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Acceleration Order
(USA) An order by the SEC declaring a registration statement effective
(and thereby making sales of securities permissible)before expiration
of the statutory 20 day period from the date of filing. The filing
of an amendment to a registration statement by the issuing company
restarts the 20 day clock.
Acceleration Request
(USA) A letter (or in some cases, oral communication) to the SEC
from both the issuer and the managing underwriters of a public offering,
requesting that the SEC declare a registration statement effective.
The SEC's policy, often waived, is that the acceleration request
be received at least two business days prior to the date the registration
statement is to become effective.
Acceptance message
Notification from the SEC that an electronic submission
has met the minimum filing requirements and been accepted by EDGAR.
If the submitter or filer has an e-mail address, the acceptance
messages are sent by e-mail to that account. Acceptance messages
are also sent to all Internet e-mail addresses listed in the submission
header fields.
Acceptance review
Procedural checks performed by EDGAR to determine whether
a filing meets certain minimum filing requirements. The requirements
may relate to the composition and completeness of the submission
package, as well as to the particular type of filing being made.
The EDGAR system does not check the content contained within is
a filing.
Accepted
The term that describes a filing that has successfully
passed acceptance review. A live filing is deemed public at this
point.
Accession number
A unique number generated by the EDGAR system for each
electronic submission. Accession numbers are reported to submitters
and filers in the acceptance and suspense messages. Assignment of
an accession number does not mean that EDGAR has accepted your submission.
Accredited Investor
A person or institution deemed capable of understanding and affording
the financial risks associated with the acquisition of unregistered
securities. The SEC recognizes the following parties as accredited:
- An individual who alone, or with a spouse, has a net worth of
over $1 million.
- An individual who alone had income in excess of $200,000 in
each of the past two years (or with a spouse, in excess of $300,000
in each of the past two years) and has a reasonable expectation
of doing as well in the current year.
- A financial institution such as bank, broker/dealer, insurance
company or business development company.
- Any director, officer or general partner of the issuer.
- A trust or business partnership, with assets in excess of $5
million, that wasn't formed for the purpose of acquiring the unregistered
securities.
- Any entity wholly owned by accredited investors.
Aftermarket Performance
The price appreciation (or depreciation) in IPOs is measured from
the offering price going forward. However, to obtain a better benchmark
of IPO aftermarket performance, some investors track performance
from the first day's closing price.
Aftermarket Trading
Trading in the IPO subsequent to its offering is called the aftermarket
trading. Trading volume in IPOs may be extremely high on the first
day due to intra day-trading, flipping and aftermarket purchases.
Allocation
The amount of stock in an initial public offering (IPO) granted by the underwriter to an investor. For many IPOs, the allocation is significantly less than investor's indication of interest. The allocations are meted out based on commission volume, trading history and type of investor.
American Depositary Receipt (ADR)
Receipt for shares of foreign-based companies that entitle the shareholder to all dividends and capital gains. ADRs allow Americans to buy shares of foreign-based corporations' securities at American Exchanges instead of having to go to overseas exchanges.
AMEX (American Stock Exchange)
(USA) An exchange or a securities market which generally lists securities of small or newer corporations than those listed on the New York Stock Exchange. It has historically been popular for trading of companies involved in the production and sale of natural resources and option trading. Located in New York. In October 1998, Nasdaq and the American Stock Exchange combined into one corporate organization: The Nasdaq-Amex Market Group.
Animated graphics
The term "animated graphics" means text or images that do not remain static but that may move when viewed in a browser. Such graphics are not permitted in SEC filings.
Angel
A person or entity that provides financing to companies that have progressed beyond the start-up phase but are not yet ready for venture financing.
Arbitrage
The practice of simultaneously buying and selling the same or equivalent securities to profit from the disparity in their prevailing prices in separate markets. This activity applies to equivalent securities trading in different markets, securities with convertible features, or securities involved in mergers, tender offers or corporate divestitures.
ASCII document
The term "ASCII document" means an electronic text document with contents limited to American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII) characters and that is tagged with Standard Generalized Mark Up Language (SGML) tags in the format required for ASCII/SGML documents by the EDGAR Filer Manual.
Ask
The lowest price at which someone is willing to sell a security.
Auditor
A qualified individual that examines and verifies a company's financial and accounting records and supporting documents.
Basis Point
One basis point is equal to 0.01% of the yield on a bond (i.e. 100
basis points is equal to 1%).
Bearer Bond
A security, usually a bond, that does not have the owner's name
registered on the books of the issuer or on the certificate. Interest
and principal, when due, are payable to the person in possession
of the bond. The holder sends in or presents a coupon for payment.
Best Efforts Sale
A method of securities distribution/underwriting in which the securities
firm agrees to sell as much of the offering as possible and return
any unsold shares to the issuer. As opposed to a guaranteed or fixed
price sale, where the underwriter agrees to sell a specific number
of shares (with the securities firm holding any unsold shares in
its own account if necessary).
Beta
A statistical measure that shows a fund's volatility relative to
the S & P 500® Index over the last 36 months. By definition,
the beta of the S & P 500 is 1.0. A fund with a beta of 1.10
tends to perform 10% better than the market in up markets and 10%
worse in down markets.
Bid
The highest price at which someone is willing to buy a security.
Blue Chip
Term used to describe an established company that has a long record
of stable growth or credit worthiness.
Blue Sky Law
(USA) State laws regulating the offer and sale of securities and
the registration of broker-dealers. All securities issued by a company
must be offered and sold in compliance with or under an exemption
from blue sky laws and regulations of each state in which securities
are sold. The name 'blue sky' comes from the preamble to an early
Wisconsin law designed to prevent companies from selling pieces
of the blue sky to unsuspecting investors.
Bond
A long-term debt security of the Government or a corporation with
maturity of 10 years or more from the issue date. Interest is usually
paid every six months and its face value returned, repaid at maturity.
Book or Syndicate Book
The list of investors who have indicated an interest in purchasing
shares in a public offering maintained by the lead managing underwriter
during the offering process.
Book-Entry Securities
Securities whose ownership are evidenced by an entry on the books
of the issuer or the transfer agent and not by physical certificates.
Book Manager
The lead managing underwriter who maintains the Book.
Book Value per Share
A company's net worth (assets minus liabilities) divided by the
number of shares outstanding. Tangible book value is the company's
net tangible worth (tangible assets minus liabilities) divided by
the number of shares outstanding.
Bookbuilding
Process pursuant to which the lead underwriter(s) in a public offering
solicit institutional and retail investors to commit to subscribe
to shares prior to the closing of the offering.
Bookrunner
The underwriter in charge of the bookbuilding process.
Browser
Commercially available software used for viewing on the
Internet. The most popular versions are Netscape and Internet Explorer.
Buy
Purchase of a security.
Buyback
A corporation's repurchase of stock or bonds it has issued. Also,
the purchase of a long position to offset a short position.
CAC-40 (Compagnie des Agents de Change 40 Index)
An index based on 40 of the largest and most liquid stocks traded
on the Paris Stock Exchange.
Calendar
A schedule of securities that will be offered for sale in the near
future. An individual calendar is issued for new stock offerings,
municipal bonds, corporate bonds and government securities.
Call Option
Gives its buyer the right to buy or sell 100 shares of the underlying
security at a fixed price before a specified expiration date. Call
buyers hope the price of the stock will rise.
Capital Gain
Occurs when an investor sells an investment at a price higher than
his cost basis in the investment.
Capitalization
The sum of a corporation's long-term debt, stock and retained earnings.
Also called invested capital.
(CIK) Central Index Key
A unique ten-digit number assigned by the SEC, distinguishing
the company or individual to which it is assigned. Used by EDGAR
to identify either a submitter (LOGIN CIK) or filer.
Class
Classes of securities are securities that share the same terms and
benefits. Classes of capital stock are generally alphabetically
designated, e.g., 'Class C Common Stock' or 'Class A Preferred Stock'.
Class Action Suit
A lawsuit brought by one person on behalf of a larger group of individuals
all having the same grievance.
(CCC) Confirmation Code
An eight-character code that EDGAR uses in conjunction
with the CIK to authenticate a filer. It is case-sensitive and must
contain at least one numeric character and at least one special
character (*, #, @, $).
Comfort Letter or Cold Comfort Letter
A letter delivered by the auditors for an issuer at the time of
a registered public offering which typically (a)confirms certain
numerical information in the registration statement which can be
derived from the issuer's financial records, and (b)provides limited
negative assurances concerning changes in financial conditions since
the last audit.
Comment Letter
(USA) A letter prepared by an examiner at the SEC setting forth
the Sec's questions and comments with regard to a registration statement
or prospectus. Other filings with the SEC, such as annual reports
on Form 10-K and proxy statements may also be reviewed by the SEC
and may be the subject of a comment letter.
Commercial Paper
An unsecured obligation issued by a corporation or bank to finance
its short-term credit needs, such as accounts receivable and inventory.
Maturities typically range from 2 to 270 days.
Commission Des Opérations de Bourse (COB)
The Commission Des Opérations de Bourse, or COB, is the competent
authority regulating the securities industry in France.
Common Stock
Securities that represent an ownership interest in a corporation.
Confidential
Refers to portions of documents omitted from public filings
pursuant to SEC rules (e.g., Rule 406 under 1933 Act).
Confirming copy
An electronic copy of a paper filing filed under Form TH
(Temporary Hardship). The paper filing is the official copy and
the confirming copy is an electronic duplicate.
Consolidated Financial Statements
Financial statements for a company and all of its subsidiaries as
if a single enterprise rather than for the company on a stand-alone
basis.
Convertible Debt
A debt obligation of a company which is convertible into stock.
Convertible Preferred Stock
Preferred stock convertible into common stock.
Corporate Bond
Debt obligations issued by corporations as an alternative to offering
equity ownership. Like most municipal bonds and Treasuries, corporate
bonds generally pay semi-annual interest and promise to return their
principal when they mature.
Correspondence submission
A submission type EDGAR filers may use to submit non-public
information, generally correspondence, to the SEC staff. Note: Some
of these documents may be made public (on www.gsionline.com)
after registration is declared effective.
Custodial Account
An account for the benefit of a minor with an adult as the custodian.
Data field
An identifier that labels specific information submitted
to EDGAR. Data fields are created by placing angle brackets on either
side of a term. An end data field is distinguishable from a begin
data field by the "/" (virgule/slash) immediately following
the opening angle bracket (<). For example, the beginning and
end of a table would be signified by <TABLE> and </TABLE>,
respectively.
DAX
A price-weighted index of the most heavily traded stocks on the
Frankfurt Stock Exchange..
Day Order
An order condition that causes your order to be canceled at the
end of the current day's trading if your order is not executed.
Dealer
Any individual or firm, other than a bank, which is engaged in the
buying and selling of securities for itself.
Debt Capital
Capital raised through the issuance of bonds.
Delisting
The removal of a company from listing on an exchange, either because
the company no longer satisfies certain minimum financial or market
capitalization standards or because the company violated one of
the rules or regulations of the exchange.
Derivative or Derivative Security
A financial instrument or security whose characteristics and value
depend upon the characteristics and value of an underlying instrument
or asset, typically a commodity, bond, equity or currency. Examples
include futures, options, and mortgage-backed securities.
Dilution
Effect on earnings per share and book value per share if all convertible
securities were converted or all warrants or stock options were
exercised.
Direct Public Offerings
Offering of new securities to the public directly by an issuer without
the assistance of an investment banking firm.
Disruptive code
The term "disruptive code" means any active content
or other executable code, or any program or set of electronic computer
instructions inserted into a computer, operating system, or program
that replicates itself or that actually or potentially modifies
or in any way alters, damages, destroys or disrupts the file content
or the operation of any computer, computer file, computer database,
computer system, computer network or software, and otherwise set
forth in the EDGAR Filer Manual.
Distribution
The sale of a block of securities to a number of investors. Often,
this is accomplished through a syndicate of investment banks or
stock brokers that buy the securities from the underwriter or under-
writers and sell them on to their clients.
Diversification
The allocation of assets within an investment portfolio among various
types of investments.
Dividend
A distribution by an issuer to holders of the issuer's stock.
Dividend Yield
In the case of a cash dividend, a fraction representing the amount
of the dividend divided by the issuer's stock price.
Document
Document is a generic term for the various forms, reports,
schedules, exhibits, items of correspondence, etc., that comprise
filings and other submissions. An electronic document originating
with a filer or agent can only be sent as part of a submission.
A document is a discrete unit of text. One or more documents comprise
an electronic submission. Examples of documents include a 1933 Act
registration statement, a 1934 Act Form 10-Q, or a cover letter.
Each exhibit is a separate document within a submission. The SEC
EDGAR system also treats each graphic file included in a submission
as a separate document.
Document header
A header used within an EDGAR submission to indicate, by
the appropriate use of tags and tag values, the document type, and
if desired, the description of the document. EDGARLink constructs
document headers for each separate document contained within a submission.
Document type: Submissions received may consist of more than one
document. For example, a Form 10-K, an exhibit, and a cover letter
constitute three separate documents in one submission. Each document
must begin with a document header. A Form 10-K submission must contain
at least one document, which is the Form 10-K.
Dollar Cost Averaging
Buying securities in a given investment at scheduled intervals at
the same dollar amount over a period of time.
Dow Jones Industrial Average (Dow)
Best known stock index in the US It contains 30 New York Stock Exchange
stocks and is considered a barometer of how shares of the largest
US companies are performing.
Dual Listing
The listing of a security on more than one exchange. Increasingly,
securities are being listed on both a local exchange and an exchange
with more wide- spread coverage. In addition, issuers may list on
both a US exchange and a European or Asian exchange.
Due Diligence
An examination of the books and records of an issuer and interviews
with officers, partners, etc, to confirm information about the issuer's
business as well as legal and accounting affairs. It typically includes
a review of such matters as significant customers and suppliers;
the background of key employees (to learn of prior employment problems,
criminal convictions, disciplinary actions by market regulators,
fraudulent resumés); material contracts; facilities; real
property owned; subsidiaries; judgements and lawsuits; insurance;
patents and other intellectual property rights; licenses and permits;
and tax status. The phrase derives from the fact that under USA
law certain persons (including the directors, underwriters and auditors)
are personally liable for a misstatement of material fact in a registration
statement unless they can demonstrate that after reasonable investigation
they had reasonable ground to believe, and in fact did believe,
that the statement was true. Conducting the due diligence examination
enables these persons to raise a 'due diligence defence' if sued.
Earnings Per Share (EPS)
A fraction representing the issuer's earnings per each share outstanding.
EBIT
Earnings before interest and taxes — a financial measurement
often used in valuing a company.
EBITDA
Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization —
a financial measurement used in valuing a company.
Earnings Per Share Date
Date of the last earnings announcement.
EDGAR
The term "EDGAR" – Electronic Data Gathering,
Analysis, and Retrieval – refers to the computer system for
the receipt, acceptance, review and dissemination of documents submitted
to the SEC in electronic format.
EDGAR Filer Manual
The term "EDGAR Filer Manual" means the current
version of the manual prepared by the Commission setting out the
technical format requirements for an electronic submission.
Note: See Rule
301 of Regulation S-T (§232.301).
SEC’s
EDGAR Filer Manual.
Effective Date
(USA) The date of the SEC order declaring the registration statement
for a public offering to be effective, at which time the sale of
shares to the public can commence.
Effective Par
The par value for preferred stock that would ordinarily correspond
to a given dividend rate.
Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval (EDGAR)
(USA) The Sec's system required to be used by substantially all
public companies to file required reports, such as quarterly and
annual reports with the SEC, electronically, those enabling electronic
retrieval of these filings through the internet. At the present
time foreign companies registered as public companies in the USA
are not required to file electronically and may continue to file
paper documents if they choose.
Electronic document
The term "electronic document" means the portion
of an electronic submission separately tagged as an individual document
in the format required by the EDGAR Filer Manual.
Electronic filer
The term "electronic filer" means a person or
an entity that submits filings electronically pursuant to Rules
100 and 101 of Regulation S-T (§§232.100 and 232.101,
respectively).
Electronic filing
The term "electronic filing" means one or more
electronic documents filed under the federal securities laws that
are transmitted or delivered to the Commission in electronic format.
Electronic format
The term "electronic format" means the computerized
format of a document prepared in accordance with the EDGAR Filer
Manual (e.g., HTML, ASCII).
Electronic Funds Transfer
Transferring funds between accounts and firms electronically.
Electronic submission
The term "electronic submission" means any document,
such as a filing, correspondence, or modular submission, or any
discrete set of documents, transmitted or delivered to the Commission
in electronic format.
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)
(USA) The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,the principal
USA law regulating retirement and employee benefit plans.
Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP)
(USA) A plan established by a company for the allocation of some
of its stock to its employees over time, intended to motivate employees,
and often providing tax benefits to the company.
Employee Stock Purchase Plan
A plan under which key employees are given the right to purchase
shares of the company at a future date on favourable terms. Under
the USA Internal Revenue Code, if a plan meets certain requirements,
employees can purchase stock at 85%of market price without any USA
tax consequence, though the rules in other countries are different.
Employee Stock Repurchase Agreement
An arrangement in which a corporation sells stock to its employees
but reserves the right to repurchase it under certain conditions.
EURONEXT
The stock market entity resulting from the merger of the Amsterdam,
Brussels and Paris stock exchanges, signed in September 2000.
EURO.NM
A pan-European grouping of regulated markets dedicated to growth
companies. The members of EURO.NM and their respective growth markets
currently include the ParisBourse (Le Nouveau Marche'), the Deutsche
Boerse (Neuer Markt), the Amsterdam Exchanges (EURO.NM Amsterdam),
the Brussels Exchanges (EURO.NM Belgium) and the Italian Exchange
(Nuovo Mercato).This grouping is being disbanded at the end of 2000.
Exchange
The marketplace in which shares, options and futures on stocks,
bonds, commodities and indices are traded.
Exchange Act
The term "Exchange Act" means the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934. For a copy of the SEC Handbook covering the
Exchange Acts, click here to order
the annually updated printed copy or see a PDF or HTML version.
Executable code
The term "executable code" means instructions
to a computer to carry out operations that use features beyond the
viewer's, reader's, or Internet browser's native ability to interpret
and display HTML, PDF, and static graphic files. Such code may be
in binary (machine language) or in script form. Executable code
includes disruptive codes.
Exemption or Exempt from Registration
(USA) An exemption from the statutory requirement to register the
offer and sale of a security with the SEC under the Securities Act
of 1933. Exemptions are provided for certain types of securities
(eg. government issues and pension plans) and certain types of transactions
(eg. private placements and offerings to existing security holders).
Expense Allowance
An amount paid by the issuer of a security to an underwriter (most
common in smaller, higher risk offerings) to reimburse it for expenses
incurred in connection with a securities offering. An expense allowance
may be accountable (reimbursement against documented out-of-pocket
expenses) or non-accountable (typically a percentage of the offering
amount without documentation of the expense).
FASB
(USA) The Financial Accounting Standards Board. The quasi-private
body primarily responsible for developing rules governing USA generally
accepted accounting practices.
File number
A number assigned by the SEC to registrations, applications,
and reports.
Filer
A person or entity on whose behalf an electronic filing
is made.
Filing agent
A third party such as RR Donnelley, law firm or other party
that submits filings on behalf of a filer.
Filing types
A distinct type of submission that must be filed pursuant to the
federal securities laws (e.g., 1934 Act Form 10-K or a preliminary
proxy statement).
Final Prospectus
The final version of a prospectus which includes the final price,
delivery date and the underwriting spread; it is given to all investors
who wish to purchase the issue.
Financial Services Authority (FSA)
The Financial Services Authority is an independent non-governmental
body in the UK, which exercises statutory powers under the Financial
Services Act 1986 and the Banking Act 1987 (and certain other legislation).
The FSA is the competent authority regulating the securities industry
in the UK, being created by the merger of functions previously performed
by the Securities Investment Board, or SIB, Investment Management
Regulatory Organization, or IMRO, the Bank of England and other
agencies.
Firm Commitment
A type of underwriting whereby the underwriter agrees to purchase
the entire issue from the issuer, regardless of his ability to sell
the securities to the public. Any unsold shares cannot be returned
to the issuer. Also called a "Firm Commitment Underwriting."
Firm Commitment Underwriting
A type of underwriting whereby the underwriter agrees to purchase
the entire issue from the issuer, regardless of his ability to sell
the securities to the public. Any unsold shares cannot be returned
to the issuer.
First Preferred Stock
Preferred stock which takes precedence over other preferred and
common stock with regard to dividends and assets.
Fixed Income Securities
Securities that obligate the borrower to pay the owner interest
during the term of the loan and to return the principal or face
value, when the loan matures. A variety of institutions issue debt
obligations including the US government, state and local governments,
publicly held companies, banks, and savings and loans.
Flipping
Term for the practice of subscribing to a new security offering
and quickly selling it in the aftermarket.
Float or Free Float or Public Float
The number of shares not held by corporate insiders that are freely
tradable in the public market or markets on which a company's securities
are listed.
Flowback
(USA) Term used to describe securities initially offered outside
the USA, that are subsequently resold to USA residents, which may
be in violation to applicable restrictions or registration requirements.
Follow-on Investment
An additional investment by existing investors, which may be provided
for in documentation relating to the initial investment.
Form Filed
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires issuers to
file information regarding their corporate status and developments
on various forms, depending on the type of event or information
that is being reported. Typically, a US issuer conducting an IPO
will file on Form S-1. Alternatively, a foreign issuer files for
its IPO on Form F-1.
Form ID
The form used to apply for access codes needed to use EDGAR,
namely the CIK, Password, CCC, and PMAC. Download Form
ID
Forms F-1, 2 and 3
For foreign companies; correspond with Forms S-1, 2,and 3 described
below:
Form S-1
The most complete version, required for initial public offerings;
Form S-2
Short version, used for public companies already registered under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 which are up to date with their
filings and with payments to security holders;
Form S-3
Short version, used for public companies already registered under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 which meet certain additional
conditions;
Form SB-2
Similar to Form S-1,but somewhat abbreviated, for small business
issuers; and
Form SE
A Form "Separate Exhibit" accompanies all exhibits
to electronic filings that are submitted in paper. Download Form
SE
Form TH
The form used to notify the Commission that the filing
is being made in paper pursuant to a temporary hardship exemption,
as specified by Rule 201 of Regulation S-T. Download Form
TH
Form U-7
A form of registration at the state level for offerings by small
businesses which are exempt at the federal level because they are
below $1 million. Requires somewhat less disclosure.
Forms 3, 4 and 5
Reports to the SEC required to be made under Section 16 of the Securities
Act of 1934 by directors, executive officers and certain other insiders
of a public company, reporting their trades in securities of that
company or its subsidiaries;
Form 6-K
The form filed with the SEC by foreign companies subject to the
USA public company reporting rules for the filing of information
that:
(a) the company is required to make public under the laws of its
jurisdiction of incorporation,
(b) it files with the securities exchange on which its securities
are traded and which was made public by that exchange, or
(c) it distributes to its stockholders;
Form 8-A
The form filed with the SEC to register a company's class of securities
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
Form 8-K
A form required to be filed with the SEC by any USA public company
upon the occurrence of certain events such as a change in control
of the company, significant acquisitions or dispositions of assets,
bankruptcy or receivership of the company, changes in the company's
independent accountants and certain resignations of the company's
directors;
Form 10-K
A form required to be filed annually with the SEC by any public
company with a class of securities registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934;
Form 10-Q
Same as above, but abbreviated and filed quarterly; and
Form 20-F
The form filed with the SEC by most foreign companies to either
(a) register securities under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,or
(b) file annual reports under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Forward Pricing
(USA) The SEC requirement that open-end investment companies (popularly
called mutual funds) set their share price based on net asset value
and base all incoming buy and sell orders on the immediately subsequent
net asset value.
FTSE 100
An index based on the stock of the top 100 companies traded on the
London Stock Exchange.
GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles)
Rules and procedures generally accepted within the accounting profession.
The Financial Accounting Standards Board is the body primarily responsible
for developing rules governing US generally accepted accounting
practices.
GDR or GDS (Global Depositary Receipts or Global Depositary
Shares)
A GDR is a negotiable certificate that represents an ownership interest
in a specified number of securities that have been deposited with
a depositary by the holder of such securities. A GDR is the physical
certificate that evidences GDSs (in much the same way that a stock
certificate evidences shares of stock), and a GDS is the security
that represents an ownership interest in the underlying securities
of a corporation that have been deposited with the
depositary. GDRs are generally used to facilitate the trading of
a particular security in more than one international market.
Global Coordinator
The lead underwriter in simultaneous public offering in several
countries or on several exchanges (e.g. joint Nasdaq/Euronext offering).
The Global Coordinator is responsible for coordinating the activities
of the several underwriters responsible for their respective offering
markets.
Going Effective
(USA) The time at which the SEC declares a registration statement
effective under the Securities Act of 1933,so that sales (not just
offers )of the securities being registered can be made.
Going Private
The transformation of a company from public to private ownership
status, usually used in the context where old management remains
involved with the company. A company may go private either by repurchasing
its publicly traded shares or by having a third party purchase all,
or substantially all, of the company's outstanding shares.
Going Public
Industry term used to describe the initial sale of shares of a privately
held corporation to the public. To fund corporate expansion, a company
may go public to raise capital. See Initial Public Offering.
Golden Handcuffs
A method of insuring that key employees remain with the company
for a certain period of time by granting the employees options or
restricted shares of stock that vest over a period of time.
Green Shoe or Shoe
Term for an underwriter's over-allotment option. This name derives
from the fact that the over- allotment option technique was first
used in a public offering of the securities of The Green Shoe Company.
Gross Spread
The difference (spread) between a security's public offering price
and the price paid to the issuer by an underwriter. The spread consists
of the syndicate manager's fee, the underwriter's discount, and
the selling concession offered to members of the selling group.
HTML document
The term "HTML document" means an electronic
text document tagged with HyperText Markup Language tags in the
format required by the EDGAR Filer Manual.
Header information
The term "header information" means information
designated by the EDGAR Filer Manual to precede the text of each
electronic submission and document submitted therewith via EDGAR
that identifies characteristics of the submission and documents
in order to facilitate electronic processing by the EDGAR system.
Highly Confident Letter
A letter from an investment bank indicating that it is highly confident
that it will be able to raise financing for a transaction, but without
legally obligating itself to do so.
Hypertext links or hyperlinks
The term "hypertext links" or "hyperlinks"
means the representation of an Internet address in a form that an
Internet browser application can recognize as an Internet address.
Initial Public Offering (IPO)
The first public distribution of stock from a company that has not
been publicly traded before.
Inside Spread or Inside Quote
The difference between the highest bid and lowest ask price being
quoted by market makers for a security.
Insider Trading
The term commonly used in reference to the buying and selling of
the company's securities based on material information relating
to the company that has not been made public. Insider trading according
to this definition is against the law in most countries. The term
may also be used to refer to the buying and selling of shares of
a public company by its officers, directors and major stockholders.
In the USA transactions by officers, directors and 10% stockholders
must be reported monthly to the SEC under Section 16 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934. Reporting rules for similar trading may also
exist in other countries or markets.
Institutional Investor
An institution such as an investment company, mutual fund, insurance
company, pension fund, or endowment fund, which generally has substantial
assets and experience in investments. In many countries, institutional
investors are not protected as fully by securities laws because
it is assumed that they are more knowledgeable and better able to
protect themselves. They account for a majority of overall trading
volume in most major securities markets.
Intellectual Property
Patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets and similar rights
in ideas, concepts, etc.
Investment Banker
A person or firm engaged in the investment banking business, which
typically includes activities such as underwriting the sale of securities,
valuing businesses, advising on the financial aspects of mergers
and acquisitions, etc.
Investment Company Act
The term "Investment Company Act" means the Investment
Company Act of 1940. For a copy of the Investment Company Act, click
here to order the annually updated printed copy or see a PDF
or HTML version.
Investment Services Directive (ISD)
A Directive produced by the European Commission regarding the provision
of investment services within the member states of the European
Union. The Directive has been described as the 'passport to Europe'
for securities houses. The key feature of the Directive is that
of 'mutual recognition', in that:
a)any firm approved to provide investment services within its home
state is mutually recognized by all other member states as being
allowed to provide the same services within those other member states;
and
b)any stock market or exchange that is recognized by its Competent
Authorities within one member state is mutually recognized in all
other member states as being allowed to offer its services (including
the installation of trading system computer terminals) within those
other member states.
The result of ISD will be a borderless single marketplace for securities
covering all member states of the European Union.
IRA
An Individual Retirement Account in which some or all of the contribution
may be deductible from current taxes, depending on the individual's
adjusted gross income and coverage by an employer sponsored retirement
plan.
Issuer
An entity, such as a corporation, municipality or government, that
has the power to issue and distribute securities.
Lead Underwriter
See Managing Underwriter
Leveraged Buy-out (LBO)
The acquisition of a company by members of management or outside
investors with financing from investment bankers or other third
parties. The financing is typically secured by the target company's
assets with repayment generated from the company's retained or future
earnings or sales of certain of its assets.
Limited Liability Company or LLC
A non-incorporated association that resembles a corporation in some
ways and a partnership in others. Under USA law, an LLC generally
will be taxed as a partnership (meaning it will not pay separate
income tax as an entity), but will enjoy the limited liability of
a corporation.
Listed Security
A security that has been accepted for trading on an exchange. To
become a listed security, the issuer must satisfy the listing requirements
of the exchange. Shares that are not listed may be sold over-the-counter'.
Listing Requirements
The standards to be satisfied for a security to be admitted to trading
on an exchange. Listing requirements vary among exchanges but commonly
include financial standards and levels of market capitalization.
Lockbox
The term used to describe the arrangement with the US Treasury-designated
depository to collect and deposit checks, money orders, cash, and
wire transfers to an SEC account at the depository.
Lock-up Agreement
Agreement between an underwriter and certain stockholders of a company
requiring the stockholders to refrain from selling their shares
in the public market for a specified period after a public offering.
In the USA this period is customarily 180 days after an IPO and
90 days after subsequent offerings, but may range from as little
as 30 days to as much as one year or more.
Lockup Period
The lead underwriter typically restricts insiders from selling their
shares for a period of time — usually 180 days — from
the effective date of the offering. However, the lead underwriter
has the option of lifting the lockup period earlier.
Management Buy-in
A transaction in which a manager or management group from outside
a company buys in to that company, often with the assistance of
venture capital investors.
Management Buyout (MBO)
A transaction in which the current operating managers of an existing
company and investors purchase that company or a business activity
or range of products of that company.
Managing Underwriter
The leading underwriter of the underwriting group. The managing
underwriter is empowered to act as agent for the underwriting group,
and is also known as the Syndicate Manager.
Market Authority
Governing entity of a stock exchange or trading system responsible
for market regulation, approval of members, admission to and cancellation
of listing and operation of the trading system.
Market Capitalization
The dollar value placed on a company by the market, calculated by
multiplying the total number of shares outstanding by the current
share price.
Market Indicators
A variety of indices that give an indication of the overall direction
and strength of the market.
Market Maker
Brokerage and securities firms that are required by the rules of
a stock market or exchange to both buy and sell securities of a
quoted company, for which they act as market marker, at bid and
offer prices which they quote. All Nasdaq-traded and EURONEXT-traded
companies are required to have two or more market makers.
Market Order
An order which instructs a broker to execute an order as quickly
as possible at the best price available. During market hours, this
means orders for widely traded securities will usually execute at
or close to the current quotation. Buy orders will execute at or
close to the "ask" price and sell orders will execute
at or close to the "bid" price.
Master segment
In EDGAR, a segment, referred to as a subordinate segment,
is a document (partial or whole) that is to be included into a submission
once EDGAR has processed it. The master segment is the final submission
you transmit to EDGAR that incorporates all the previously submitted
subordinate segments. For HTML filings, segments must contain complete
documents. Partial documents can only be filed in the ASCII format.
Maturity Date
The date on which the principal amount of a loan, bond, or any other
debt instrument becomes due and is to be paid in full.
Maturity Date
The date at which the face value and final interest payment of a
fixed income security (for example, bond or note) is due and payable
by the debt issuer.
MD&A (Management Discussion and Analysis)
(USA) A required part of the disclosure in a registration statement
under the Securities Act of 1933 or Form 10-K or 10-Q under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934,where management of the issuer explains,
in narrative form, the financial results of operations and financial
liquidity of a company.
Merchant Bank
A firm investing its own funds for its own account, often acquiring
a controlling interest in a company.
Modular submission
The term "modular submission" means an electronic
submission that contains one or more documents, or portions of a
document, submitted for storage in the non-public EDGAR data storage
area for purposes of subsequent inclusion in one or more electronic
filings pursuant to Rule
501(a) of Regulation
S-T (§232.501(a) of this chapter). For HTML filings, modules
must contain complete documents. Partial documents can only be filed
in ASCII format.
Municipal Bonds
A bond issued by a state, municipality, or revenue district. Municipal
bonds exempt from federal and, in some cases, state and city taxes.
Mutual Fund
An investment company that pools money from shareholders and invests
in a variety of securities, such as stocks, bonds and money market
instruments.
NASD
The National Association of Securities Dealers is a self-regulating
organization, like the New York Stock Exchange, that is responsible
for regulating its members. Most broker-dealers are members. The
NASD operates the NASDAQ stock market.
Nasdaq-100
An index based on the Stock of the top 100 companies traded on the
Nasdaq National Market.
Nasdaq-Amex Market Group
In October 1998, Nasdaq (qv) and the American Stock Exchange (qv)
combined into one corporate organization: The Nasdaq-Amex Market
Group.
Nasdaq National Market (formerly NASDAQ NMS)
The larger and higher quality of the two markets administered by
The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. The Nasdaq National Market is now
the second largest stock market in the world in terms of volume
of shares traded. The Nasdaq markets are not physical stock exchanges
in the traditional sense and do not have an exchange floor, but
instead use computer- based trading and trade support systems. In
October 1998, Nasdaq and the American Stock Exchange combined into
one corporate organization: The Nasdaq-Amex Market Group.
Nasdaq Stock Market
The Nasdaq Stock Market (based in Washington, D.C.,USA) has two
tiers, the Nasdaq National Market and the Nasdaq SmallCap Market.
Each tier has its own set of financial requirements that a company
must meet to list its securities. Nasdaq also operates the OTC Bulletin
Board. The Nasdaq markets are not physical stock exchanges in the
traditional sense and do not have an exchange floor, but instead
use electronic trading and support systems. In 1998, Nasdaq and
the American Stock Exchange combined into one corporate organization:
The Nasdaq-Amex Market Group.
Nested
Certain data fields that must appear together are "nested".
In the tables beginning with Section 4.6, the lead fields are shown
first in nested groupings. The fields that must follow are shown
with the same number plus an alpha designation (e.g., 5, 5a, etc.)
When you use nested fields, not all of the possible nested fields
may apply to your situation. You should only use the fields that
apply. Certain nested field sets also require an end field.
Net Worth
The value of your personal assets (including your home, contents
of your home, car(s), investments, retirement plans, and insurance)
minus any outstanding obligations (mortgage, outstanding loans and
credit card debt).
New Issue
A security being offered to the public for the first time. New issues
may be initial public offerings by private companies going public
or additional securities of corporations already public.
Non-public
Information that is not disseminated publicly. Correspondence
is non-public information, but it is not considered “confidential.”
Such information may be disclosed if requested pursuant to the Freedom
of Information Act.
N-SAR
Investment Management Semiannual Report.
Nouveau Marché
Le Nouveau Marché (based in Paris, France) was established
in 1996 and is a market dedicated to innovative companies with high-growth
potential. It is managed by ParisBourse SA.
NYSE
The oldest and largest stock exchange (founded in 1792) in the US
Located in New York City, it is where more than 3,000 (common and
preferred) stocks are traded. Also known as the Big Board or The
Exchange.
Official filing
The term official filing means any filing that is received
and accepted by the SEC, regardless of filing medium and exclusive
of header information, tags and any other technical information
required in an electronic filing.
Open
The price at which a security opened for trading on a given day.
Open-End Fund
A mutual fund with no limit to the number of shares that can be
issued. These shares are purchased directly from the fund company
itself, or through a brokerage firm.
Operating Ratio
A company's operating expenses divided by its operating revenues,
or more generally, any of a number of ratios measuring a company's
operating efficiency, such as sales to cost of goods sold, net profits
to gross income, operating expenses to operating income, and net
profit to net worth.
Option
A contract that permits the owner (depending on the type of option
held) to purchase or sell a security at a specific ("strike")
price until a specified expiration date. An option to purchase a
security is a "call." An option to sell a security is
a "put." See Call Option and Put Option.
Organizational Meeting
In the public offering process, the first meeting after the underwriter
or underwriters have been selected, attended by representatives
of the issuer, the underwriters, their respective lawyers and the
issuer's accountants. The initial portion of the meeting is typically
spent reviewing the timetable for the proposed public offering,
with the remainder being used to familiarize the underwriters and
their lawyers with the company's business.
Paper format
The term "paper format" means a paper document.
Password
A unique, eight-character, confidential code assigned to
EDGAR participants that must be used in conjunction with the CIK
number. The two codes must "match" to access EDGAR. Use
the Form ID to apply for a password. The code is case-sensitive
and must contain at least one numeric character and at least one
special character (*, #, @, $). The password expires after one year.
PDF
Portable Document Format.
PDN
Public Data Network.
Plain English
(USA) The SEC rules requiring issuers to write the cover page, summary,
and risk factors section of prospectuses in plain English to make
prospectuses more clear, concise and understandable.
PMAC
Password Modification Authorization Code. An eight-character,
confidential code that authenticates a request to change a password.
The code is case-sensitive and must contain at least one numeric
character and at least one special character (*, #, @, $).
Poison Pill
The most famous anti-take-over device. It normally takes the form
of granting existing stockholders (other than stockholders who acquire
more than a certain percentage of the company) the option (which
can only be exercised upon certain events) to buy more stock on
very favourable terms as a way of diluting the position of the person
trying to take control.
PORTAL
'Private Offerings, Resale and Trading through Automated Linkages'.
A market created by The Nasdaq Stock Market for the trading of certain
foreign and domestic securities through an automated quotation and
communications system that facilitates private offerings, resales,
trading, clearance and settlement of securities offered to Qualified
Institutional Buyers under Rule 144A.
Power of Attorney
A legal document that enables one person to legally act on behalf
of another person.
Preferred Stock
A preferred stock is a type of capital stock that pays dividends
at a set rate. Generally, dividend payments to preferred holders
must be made before common stock dividends can be paid. Preferred
stocks usually do not have voting rights.
Pre-IPO Capital/Fund
'Late round' venture capital financing in connection with a company's
expansion phase, as it solidifies its market share. A 'Pre-IPO Fund'
is a venture capital fund focusing on late round financing.
Preliminary Prospectus
The first document released by the underwriter of a new issue to
prospective purchasers during the cooling-off period. The preliminary
prospectus includes information about the offering and about the
company, but does not contain all the information that will be included
in the final prospectus. The preliminary prospectus is also known
as the "red herring."
Premium Bond
A bond that is selling above its face value or redemption price.
Price Earnings Ratio
Price of a stock divided by earnings per share.
Principal
The amount of money that is financed, borrowed, or invested.
Private Placement
A type of offering exempt from registration that allows the issuing
company to avoid registration requirements and save underwriting
fees by offering company shares directly to institutional and accredited
investors.
Private Placement Memorandum (or Private Offering Memorandum,
Private Offering Circular or Offering Circular)
A document used to describe securities being offered on a private
basis rather than in a public offering exempt from the registration
requirements of national competent authorities, or in the USA exempt
from registration under the Securities Act of 1933. It may contain
much of the same information that would be included in a prospectus.
Prospectus
A printed document that summarizes a corporation's registration
statement for a new issue of non-exempt securities that was filed
with the SEC. It details material information about the corporation
and the security being issued. A prospectus must be given to all
buyers and potential buyers of the new issue.
Prospectus Directive
A Directive of the European Commission requiring the implementation
into the national law of all member states of the European Union
of a set of common standards for securities prospectuses. A key
feature of this Directive is that of 'mutual recognition', i.e.
that a prospectus that has been approved by the appropriate competent
authority of one member state is mutually recognized by the competent
authorities of all other member states.
Proxy
A written authorization by a shareholder allowing a representative
to vote for or against business proposals and directors at annual
meetings.
Public Offering
An offering of new securities to the public at an offering price
that has been agreed upon by the issuer and the lead underwriter.
This can only be done after the issue has been registered with the
SEC. The term is also used when referring to a secondary distribution
of securities previously issued.
Public Offering Price
The price at which a new issue is offered to the public by underwriters.
Public Utility Act
The term "Public Utility Act" means the Public
Utility Holding Company Act of 1935.
Put Option
Gives the buyer the right to sell a number of shares of stock at
a price until the option's expiration date. Put buyers hope the
price of the stock will fall. See Call Option.
Quiet Period
The period during which an issuer is prohibited from engaging in
promotional publicity for the issue. This interval begins during
the pre-filing period and lasts for either 40 or 90 days after the
effective date.
Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT)
A company that has been established to own and manage a portfolio
of real estate investments. Investors may purchase shares of the
portfolio in much the same manner as they purchase stock.
Red Herring
See Preliminary Prospectus.
Registered Securities
Securities issued in a form allowing the owner's name to be imprinted
on the certificate and allowing the issuer to maintain records as
to the identity of the owners .Also commonly used in the USA in
reference to securities that are registered under the Securities
Act of 1933.
Registrant
The term "registrant" means an issuer of securities
for which a Securities Act registration statement is required to
be filed and/or an issuer of securities with respect to which an
Exchange Act registration statement or report is required to be
filed and/or an investment company required to file an Investment
Company Act registration statement or report.
Registration
The process of filing the necessary documentation with the appropriate
authorities for an offering of securities to the public, and having
this registration approved or declared effective. In Europe, filing
is generally made with the stock market(s) on which the stock is
to be traded, as well as with the competent authorities for such
filings in the home country of the stock market(s). In the USA,
the registration statement is filed with the SEC, which also declares
it effective.
Registration Rights
The contractual right of a stockholder to participate in the registration
of the issuer's stock for resale in the public market.
Registration Statement
(USA) The document required by the Securities Act of 1933 to be
filed with the SEC by the issuer of securities before a public offering
can be made. The most frequently used registration statement forms
include those shown below, definitions for which can be found under
'F' in this glossary.
- Forms F-1, 2 and 3
- Form S-1
- Form S-2
- Form S-3
- Form SB-2
- Form U-7
- Forms 3, 4 and 5
- Form 6-K
- Form 8-A
- Form 8-K
- Form 10-K
- Form 10-Q
- Form 20-F
Regulation A (or Reg A)
(USA) A regulation under the Securities Act of 1933 providing for
a simplified form of filing with the SEC, used for certain public
offerings of not more than $5,000,000 and exempting such offerings
from full registration.
Regulation D (or Reg D)
(USA) A regulation under the Securities Act of 1933 which exempts
limited offers and sales of securities from registration if the
offering satisfies certain requirements as to the number and nature
of investors and the value of the offering. Advertising and resale
are restricted. In general, Rule 504 of Reg D is used for offerings
of $1 million or less; Rule 505 of Reg D is used for offerings of
$5 million or less, with no more than 35 purchasers who are not
Accredited Investors; and Rule 506 of Reg D is used for offerings
over $5 million, with no more than 35 purchasers who are not Accredited
Investors, but who must be either sophisticated or represented by
a Purchaser Representative.
Regulation S (or Reg S)
(USA) A regulation under the Securities Act of 1933 which exempts
from registration certain offers and sales of securities made outside
of the United States by USA or foreign issuers.
Regulation S-K
(USA) An SEC regulation which sets forth in detail the information
to be disclosed in registration statements and periodic reports
of public companies.
Regulation S-X
(USA) An SEC regulation that sets forth in detail the requirements
as to the form and content of financial statements used in registration
statements and periodic reports of public companies.
Reporting Company
(USA) An issuer subject to the periodic reporting requirements of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,such as the requirements to
file Form 10-Ks and Form 10-Qs.
Restricted Security
(USA) A security which has not been registered under the Securities
Act of 1933 and may only be resold in certain ways.
Retail Investor
A non-institutional investor who purchases securities for his or
her own account.
Return copy
A copy of an accepted filing posted on the Filing website
and available to registrants and co-registrants only. A Return Copy
must be requested in the submission header so that EDGAR can generate
one. Return copies are available for seven business days after the
submission is received by EDGAR.
Rights
Rights allow existing shareholders of a corporation to subscribe
to shares of a new issue of common stock before that stock is offered
to the public. A right usually has a limited life, is transferable,
and entitles the holder to buy the new common stock below the Public
Offering Price.
Risk/Return Factor
The relationship between an investment's growth potential and its
exposure to loss.
Road Show
The process by which underwriters acquaint potential institutional
investors with the products, people and finances of a company planning
to go public. Generally, this presentation is a face-to-face meeting,
but online and video presentations may become commonplace in the
future.
Rule 144
(USA) An SEC rule specifying the conditions under which a holder
of unregistered securities may publicly sell them without filing
a Registration Statement.
Rule 144A
(USA)An SEC rule that permits the private placement of securities
to institutional investors which are Qualified Institutional Buyers
through an underwriter or placement agent. Rule 144A securities
are typically eligible for trading on PORTAL.
Schedule 13D
(USA) A form required to be filed with the SEC by any person or
entity that acquires a 5%or greater ownership interest in a public
company; setting forth identifying information about the investor,
the source of funds used to purchase the securities and, most importantly,
the investor's intent with respect to attempting to take control
of the issuer.
Schedule 13G
(USA) A shorter form than Schedule 13-D that some 5%owners who do
not intend to assert any control can file in lieu of filing a Schedule
13D. Also used for persons who acquired their 5%interest prior to
an issuer's IPO.
S Corporation (or Sub-chapter S Corporation)
(USA) A small business corporation permitted to be taxed substantially,
as if it were a partnership or individual proprietorship (no corporate
tax; corporate losses can be claimed by the shareholders and corporate
profits are taxed directly to the shareholders).
SEC
US Securities and Exchange Commission.
Securities Act
The term "Securities Act" means the Securities
Act of 1933. For a copy of the SEC Handbook, click
here to order the annually updated printed copy or see a PDF
or HTML version.
Second Preferred Stock
Preferred stock which has rights subordinate to those of other preferred
stock on dividend and assets.
Secondary Distribution/Shares (or Secondary Offering)
A public offering of a security by a selling holder of securities.
The term secondary offering is also sometimes used more generally
in reference to any public offering other than an IPO.
Secondary Market
The trading in existing or outstanding shares of securities as opposed
to new issues, or initial public offerings. Transactions in the
secondary market occur either on an exchange or in the over the
counter market.
Securities Act of 1933
An act of Congress which governs the issuance of new issues of securities.
It requires the registration of securities, disclosure of pertinent
information relating to new issues so that investors may make informed
decisions. The oversight of this function is the responsibility
of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
(USA) The primary USA federal regulatory agency for the securities
industry, whose responsibility is to promote full disclosure and
to protect investors against fraudulent and manipulative practices
in the securities markets. The SEC enforces, among other acts, the
Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the
Trust Indenture Act of 1939, the Investment Company Act of 1940
and the Investment Advisers Act. The supervision of dealers is delegated
to the self-regulatory bodies of the exchanges.
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (also '1934 Act' or '34
Act')
(USA) A Federal law which regulates stock markets, trading in stock
markets, and on-going disclosure by public companies traded on those
stock markets.
Segmented filing
The term "segmented filing" means an electronic
format document assembled from segments previously submitted to
the non-public EDGAR data storage for one-time inclusion in an electronic
filing pursuant to Rule
501(b) of Regulation
S-T (§232.501(b) of this chapter).
For HTML filings, segments must contain complete documents. Partial
documents can only be filed in ASCII format.
SGML
Standard Generalized Mark-up Language.
Self-regulatory Organization (SRO)
(USA) Non-government organization which has statutory responsibility
to regulate its own members through the adoption and enforcement
of rules of conduct for fair, ethical and efficient practices. Examples
include NASD and the national securities and commodities exchanges.
Sell
To sell a security you own.
Sell Short
Selling a stock not owned in the hope that the price will go down.
The seller must indicate that the sale is a short sale when the
order is entered. If available, the stock may be borrowed from a
brokerage firm for delivery to the buyer and must be bought back
at a future date.
Selling Group
A group of broker dealers hired by the underwriters to act as their
agent in order to sell a new issue. The selling group members must
abide by the selected dealer agreement which outlines the terms
of the relationship with the underwriting group.
Senior Debt
A debt instrument which expressly has a higher priority for repayment
than that of general unsecured creditors. Typically used for long-term
financing for low-risk companies or for later-stage financing.
Shelf Registration
(USA) A registration statement that covers securities that are not
to be sold in a single offering immediately upon effectiveness,
but rather are proposed to be sold over a period of time or on a
continuous basis.
SIC Code
Abbreviation for Standard Industrial Classification. Each 4-digit
code represents a unique business activity.
Spinoff
The creation of a new independent company from a existing company
by the transfer of the assets of part of the company to a new corporation
and the distribution of stock of that new corporation to stock holders
of the old one.
Split
When a company increases the number of shares it has outstanding.
In a two-for-one split, each share is split into two. The investor's
percentage of equity in the company remains the same. So, if you
had 100 shares valued at $50, each, after the split you would have
200 shares valued at $25 each. Companies often split their stock
when the price gets too high. There are also reverse splits, when
companies decrease the number of shares outstanding.
Spread
The difference between a new issue's public offering price and the
proceeds received by the issuer — commonly know as the "underwriting
spread".
Standard & Poor's 500 (S&P 500)
A market-value weighted index of the 500 largest stocks in the USA
markets maintained by Standard & Poor Corporation. Generally
considered to be a benchmark of the overall USA stock market.
Start-up
A company at its initial stages of development -even before set-up
-that typically has little or no earnings and revenues. Start-up
capital is typically provided for product development and/or initial
marketing.
Submission
A submission is the fundamental unit of information that
is transmitted to EDGAR for receipt, validation, and acceptance.
It is the conveyance of a document or series of documents, in electronic
format, to the SEC via EDGAR.
Suspended filing
Filings that have not successfully passed EDGAR’s
acceptance review are placed in a suspended status indicating fatal
flaws within the submission. Suspended filings are deleted in six
business days.
Suspense message
Notification from the SEC that an electronic submission
has not met the minimum filing requirements and been suspended by
EDGAR. If the filer has an Internet address on file, the suspense
messages are sent electronically to that Internet address. Suspense
messages are also sent to all Internet addresses on the Notification
page.
Syndicate Group
See Underwriting Group.
Tag
The term "tag" means an identifier that highlights
specific information to EDGAR that is in the format required by
the the SEC’s
EDGAR Filer Manual.
Take-over
Acquiring control of a corporation by stock purchase or exchange,
either hostile or friendly.
Tender Offer
A formal offer to all or a large group of stockholders to purchase
their shares on fixed and substantially non-negotiable terms. The
party making the offer customarily reserves the right to accept
all, none, or a specific number of the shares presented for acceptance.
In the USA, tender offers of public companies are regulated under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Test filing
A submission made to EDGAR to test the ability to create
a filing in an EDGAR-acceptable format. Such filings are neither
publicly available nor retained on the filing database. EDGAR sends
the results of a test filing acceptance review to the filer via
acceptance or suspense messages. A test filing cannot be changed
to a live filing.
Third-party filer
The term "third party filer" means any person
or entity that files documents with the Commission with respect
to another entity.
Ticker Symbol
Generally a 1- to 4-letter abbreviation for a company name that
is the symbol used to identify the company for trading purposes.
Tombstone
An announcement that gives basic information about an offering of
securities to investors. It is not an offer to sell or purchase
the securities, but rather a notice that follows specific statutory
guidelines.
Tracking Stock
Tracking stock is a type of common stock that is intended to reflect
or track the performance of a particular business. From a financial
reporting standpoint, a firm separates a discrete business from
the rest of its businesses and allocates all of its consolidated
assets, liabilities, revenue, expenses and cash flow between the
two.
Training agent
A person or entity which sends only testing filings in
conjunction with training other persons.
Transfer Agent
An agent employed by a corporation to maintain shareholder records,
including purchases, sales, and account balances.
Treasury Bill
A short-term debt security of the US Government, known as a "T-Bill."
T-Bills are short term, highly liquid investments that mature anywhere
from 3 months to a year, are sold at a discount, and return to their
full face value at maturity. The interest earned is the difference
between the face value of the bill and the purchase price.
Treasury Note
A mid-term debt security of the US Government, with maturities ranging
from two to ten years that pay a fixed rate of interest every six
months and returns its face value at maturity. Minimum denomination
is $5,000 plus $1,000 increments for a two to three year maturity,
or $1,000 plus $1,000 for a four to ten year maturity.
Treasury Security
Debt obligations of the US Government that are issued through the
Department of the Treasury. Since they are backed by the full faith
and credit of the U. S. Government, they are considered virtually
free from risk of default. For individual investors, the income
of Treasuries is exempt from state and local taxes.
Trust Indenture Act
The term "Trust Indenture Act" means the Trust
Indenture Act of 1939.
Underwriter
Investment bankers who handle the offering of a new issue of securities.
They buy all the securities from the issuer and distribute them
to investors. They make a profit on the underwriting spread. The
investment banker may be acting alone or as a member of an underwriting
group or syndicate.
Underwriting Agreement
The document pursuant to which the underwriters of a public offering
contractually commit to purchase from the issuer the securities
that are the subject of the public offering (or, in a best efforts
offering, in which they agree to use best efforts to sell the securities).
Underwriting Group
Group of investment bankers formed by the originating investment
banker in a new issue of securities. The group operates under an
agreement among underwriters. The purpose of the underwriting group
is to limit risk and assure successful distribution of the issue.
Unofficial PDF copy
The term "unofficial PDF copy" means an optional
copy of an electronic document that may be included in an EDGAR
submission tagged as a Portable Document Format document in the
format required by the EDGAR Filer Manual and submitted in accordance
with Rule
104 of Regulation
S-T (§232.104).
Unit
A security consisting of two separate securities bundled together,
for example a share of stock plus a warrant.
Venture Capital
An important source of financing used to fund startup and emerging
growth companies that usually do not have access to the capital
markets. VC typically entails significant investment risk but offers
the potential for above-average future returns.
Volatility
The volatility of a stock describes the extent of its variance over
time between high and low market prices. High volatility denotes
a wide variation; low volatility, a more stable stock.
Volume
The daily number of shares traded in a security.
Wall Street
A shorthand description for the US financial community, generally.
The term comes from a street in lower Manhattan, New York on which
the American and New York stock exchanges, together with many financial
professionals, are located.
Warrants
A type of security usually issued together with a bond or preferred
stock that allows the holder to buy a proportionate amount of common
stock at a fixed price for a period of years or to perpetuity. Warrants
are sometimes transferable and often trade on the major exchanges.
Window
A short period in which an opportunity is available. Often referred
to as a 'window of opportunity'.
WTO (World Trade Organization)
Treaty organization affiliated with the United Nations of which
most nations are members whose purpose is to facilitate the reduction
of barriers to international trade. Successor to GATT.
XFDL
Extended Forms Definition Language
XML
Extensible Markup Language
Yield
The rate of return on a debt instrument if the full amount of interest
and principal are paid on schedule. Current yield is the interest
rate as a percentage of the initial investment.
Zero Coupon Bond
Zeros are securities that do not pay interest during their terms
but are sold at a discount from their face value. A zero coupon
bond generally increases in value as it approaches maturity. The
dollar amount difference between the purchase price and the maturity
value represents the yield or accretion value.
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