| V |
Fifth letter of a Nasdaqstock symbol indicate that it is
when-issued or when-distributed. |
| V formation |
A technical chart pattern that follows a letter V form,
indicating that the security price has bottomed out, and is now
in a bullish trend. |
| VA |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for HOLY SEE (VATICAN
CITY STATE). |
| Vacant possession |
The right to possession of a property, ie without the property
being subject to leases or other rights of occupation. |
| Validated Export License |
Document issued by the U.S. government (BXA), authorizing the
export of specific commoditites to a specified foreign country
within a specified time period. |
| Valuation |
Determination of the value of a company's stock based on
earnings and the market value of assets. |
| Valuation Clause |
Stipulates a fixed sum for insured property in the event of loss
when included in a marine cargo insurance policy. |
| Valuation Opportunity Cost |
The potential increase in firm value associated with investments
that are for gone due to capital rationing. |
| Valuation reserve |
An allowance to provide for changes in the value of a company's
assets, such as depreciation. |
| Value Added |
Value added is the risk adjusted return generated by an
investment strategy: the return of the investment strategy minus
the return of the benchmark. |
| Value additivity principal |
When the value of a whole group of assets exactly equals the sum
of the values of the individual assets that make up the group of
assets. Or, the principle that the net present value of a set of
independent projects is just the sum of the net present values
of the individual projects. |
| Value broker |
A discountbroker whose rates are a percentage of the dollar
value of each transaction. |
| Value date |
In the market for Eurodollar deposits and foreign exchange, the
delivery date of funds traded. For spot transactions, it is
normally on spot transactions two days after a transaction is
agreed upon. In the case of a forward foreign exchange trade, it
is the future date. |
| Value dating |
When value or credit is given for funds transferred between
banks. |
| Value investing |
In the context of asset management, mutual funds, and hedge
funds, the a style of investment that focuses on securities with
low price to earnings ratios or low price to book ratios. Some
of these securities are deemed cheap and are viewed by manager
as having a lot of profit potential. |
| Value Line investment survey |
A proprietary service that ranks stocks for timeliness and
safety. |
| Value manager |
A manager who seeks to buystocks that are at a discount to their
"fair value" and to sell them at or in excess of that value.
Often a value stock is one with a low price-to-book value ratio.
Opposite of to growth stock. |
| Value Maximization |
Increases in owners' wealth achieved by maximizing of the value
of a firm's common stock. |
| Value stock fund |
A mutual fund that emphasizes stocks of companies whose growth
opportunities are generally regarded as subpar by the market. A
value stock company often pays regular dividend income to
shareholders and sells at relatively low prices in relation to
its earnings or book value. |
| Value stocks |
Stocks with low price/book ratios or price/earnings ratios.
Historically, value stocks have enjoyed higher average returns
than growth stocks (stocks with high price/book or P/E ratios)
in a variety of countries. |
| Value-added tax |
Tax added onto a product during each step of production, from
raw material to finished good. |
| Value-at-risk model (VaR) |
Procedure for estimating the probability of portfoliolosses
exceeding some specified proportion based on a statistical
analysis of historical market pricetrends, correlations, and
volatilities. |
| VAMI |
A way of reporting fund performance whereby each reporting
period is indexed at 100 or 1000. Hence, for a fund with a total
return of 39% over the year, the VAMI indexed at 100 is 139. |
| Vancouver Stock Exchange (VSE) |
A securities and optionsexchange in Vancouver, British Columbia,
(Canada), specializing in venture capital companies. |
| Vanilla issue |
A securityissue that has no unusual features. |
| VaR |
See: Value-at-risk model |
| Variable |
An element in a model. For example, in the model RS&Pt+1 = a + b
Tbill t + et, where RS&Pt+1 is the return on the S&P in month
t+1 and Tbill is the Tbill return at month t, both RS&P and
Tbill are "variables" because they change through time; i.e.,
they are not constant. |
| Variable annuities |
Investment contracts whose issuer pays a periodic amount linked
to the investment performance of an underlyingportfolio. |
| Variable cost |
A cost that is directly proportional to the volume of output
produced. When production is zero, the variable cost is equal to
zero. |
| Variable interest rate |
See: Adjustable rate |
| Variable life insurance policy |
A whole life insurance policy that provides a death benefit
dependent on the insured's portfoliomarket value at the time of
death. Typically the company invests premiums in common stocks,
so variable life policies are referred to as equity-linked
policies. |
| Variable Plan |
A plan in which either the number of shares and/or the price at
which they will be issued is not known on the grant date. |
| Variable rated demand bond (VRDB) |
Floating-rate bond that periodically can be sold back to the
issuer. |
| Variable Ratio Write |
An option strategy in which the investor owns 100 shares of the
underlying security and writes two call options against it, each
option having a different striking price. |
| Variable-price security |
A security that sells at a fluctuating market-determined
pricestocks and bonds are example. |
| Variable-rate |
A varible-rate agreement, as distinguished from a fixed-rate
agreement, calls for an interest rate that may fluctuate over
the life of the loan. The rate is often tied to an index that
reflects changes in market rates of interest. A fluctuation in
the rate causes changes in either the payments or the length of
the loan term. Limits are often placed on the degree to which
the interest rate or the payments can vary. |
| Variable-rate CDs |
Short-term certificate of deposits that pay interest
periodically on roll dates. On each roll date, the coupon on the
CD is adjusted to reflect current market rates. |
| Variable-rate demand note |
A note that is payable on demand and bears interest tied to a
money market rate. |
| Variable-rate loan |
Loan made at an interest rate that fluctuates depending on a
base interest rate, such as the prime rate or LIBOR. |
| Variance |
A measure of dispersion of a set of data points around their
mean value. The mathematical expectation of the average squared
deviations from the mean. The square root of the variance is the
standard deviation. |
| Variance rule |
Specifies the permitted minimum or maximum quantity of
securities that can be delivered to satisfy a TBAtrade. For
Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Macpass-through securities,
the accepted variance is plus or minus 2.499999 % per million of
the par value of the TBA quantity. |
| Variance-minimization approach to tracking |
An approach to bond indexing that uses historical data to
estimate the variance of the tracking error. |
| Variation margin |
An additional required deposit to bring an investor's equity
account up to the margin level when the balance falls below the
maintenance margin requirement. |
| VAT |
See: Value-added tax |
| Vault cash |
Cash kept on hand in a depository institution's vault to meet
day-to-day business needs, such as cashing checks for customers;
can be counted as a portion of the institution's required
reserves. |
| VC |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for SAINT VINCENT AND
THE GRENADINES. |
| VE |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for VENEZUELA. |
| VEB |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Venezuelan Bolivar. |
| Vega |
A term that describes the sensitivity of the option price to a
one-percent change in volatility. |
| Velda Sue |
Stands for Venture Enhancement and Loan Development
Administration for Smaller Undercapitalized Enterprises. A
federal agency that buys and pools small business loans made by
banks, and then issuessecurities that are bought by large
institutional investors. |
| Velocity |
The number of times a dollar is spent, or turns over, in a
specific period of time. Velocity affects the amount of economic
activity generated by a given money supply. |
| Vendor |
Seller or supplier. |
| Venture capital |
An investment in a start-up business that is perceived to have
excellent growth prospects but does not have access to capital
markets. Type of financing sought by early-stage companies
seeking to grow rapidly. |
| Venture capital limited partnership |
A partnership between a startup company and a brokerage firm or
entrepreneurial company that provides capital for the new
business in return for stock in the company and a share of the
profits. |
| Vertical acquisition |
Buying or taking over a firm in the same industry in which the
acquired firm and the acquiring firm represent different steps
in the production process. |
| Vertical analysis |
Dividing each expense item in the income statement of a given
year by net sales to identify expense items that rise more
quickly or more slowly than a change in sales. |
| Vertical line charting |
A form of technical charting that shows the high, low, and
closing prices of a stock or a market on each day on one
vertical line with the closing price indicated by a short
horizontal mark. |
| Vertical merger |
When one firm acquires another firm that is in the same industry
but at another stage in the production cycle. For example, the
firm being acquired serves as a supplier to the firm doing the
acquiring. |
| Vertical spread |
Simultaneous purchase and sale of two options that differ only
in their exercise price. See: Horizontal spread. |
| Vessel |
A conveyance for the transport of goods by water. |
| Vest |
Become applicable or exercisable. A term mainly used on the
context of employee stock ownership or option programs.
Employees might be given equity in a firm but they must stay
with the firm for a number of years before they are entitled to
the full equity. This is a vesting provision. It provides
incentive for the employee to perform. |
| Vesting |
Nonforfeitable ownership (or partial ownership) by an employee
of the retirement account balances or benefits contributed on
the employees behalf by an employer. The Tax Reform Act of 1986
established minimum vesting rights for employees based on their
years of service—full vesting in five years or 20% vesting per
year starting by the end of the third year. |
| Vesting Schedule |
Schedule setting forth when, and to what extent, options become
exercisable or restricted stock or stock units are no longer
subject to forfeiture (for example, 20% per year over five
years). |
| Veterans Administration (VA) mortgage |
A home mortgage loan granted by a lending institution to U.S.
veterans and guaranteed by the Veterans Administration. |
| VG |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for VIRGIN ISLANDS,
BRITISH. |
| VI |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for VIRGIN ISLANDS,
U.S.. |
| Vienna Convention |
Common name for the United Nations Convention on Contracts for
the International Sale of Goods. They are a body of law
governing the international sale of goods between parties
domiciled in member countries. |
| Vienna Stock Exchange (VSX) |
One of the world's oldest exchanges, which accounts for
approximately 50% of Austrian stocktransactions; the balance are
tradedOTC. |
| Vignette |
A symbol or pictorial representation of the corporation on a
stock certificate. Usually a complicated and artistic design, it
is meant to make the counterfeiting of stock certificates as
difficult as possible. |
| Virtual currency option |
A new optioncontract introduced by the PHLX in 1994 that is
settled in US dollars rather than in the underlying currency.
These options are also called 3-Ds (dollar-denominated
delivery). |
| Visible supply |
New muni bondissues scheduled to come to market within the next
30 days. |
| VIX |
The implied volatility on the S&P 100 (OEX) option. This
volatility is meant to be a forward looking volatility. It is
calculated from both calls and puts that are near the money. The
VIX is a popular measure of market risk. |
| VN |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for VIET NAM. |
| VND |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Vietnamese Dong. |
| Void |
Space which cannot be used, for example, a roof void. Also space
which could be used but is vacant, for example, empty shops in a
shopping centre. Colloquially the length of time a landlord
takes to market the property before it is relet. |
| Volatility |
A measure of risk based on the standard deviation of the
assetreturn. Volatility is a variable that appears in option
pricing formulas, where it denotes the volatility of the
underlying asset return from now to the expiration of the
option. There are volatility indexes. Such as a scale of 1-9; a
higher rating means higher risk. |
| Volatility risk |
The risk in the value of optionsportfolios due to the
unpredictable changes in the volatility of the underlying asset. |
| Volume |
This is the daily number of shares of a security that change
hands between a buyer and a seller. Also known as volume traded.
Also see Up volume and Down volume. |
| Volume counting |
The SEC dictates how volume is counted. Thus, volume is counted
in the same manner on all markets based on the above reporting
structure. Any time money changes hands (or any time capital is
risked), it must be counted as a trade. Examples: 1) One
registered market participant on Nasdaq buys 100 shares into
inventory from another registered market participant or from one
of its clients. In either case, it is counted as 100 shares. 2)
One member firm on the NYSE or Amex buys 100 shares from another
member firm. The Specialist matches the order between the two
firms and it is counted as 100 shares. 3)The Specialist sells
100 shares from his inventory to a member firm on the NYSE. It
is counted as 100 shares. 4) A Market Maker receives an order to
buy 100 shares from it's client. It does not have 100 shares in
its inventory. It must go buy 100 shares from someone else. It
then sells these 100 shares to the client. Thus, there are two
trades in this example for a total of 200 shares. |
| Volume deleted |
A note appearing on the consolidated tape when the tape is
running behind under heavy trading, meaning that only the stock
symbol and price will be shown for trades under 5000 shares. |
| Volume discount |
A reduction in price based on the purchase of a large quantity. |
| Voluntary accumulation plan |
Arrangement allowing shareholders of a mutual fund to purchase
shares over a period of time on a regular basis, and in so doing
take advantage of dollar cost averaging. |
| Voluntary bankruptcy |
The legal proceeding that follows a petition of bankruptcy. |
| Voluntary liquidation |
Liquidation proceedings that are supported by a company's
shareholders. |
| Voluntary plan |
A pension plan supported partially by the employee by pension
contributions deducted from each paycheck. |
| Voting certificate |
Certificates issued by a voting trust to stockholders in
exchange for their common stock, which represent all the rights
of common stock except voting rights. |
| Voting Instruction Card |
The voting card sent to participants in an employee plan giving
the trustee of the plan the authority to vote the shares as
indicated on a proxy card. |
| Voting rights |
The right to vote on matters that are put to a vote of security
holders. For example the right to vote for directors. |
| Voting stock |
The shares in a corporation that entitle the shareholder to
vote. |
| Voting trust certificate |
A trust in which control of a corporation is given to a few
individuals, usually to support reorganization of a corporation
without interference. |
| VP |
See vacant possession. |
| VRDB |
See: Variable-rated demand bond |
| VU |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for VANUATU. |
| VUV |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Vanuatu Vatu. |
| VWAP |
The volume-weighted average price. |
| VXN |
The implied volatility on the Nasdaq 100 (NPX) option. This
volatility is meant to be a forward looking volatility. It is
calculated from both calls and puts that are near the money. |