General Terms Flashcards

1
Q

Arbitrage

A

The simultaneous purchase and sale of an asset in order to profit from a different price (in two or more markets). It exists as a result of market inefficiencies.

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2
Q

Exchange-traded Fund

A

ETFs are security certificates that state the legal right of ownership over a portion of a basket of individual stock certificates. It holds assets such as stocks, commodities, or bonds, and trades close to its net asset value over the course of the trading day.

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3
Q

Unit Investment Trust

A

An investment company that offers a fixed, unmanned portfolio, generally of stocks and bonds, as redeemable “units” to investors for a specific period of time.

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4
Q

Net Asset Value

A

Synonym to book value. Value of an entity’s assets less the value of it’s liabilities.

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5
Q

Prospectus

A

A formal legal document, which is required by and filed by the SEC, that provides details about an investment offering for sale to the public. Offers certain facts that an investor needs to make an informed investment decision.

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6
Q

Price Earnings Ratio

A

A valuation ratio of a company’s current share price compared to its per-share earnings.

Market Value (Price) per Share / Earnings (Net Income) per Share (EPS)

Price is what you pay, value is what you get. Low P/E values coincide with high returns, high P/E values coincide with low returns.

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7
Q

Quantitative Easing

A

When the government purchases debt in the open market to increase demand for those assets, thereby causing their prices to increase.

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8
Q

Industry Sectors (8)

A
Agriculture, Forestry & Fishing
Construction & Mining
Finance, Insurance, & Real Estate
Manufacturing
Public Administration
Retail & Wholesale Trade
Services
Transportation & Utilities
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9
Q

Debt/Equity Ratio

A

A high debt / equity ratio generally means that a company has been aggressive in financing its growth with debt. This can result in volatile earnings as a result of the additional interest expense. The ratio also depends on the industry, for example, capital-intensive industries like auto manufacturing may have a debt/equity ratio above 2, while PC company may be under .5

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10
Q

Value Investing Concepts:

A

A stock is a vehicle by which a person becomes an owner of the company.

Value investing compares the current share price to intrinsic value, not historic share prices.

Efficient market hypothesis is false

Value stocks are often located in industries that recently have fallen on hard times.

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11
Q

Efficient market hypothesis

A

Claims that prices are always reflecting all relevant information, and therefore are already showing intrinsic worth. Value investors believes this is false (why) because the market price is driven by emotion in the short term.

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12
Q

Value Investor Guidelines

A

1) Share price should be no more than 2/3 of intrinsic worth.
2) Look at companies with P/E ratios at the lowest 10% of all equity securities
3) PEG should be less than 1
4) Stock price should be no more than tangible book value
5) There should not be more debt than equity.
6) Current Assets should be two times current liabilities
7) Dividend Yield should be at least 2/3 of the long-term AAA bond yield. (What about stocks that don’t give dividends?)
8) Earnings growth should be at least 7% per annum compounded over last 10 years.

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13
Q

Price/Earnings to Growth (PEG)

A

(P/E ratio / Annual EPS Growth rate). A stock’s price-to-earnings ratio divided by the growth rate of its earnings for a specified period of time. The lower the PEG ratio, the more the stock may be undervalued given its earnings performance. Forward v. Trailing PEG ratio depending if historical or projected growth data is used.

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14
Q

Free Cash Flow

A

Capital Expenditures - Operating Cash Flow = Free Cash Flow. The cash that a company is able to generate after spending the money required to run or expand its business.

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15
Q

Capital Expenditures (CAPEX)

A

Funds the company uses to upgrade its physical assets, such as property, industrial buildings or equipment.

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16
Q

Operating Expenses (OPEX) (Could be called operating cash flow)

A

Any expenditure made for the purpose of operating a business. These are day-to-day costs that help keep the business going. Includes: Accounting & Legal fees, Bank charges, sales and marketing, travel & entertainment, interest paid, noncapitalized R&D, office supplies, rent, repair and maintenance, utility expenses, cost of goods sold, and salary and wages. For profitability, keep OPEX as low as possible by still maintaining sales.

17
Q

Amortization (2 definitions)

A

1) (In Lending) Paying off debt with a fixed repayment schedule in regular installments over a period of time.
2) The spreading out of capital expenses for intangible assets over a specific period of time (for accounting and tax purposes)

Amortization is reflected as a reduction in book value or the intangible asset in the balance sheet, and as an expense on the income statement.

18
Q

Depreciation (2 definitions)

A

1) A method of allocating the cost of a tangible asset over its useful life.
2) A decrease in an asset’s value caused by unfavorable market conditions.

19
Q

Capital Structure

A

How a firm finances its overall operations and growth by using different sources of funds. Debt comes from bond issues or long-term notes payable, and equity is common stock, preferred stock, or retained earnings.

20
Q

Financial Leverage

A

The degree to which a company uses fixed-income securities, such as debt and preferred equity.

21
Q

Security

A

A financial instrument that represents: an ownership position in a publicly traded corporation (stock), a creditor relationship with a governmental body or corporation (bond_, or rights to ownership as represented by an option.

22
Q

Monetary Policy

A

Federal reserve (the decentralized bank of the United States) ability to increase or decrease the money supply, thereby decreasing or increasing the interest rate (Federal funds rate)

The Federal Reserve consists of a centralized bank in Washington DC, and 12 private banks across the US.

Lower rates - stimulate economic activity (gas pedal), increase amount of money, therefore people are more likely to

Increase rates - stifle economic activity (brake)

23
Q

Chairman of Federal Reserve

A

Ben Bernacke

24
Q

Bretton Woods System

A

After British and German currencies collapsing after WW1, the USD became the worlds leading currency (and economy)

The Breton woods system, from 1944, is the solution. Usd would be backed by gold, and all other countries currencies would be tied to the dollar

25
Q

Lyndon Johnson Era

A

The presidents “great society” programs and the war in Vietnam, resulted in the interest rates needing to be increased but not being increased because the president did not want to start another recession. The Federal Reserve caved in

After 1971 the dollar was only backed by faith it was no longer backed by gold

26
Q

Asset inflation (bull market)

A

As opposed to the price of goods, Price of stocks, Bonds, real estate, and other investment vehicles increasing.

27
Q

Warning Signs of a Bubble

A

Leverage
Failed Academic Theories
Derivatives
Federal Reserve Bailout