by mutual fund companies whereby an investor
agrees to invest a predetermined amount on a regular basis.
Warrant:
Certificates allowing the holder the opportunity to buy shares in a
company at a stated price over a specified period. Warrants are usually
issued in conjunction with a new issue of bonds, preferred shares or
common shares.
Wrap account: An
account offered by investment dealers whereby investors are charged an
annual management fee based on the value of invested assets.
Yield: Annual rate
of return received on investments, usually expressed as a percentage of
the market price of the security.
Yield curve: A
graphic representation of the relationship among yields of similar bonds
of differing maturities.
Yield to
maturity: The annual rate of return an investor would receive if a
bond were held until maturity.
Zero coupon bond:
A bond that pays no interest and is initially sold at a discount.
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