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Financial Glossary

Glossary Term
What it Means
Capital Gain or Loss

When a capital asset like land, property, bonds, equity shares etc are sold they result in a profit or loss depending on whether the selling price is more than the buying price or less than the buying price. Capital gains are taxed as income and capital losses can be set off against capital gains (or even carried forward to futures) to reduce your tax liability on capital gains. Capital gains can be long term or short term. For equities, any holding of more than 1 year is long term and less than that is short term.

Carry Trade

Carry trade is the practice of borrowing at a low cost and investing in high yield assets. Carry trades are most common in the foreign currency markets. Traders normally prefer to borrow in the Japanese Yen where the interest rates are very low. Then such monies are invested in high yield bonds in countries like India and Indonesia. While the strategy looks simple, it does carry an exchange risk if the rupee / yen movement is unfavourable. Carry trade is normally done by professional traders using high end algorithms.

Cash Dividend / Distribution

Cash dividends are paid out to shareholders after all the expenses are met and the taxes are also paid. Hence dividends are a post tax appropriation. A company normally expresses dividends as the percentage of the par value or face value of the stock. A stock with par value of Rs.10 paying 40% as dividend is actually paying Rs.4 per share. A better measure of dividends is the dividend yield which divides the dividend per share with the market price per share. Conservative investors prefer to buy high dividend yield shares.

Cash Settlement

Cash settlement is very common in futures and options trading in India; in cash F&O, index F&O, commodities and also in currencies. In cash settlement, there is no delivery of shares taken or given. Any profits or losses on the trade are directly adjusted to your trading account. If you buy Nifty futures for Rs.7.50 lakhs and sell for Rs.7.65 lakhs, then the profit of Rs.15,000 will be directly credited to your trading account.

Commodities

Commodities are interchangeable goods or material that can be bought and sold freely. In the stock markets, commodities are seen as the opposite of brands. Commodities include agricultural commodities like wheat, maize, mentha, cotton etc; industrial commodities like copper, tin, zinc etc; precious metals like gold, silver, palladium and energy products like oil & gas. Normally, commodity stocks get lower P/E valuations in the markets compared to companies with strong brands.

Contrarian

Contrarian is an investor who takes an opposite view to the popular trend in the market. For example, when stocks are falling sharply in the market, contrarians try to find pockets of opportunity in the stock market to buy. Successful investors like Warren Buffett have been contrarian investors and they have always tried to buy in the midst of fear and sell in the midst of greed.

Cum Dividend

Cum dividend means with dividend and needs to be looked at in contrast to ex-dividend. When a stock is cum-dividend, it means that investing in the stock at that point of time will entitle you to receive the dividends that have just been declared. The cum-dividend price is normally higher since it includes the dividend and it later falls to the extent of the dividends paid out when it becomes ex dividend.

Cum Rights

Rights are an option to existing shareholders to subscribe to shares at a fixed price (Normally lower than market price). Cum rights means with rights and needs to be looked at in contrast to ex-rights. When a stock is cum-rights, it means that investing in the stock at that point of time will entitle you to receive the rights shares in the said ratio that has just been declared. The cum rights price is normally higher since it includes the rights and it later falls to the extent of the dilution in equity value due to the rights when it becomes ex rights.

Cum-Dividend/Distribution Date

The cum-dividend date is linked to the concept of cum dividend shares. How do you determine which shareholders should get the dividend since the shareholding patter keeps changing. For that the company announces the ex-dividend date. The last trading day before the ex-dividend day will be the last cum-dividend date. If you want to receive the dividend then you need to buy the shares before the last cum-dividend date.

Capital Growth

Capital growth is the appreciation in the value of an asset over a period of time. It is calculated by comparing the current market price with the purchase price. For example, if you bought 1000 units of Fund X at a NAV of Rs.25 and at the end of 1 year the NAV stands at Rs.30 then your mutual fund portfolio has seen capital appreciation to the tune of Rs.5,000 (1000 units into Rs.5). Till the time these capital growth is booked, they are called notional gains.

Closed Ended Plan

Closed ended funds are opened for subscription for a fixed period of time and then the closed ended fund is listed and fresh redemptions are stopped. Investors cannot buy the units of a closed-ended fund after its NFO period is over via the mutual fund repurchase window. That is only for open ended funds. However, to provide a platform for investors to exit before the term, the fund houses are required to list their closed-ended schemes on a stock exchange.

Corpus

Corpus is total amount of money invested by all investors in a scheme. For example, your investable surplus plus your existing investments make your corpus. You plan your goals based on projected future corpus. For a mutual fund scheme, the funds collected under the scheme constitute the corpus. Basically, the corpus refers to the total amount of assets under management and is also designated in short as AUM.

Credit Opportunities Fund

Credit opportunities fund is a type of debt fund that seeks to invest in relatively lower quality bonds with the aim of generating higher yields and accrual income. Bond yields are negatively related to the bond ratings. Subsequent to the categorization and rationalization of mutual fund schemes by SEBI, credit opportunities funds have been renamed as credit risk funds. Just as credit risk funds enhance returns, and then also enhance default risk in your portfolio.

Co-Manager

Co-Manager is an investor banker who assists the BRLM in the issue management process. Most IPOs and secondary offerings have more than one underwriter. The manager controlling the offering is called the lead manager. Other underwriters are co-managers. The names of these underwriters appear on the bottom of the front page of the prospectus, with the most important manager appearing on the top left, and the co-managers arrayed from left to right in order of importance.

Conditional Offer

Conditional Offer of securities is basically an offer to purchase securities depending on the effectiveness of a registration statement and the pricing of an IPO. This is not a blanket expression of interest to subscribe to an issue but it is only valid subject to certain pre stated conditions.

Contingent Liabilities

Contingent liability is a potential liability that may occur depending on the outcome of an uncertain future event. A contingent liability is recorded in the accounting records if the contingency is probable and the amount of the liability can be reasonably estimated. Typically, guarantees given by the company on behalf of subsidiaries or even legal cases that are pending against a company and which could have negative liability implications are included as contingent liabilities.

Cut off Price

Cut off Price is a bid put in by an investor expressing his/her willingness to accept whatever price is eventually discovered. In a Book Building Public Issue, the Investors have an additional option to bid. This bid price is known as "Cut off" price. Bidding at "Cut off" price means that the Investor is ready to pay the price decided by the Company at the end of the book building process. For allotment purposes, they will be treated as valid applications.

Call Option

Call Option is quite often simply labelled a "call". Call option is a financial contract between two parties giving the buyer of the call option the right to buy a stock or an index at a specific strike price maturing on a specified date and at a certain premium. The call option loss is limited to the premium paid. On the upside, once the premium cost is covered, the profits can be unlimited for the buyer of the call option. However, for the seller / writer of the call options, the profit is limited to the premium earned but the losses can be unlimited.

Carrying Charge

Carrying Charge is also popularly called the cost of carry and it refers to the cost of storing a physical commodity, such as grain or metals, over a period of time. The carrying charge includes insurance, storage and interest on the invested funds as well as other incidental cost. Most of these charges are applicable in case of commodity futures. In stock futures and index futures, you don't incur any of these costs. However, there is the interest cost and hence the cost of carry of a stock future or an index future just compensates for the opportunity cost of funds entailed.

Clearing Member

Clearing Member is better known as CM in the Indian context and refers to a member of an exchange clearinghouse. Memberships in clearing organizations are usually held by companies. Clearing members are responsible for the financial commitments of customers that clear through their firm. Most trading members are also the clearing members but there are also professional clearing members like the custodians who only clear trades on behalf of clients.

Clearinghouse

A clearing house is a financial institution formed to facilitate the exchange of payments, securities, or derivatives transactions. They take care of the clearing and the settlement of trades. The clearing house stands between two clearing firms. Its purpose is to reduce the risk of a member firm failing to honour its trade settlement obligation.

Collar strategy

Collar strategy is a very popular limited risk strategy in futures and options. A collar combines a protective put and a covered call. In a collar trading strategy that is constructed is to hold shares of the underlying stock while simultaneously buying protective puts on the downside and selling call options against that holding on the upside. The call option sold reduces the cost of protection entailed in put option. However, the maximum profit of the collar strategy gets capped at the price at which the call strike is sold.

Compulsory delivery

Compulsory delivery is a situation where in all the futures and options transactions will only be settled by actual delivery and there will be no cash settlement. Effectively July 2018 all stock futures, as per SEBI regulations, will be settled via compulsory physical delivery (List of stocks available on NSE website). If you hold a position in any of these contracts at expiry, you will be required to give/take delivery of stocks and cash settlement is not permitted. This entails a higher degree of securities transaction tax payable.

Contract Month

Contract Month is the month in which the F&O contract expires. In the Indian F&O context there are 3 contracts viz. the near month contract, the mid month contract and the far month contract. The near month contract expires on the last Thursday of the current month, the mid month contract in the last Thursday of the next month and the far month contract on the last Thursday of the month after that. At any time these 3 monthly contracts are available on all F&O contracts.

Cost of Carry

Carrying Charge is also popularly called the cost of carry and it refers to the cost of storing a physical commodity, such as grain or metals, over a period of time. The carrying charge includes insurance, storage and interest on the invested funds as well as other incidental cost. Most of these charges are applicable in case of commodity futures. In stock futures and index futures, you don't incur any of these costs. However, there is the interest cost and hence the cost of carry of a stock future or an index future just compensates for the opportunity cost of funds entailed.

Covered Call Option Writing

Covered Call Option Writing is a financial market transaction entailing a unique futures and options strategy. In this strategy a trader who owns underlying shares of a company is also the seller of higher strike call options of an equivalent number of shares. That means your share holding must be in multiples of the lot size to be meaningful to the covered call strategy. In a covered call, the upside return is limited but the risk on the upside is covered. However, the covered call has open risk on the downside if the price of the stock goes down. Covered is a price reducer.

Cross-Hedging

A cross hedge is used to manage risk by investing in two positively correlated securities that have similar price movements. The investor takes opposing positions in each investment in an attempt to reduce the risk of holding just one of the securities. This is also called a long/short strategy and provides a natural hedge to the trader. However, the returns on this strategy come from relative outperformance and not from individual stock returns.

CIF

CIF stands for Cost, Insurance, Freight and it is an expense paid by a seller to cover the said costs. Until the loading of the goods onto a transport ship is complete, the seller bears the costs of any loss or damage to the product. Further, if the product requires additional customs or export paperwork or requires inspections or rerouting, the seller must cover these expenses. Once the freight loads, the buyer becomes responsible for all other costs. This is different from FOB.

Close out price

The Close-out price is the rate at which settlement of short delivery of commodities is completed. When delivery is short, the two potential parties involved tend to arrive at a small discount and complete the contract so as not to impose very steep penalties on either of them. The close out prices is usually at a discount to the spot price.

Commodity exchange

A commodity exchange is an exchange where various commodities, derivative products, agricultural products and other raw materials are traded. Most of the commodity markets across the world trade in commodities such as wheat, barley, sugar, maize, cotton, cocoa, coffee, milk products, pork bellies, oil, metals, etc. In India the MCX is the largest commodity exchange and has leadership in precious metals, base metals and energy products. NCDEX has a leadership position in agricultural products.

Commodity spreads

Commodity Spread trading involves taking opposite positions in the same or related markets. A spread trader always wants the long side of the spread to increase in value relative to the short side. Spread trades can be between correlated commodities or between two different expiries. Spreads bet on the relative price movement rather than on absolute price movements. In a way spreads are non-directional strategies.

Commodity Straddles

A straddle strategy is accomplished by holding an equal number of calls and puts on the same strike price in the contract. There are two break even points in a straddle and on both sides the break even point is the strike price plus the sum of call and put premiums. Straddles are useful strategies when you expect volatility but are not sure of the direction. Reverse straddles can also be used when you have a range bound view on the market.

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KYC is a one-time exercise while dealing in securities markets - once KYC is done through a SEBI registered intermediary (broker, DP, Mutual Fund etc.), you need not undergo the same process again when you approach another intermediary. | Investors don’t need to issue cheques while subscribing to IPOs. Just write your bank account number and sign the application form to authorise your bank to make a payment on your behalf in case of allotment. You don’t have to worry about refunds as the money remains in the investor's account. | It has been brought to the notice of SEBI by Central Economic Intelligence Bureau, Department of Revenue, GOI, that certain fraudsters are collecting data of customers who are already into trading either in NSE / BSE and send them bulk messages on the pretext of providing investment tips and luring them to invest with them in their bogus firms by promising huge profits. Hence, the investors are requested to take note of the above and exercise caution and due care. | Process for filing complaints on the SEBI SCORES website: a. Register on SEBI SCORES | b. Mandatory details for filing complaints on SCORES | Name, PAN, Address, Mobile Number, Email ID | c. Benefits: i. Effective Communication ii. Speedy redressal of the grievances
KYC is a one-time exercise while dealing in securities markets - once KYC is done through a SEBI registered intermediary (broker, DP, Mutual Fund etc.), you need not undergo the same process again when you approach another intermediary. | Investors don’t need to issue cheques while subscribing to IPOs. Just write your bank account number and sign the application form to authorise your bank to make a payment on your behalf in case of allotment. You don’t have to worry about refunds as the money remains in the investor's account. | It has been brought to the notice of SEBI by Central Economic Intelligence Bureau, Department of Revenue, GOI, that certain fraudsters are collecting data of customers who are already into trading either in NSE / BSE and send them bulk messages on the pretext of providing investment tips and luring them to invest with them in their bogus firms by promising huge profits. Hence, the investors are requested to take note of the above and exercise caution and due care. | Process for filing complaints on the SEBI SCORES website: a. Register on SEBI SCORES | b. Mandatory details for filing complaints on SCORES | Name, PAN, Address, Mobile Number, Email ID | c. Benefits: i. Effective Communication ii. Speedy redressal of the grievances

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