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Financial Glossary

Glossary Term
What it Means
P/E

The price-to-earnings ratio (P/E ratio) is the ratio for valuing a company that measures its current share price relative to its per-share earnings (EPS). It can also be seen as the ratio of market capitalization to the net profits. The price-to-earnings ratio is also sometimes known as the price multiple or the earnings multiple and is an important tool in valuation of equity. Normally, P/E ratios are ratified by comparing to the peer group and to industry benchmarks.

Par Value

Par value is the face 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 par value of a stock, you also have stocks with par value of Rs.5, Rs.2 and Rs.1 in India. The dividends are paid on the par / face value of the stock. This is the cost that is shown in the share certificate (demat account).

Portfolio

A portfolio is a combination of financial assets and includes stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies and cash equivalents, mutual, ETFs, property, gold etc. The whole of logic of a portfolio is that when you combine assets classes that have a low correlation with one another, then this leads to reduction in overall levels of risk as bad times for one asset is made up by good times for the other. Portfolio is based on the premise of diversification.

Power of Compounding

Power of compounding is all about earning interest on interest. Contrast that to simple interest; wherein you only earn the interest on principal. Compounding leads to geometric growth in your investments and savings. You can start with a small sum as the key is not the initial investment but the duration of investment and the rate at which you compound. That is one of the reasons, investors tend to accumulate large corpuses by just staying invested in equities.

Preferred Shares

Preferred shares are a class of shares in a company that has a higher claim on its assets and earnings compared to normal shares issued. Preferred shares generally have a dividend that must be paid out before dividends to common shareholders, and the shares usually do not carry voting rights. In India preference shares can either be participating or non-participating. While non-participating is debt, participating preference is classified as equity.

Preferred Stock

Preferred stock is the same as preference shares and represents a class of shares in a company that has a higher claim on its assets and earnings compared to normal shares issued. Preferred stock generally has a dividend that must be paid out before dividends to common shareholders, and the shares usually do not carry voting rights. While it is called preference shares in India, the same instrument is referred to as Preferred stock in the US.

Price Gap

A price gap in the stock market describes a situation where a stock opens at a price either higher or lower than the closing price of the previous trading day. This usually happens when some news affecting the value of the stock is announced after the market closes e.g. positive or negative earnings. Normally price sensitive information announced after the close of trade creates overnight risk and is normally the reason for the Price Gap

Price to Earnings Ratio (p/e)

The price-to-earnings ratio (P/E ratio) is the ratio for valuing a company that measures its current share price relative to its per-share earnings (EPS). It can also be seen as the ratio of market capitalization to the net profits. The price-to-earnings ratio is also sometimes known as the price multiple or the earnings multiple and is an important tool in valuation of equity. Normally, P/E ratios are ratified by comparing to the peer group and to industry benchmarks.

Price to Sales Ratio (p/s)

Price–sales ratio, P/S ratio, or PSR, is a valuation metric for stocks. It is calculated by dividing the company's market capitalization by the revenue in the most recent year; or, equivalently, divide the per-share stock price by the per-share revenue. Price to Sales ratio is very useful in case of companies where it is yet to start generating profits. Also in case of cyclical businesses, P/S ratio can be a lot more useful and meaningful.

Profit

Profit is a financial gain, essentially the difference between the amount earned and the amount spent in buying, operating, or producing something. While we all know of profit made on sale of assets, from a business perspective, profit has many definitions like operating profit, net profit, gross profit etc. We normally refer to net profit as profit.

Profit Margin

When you convert the profit earned by the company to a ratio of its sales, it gives you the profit margin for the company. Profit margin is a profitability ratio calculated as net income divided by revenue, or net profits divided by sales. It shows how effectively the sales revenues are leveraged to generate profits. Higher the better it is!

Put/Call Ratio

The put-call (P/C) ratio is a popular tool used by investors and the traders in futures and options to gauge the overall sentiment in the market. Put call ratio measures how many put options are being traded relative to call options. P/C ratio can be measured for the traded volumes or for the open interest in the market. Normally, the P/C ratio is not seen in isolation but in combination with other F&O parameters to get a colour of the market.

Passive Investing

Passive management of funds is also called passive investing. It is an investing strategy that tracks a market-weighted index or portfolio. The most popular method is to mimic the performance of an externally specified index by buying an index fund. Index funds and ETFs are the most common examples of passive management of funds. In passive management, there is not stock selection but only tracking error has to be managed.

Portfolio Manager

Portfolio Manager is the person or the institution that is making decisions about investment mix and policy, matching investments to objectives, asset allocation for individuals and institutions, and balancing risk against performance. Portfolio manager has a complex job of enhancing profits on the portfolio without enhancing the level of risk. It is a more a task of optimizing the portfolio returns.

Portfolio Turnover Rate

Portfolio Turnover Ratio represents the churn of the fund portfolio or the percentage of the portfolio holdings that have changed over a time period. Normally, portfolio turnover has a cost and hence needs to be minimized. Portfolio turnover is calculated by dividing either the total purchases or total sales, whichever is lower, by the average of the net assets. Being long term investments, mutual funds must strive to keep the portfolio turnover as low as possible.

Price/Book Ratio

Price/Book Ratio is a financial ratio that is used to compare market value of a stock to its book value is called price to book ratio or P/B ratio. The financial ratio is derived by dividing the current closing price of a share by the book value of a share in the latest quarter. This is a ratio that is used as a popular valuation matrix for banks and financials and also for companies that have not started making profits.

Paid Up capital

Paid-up capital is the amount of money a company has received from shareholders in exchange for shares of stock. Paid-up capital is created when a company sells its shares on the primary market directly to investors. Normally, paid up capital of a company are less than the authorized capital and the EPS calculations are done on paid up capital where the profits of the company are divided by the total number of shares that are fully paid up.

Premium

Premium is in a nutshell the price of insurance against a particular risk. In financial parlance, premium represents insurance as a means of protection from financial loss. It is a form of risk management, primarily used to hedge against the risk of a contingent or uncertain loss. An entity which provides insurance is known as an insurer, insurance company, insurance carrier or underwriter and the recipient of the service is called the insured.

Premium (futures)

Premium (futures) is the excess of one futures contract price over that of another, or over the cash market price. It could also be the amount agreed upon between the purchaser and seller for the purchase or sale of a futures option. Remember that purchasers pay the premium and sellers (writers) receive the premium. Futures premium can be over spot or it can be the premium of the mid month contract over the near month or far month over the mid month.

Premium (options)

Premium (options) can be defined as the income received by an investor who sells or "writes" an option contract to another party. The writer of the option has profits that are limited to the premium only and is charged for giving the buyer of the option the right without the obligation. An option premium may also refer to the current price of any specific option contract that has yet to expire and it consists of time value and intrinsic value of the option. Also called option price.

Price Discovery

Price discovery refers to the act of determining the proper price of a security, commodity, or good or service by studying market supply and demand and other factors associated with transactions. In the markets, book building is a process of price discovery of an IPO. Similarly, market is a process of price discovery of stocks, futures and options.

Price Limit

Price limit is an established amount in which a price may increase or decrease in any single trading day from the previous day's settlement price. This is defined by the exchange for risk management purpose and to prevent unnecessary volatility in the stock price. There are price limits on individual stocks and also on the index as a whole. In financial and commodity markets, prices are only permitted to rise or fall by a certain number of ticks per trading session.

Primary Dealer

Primary dealer is a firm that buys government securities directly from a government, with the intention of reselling them to others, thus acting as a market maker of government securities. Primary dealers give buy and sell quotes and typically operate on the spread between the bids and ask prices. Primary dealers have to be adequately capitalized

Pulpit

In common terms a Pulpit is a raised structure. With specific reference to the markets, pulpit represents a raised stage or platform adjacent to, or in the centre of, the pit or ring at a futures exchange where market reporters, employed by the exchange, record price changes as they occur in the trading pit. This used to be common in the open outcry system.

Put

A put is an option contract giving the owner the right, but not the obligation, to sell a specified amount of an underlying asset at a set price within a specified time. The buyer of a put option believes the underlying asset will drop below the exercise price before the expiration date. Seller of the put expects downsides to be capped.

Put Option

In financial parlance a put or put option is a stock market device which gives the owner the right, but not the obligation, to sell an asset, at a specified price, by a predetermined date to a given party. Put option is a right to sell without an obligation to sell. The purchase of a put option is interpreted as a negative view on the index or the underlying stock and puts can be used either to speculate on the downside or to hedge a long position.

Precious Metals

Precious metals are rare and naturally occurring elements of high economic value. Precious metals are usually ductile (can be drawn into thin wires) and have a high lustre. Historically, precious metals were also used as currency but are now regarded mainly as investment; either in physical form or in the form of ETFs. Gold, silver, platinum, and palladium are all examples although in India it is more of gold and silver that get traded on the commodity exchanges.

Precious Metals

Precious metals are rare and naturally occurring elements of high economic value. Precious metals are usually ductile (can be drawn into thin wires) and have a high lustre. Historically, precious metals were also used as currency but are now regarded mainly as investment; either in physical form or in the form of ETFs. Gold, silver, platinum, and palladium are all examples although in India it is more of gold and silver that get traded on the commodity exchanges.

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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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