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Index to Load
Index.
A statistical
composite that tracks the ups and downs in one or more financial
markets.
Individual retirement
account. A
tax-sheltered account ideal for retirement investing because
it permits investment earnings to accumulate untaxed until
they are withdrawn. The contribution limit is $2,000 per year,
and penalties usually apply for withdrawals before age 59
1/2. Taxpayers whose income is below certain levels can deduct
all or part of their IRA contributions, making the IRA a double
tax shelter for them.
Initial public
offering. A
corporation's first public offering of an issue of stock.
Also called an IPO.
Institutional
investors.
Mutual funds, banks, insurance companies, pension plans and
others that buy and sell stocks and bonds in large volumes.
Institutional investors account for 70% or more of market
volume on an average day.
Investment Company
Act of 1940.
Requires mutual fund companies to register with the Securities
and Exchange Commission, which also regulates the industry.
The Act sets the standards by which mutual funds and other
investment vehicles of investment companies operate, in such
areas as promotion, reporting requirements, pricing of securities
for sale to the public, and allocation of investments within
a fund portfolio.
Junk bond.
A high-risk, high-yield bond rated BB or lower by Standard
& Poor's or Ba or lower by Moody's. Junk bonds
are issued by relatively unknown or financially weak companies,
or they have only limited backing from reasonably solvent
companies .
Keogh plan.
A tax-sheltered retirement plan into which self-employed individuals
can deposit up to 20% of earnings and deduct the contributions
from current income. Investments within the Keogh grow untaxed
until they are withdrawn. Withdrawals from the plan are restricted
before age 59 1/2.
Leveraging.
Investing with borrowed money in the hope of multiplying gains.
If you buy $100,000 worth of stock and its price rises to
$110,000, you've earned 10% on your investment. But
if you leveraged the deal by putting up only $50,000 of your
o wn money and borrowing the rest, the same $10,000 increase
would represent a 20% return on your money, not counting
interest on the loan. The flip side of leverage is that it
also multiplies losses. If the price of the stock goes down
by $5,000 on the all -cash deal, your loss would be 5%
of your $100,000 investment. On the leveraged deal, your loss
would be 10% of the money you put up and you'd still
have to pay back the $50,000 you borrowed.
Leveraged buyout.
The use of borrowed money to finance the purchase of a firm.
Often, an LBO is financed by raising money through the issuance
and sale of junk bonds.
Limited partnership.
A business arrangement put together and managed by a general
partner (which may be a company or an individual) and financed
by the investments of limited partners, so called because
their liability is limited to the amount of m oney they invest
in the venture. Limited partnerships can invest in virtually
anything, but real estate is the most common choice. They
have often been characterized by high fees for the general
partners, complicated tax reporting requirements and elusive
payouts for the limited partners.
Limit order.
An order to buy or sell a security if it reaches a specified
price. A stop-loss order is a common variation.
Liquidity.
The ability to quickly convert an investment portfolio to
cash without suffering a noticeable loss in value. Stocks
and bonds of widely traded companies are considered highly
liquid. Real estate and limited partnerships are illiquid.
Load.
See back-end load and front-end load.
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