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Back End Load To Bullish
Back-end
load. A fee
charged by mutual funds to investors who sell their shares
before owning them for a specified time.
Back office.
The support operations of a brokerage firm that don't
deal directly with customers. "Back office problems"
usually refers to slow paperwork or other bottlenecks in the
execution of customers' orders.
Basis. This
is the original cost plus out-of-pocket expense that must
be reported to the Internal Revenue Service when an investment
is sold. It is used in calculating capital gains or losses.
Bearer bond.
Also called a coupon bond, it is not registered in anyone's
name. Rather, whoever holds the bond (the "bearer")
is entitled to collect interest payments merely by cutting
off and mailing in the attached coupons at the proper time.
Bear er bonds are no longer being issued.
Bearish.
A bear thinks the market is going to go down. This makes bearish
the opposite of bullish.
Beta.
A measure of price volatility that relates the stock or mutual
fund to the market as a whole. A stock or fund with a beta
higher than 1 is expected to move up or down more than the
market. A beta below 1 indicates a stock or fund that usually
jumps up and down less than the market.
Bid/asked.
Bid is the price a buyer is willing to pay; asked is the price
the seller will take. The difference, known as the spread,
is the broker's share of the transaction.
Blue chips.
There is no set definition of a blue-chip stock, but most
would agree it has at least three characteristics: It is issued
by a well-known, respected company, has a good record of earnings
and dividend payments, and is widely held by inv estors.
Boiler room.
A blanket term used to describe the place of origin of high-pressure
telephone sales techniques, usually involving cold calls to
unsuspecting customers who would be better off without whatever
is being offered to them.
Bond.
An interest-bearing security that obligates the issuer to
pay a specified amount of interest for a specified time, usually
several years, and then repay the bondholder the face amount
of the bond. Bonds issued by corporations are backed by co
rporate assets; in case of default, the bondholders have a
legal claim on those assets. Bonds issued by government agencies
may or may not be collateralized. Interest from corporate
bonds is taxable; interest from municipal bonds, which are
issued by stat e and local governments, is free of federal
income taxes and, usually, income taxes of the issuing jurisdiction.
Interest from Treasury bonds, issued by the federal government,
is free of state and local income taxes but subject to federal
taxes.
Bond rating.
A judgment about the ability of the bond issuer to fulfill
its obligation to pay interest and repay the principal when
due. The best-known bond-rating companies are Standard &
Poor's and Moody's. Their rating systems, although
slightly different, both use a letter-grade system, with triple-A
the highest rating and C or D the lowest.
Book value.
For investing purposes, this is the net-asset value of a company,
determined by subtracting its liabilities from its assets.
Dividing the result by the number of shares of common stock
issued by the company yields the book value per share, which
can be used as a relative gauge of the stock's value.
Brokered CD.
A large-denomination certificate of deposit sold by a bank
to a brokerage, which slices it up into smaller pieces and
sells the pieces to its customers.
Bullish.
A bull is someone who thinks the market is going to go up,
which makes
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