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Financial glossary

The current financial crisis has thrown terminology from the business pages

onto the front pages of newspapers, with jargon now abounding everywhere from

the coffee bar to the back of a taxi.

Here is a guide to many of the business terms currently cropping up regularly,

as well as some of the more exotic words coined to describe some of the social

effects of the financial crisis.

A

AAA-rating The best credit rating that can be given to a borrower's debts,

indicating that the risk of a borrower defaulting is minuscule.

Administration A rescue mechanism for UK companies in severe trouble. It allows

them to continue as a going concern, under supervision, giving them the

opportunity to try to work their way out of difficulty. A firm in

administration cannot be wound up without permission from a court.

AGM An annual general meeting, which companies hold each year for shareholders

to vote on important issues such as dividend payments and appointments to the

company's board of directors. If an emergency decision is needed - for example

in the case of a takeover - a company may also call an exceptional general

meeting of shareholders or EGM.

Assets Things that provide income or some other value to their owner.

Fixed assets (also known as long-term assets) are things that have a useful

life of more than one year, for example buildings and machinery; there are also

intangible fixed assets, like the good reputation of a company or brand.

Current assets are the things that can easily be turned into cash and are

expected to be sold or used up in the near future.

Austerity Economic policy aimed at reducing a government's deficit (or

borrowing). Austerity can be achieved through increases in government revenues

- primarily via tax rises - and/or a reduction in government spending or future

spending commitments.

B

Bailout The financial rescue of a struggling borrower. A bailout can be

achieved in various ways:

providing loans to a borrower that markets will no longer lend to

guaranteeing a borrower's debts

guaranteeing the value of a borrower's risky assets

providing help to absorb potential losses, such as in a bank recapitalisation

Bankruptcy A legal process in which the assets of a borrower who cannot repay

its debts - which can be an individual, a company or a bank - are valued, and

possibly sold off (liquidated), in order to repay debts.

Where the borrower's assets are insufficient to repay its debts, the debts have

to be written off. This means the lenders must accept that some of their loans

will never be repaid, and the borrower is freed of its debts. Bankruptcy varies

greatly from one country to another, some countries have laws that are very

friendly to borrowers, while others are much more friendly to lenders.

Base rate The key interest rate set by the Bank of England. It is the overnight

interest rate that it charges to banks for lending to them. The base rate - and

expectations about how the base rate will change in the future - directly

affect the interest rates at which banks are willing to lend money in sterling.

Basel accords The Basel Accords refer to a set of agreements by the Basel

Committee on Bank Supervision (BCBS), which provide recommendations on banking

regulations. The purpose of the accords is to ensure that financial

institutions have enough capital to meet obligations and absorb unexpected

losses.

Basis point One hundred basis points make up a percentage point, so an interest

rate cut of 25 basis points might take the rate, for example, from 3% to 2.75%.

BBA The British Bankers' Association is an organisation representing the major

banks in the UK - including foreign banks with a major presence in London. It

is responsible for the daily Liborinterest rate which determines the rate at

which banks lend to each other.

Bear market In a bear market, prices are falling and investors, fearing losses,

tend to sell. This can create a self-sustaining downward spiral.

Bill A debt security- or more simply an IOU. It is very similar to a bond, but

has a maturity of less than one year when first issued.

BIS The Bank for International Settlements is an international association of

central banks based in Basel, Switzerland. Crucially, it agrees international

standards for the capital adequacyof banks - that is, the minimum buffer banks

must have to withstand any losses. In response to the financial crisis, the BIS

has agreed a much stricter set of rules. As these are the third such set of

regulations, they are known as "Basel III".

Bond A debt security, or more simply, an IOU. The bond states when a loan must

be repaid and what interest the borrower (issuer) must pay to the holder. They

can be issued by companies, banks or governments to raise money. Banks and

investors buy and trade bonds.

BRIC An acronym used to describe the fast-growing economies of Brazil, Russia,

India and China.

Bull market A bull market is one in which prices are generally rising and

investor confidence is high.

C

Capital For investors, it refers to their stock of wealth, which can be put to

work in order to earn income. For companies, it typically refers to sources of

financing such as newly issued shares.

For banks, it refers to their ability to absorb losses in their accounts. Banks

normally obtain capital either by issuing new shares, or by keeping hold of

profits instead of paying them out as dividends. If a bank writes off a loss on

one of its assets - for example, if it makes a loan that is not repaid - then

the bank must also write off a corresponding amount of its capital. If a bank

runs out of capital, then it is insolvent, meaning it does not have enough

assets to repay its debts.

Capital adequacy ratio A measure of a bank's ability to absorb losses. It is

defined as the value of its capital divided by the value of risk-weighted

assets (ie taking into account how risky they are). A low capital adequacy

ratio suggests that a bank has a limited ability to absorb losses, given the

amount and the riskiness of the loans it has made.

A banking regulator - typically the central bank - sets a minimum capital

adequacy ratio for the banks in each country, and an international minimum

standard is set by the BIS. A bank that fails to meet this minimum standard

must be recapitalised, for example by issuing new shares.

Capitulation (market). The point when a flurry of panic selling induces a final

collapse - and ultimately a bottoming out - of prices.

Carry trade Typically, the borrowing of currency with a low interest rate,

converting it into currency with a high interest rate and then lending it. The

most common carry trade currency used to be the yen, with traders seeking to

benefit from Japan's low interest rates. Now the dollar, euro and pound can

also serve the same purpose. The element of risk is in the fluctuations in the

currency market.

Chapter 11 The term for bankruptcy protection in the US. It postpones a

company's obligations to its creditors, giving it time to reorganise its debts

or sell parts of the business, for example.

Collateralised debt obligations (CDOs) A financial structure that groups

individual loans, bonds or other assets in a portfolio, which can then be

traded. In theory, CDOs attract a stronger credit rating than individual assets

due to the risk being more diversified. But as the performance of many assets

fell during the financial crisis, the value of many CDOs was also reduced.

Commercial paper Unsecured, short-term loans taken out by companies. The funds

are typically used for working capital, rather than fixed assets such as a new

building. The loans take the form of IOUs that can be bought and traded by

banks and investors, similar to bonds.

Commodities Commodities are products that, in their basic form, are all the

same so it makes little difference from whom you buy them. That means that they

can have a common market price. You would be unlikely to pay more for iron ore

just because it came from a particular mine, for example.

Contracts to buy and sell commodities usually specify minimum common standards,

such as the form and purity of the product, and where and when it must be

delivered.

The commodities markets range from soft commodities such as sugar, cotton and

pork bellies to industrial metals such as iron and zinc.

Core inflation A measure of CPI inflation that strips out more volatile items

(typically food and energy prices). The core inflation rate is watched closely

by central bankers, as it tends to give a clearer indication of long-term

inflation trends.

Correction (market) A short-term drop in stock market prices. The term comes

from the notion that, when this happens, overpriced or underpriced stocks are

returning to their "correct" values.

CPI The Consumer Prices Index is a measure of the price of a bundle of goods

and services from across the economy. It is the most common measure used to

identify inflation in a country. CPI is used as the target measure of inflation

by the Bank of England and the ECB.

Credit crunch A situation where banks and other lenders all cut back their

lending at the same time, because of widespread fears about the ability of

borrowers to repay.

If heavily-indebted borrowers are cut off from new lending, they may find it

impossible to repay existing debts. Reduced lending also slows down economic

growth, which also makes it harder for all businesses to repay their debts.

Credit default swap (CDS) A financial contract that provides insurance-like

protection against the risk of a third-party borrower defaulting on its debts.

For example, a bank that has made a loan to Greece may choose to hedge the loan

by buying CDS protection on Greece. The bank makes periodic payments to the CDS

seller. If Greece defaultson its debts, the CDS seller must buy the loans from

the bank at their full face value. CDSs are not just used for hedging - they

are used by investors to speculate on whether a borrower such as Greece will

default.

Credit rating The assessment given to debts and borrowers by a ratings agency

according to their safety from an investment standpoint - based on their

creditworthiness, or the ability of the company or government that is borrowing

to repay. Ratings range from AAA, the safest, down to D, a company that has

already defaulted. Ratings of BBB- or higher are considered "investment grade".

Below that level, they are considered "speculative grade" or more colloquially

as junk.

Currency peg A commitment by a government to maintain its currency at a fixed

value in relation to another currency. Sometimes pegs are used to keep a

currency strong, in order to help reduce inflation. In this case, a central

bank may have to sell its reserves of foreign currency and buy up domestic

currency in order to defend the peg. If the central bank runs out of foreign

currency reserves, then the peg will collapse.

Pegs can also be used to help keep a currency weak in order to gain a

competitive advantage in trade and boost exports. China has been accused of

doing this. The People's Bank of China has accumulated trillions of dollars in

US government bonds, because of its policy of selling yuan and buying dollars -

a policy that has the effect of keeping the yuan weak.

D

Dead cat bounce A phrase long used on trading floors to describe the small

rebound in market prices typically seen following a sharp fall.

Debt restructuring A situation in which a borrower renegotiates the terms of

its debts, usually in order to reduce short-term debt repayments and to

increase the amount of time it has to repay them. If lenders do not agree to

the change in repayment terms, or if the restructuring results in an obvious

loss to lenders, then it is generally considered a default by the borrower.

However, restructurings can also occur through a debt swap - a voluntary

agreement by lenders to switch existing debts for new debts with easier easier

repayment terms - in which case it can be very hard to determine whether the

restructuring counts as a default.

Default Strictly speaking, a default occurs when a borrower has broken the

terms of a loan or other debt, for example if a borrower misses a payment. The

term is also loosely used to mean any situation that makes clear that a

borrower can no longer repay its debts in full, such as bankruptcy or a debt

restructuring.

A default can have a number of important implications. If a borrower is in

default on any one debt, then all of its lenders may be able to demand that the

borrower immediately repay them. Lenders may also be required to write off

their losses on the loans they have made.

Deficit The amount by which spending exceeds income over the course of a year.

In the case of trade, it refers to exports minus imports. In the case of the

government budget, it equals the amount the government needs to borrow during

the year to fund its spending. The government's "primary" deficit means the

amount it needs to borrow to cover general government expenditure, excluding

interest payments on debts. The primary deficit therefore indicates whether a

government will run out of cash if it is no longer able to borrow and decides

to stop repaying its debts.

Deflation Negative inflation - that is, when the prices of goods and services

across the whole economy are falling on average.

Deleveraging A process whereby borrowers reduce their debtloads. Primarily this

occurs by repaying debts. It can also occur by bankruptcies and debt defaults,

or by the borrowers increasing their incomes, meaning that their existing

debtloads become more manageable. Western economies are experiencing widespread

deleveraging, a process associated with weak economic growth that is expected

to last years. Households are deleveraging by repaying mortgage and credit card

debts. Banks are deleveraging by cutting back on lending. Governments are also

beginning to deleverage via austerity programmes - cutting spending and

increasing taxation.

Derivative A financial contract which provides a way of investing in a

particular product without having to own it directly. For example, a stock

market futures contract allows investors to make bets on the value of a stock

market index such as the FTSE 100 without having to buy or sell any shares. The

value of a derivative can depend on anything from the price of coffee to

interest rates or what the weather is like. Credit derivatives such as credit

default swaps depend on the ability of a borrower to repay its debts.

Derivatives allow investors and banks to hedge their risks, or to speculate on

markets. Futures, forwards, swaps and options are all types of derivatives.

Dividends An income payment by a company to its shareholders, usually linked to

its profits.

Dodd-Frank Legislation enacted by the US in 2011 to regulate the banks and

other financial services. It includes:

restrictions on banks' riskier activities (the Volcker rule)

a new agency responsible for protecting consumers against predatory lending and

other unfair practices

regulation of the enormous derivatives market

a leading role for the central bank, the Federal Reserve, in overseeing

regulation

higher bank capital requirements

new powers for regulators to seize and wind up large banks that get into

trouble

Double-dip recession A recession that experiences a limited recovery then dips

back into recession. The exact definition is unclear, as the definition of what

counts as a recession varies between countries. A widely-accepted definition is

one where the initial recovery fails to take total economic output back up to

the peak seen before the recession began.

E

EBA The European Banking Authority is a pan-European regulator responsible

created in 2010 to oversee all banks within the European Union. Its powers are

limited, and it depends on national bank regulators such as the UK's Financial

Services Authority to implement its recommendations. It has already been active

in laying down new rules on bank bonuses and arranging the European bank stress

tests.

Ebitda Earnings (or profit) before interest payments, tax, depreciation and

amortisation. It is a measure of the cashflow at a company available to repay

its debts, and is much more important indicator for lenders than the borrower's

profits.

EBRD The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is a similar

institution to the World Bank, set up by the US and European countries after

the fall of the Berlin Wall to assist in economic transition in Eastern Europe.

Recently the EBRD's remit has been extended to help the Arab countries that

emerged from dictatorship in 2011.

ECB The European Central Bank is the central bank responsible for monetary

policy in the eurozone. It is headquartered in Frankfurt and has a mandate to

ensure price stability - which is interpreted as an inflation rate of no more

than 2% per year.

EIB The European Investment Bank is the European Union's development bank. It

is owned by the EU's member governments, and provides loans to support

pan-European infrastructure, economic development in the EU's poorer regions

and environmental objectives, among other things.

ESM The European Stability Mechanism is a 500bn-euro rescue fund that will

replace the EFSF and the EFSM from June 2013. Unlike the EFSF, the ESM is a

permanent bail-out arrangement for the eurozone. Unlike the EFSM, the ESM will

only be backed by members of the eurozone, and not by other European Union

members such as the UK.

EFSF The European Financial Stability Facility is currently a temporary fund

worth up to 440bn euros set up by the eurozone in May 2010. Following a

previous bail-out of Greece, the EFSF was originally intended to help other

struggling eurozone governments, and has since provided rescue loans to the

Irish Republic and Portugal. More recently, the eurozone agreed to broaden the

EFSF's mandate, for example by allowing it to support banks.

EFSM The European Financial Stability Mechanism is 60bn euros of money pledged

by the member governments of the European Union, including 7.5bn euros pledged

by the UK. The EFSM has been used to loan money to the Irish Republic and

Portugal. It will be replaced by the ESM from 2013.

Equity The value of a business or investment after subtracting any debts owed

by it. The equity in a company is the value of all its shares. In a house, your

equity is the amount your house is worth minus the amount of mortgage debt that

is outstanding on it.

Eurobond A term increasingly used for the idea of a common, jointly-guaranteed

bond of the eurozone governments. It has been mooted as a solution to the

eurozone debt crisis, as it would prevent markets from differentiating between

the creditworthiness of different government borrowers.

Confusingly and quite seperately, "Eurobond" also refers to a bond issued in

any currency in the international markets.

Eurozone The 17 countries that share the euro.

F

Federal Reserve The US central bank.

Financial Policy Committee A new committee at the Bank of England set up in

2010-11 in response to the financial crisis. It has overall responsibility for

ensuring major risks do not build up within the UK financial system.

Financial transaction tax See Tobin tax.

Fiscal policy The government's borrowing, spending and taxation decisions. If a

government is worried that it is borrowing too much, it can engage in

austerity; raising taxes and/or cutting spending. Alternatively, if a

government is afraid that the economy is going into recession it can engage in

fiscal stimulus, which can include cutting taxes, raising spending and/or

raising borrowing.

Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae Nicknames for the Federal Home Loans Mortgage

Corporation and the Federal National Mortgage Association respectively. They

don't lend mortgages directly to homebuyers, but they are responsible for

obtaining a large part of the money that gets lent out as mortgages in the US

from the international financial markets. Although privately-owned, the two

operate as agents of the US federal government. After almost going bust in the

financial crisis, the government put them into "conservatorship" - guaranteeing

to provide them with any new capital needed to ensure they do not go bust.

FTSE 100 An index of the 100 companies listed on the London Stock Exchange with

the biggest market value. The index is revised every three months.

Fundamentals Fundamentals determine a company, currency or security's value in

the long-term. A company's fundamentals include its assets, debt, revenue,

earnings and growth.

Futures A futures contract is an agreement to buy or sell a commodity at a

predetermined date and price. It could be used to hedge or to speculate on the

price of the commodity. Futures contracts are a type of derivative, and are

traded on an exchange.

G

G7 The group of seven major industrialised economies, comprising the US, UK,

France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan.

G8 The G7 plus Russia.

G20 The G8 plus developing countries that play an important role in the global

economy, such as China, India, Brazil and Saudi Arabia. It gained in

significance after leaders agreed how to tackle the 2008-09 financial crisis

and recession at G20 gatherings.

GDP Gross domestic product. A measure of economic activity in a country, namely

of all the services and goods produced in a year. There are three main ways of

calculating GDP - through output, through income and through expenditure.

Glass-Steagall A US law dating from the 1930s Great Depression that separated

ordinary commercial banking from investment banking. Like the UK's planned

ring-fence, the law was intended to protect banks which lend to consumers and

businesses - deemed vital to the US economy - from the risky speculation of

investment banks. The law was repealed in 1999, largely to enable the creation

of the banking giant Citigroup - a move that many commentators say was a

contributing factor to the 2008 financial crisis.

H

Haircut A reduction in the value of a troubled borrower's debts, imposed on, or

agreed with, its lenders as part of a debt restructuring.

Hedge fund A private investment fund which uses a range of sophisticated

strategies to maximise returns including hedging, leveraging and derivatives

trading. Authorities around the world are working on ways to regulate them.

Hedging Making an investment to reduce the risk of price fluctuations to the

value of an asset. Airlines often hedge against rising oil prices by agreeing

in advance to to buy their fuel at a set price. In this case, a rise in price

would not harm them - but nor would they benefit from any falls.

I

IIF The Institute of International Finance is a global trade association of the

major banks.

IMF The International Monetary Fund is an organisation set up after World War

II to provide financial assistance to governments. Since the 1980s, the IMF has

been most active in providing rescue loans to the governments of developing

countries that run into debt problems. Since the financial crisis, the IMF has

also provided rescue loans, alongside the European Union governments and the

ECB, to Greece, the Irish Republic and Portugal. The IMF is traditionally - and

of late controversially - headed by a European.

Impairment charge The amount written off by a company when it realises that it

has valued an asset more highly than it is actually worth.

Independent Commission on Banking A commission chaired by economist Sir John

Vickers set up in 2010 by the UK government in order to make recommendations on

how to reform the banking system. The commission reported back in September

2011, and called for:

a ring-fence, to separate and safeguard the activities of banks that were

deemed essential to the UK economy

measures to increase the transparency of bank accounts and competition among

banks, including the creation of a new major High Street bank

much higher capital requirements for the big banks so that they can better

absorb future losses

Inflation The upward price movement of goods and services.

Insolvency A situation in which the value of a borrower's assets is not enough

to repay all of its debts. If a borrower can be shown to be insolvent, it

normally means they can be declared bankrupt by a court.

Investment bank Investment banks provide financial services for governments,

companies or extremely rich individuals. They differ from commercial banks

where you have your savings or your mortgage. Traditionally investment banks

provided underwriting, and financial advice on mergers and acquisitions, and

how to raise money in the financial markets. The term is also commonly used to

describe the more risky activities typically undertaken by such firms,

including trading directly in financial markets for their own account.

J

Junk bond A bondwith a credit rating of BB+ or lower. These debts are

considered very risky by the ratings agencies. Typically the bonds are traded

in markets at a price that offers a very high yield(return to investors) as

compensation for the higher risk of default.

K

Keynesian economics The economic theories of John Maynard Keynes. In modern

political parlance, the belief that the state can directly stimulate demand in

a stagnating economy, for instance, by borrowing money to spend on public works

projects such as roads, schools and hospitals.

L

Lehman Brothers A US investment bank, whose collapse in September 2008 sparked

the most intense phase of the financial crisis.

Leverage Leverage, or gearing, means using debt to supplement investment. The

more you borrow on top of the funds (or equity) you already have, the more

highly leveraged you are. Leverage can increase both gains and losses.

Deleveraging means reducing the amount you are borrowing.

Liability A debt or other form of payment obligation, listed in a company's

accounts.

Libor London Inter Bank Offered Rate. The rate at which banks in London lend

money to each other for the short-term in a particular currency. A new Libor

rate is calculated every morning by financial data firm Thomson Reuters based

on interest rates provided by members of the British Bankers Association.

Limited liability Confines an investor's loss in a business to the amount of

capital they invested. If a person invests 100,000 in a company and it goes

under, they will lose only their investment and not more.

Liquidation A process in which assets are sold off for cash. Liquidation is

often the outcome for a company deemed irretrievably loss-making. In that case,

its assets are sold off individually, and the cash proceeds are used to repay

its lenders. In liquidation, a company's lenders and other claimants are given

an order of priority. Usually the tax authorities are the first to be paid,

while the company's shareholders are the last, typically receiving nothing.

Liquidity How easy something is to convert into cash. Your current account, for

example, is more liquid than your house. If you needed to sell your house

quickly to pay bills you would have to drop the price substantially to get a

sale.

Liquidity crisis A situation in which it suddenly becomes much more difficult

for banks to obtain cash due to a general loss of confidence in the financial

system. Investors (and, in the case of a bank run, even ordinary depositors)

may withdraw their cash from banks, while banks may stop lending to each other,

if they fear that some banks could go bust. Because most of a bank's money is

tied up in loans, even a healthy bank can run out of cash and collapse in a

liquidity crisis. Central banks usually respond to a liquidity crisis by acting

as "lender of last resort" and providing emergency cash loans to the banks.

Liquidity trap A situation described by economist John Maynard Keynesin which

nervousness about the economy leads everybody to cut back on their spending and

to hold cash, even if the cash earns no interest. The widespread fall in

spending undermines the economy, which in turn makes households, banks and

companies even more nervous about spending and investing their money. The

problem becomes particularly intractable when - as in Japan over the last 20

years - the weak spending leads to falling prices, which creates a stronger

incentive for people to hold onto their cash, and also makes debts more

difficult to repay. In a liquidity trap, monetary policy can become useless,

and Keynes said that the onus is on governments to increase their spending.

Loans-to-deposit ratio For financial institutions, the sum of their loans

divided by the sum of their deposits. It is used as a way of measuring a bank's

vulnerability to the loss of confidence in a liquidity crisis. Deposits are

typically guaranteed by the bank's government and are therefore considered a

safer source of funding for the bank. Before the 2008 financial crisis, many

banks became reliant on other sources of funding - meaning they had very high

loan-to-deposit ratios. When these other sources of funding suddenly

evaporated, the banks were left critically short of cash.

M

Mark-to-market (MTM) Recording the value of an asseton a daily basis according

to current market prices. So for a Greek governmentbond, the MTM is how much it

could be sold for today. Banks are not required to mark to market investments

that they intend to hold indefinitely (in what is called the "banking book" in

accounting jargon). Instead, these investments are valued at the price at which

they were originally purchased, minus any impairment charges - which might

arise following a defaultby the borrower.

Monetary policy The policies of the central bank. A central bank has an

unlimited ability to create new money. This allows it to control the short-term

interest rate, as well as to engage in unorthodox policies such as quantitative

easing - printing money to buy up government debts and other assets. Monetary

policy can be used to control inflation and to support economic growth.

Money markets Global markets dealing in borrowing and lending on a short-term

basis.

Monoline insurance Monolines were set up in the 1970s to insure against the

risk that a bondwill default. Companies and public institutions issue bonds to

raise money. If they pay a fee to a monoline to insure their debt, the

guarantee helps to raise the credit rating of the bond, which in turn means the

borrower can raise the money more cheaply.

Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) Banks repackage debts from a number of

mortgages into MBS, which can be bought and traded by investors. By selling off

their mortgages in the form of MBS, it frees the banks up to lend to more

homeowners.

MPC The Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England is responsible for

setting short-term interest rates and other monetary policy in the UK, such as

quantitative easing.

N

Naked short selling A version of short selling, illegal or restricted in some

jurisdictions, where the trader does not first establish that he is able to

borrow the relevant asset before selling it on. The aim with short selling is

to buy back the asset at a lower price than you sold it for, pocketing the

difference.

Nationalisation The act of bringing an industry or assetssuch as land and

property under state control.

Negative equity Refers to a situation in which the value of your house is less

than the amount of the mortgage that still has to be paid off.

O

OECD The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development is an

association of industrialised economies, originally set up to administer the

Marshall Plan after World War II. The OECD provides economic research and

statistics, as well as policy recommendations, for its members.

Options A type of derivativethat gives an investor the right to buy (or to

sell) something - anything from a share to a barrel of oil - at an agreed price

and at an agreed time in the future. Options become much more valuable when

markets are volatile, as they can be an insurance against price swings.

P

Ponzi scheme Similar to a pyramid scheme, an enterprise where funds from new

investors - instead of genuine profits - are used to pay high returns to

current investors. Named after the Italian fraudster Charles Ponzi, such

schemes are destined to collapse as soon as new investment tails off or

significant numbers of investors simultaneously wish to withdraw funds.

Preference shares A class of shares that usually do not offer voting rights,

but do offer a superior type of dividend, paid ahead of dividends to ordinary

shareholders. Preference shareholders often also have somewhat better

protection when a company is liquidated.

Prime rate A term used primarily in North America to describe the standard

lending rate of banks to most customers. The prime rate is usually the same

across all banks, and higher rates are often described as "x percentage points

above prime".

Private equity fund An investment fund that specialises in buying up troubled

or undervalued companies, reorganising them, and then selling them off at a

profit.

PPI The Producer Prices Index, a measure of the wholesale prices at which

factories and other producers are able to sell goods in an economy.

Profit warning When a company issues a statement indicating that its profits

will not be as high as it had expected. Also profits warning.

Q

Quantitative easing Central banks increase the supply of money by "printing"

more. In practice, this may mean purchasing government bonds or other

categories of assets, using the new money. Rather than physically printing more

notes, the new money is typically issued in the form of a deposit at the

central bank. The idea is to add more money into the system, which depresses

the value of the currency, and to push up the value of the assets being bought

and to lower longer-term interest rates, which encourages more borrowing and

investment. Some economists fear that quantitative easing can lead to very high

inflation in the long term.

R

Rating The assessment given to debts and borrowers by a ratings agency

according to their safety from an investment standpoint - based on their

creditworthiness, or the ability of the company or government that is borrowing

to repay. Ratings range from AAA, the safest, down to D, a company that has

already defaulted. Ratings of BBB- or higher are considered "investment grade".

Below that level, they are considered "speculative grade" or more colloquially

as junk.

Rating agency A company responsible for issuing credit ratings. The major three

rating agencies are Moody's, Standard & Poor's and Fitch.

Recapitalisation To inject fresh equityinto a firm or a bank, which can be used

to absorb future losses and reduce the risk of insolvency. Typically this will

happen via the firm issuing new shares. The cash raised can also be used to

repay debts. In the case of a government recapitalising a bank, it results in

the government owning a stake in the bank. In an extreme case, such as Royal

Bank of Scotland, it can lead to nationalisation, where the government owns a

majority of the bank.

Recession A period of negative economic growth. In most parts of the world a

recession is technically defined as two consecutive quarters of negative growth

- when economic output falls. In the United States, a larger number of factors

are taken into account, such as job creation and manufacturing activity.

However, this means that a US recession can usually only be defined when it is

already over.

Repo A repurchase agreement - a financial transaction in which someone sells

something (for example a bond or a share) and at the same time agrees to buy it

back again at an agreed price at a later day. The seller is in effect receiving

a loan. Repos were heavily used by investment banks such as Lehman Brothers to

borrow money prior to the financial crisis.

Repos are also used by speculators for short selling. The speculator can buy a

share through a repo and then immediately sell it again. At a later date the

speculator hopes to buy the share back from the market at a cheaper price,

before selling it back again at the pre-agreed price via the repo.

Reserve currency A currency that is widely held by foreign central banks around

the world in their reserves. The US dollar is the pre-eminent reserve currency,

but the euro, pound, yen and Swiss franc are also popular.

ReservesAssets accumulated by a central bank, which typically comprise gold and

foreign currency. Reserves are usually accumulated in order to help the central

bank defend the value of the currency, particularly when its value is pegged to

another foreign currency or to gold.

Retained earnings Profits not paid out by a company as dividends and held back

to be reinvested.

Rights issue When a public company issues new shares to raise cash. The company

might do this for a number or reasons - because it is running short of cash,

because it wants to make an expensive investment or because it needs to be

recapitalised. By putting more shares on the market, a company dilutes the

value of its existing shares. It is called a "rights" issue, because existing

shareholders have the first right to buy the new shares, thereby avoiding

dilution of their existing shares.

Ring-fence A recommendation of the UK's Independent Commission on Banking.

Services provided by the banks that are deemed essential to the UK economy -

such as customer accounts, payment transfers, lending to small and medium

businesses - should be separated out from the banks other, riskier activities.

They would be placed in a separate subsidiary company in the bank, and provided

with its own separate capital to absorb any losses. The ring-fenced business

would also be banned from lending to or in other ways exposing itself to the

risks of the rest of the bank - in particular its investment banking

activities.

S

Securities lending When one broker or dealer lends a security (such as a bond

or a share) to another for a fee. This is the process that allows short

selling.

Securitisation Turning something into a security. For example, taking the debt

from a number of mortgages and combining them to make a financial product,

which can then be traded (see mortgage backed securities). Investors who buy

these securities receive income when the original home-buyers make their

mortgage payments.

Security A contract that can be assigned a value and traded. It could be a

share, a bond or a mortgage-backed security.

Separately, the term "security" is also used to mean something that is pledged

by a borrower when taking out a loan. For example, mortgages in the UK are

usually secured on the borrower's home. This means that if the borrower cannot

repay, the lender can seize the security - the home - and sell it in order to

help repay the outstanding debt.

Shadow banking A global financial system - including investment banks,

securitisation, SPVs, CDOs and monoline insurers - that provides a similar

borrowing-and-lending function to banks, but is not regulated like banks. Prior

to the financial crisis, the shadow banking system had grown to play as big a

role as the banks in providing loans. However, much of shadow banking system

collapsed during the credit crunch that began in 2007, and in the 2008

financial crisis.

Short selling A technique used by investors who think the price of an asset,

such as shares or oil contracts, will fall. They borrow the asset from another

investor and then sell it in the relevant market. The aim is to buy back the

asset at a lower price and return it to its owner, pocketing the difference.

Also known as shorting.

Spread (yield) The difference in the yield of two different bondsof

approximately the same maturity, usually in the same currency. The spread is

used as a measure of the market's perception of the difference in

creditworthiness of two borrowers.

SPV A Special Purpose Vehicle (also Special Purpose Entity or Company) is a

company created by a bank or investment bank solely for the purpose of owning a

particular set of loans or other investments, and distributing the risk to

investors. Before the financial crisis, SPVs were regularly used by banks to

offload loans that they owned, freeing the banks up to lend more. SPVs were a

major part of the shadow banking system, and were used in securitisation and

CDOs.

Stability pact A set of rules demanded by Germany at the creation of the euro

in the 1990s that were intended among other things to limit the borrowing of

governments inside the euro to 3% of their GDP, with fines to be imposed on

miscreants. The original stability pact was abandoned after Germany itself

broke the rules with impunity in 2002-05. More recently, the German government

has called for an even stricter system of rules and fines to be introduced in

response to the eurozone debt crisis.

Stagflation The dreaded combination of inflation and stagnation - an economy

that is not growing while prices continue to rise. Most major western economies

experienced stagflation during the 1970s.

Sticky prices A phenomenon observed by Depression-era economist John Maynard

Keynes. Workers typically strongly resist falling wages, even if other prices -

and therefore the cost of living - is falling. This can mean that, particularly

during deflation, wages can become uncompetitive, leading to higher

unemployment. The implication is that periods of deflation usually go

hand-in-hand with very high unemployment. Many economists warn that this may be

the fate of Greece and other struggling economies within the eurozone.

Stimulus Monetary policy or fiscal policy aimed at encouraging higher growth

and/or inflation. This can include interest rate cuts, quantitative easing, tax

cuts and spending increases.

Sub-prime mortgages These carry a higher risk to the lender (and therefore tend

to be at higher interest rates) because they are offered to people who have had

financial problems or who have low or unpredictable incomes.

Swap A derivativethat involves an exchange of cashflows between two parties.

For example, a bank may swap out of a fixed long-term interest rate into a

variable short-term interest rate, or a company may swap a flow of income out

of a foreign currency into their own currency.

T

TARP The Troubled Asset Relief Program - a $700bn rescue fund set up by the US

government in response to the 2008 financial crisis. Originally the TARP was

intended to buy up or guarantee toxic debts owned by the US banks - hence its

name. But shortly after its creation, the US Treasury took advantage of a

loophole in the law to use it instead for a recapitalisation of the entire US

banking system. Most of the TARP money has now been repaid by the banks that

received it.

Tier 1 capital A calculation of the strength of a bank in terms of its capital,

defined by the Basel Accords, typically comprising ordinary shares, disclosed

reserves, retained earnings and some preference shares.

Tobin tax A tax on financial transactions, originally proposed by economist

James Tobin as a levy on currency conversions. The tax is intended to

discourage market speculators by making their activities uneconomic, and in

this way, to increase stability in financial markets. The idea was originally

pushed by former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown in response to the financial

crisis. More recently it has been formally proposed by the European Commission,

with some suggesting the revenue could be used to tackle the financial crissi.

It is now opposed by the current UK government, which argues that to be

effective, the tax would need to be applied globally - not just in the EU - as

most financial activities could quite easily be relocated to another country in

order to avoid the tax.

Toxic debts Debts that are very unlikely to be recovered from borrowers. Most

lenders expect that some customers cannot repay; toxic debt describes a whole

package of loans that are unlikely to be repaid. During the financial crisis,

toxic debts were very hard to value or to sell, as the markets for them ceased

to function. This greatly increased uncertainty about the financial health of

the banks that owned much of these debts.

Troika The term used to refer to the European Union, the European Central Bank

and the International Monetary Fund - the three organisations charged with

monitoring Greece's progress in carrying out austerity measures as a condition

of bailout loans provided to it by the IMF and by other European governments.

The bailout loans are being released in a number of tranches of cash, each of

which must be approved by the troika's inspectors.

U

Underwriters The financial institution pledging to purchase a certain number of

newly-issued securitiesif they are not all bought by investors. The underwriter

is typically aninvestment bank who arranges the new issue. The need for an

underwriter can arise when a company makes a rights issue or a bondissue.

Unwind To unwind a deal is to reverse it - to sell something that you have

previously bought, or vice versa, or to cancel a derivative contract for an

agreed payment. When administratorsare called in to a bank, they must do the

unwinding before creditors can get any money back.

V

Vickers Report See Independent Commission on Banking

Volcker Rule A proposal by former US Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker that

US commercial banks be banned or severely limited from engaging in risky

activities, such as proprietary trading (taking speculative risks on the

markets with their own, rather than clients' money) or investing in hedge

funds. The Volcker Rule follows similar logic to the Glass-Steagall Act and the

UK ring-fenceproposal, and a modified version of the rule was included in the

Dodd-Frankfinancial regulation law passed in the wake of the financial crisis.

W

Warrants A document entitling the bearer to receive shares, usually at a stated

price.

Working capital A measure of a company's ability to make payments falling due

in the next 12 months. It is calculated as the difference between the company's

current assets (unsold inventories plus any cash expected to be received over

the coming year) minus its current liabilities (what the company owes over the

same period). A healthy company should have a positive working capital. A

company with negative working capital can experience cashflow problems.

World Bank Set up after World War II along with the IMF, the World Bank is

mainly involved in financing development projects aimed at reducing world

poverty. The World Bank is traditionally headed by an American, while the IMF

is headed by a European. Like the IMF and OECD, the World Bank produces

economic data and research, and comments on global economic policy.

Write-down Reducing the book value of an asset, either to reflect a fall in its

market value (see mark-to-market) or due to an impairment charge.

Y

Yield The return to an investor from buying a bond implied by the bond's

current market price. It also indicates the current cost of borrowing in the

market for the bond issuer. As a bond's market price falls, its yield goes up,

and vice versa. Yields can increase for a number of reasons. Yields for all

bonds in a particular currency will rise if markets think that the central bank

in that currency will raise short-term interest rates due to stronger growth or

higher inflation. Yields for a particular borrower's bonds will rise if markets

think there is a greater risk that the borrower will default.