| Y |
Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying that it is an
ADR |
| Yankee bonds |
Foreign bonds denominated in U.S. dollars and issued in the
United States by foreign banks and corporations. These bonds are
usually registered with the SEC. Such as, bondsissued by
originators with roots in Japan are called Samurai bonds. |
| Yankee CD |
A CDissued in the domestic market, typically New York, by a
branch of a foreign bank. |
| Yankee market |
The foreign market in the United States. |
| Yard |
Slang for one billion currency units. Used particularly in
currency trading, e.g., for Japanese yen since one billion yen
equals approximately US$10 million. It is clearer to say, "I'm a
buyer of a yard of yen," than to say, "I'm a buyer of a billion
yen," which could be misheard as "I'm a buyer of a million yen." |
| YE |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for YEMEN. |
| Year-end dividend |
A special dividend declared at the end of a fiscal year that
usually represents distribution of higher-than-expected company
profits. |
| Years’ purchase (YP) |
A description of capital value based on actual or potential
income. If someone buys a property as an investment they pay a
capital sum in return for the right to receive a rental income.
For example, a property purchased for £1,000,000 which brings in
£40,000 a year in rent is bought at 25 YP. That is the value of
the rents received over a 25 year period will equal the original
capital outlay of £1,000,000. |
| Year-to-date (YTD) |
The period beginning at the start of the calendar year up to the
current date. |
| Yellow sheets |
Sheets published by the National Quotation Bureau that detail
bid and ask prices, plus those firms that are making a market in
over-the-countercorporate bonds. |
| Yen bond |
Any bond denominated in Japanese yen currency. |
| YER |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Yemen Rial. |
| Yield |
The income of a property expressed as a percentage of its cost.
The yield is the inverse of a year’s purchase. If the number of
years purchase is 25 then yield is 4%. The yield on a property
depends on several factors, including location, standard of
building, the calibre of other premises in the area and the
quality of the tenant. Knowing the yield on a property lets the
investor compare the investment potential of different types of
properties. |
| Yield |
The percentage return paid on a stock in the form of dividends,
or the effective rate of interest paid on a bond or note. |
| Yield advantage |
The advantage gained by purchasing convertible securities
instead of common stock, which equals the difference between the
rates of return of the convertible security and the common
shares. |
| Yield burning |
A municipal bond financing method. Underwriters in advance
refundings add large markups on US Treasury bonds bought and
held in escrow to compensate investors while waiting for
repayment of old bonds after issuance of the new bonds. Since
bond prices and yields move in opposite directions, when the
bonds are marked up, they "burn down" the yield, which may
violate federal tax rules and diminishes tax revenues. |
| Yield curb |
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Difference in current
yield between the convertible and the underlyingcommon. |
| Yield curve |
A diagram showing changes in interest rates against the period
for which the rate could be fixed. |
| Yield curve |
The graphic depiction of the relationship between the yield on
bonds of the same credit quality but different maturities.
Related: Term structure of interest rates. Harvey (1991) finds
that the inversions of the yield curve (short-term rates greater
than long term rates) have preceded the last five US recessions.
The yield curve can accurately forecast the turning points of
the business cycle. |
| Yield curve option-pricing models |
Models that can incorporate different volatility assumptions
along the yield curve, such as the Black-Derman-Toy model. Also
called arbitrage-free option-pricing models. |
| Yield curve strategies |
Investments that position a portfolio to capitalize on expected
changes in the shape of the Treasuryyield curve. |
| Yield differential/pickup |
Mainly applies to convertible securities. Graph showing the term
structure of interest rates by plotting the yield of all bonds
of the same quality with maturities ranging from the shortest to
the longest available. |
| Yield equivalence |
The interest rate at which a tax-exempt bond and a taxable
security of similar quality give the investor the same rate of
return. |
| Yield ratio |
The quotient of two bond yields. |
| Yield spread |
The difference in yield between different securityissues usually
securities of different credit quality. |
| Yield spread strategies |
Investments that position a portfolio to capitalize on expected
changes in yield spreads between sectors of the bondmarket. |
| Yield to average life |
A yield calculation in which bonds are retired routinely during
the life of the issue. Since the issuer buys its own bonds on
the open market because of sinking fund requirements, if the
bonds are trading below par, this action provides automatic
price support for these bonds and they will usually trade on a
yield to average lifebasis. |
| Yield to call |
The percentage rate of a bond or note if the investor buys and
holds the security until the call date. This yield is valid only
if the security is called prior to maturity. Generally bonds are
callable over several years and normally are called at a slight
premium. The calculation of yield to call is based on coupon
rate, length of time to call, and market price. |
| Yield to maturity |
The percentage rate of return paid on a bond, note, or other
fixed income security if the investor buys and holds it to its
maturity date. The calculation for YTM is based on the coupon
rate, length of time to maturity, and market price. It assumes
that coupon interest paid over the life of the bond will be
reinvested at the same rate. |
| Yield to warrant call |
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Effective yield of
usable or syntheticconvertible bonds determined against the
first date at which the warrants can be called. |
| Yield to warrant expiration |
Applies mainly to convertible securities. Effective yield of
usable convertible bonds determined by the expiration date of
the applicable warrants. |
| Yield to worst |
The bondyield computed by using the lower of either the yield to
maturity or the yield to call on every possible call date. |
| Yo-yo stock |
A highly volatile stock that moves up and down like a yo-yo. |
| YT |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for MAYOTTE. |
| YU |
The two-character ISO 3166 country code for YUGOSLAVIA. |
| YUM |
The ISO 4217 currency code for the Yugoslavia New Dinar. |