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Debenture to Expense Ratio
Debenture.
A corporate IOU that is not backed by the company's assets
and is therefore somewhat riskier than a bond.
Discount broker.
A cut-rate
firm that executes orders but provides little if anything
in the way of research or other investment aids.
Discretionary
account. A
brokerage account in which the customer has given the broker
the authority to buy and sell securities at his or her discretion--that
is, without checking with the customer first.
Dividend.
A share of company earnings paid out to stockholders. Dividends
are declared by the board of directors and paid quarterly.
Most are paid as cash, but they are sometimes paid in the
form of additional shares of stock.
Dividend reinvestment
plan. Also
called a DRIP, this is a program under which the company automatically
reinvests a shareholder's cash dividends in additional
shares of common stock, often with no brokerage charge to
the shareholder.
Dollar-cost
averaging.
A program of investing a set amount on a regular schedule
regardless of the price of the shares at the time. In the
long run, dollar-cost averaging results in your buying more
shares at low prices than you do at high prices.
Dow Theory.
A belief that a major trend in the stock market isn't
signaled by one index alone but must be confirmed by two--specifically,
a new high or low must be recorded by both the Dow Jones industrial
average and the Dow Jones transportation av erage before it
can safely be declared that the market is headed in one direction
or the other.
Due diligence.
The work performed by a broker or other representative in
order to investigate and understand an investment thoroughly
before recommending it to a customer.
Earnings per
share. A company's
profits after taxes, bond interest and preferred stock payments
have been subtracted, divided by the number of shares of common
stock outstanding.
Education IRA.
This account,
available for the first time in 1998, allows up to $500 a
year to be saved for a child's college education. Contributions
are not deductible, but earnings are tax-free if used to pay
college bills. Contributions depend on the contributor's AGI.
No contributions can be made after the child reaches age 18.
Ex-dividend.
The period
between the declaration of a dividend by a company or a mutual
fund and the actual payment of the dividend. On the ex-dividend
date, the price of the stock or fund will fall by the amount
of the dividend, so new investors do n't get the benefit
of it. Companies and funds that have "gone ex-dividend"
are marked by an X in the newspaper listings.
Expense ratio.
A measure of
the costs of running a mutual fund. Expressed as a percentage
of the fund's assets, the expense ratio is the best tool
for comparing the management costs you'll incur by investing
in different funds. The ratio includes management and 12b-1
fees, but not sales loads.
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