Return to Glossary front
- I
-
Fifth letter of a NASDAQ stock symbol specifying that it is the third preferred bond of the company.
- I.B.E.S.
- See: Institutional Broker's Estimate System
- I.B.F.
- See: International Banking Facility
- I.B.R.D.
- See: International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
- I.D.R.
- See: International Depository Receipt
- I.C.
- See: Information Coefficient
- I.F.C.
- See: International Finance Corporation
- I.M.F.
- See: International Monetary Fund
- I.M.M.
- See: International Monetary Market
- I.O.
- See: Interest Only Strip
- I.O.C. order
- See: Immediate or cancelled order
- I.O.M.
- See: Index and option market
- I.P.L.
- See: Investment Product Line
- I.P.O.
- See: Initial Public Offering
- I.R.B.
- See: Industrial Revenue Bond
- I.R.R.
- See: Internal rate of return
- I.S.D.A.
- See: International Swap Dealers Association
- I.S.M.A.
- See: International Security Market Association
- I.T.S.
- See: Intermarket trading system
- Idiosyncratic Risk
- Unsystematic risk or risk that is uncorrelated to the overall market risk. In other words, the risk that is firm specific and can be diversified through holding a portfolio of stocks.
- I-I page
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. Same as H-H page, but exclusively for O.T.C. Stocks.
- Imbalance of orders
- Used for listed equity securities. Too many market orders of one kind -- to buy or to sell or limit orders to buy up or sell down, without matching orders of the opposite kind. An imbalance usually follows a dramatic event such a takeover, research recommendation, death of a key executive, or a government ruling that will significantly affect the company's business. If it occurs before the stock exchange opens, trading in the stock is delayed. If it occurs during the trading day, the specialist halts and then suspends trading (with floor governor's approval) until enough matching orders can be found to make an orderly market.
- Immediate or cancelled order (I.O.C. order)
- Used in the context of general equities. Market or limited price order which is to be executed in whole or in part as soon as such order is represented in the trading crowd. The portion not executed is to be treated as cancelled. A stop is considered an execution in this context. See: A.O.N. order, F.O.K. order.
- Immediate settlement
- Delivery and settlement of securities within five business days.
- Immunization
- The construction of an asset and a liability that are subject to offsetting changes in value.
- Immunization strategy
- A bond portfolio strategy whose goal is to eliminate the portfolio's risk against a general change in the rate of interest through the use of duration.
- Implied call
- The right of the homeowner to prepay, or call, the mortgage at any time.
- Implied repo rate
- The rate that a seller of a futures contract can earn by buying an issue and then delivering it at the settlement date. Related: cheapest to deliver issue
- Implied volatility
- The expected volatility in a stock's return derived from its option price, maturity date, exercise price, and riskless rate of return, using an option-pricing model such as Black/Scholes.
- Import-substitution development strategy
- A development strategy followed by many Latin American countries and other L.D.C.s that emphasized import substitution - accomplished through protectionism - as the route to economic growth.
- Imputation tax system
- Arrangement by which investors who receive a dividend also receive a tax credit for corporate taxes that the firm has paid.
- In & out
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. Trade in which the trader has both the buyers and sellers lined up for a clean trade. See: cross
- In between
- Used in the context of general equities. Priced higher than the bid price but lower than the offer price. See: in the middle
- Income beneficiary
- One who receives income from a trust.
- Income bond
- A bond on which the payment of interest is contingent on sufficient earnings. These bonds are commonly used during the reorganization of a failed or failing business.
- Income fund
- A mutual fund providing for liberal current income from investments.
- Income statement (statement of operations)
- A statement showing the revenues, expenses, and income (the difference between revenues and expenses) of a corporation over some period of time.
- Income stock
- Common stock with a high dividend yield and few profitable investment opportunities.
- In competition
- Indication that the customer has shown his interest to multiple brokers and that the trade will take place with the firm having the highest bid or lowest offer. Antithesis of exclusive.
- Incremental cash flows
- Difference between the firm's cash flows with and without a project.
- Incremental costs and benefits
- Costs and benefits that would occur if a particular course of action were taken compared to those that would occur if that course of action were not taken.
- Incremental internal rate of return
- Internal rate of return (I.R.R.) on the incremental investment from choosing a large project instead of a smaller project.
- Indenture
- Agreement between lender
and borrower which details specific terms of the bond issuance. Specifies legal obligations of bond issuer and rights of bondholders. Document spelling out the specific terms of a bond as well as the rights and responsibilities of both the issuer of the security and the holder.
- Independent project
- A project whose acceptance or rejection is independent of the acceptance or rejection of other projects.
- Index
- Often applies to derivative products. Statistical composite that measures changes in the economy or in financial markets, often expressed in percentage changes from a base year or from the previous month. Most relevantly, indices measure the ups and downs of stock, bond , and some commodities markets, reflecting market prices and weighing of the companies on the index.
- Index and Option Market (I.O.M.)
- A division of the C.M.E. established in 1982 for trading stock index products and options. Related: Chicago Mercantile Exchange (C.M.E.).
- Index arbitrage
- An investment/trading strategy that exploits divergences between actual and theoretical futures prices. For example, the simultaneous buying (selling) of stock index futures (i.e., S&P 500) while selling (buying) the underlying stocks of that index, capturing as profit the temporarily-inflated basis between these two baskets. Often, the point where profitability exists is expressed at the block call as a number of points the future must be over or under the underlying basket for an arbitrage opportunity to exist. See: program trading
- Indexed bond
- Bond whose payments are linked to an index, e.g. the consumer price index.
- Index fund
- Investment fund designed to match the returns on a stock market index. Mutual fund whose portfolio matches that of a broad-based index such as the S&P 500 and whose performance therefore mirrors the market as represented by that index.
- Indexing
- A passive instrument strategy consisting of the construction of a portfolio of stocks designed to track the total return performance of an index of stocks.
- Indexing plus
- See: Enhanced indexing
- Index model
- A model of stock returns using a market index such as the S&P 500 to represent common or systematic risk factors.
- Index option
- A call or put option based on a stock market index.
- Index warrant
- A stock index option issued by either a corporate or sovereign entity as part of a security offering, and guaranteed by an option clearing corporation.
- Indicated dividend
- Total amount of dividends that would be paid on a share of stock over
the next 12 months if each dividend were the
same amount as the most recent dividend. Usually represent by the letter "e" in stock tables.
- Indicated yield
- The yield, based on the most recent quarterly rate times four. To determine the yield, divide the annual dividend by the price of the stock. The resulting number is represented as a percentage. See: dividend yield.
- Indication
- 1) Notice given by a dealer (through Autex ) or customer of his interest in buying or selling stock, sometimes including specific volume and price; 2) approximation of where a specialist sees buy and sell interest to tighten the range to an opening price.
- Indicator
- Used in the context of general equities. Technical or fundamental measurement securities analysts use to forecast the market's direction, such as investment advisory sentiment, volume of stock trading, direction of interest rates, and buying or selling or corporate insiders.
- Indifference curve
- The graphical expression of a utility function, where the horizontal axis measures risk and the vertical axis measures expected return. The curve connects all portfolios with the same utilities.
- Indirect quote
- For foreign exchange, the number of units of a foreign currency needed to buy one U.S.dollar.
- Inductive reasoning
- The attempt to use information about a specific situation to draw a conclusion.
- Industry
- The category describing a company's primary business activity. This category is usually determined by the largest portion of revenue.
- Industrial revenue bond (I.R.B.)
- A bond issued by local government agencies on behalf of corporations.
- Inflation
- The rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services is rising.
- Inflation-escalator clause
- A clause in a contract providing for increases or decreases in inflation based on fluctuations in the cost of living, production costs, and so forth.
- Inflation risk
- Also called purchasing-power risk, the risk that changes in the real return the investor will realize after adjusting for inflation will be negative.
- Inflation uncertainty
- The fact that future inflation rates are not known. It is a possible contributing factor to the makeup of the term structure of interest rates.
- Information asymmetry
- A situation involving information that is known to some, but not all, participants.
- Information Coefficient (I.C.)
- The correlation between predicted and actual stock returns, sometimes used to measure the value of a financial analyst. An I.C. of 1.0 indicates a perfect linear relationship between predicted and actual returns, while an I.C. of 0.0 indicates no linear relationship.
- Information-content effect
- The rise in the stock price following the dividend signal.
- Information costs
- Transaction costs that include the assessment of the investment merits of a financial asset. Related: search costs.
Free
Advertising from Click2Net!
- Informational efficiency
- The speed and accuracy with which prices reflect new information.
- Informationless trades
- Trades that are the result of either a reallocation of wealth or an implementation of an investment strategy that only utilizes existing information.
- Information-motivated trades
- Trades in which an investor believes he or she possesses pertinent information not currently reflected in the stock's price.
- Information services
- Organizations that furnish investment and other types of information, such as information that helps a firm monitor its cash position.
- In hand
- Used in the context of general equities. Firm, indicating control of a bid, offer, or order.
- In-house
- Used in the context of general equities. Keeping an activity within the firm. For example, rather than go to the marketplace and sell a security for a client to anyone, an attempt is made to find a buyer to complete the transaction with the firm. Although a listed trade must be brought to the floor of the stock exchange, matching supply with demand within the confines of the firm results in greater commissions for the firm.
- In-house processing float
- Refers to the time it takes the receiver of a check to process the payment and deposit it in a bank for collection.
- Initial margin
- Used in the context of general equities. 1) Amount of money deposited by both buyers and sellers of futures contracts to ensure performance of the terms of the contract; 2) amount of cash or eligible securities required to be deposited with a broker before engaging in margin transactions.
- Initial margin requirement
- When buying securities on margin, the proportion of the total market value of the securities that the investor must pay for in cash. The Security Exchange Act of 1934 gives the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve the responsibility to set initial margin requirements, but individual brokerage firms are free to set higher requirements. In futures contracts, initial margin requirements are set by the exchange.
- Initial public offering (I.P.O.)
- A company's first sale of stock to the public. Securities offered in an I.P.O. are often, but not always, those of young, small companies seeking outside equity capital and a public market for their stock. Investors purchasing stock in I.P.O.s generally must be prepared to accept very large risks for the possibility of large gains. I.P.O.'s by investment companies (closed-end funds) usually contain underwriting fees which represent a load to buyers.
- Initiate coverage
- 1. Firm is now followed by analysts at a particular securities house. 2. Indication to cover short position by purchasing the underlying stock (this cancels out the short position).
- In-line
- Used in the context of general equities. 1) An order or market in a specific security which lies within the inside market; 2) any announcement (earnings) that adheres closely to Wall Street analysts' expectations.
- In play
- Often used in risk arbitrage. Company that has become the target of a takeover, and whose stock has now become a speculative issue.
- Input-output tables
- Tables that indicate how much each industry requires of the production of each other industry in order to produce each dollar of its own output.
- Inquiry
- Used in the context of general equities. In-line expression of interest in a particular stock, usually asking the firm to bid for or offer stock.
- Inside market
- Refers to over-the-counter trading. Best (highest) bid and best (lowest) offer, often used in the O.T.C. Market. See: in-line
- Insider information
- Material information about a company that has not yet been made public. It is illegal for holders of this information to make trades based on it, however received.
- Insiders
- These are directors and senior officers of a corporation -- in effect those who have access to inside information about a company. An insider also is someone who owns more than 10% of the voting shares of a company.
- Insider trading
- Trading by officers, directors, major stockholders, or others who hold private inside information allowing them to benefit from buying or selling stock.
- Insolvency risk
- The risk that a firm will be unable to satisfy its debts. Also known as bankruptcy risk.
- Insolvent
- A firm that is unable to pay debts (liabilities are greater than assets).
- Installment sale
- The sale of an asset in exchange for a specified series of payments (the installments).
- Instinet (Institutional Networks Corporation)
- Computerized subscriber service that serves as a vehicle for the fourth market. "Instinet" is registered with the S.E.C. As a stock exchange if numbers among its subscribers a large number of mutual funds and other institutional investors linked to each other by computer terminals. The system permits subscribers to display bids and offers (which are exposed system-wide for whatever length of time the initiating party specifies) and to consummate trades electronically. Instinet is largely used by market-makers, but, as mentioned, non-market-makers and customers have equal access.
- Institutional Brokers' Estimate System (I.B.E.S.)
- Service which assembles analysts' estimates of future earnings for thousands of publicly-traded companies, detailing how many estimates are available for each company and the high, low, and average estimates or each.
- Institutional investors
- Organizations that invest, including insurance companies, depository institutions, pension funds, investment companies, mutual funds, and endowment funds.
- Institutionalization
- The gradual domination of financial markets by institutional investors, as opposed to individual investors. This process has occurred throughout the industrialized world.
- Instruments
- Financial securities, such as money market instruments or capital market instruments.
- In-substance defeasance
- Defeasance whereby debt is removed from the balance sheet but not cancelled.
- Insurance principle
- The law of averages. The average outcome for many independent trials of an experiment will approach the expected value of the experiment.
- Insured bond
- A municipal bond backed both by the credit of the municipal issuer and by commercial insurance policies.
- Insured plans
- Defined benefit pension plans that are guaranteed by life insurance products. Related: non-insured plans
- Intangible asset
- A legal claim to some future benefit, typically a claim to future cash. Goodwill, intellectual property, patents, copyrights, and trademarks are examples of intangible assets.
- Integer programming
- Variant of linear programming whereby the solution values must be integers.
- Intercompany loan
- Loan made by one unit of a corporation to another unit of the same corporation.
- Intercompany transaction
- Transaction carried out between two units of the same corporation.
- Intermarket trading system (I.T.S.)
- Electronic communications network linking the trading floors of seven registered exchanges to permit trading among them in stocks listed on either the N.Y.S.E. or A.M.E.X. and one or more regional exchanges. Through I.T.S., any broker or market-maker on the floor of any participating exchange can reach out to other participants for an execution whenever the nationwide quote shows a better price available. A floor broker on the exchange can enter an I.T.S. order to assure that he will get all of an offering or bid, instead of splitting it up with competing brokers.
- Interest
- The price paid for borrowing money. It is expressed as a percentage rate over a period of time and reflects the rate of exchange of present consumption for future consumption. Also, a share or title in property.
- Interest coverage ratio
- The ratio of the earnings before interest and taxes to the annual interest expense. This ratio measures a firm's ability to pay interest.
- Interest coverage test
- A debt limitation that prohibits the issuance of additional long-term debt if the issuer's interest coverage would, as a result of the issue, fall below some specified minimum.
- Interest equalization tax
- Tax on foreign investment by residents of the U.S. which was abolished in 1974.
- Interest expense
- In a corporate setting, interest expense is the money the company or corporation pays out in interest on loans.
- Interest on interest
- Interest earned on reinvestment of each interest payment on money invested. See: compound interest.
- Interest-only strip (I.O.)
- A security based solely on the interest payments form a pool of mortgages, Treasury bonds, or other bonds. Once the principal on the mortgages or bonds has been repaid, interest payments stop and the value of the IO falls to zero.
- Interest payments
- Contractual debt payments based on the coupon rate of interest and the principal amount.
- Interest rate
- The monthly effective interest rate. For example, the periodic rate on a credit card with an 18% annual percentage rate is 1.5% per month.
- Interest rate agreement
- An agreement whereby one party, for an upfront premium, agrees to compensate the other at specific time periods if a designated interest rate (the reference rate) is different from a predetermined level (the strike rate).
- Interest rate cap
- Also called an interest rate ceiling, an interest rate agreement in which payments are made when the reference rate exceeds the strike rate.
- Interest rate ceiling
- See: interest rate cap.
- Interest rate floor
- An interest rate agreement in which payments are made when the reference rate falls below the strike rate. Related: Interest rate cap
- Interest rate on debt
- The firm's cost of debt capital.
- Interest rate parity theorem
- Interest rate differential between two countries is equal to the difference between the forward foreign exchange rate and the spot rate.
- Interest rate risk
- The risk that a security's value changes due to a change in interest rates. For example, a bond's price drops as interest rates rise. For a depository institution, also called funding risk, the risk that spread income will suffer because of a change in interest rates.
- Interest rate swap
- A binding agreement between counterparties to exchange periodic interest payments on some predetermined dollar principal, which is called the notional principal amount. For example, one party will pay fixed and receive variable.
- Interest subsidy
- A firm's deduction of the interest payments on its debt from its earnings before it calculates its tax bill under current tax law.
- Interest tax shield
- The reduction in income taxes that results from the tax-deductibility of interest payments.
- Intermarket sector spread
- The spread between the interest rate offered in two sectors of the bond market for issues of the same maturity.
- Intermarket spread swaps
- An exchange of one bond for another based on the manager's projection of a realignment of spreads between sectors of the bond market.
- Intermediate-term
- Typically 1-10 years.
- Intermediation
- Investment through a financial institution. Related: disintermediation.
- Internal finance
- Finance generated within a firm by retained earnings and depreciation.
- Internal growth rate
- Maximum rate a firm can expand without outside sources of funding. Growth generated by cash flows retained by company.
- Internally efficient market
- See: Operationally efficient market.
- Internal market
- The mechanisms for issuing and trading securities within a nation, including its domestic market and foreign market. Compare: external market.
- Internal measure
- The number of days that a firm can finance operations without additional cash income.
- Internal rate of return (I.R.R.)
- Dollar-weighted rate of return. Discount rate at which net present value (N.P.V.) investment is zero. The rate at which a bond's future cash flows, discounted back to today, equals its price.
- International arbitrage
- Simultaneous buying and selling of foreign securities and A.D.R.s to capture the profit potential created by time, currency, and settlement inconsistencies that vary across international borders.
- International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (I.B.R.D.)
- International Bank for Reconstruction and Development or World Bank makes loans at nearly conventional terms to countries for projects of high economic priority.
- International Banking Facility (I.B.F.)
- International Banking Facility. A branch that an American bank establishes in the United States to do Eurocurrency business.
Free
Advertising from Click2Net!
- International bonds
- A collective term that refers to global bonds, Eurobonds, and foreign bonds.
- International Depository Receipt (I.D.R.)
- A receipt issued by a bank as evidence of ownership of one or more shares of the underlying stock of a foreign corporation that the bank holds in trust. The advantage of the I.D.R. structure is that the corporation does not have to comply with all the regulatory issuing requirements of the foreign country where the stock is to be traded. The U.S. version of the I.D.R. is the American Depository Receipt (A.D.R.).
- International diversification
- The attempt to reduce risk by investing in the more than one nation. By diversifying across nations whose economic cycles are not perfectly correlated, investors can typically reduce the variability of their returns.
- International Finance Corporation (I.F.C.)
- A corporation owned by the World Bank that produces a number of well known stock indexes for emerging markets.
- International finance subsidiary
- A subsidiary incorporated in the U.S., usually in Delaware, whose sole purpose was to issue debentures overseas and invest the proceeds in foreign operations, with the interest paid to foreign bondholders not subject to U.S. withholding tax. The elimination of the corporate withholding tax has ended the need for this type of subsidiary.
- International Fisher effect
- States that the interest rate differential between two countries should be an unbiased predictor of the future change in the spot rate.
- International fund
- A mutual fund that can invest only outside the United States.
- International market
- Related: external market.
- International Monetary Fund (I.M.F)
- An organization founded in 1944 to oversee exchange arrangements of member countries and to lend foreign currency reserves to members with short-term balance of payment problems.
- International Monetary Market (I.M.M.)
- A division of the C.M.E. established in 1972 for trading financial futures. Related: Chicago Mercantile Exchange (C.M.E.).
- International Security Market Association (I.S.M.A.)
- Swiss law association located in Zurich that regroups all the participants on the Eurobond primary and secondary markets. Establishes uniform trading procedures in the international bond markets.
- International Swap Dealers Association (I.S.D.A.)
- . Formed in 1985 to promote uniform practices in the writing, trading, and settlement of swaps and other derivatives.
- In the box
- This means that a dealer has a wire receipt for securities indicating that effective delivery on them has been made.
- In the hole
- Used in the context of general equities. Below the inside market when one is attempting to sell the stock; at a significant discount. Antithesis of premium.
- In the middle
- Used in the context of general equities. At a price exactly in between the bid and offer prices.
- In-the-money
- A put option that has a strike price higher than the underlying futures price, or a call option with a strike price lower than the underlying futures price. For example, if the March COMEX silver futures contract is trading at $6 an ounce, a March call with a strike price of $5.50 would be considered in-the-money by $0.50 an ounce. Related: put. Antithesis of Out of the money.
- In the tank
- Used in the context of general equities. Slang expression meaning market prices are dropping rapidly.
- In touch with
- Used in the context of general equities. Having a sell inquiry in a stock (not a firm customer sell order), often entailing a capital commitment. Antithesis of looking for.
- Intramarket sector spread
- The spread between two issues of the same maturity within a market sector. For instance, the difference in interest rates offered for five-year industrial corporate bonds and five-year utility corporate bonds.
- Intrinsic value of an option
- The amount by which an option is in-the-money. An option which is not in-the-money has no intrinsic value.
- Intrinsic value of a firm
- The present value of a firm's expected future net cash flows discounted by the required rate of return.
- Inventory
- For companies: Raw materials, items available for sale or in the process of being made ready for sale. They can be individually valued by several different means, including cost or current market value, and collectively by (First-in-first-out) F.I.F.O., (Last-in-first-out) L.I.F.O. or other techniques. The lower value of alternatives is usually used to preclude overstating earnings and assets. For security firms: securities bought and held by a broker or dealer for resale.
- Inventory loan
- A secured short-term loan to purchase inventory. The three basic forms are a blanket inventory lien, a trust receipt, and field warehousing financing.
- Inventory turnover
- The ratio of annual sales to average inventory which measures the speed that inventory is produced and sold. Low turnover is an unhealthy sign, indicating excess stocks and/or poor sales.
- Inverse floating rate note
- A variable rate security whose coupon rate increases as a benchmark interest rate declines.
- Inverted market
- A futures market in which the nearer months are selling at price premiums to the more distant months. Related: premium.
- Investment analysts
- Related: financial analysts
- Investment bank
- Financial intermediaries who perform a variety of services, including aiding in the sale of securities, facilitating mergers and other corporate reorganizations, acting as brokers to both individual and institutional clients, and trading for their own accounts. See: Underwriters.
- Investment decisions
- Decisions concerning the asset side of a firm's balance sheet, such as the decision to offer a new product.
- Investment grade bonds
- A bond that is assigned a rating in the top four categories by commercial credit rating companies. For example, S&P classifies investment grade bonds as BBB or higher, and Moodys' classifies investment grade bonds as Ba or higher. Related: High-yield bond.
- Investment income
- The revenue from a portfolio of invested assets.
- Investment management
- Also called portfolio management and money management, the process of managing money.
- Investment manager
- Also called a portfolio manager and money manager, the individual who manages a portfolio of investments.
- Investment product line (I.P.L.)
- The line of required returns for investment projects as a function of beta (nondiversifiable risk).
- Investments
- As a discipline, the study of financial securities, such as stocks and bonds, from the investor's viewpoint. This area deals with the firm's financing decision, but from the other side of the transaction.
- Investment tax credit
- Proportion of new capital investment that can be used to reduce a company's tax bill (abolished in 1986).
- Investment trust
- A closed-end fund regulated by
the Investment Company Act of 1940. These funds have a fixed
number of shares which are traded on the
secondary markets similarly to corporate stocks. The market price may exceed the net asset value per share, in which case it is considered at a "premium." When the market price falls below the (N.A.V.)/share, it is at a "discount." Many closed-end funds are of a specialized nature, with the portfolio representing a particular industry, country, etc. These funds are usually listed on US and foreign exchanges.
- Investment value
- Mainly applies to dealer securities. Fixed income value of a convertible, the price at which the convert would have to sell as a straight debt instrument relative to the yield of other bonds of like maturity, size and quality; represents a presumed floor to the bond, allowing, of course, for the continued credit worthiness of the issuer and the general level of interest rates. Bond value. See: conversion value
- Investor
- The owner of a financial asset.
- Investor fallout
- In the mortgage pipeline, risk that occurs when the originator commits loan terms to the borrowers and gets commitments from investors at the time of application, or if both sets of terms are made at closing.
- Investor relations
- The process by which the corporation communicates with its investors.
- Investor's equity
- The balance of a margin account. Related: buying on margin, initial margin requirement.
- Invoice
- Bill written by a seller of goods or services and submitted to the purchaser for payment.
- Invoice billing
- Billing system in which the invoices are sent off at the time of customer orders and are all separate bills to be paid.
- Invoice date
- Usually the date when goods are shipped. Payment dates are set relative to the invoice date.
- Invoice price
- The price that the buyer of a futures contract must pay the seller when a Treasury Bond is delivered.
- Involuntary liquidation preference
- A premium that must be paid to preferred or preference stockholders if the issuer of the stock is forced into involuntary liquidation.
- IRA/Keogh accounts
- Special accounts where you can save and invest, and the taxes are deferred until money is withdrawn. These plans are subject to frequent changes in law with respect to the deductibility of contributions. Withdrawals of tax deferred contributions are taxed as income, including the capital gains from such accounts.
- Irrational call option
- The implied call imbedded in the M.B.S.. Identified as irrational because the call is sometimes not exercised when it is in the money (interest rates are below the threshold to refinance). Sometimes exercised when not in the money (some sold without regard to the relative level of interest rates).
- Irrelevance result
- The Modigliani and Miller theorem that a firm's capital structure is irrelevant to the firm's value.
- "-ish"
- Used in the context of general equities. Representation of an approximation around the prefix number.
- Issue
- A particular financial asset.
- Issued share capital
- Total amount of shares that are in issue. Related:outstanding shares.
- Issuer
- An entity that issues a financial asset.
- "It's us"
- Used in the context of general equities. "The firm, and not a customer, is the party involved." Profile.
Back to the top |