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Financial Glossary

Glossary Term
What it Means
Face Value

Face value is the par value or the nominal value of the share. Normally, the share capital of the company is subdivided into shares with a fixed par value. For example, share of capital of Rs.1 crore can be subdivided into 10 lakh shares of Rs.10 each. While Rs.10 is the most common face value of a stock, you also have stocks with face value of Rs.5, Rs.2 and Rs.1 in India. The dividends are paid on the certificate (demat account).

Fed

The Fed is short of the US Federal Reserve which is the central monetary authority of the United States. In terms of role, the US Fed is the same as the RBI in India. The US Fed has a meeting every 45 days which gives an outlook of the US economy and the direction of US inflation and interest rates. The world markets closely track these variables as the Fed statement has important implications for the world markets. US Fed sets the tone for monetary policy.

Freeze

Freeze is a temporary cessation of operation. One of the most common freezes that investors do is a freeze on the demat account.. During such periods all transactions are frozen and are used as a safety measure when the investor is travelling abroad for a longer period of time. To prevent misuse of the demat account, it is advisable to freeze the demat account in such cases. However, corporate actions during the freeze period will continue without any interruptions.

Fundamental Analysis

As the name suggests, the fundamental analysis is about evaluating the worth of a company by looking at its fundamentals. Here fundamentals refer to the income statement, balance sheet, cash flow statement, business plans, product specifics, brand value etc. The purpose of fundamental analysis is to find out whether the current market price of the stock is below the intrinsic value or above the intrinsic value and take buy/sell decision accordingly. Fundamental analysis looks at financial and non-financial parameters.

Futures Rollover

In India futures expire on the last Thursday of the month. Hence if you want to take a five month view with futures then you need to roll over the futures to the next month. If you are long (buy) on futures then roll over involves selling the current month futures and buying the next month. In case of short futures, the reverse is true. Today rolling over futures has become a lot simpler since there is a dedicated roll window where the trader can just define the required spread and get rollover executed.

Financial Planning

Financial plan is a comprehensive evaluation of an individual's current pay and future financial state by using current known variables to predict future income, asset values and withdrawal plans. Financial plan forms the basis for all your investment decisions wherein you tag each investment and each SIP to a specific long term goal. The financial plan covers debt management, life insurance, general insurance, debt investment, equity investment, liquidity etc.

Fixed Maturity Plans (FMP)

Fixed Maturity Plans or FMPs are debt funds that are close-ended in nature. That means investments in FMPs can be made only during the time of a new fund offer. It comes with a fixed maturity period and invests across debt instruments like highly rated securities and corporate bonds. Most FMPs are issued for a minimum period of 3 years so that it becomes a long term gain and lower tax is payable. Some funds also use double indexation benefit by timing the launch.

Fund Family

Fund Family refers to a family of mutual funds or a group of funds that are marketed under one or more brand names. Some of the reputed global fund families include Templeton, Vanguard, Blackrock, Fidelity etc. In India, HDFC, ICICI, Reliance, Birla and Kotak are among the reputed mutual fund families. Members of the fund family usually have the same distributor, registrar and investment advisor.

Fund Manager

The fund manager is responsible for implementing a fund's investing strategy and managing its portfolio trading activities. A fund manager is normally reporting to the Board of Trustees and most decisions are taken by the Investment Committee. A fund can be managed by one person, by two people as co-managers, or by a team of three or more people. Fund managers are supported by a full eco system of traders, brokers, dealers, analysts, economists etc.

Fund of Funds

Fund of Funds (FOF) is also popularly referred to as a multi-manager investment. Globally, the use of FOF is quite sophisticated and is used extensively by financial advisors for financial planning. FOF is an investment strategy in which a fund invests in other types of funds. This strategy invests in a portfolio that contains different underlying mutual funds instead of investing directly in bonds, stocks and other types of securities.

Filing

Filing of prospectus is putting up the IPO document for approval to SEBI. This is an important step in any IPO because the actual work of an investment banker starts only after the prospectus is filed. A lot will depend on the contents of the prospectus because once the approval is given then the issue gets into action.

Firm Allotment

Firm Allotment is a kind of an assured allotment outside the purview of the stock exchanges. A company making an issue to public can reserve some shares on “allotment on firm basis” for some categories as specified in DIP guidelines. Allotment on firm basis indicates that allotment to the investor is on firm basis. Firm allotment is normally done for large institutions and HNIs.

Fixed Price Offer

Fixed Price Offering is now reducing in importance and appeal compared to a book building issue. Under fixed price, the company going public determines a fixed price at which its shares are offered to investors. The investors know the share price before the company goes public. Demand from the markets is only known once the issue is closed. The Fixed Price Offering must be viewed in contrast to the Book Building issue.

Follow on public offering (FPO)

Follow on public offering (FPO) is the issuance of shares to investors by a public company that is currently listed on a stock market exchange. An FPO is a stock issue of additional shares made by a company that is already publicly listed and has gone through the IPO process. This method of FPO is used to raise additional funds to finance its projects.

Forex Market

Forex Market is the market for foreign currencies. In the forex market, participants can buy, sell, exchange, and speculate on currencies. Currencies can be traded for hedging risk and also for speculating on the direction of the currency movement. The forex market is made up of banks, commercial companies, central banks, investment management firms, hedge funds, and retail forex brokers and investors. Forex markets have a spot and futures segment, both very liquid.

Forward (Cash) Contract

Forward Contract is a private agreement between two parties giving the buyer an obligation to purchase an asset (and the seller an obligation to sell an asset) at a set price at a future point in time. Forward contracts are a basic form of futures contract and they are symmetric contracts in the sense that the buyer and seller have equal risks and rewards on the market moving in a particular direction. Forwards are not traded on a recognized stock exchange but OTC products.

Futures

Futures are a standardized forward contract, a legal agreement to buy or sell something at a predetermined price at a specified time in the future, between parties not known to each other. Futures trading is a lot more anonymous compared to forward trading with the trades guaranteed by the central clearing corporation? This helps the futures market overcome the counterparty risk. The asset transacted can be a commodity or financial instrument.

Futures Contract

Futures Contract is a standardized forward contract, a legal agreement to buy or sell something at a predetermined price at a specified time in the future, between parties not known to each other. A futures contract is standardized in terms of lot sizes, ticks and expiries. This creates a ready secondary market for futures making them a lot more liquid than forwards. Futures contracts on indices and currencies are cash settled i.e. profits / losses are adjusted.

Futures Exchange

Futures Exchange or the futures market is a central financial exchange where people can trade standardized futures contracts. In India, the NSE and the BSE are such futures exchanges for stocks, indices and currencies while the MCX and the NCDEX are the exchanges for commodities. Futures exchanges route all futures transactions through a central clearing corporation which acts as the counterparty to each transaction. This does away with the counterparty (default) risk.

FMC

Forward Markets Commission (FMC) was constituted as a statutory body set up under the Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1952. Its principal role was to regulate the commodity futures market. The commodity spot markets are still regulated by the respective state governments. In the year 2016, the FMC was officially merged into SEBI and the entire onus of commodity market regulation also came under the purview of SEBI.

Forward price

The forward price (or sometimes forward rate) is the agreed upon price of an asset in a forward contract. Using the rational pricing assumption, for a forward contract on an underlying asset that is tradable, we can express the forward price in terms of the spot price and any dividends. Under normal circumstances, the forward price is at a premium to the spot price due to the cost of carry in a forward transaction.

Narnolia Research Directory
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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