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Financial Glossary
Adjusted Gross Income (AGI):
An interim calculation in the computation of income tax liability. It is computed by
subtracting certain allowable adjustments from gross income.
Administrator:
A person appointed by the court to settle an estate when there is no will.
After-Tax Return:
The return from an investment after the effects of taxes have been taken into
account.
Aggressive Growth Fund:
A mutual fund whose primary investment objective is substantial capital gains.
Alternative Minimum Tax:
A method of calculating income tax that disallows certain deductions, credits, and
exclusions. This was intended to ensure that individuals, trusts, and estates that
benefit from tax preferences do not escape all federal income tax liability. People
must calculate their taxes both ways and pay the greater of the two.
Annuity:
An insurance-based contract that provides future payments at regular intervals in
exchange for current premiums. Annuity contracts are usually purchased from
banks, credit unions, brokerage firms, or insurance companies.
Asset:
Anything owned that has monetary value.
Asset Allocation:
The process of repositioning assets within a portfolio to maximize return for a
given level of risk. This process is usually done using the historical performance
of the asset classes within sophisticated mathematical models.
Asset Class:
A category of investments with similar characteristics.
Audit:
The examination of the accounting and financial documents of a firm by an
objective professional. The audit is done to determine the records' accuracy,
consistency, and conformity to legal and accounting principles.
Balanced Mutual Fund:
A mutual fund whose objective is a balance of stocks and bonds. Such funds
tend to be less volatile than stock-only funds.
Bear Market:
When the stock market appears to be declining overall, it is said to be a bear
market.
Beneficiary:
A person named in a life insurance policy, annuity, will, trust, or other agreement
to receive a financial benefit upon the death of the owner. A beneficiary can be
an individual, company, organization, and so on.
Blue Chip Stock:
The common stock of a company with a long history of profitability and consistent
dividend payments.
Bond:
A bond is evidence of a debt in which the issuer promises to pay the bondholders
a specified amount of interest and to repay the principal at maturity. Bonds are
usually issued in multiples of $1,000.
Book Value:
The net value of a company's assets, less its liabilities and the liquidation price of
its preferred issues. The net asset value divided by the number of shares of
common stock outstanding equals the book value per share, which may be
higher or lower than the stock's market value.
Bull Market:
When the stock market appears to be advancing overall, it is said to be a bull
market.
Buy-Sell Agreement:
A buy-sell agreement is an arrangement between two or more parties that
obligates one party to buy the business and another party to sell the business
upon the death, disability, or retirement of one of the owners.
Capital Gain or Loss:
The difference between the sales price and the purchase price of a capital asset.
When that difference is positive, the difference is referred to as a capital gain.
When the difference is negative, it is a capital loss.
Cash Equivalents:
Short-term investments, such as U.S. Treasury securities, certificates of deposit,
and money market fund shares, that can be readily converted into cash.
Cash Surrender Value:
The amount that an insurance policyholder is entitled to receive when he or she
discontinues coverage. Policyholders are usually able to borrow against the
surrender value of a policy from the insurance company. Loans that are not
repaid will reduce the policy's death benefit.
CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER® Practitioner:
A credential granted by the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, Inc.
(Denver, CO) to individuals who complete a comprehensive curriculum in
financial planning and ethics. CFP®, CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER® and
federally registered CFP (with flame logo)® are certification marks owned by the
Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards. These marks are awarded to
individuals who successfully complete the CFP Board's initial and ongoing
certification.
Certified Public Accountant (CPA):
A professional license granted by a state board of accountancy to an individual
who has passed the Uniform CPA Examination (administered by the American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants) and has fulfilled that state's educational
and professional experience requirements for certification.
Charitable Lead Trust:
A trust established for the benefit of a charitable organization under which the
charitable organization receives income from an asset for a set number of years
or for the trustor's lifetime. Upon the termination of the trust, the asset reverts to
the trustor or to his or her designated heirs. This type of trust can reduce estate
taxes and allows the trustor's heirs to retain control of the assets.
Charitable Remainder Trust:
A trust established for the benefit of a charitable organization under which the
trustor receives income from an asset for a set number of years or for the
trustor's lifetime. Upon the termination of the trust, the asset reverts to the
charitable organization. The trustor receives a charitable contribution deduction
in the year in which the trust is established, and the assets placed in the trust are
exempt from capital gains tax.
Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC):
A professional financial planning designation granted by The American College
(Bryn Mawr, PA) to individuals who complete a comprehensive curriculum in
financial planning. Prerequisites include passing a series of written examinations,
meeting specified experience requirements and maintaining ethical standards.
The curriculum encompasses wealth accumulation, risk management, income
taxation, planning for retirement needs, investments, estate and succession
planning.
Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU):
A professional designation granted by The American College to individuals who
complete a comprehensive curriculum focused primarily on risk management.
Prerequisites include passing a series of written examinations, meeting specified
experience requirements, and maintaining ethical standards. The curriculum
encompasses insurance and financial planning, income taxation, individual life
insurance, life insurance law, estate and succession planning, and planning for
business owners and professionals.
COBRA:
The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act is a federal law requiring
employers with more than 20 employees to offer terminated or retired employees
the opportunity to continue their health insurance coverage for 18 months at the
employee's expense. Coverage may be extended to the employee's dependents
for 36 months in the case of divorce or death of the employee.
Coinsurance or Co-Payment:
The amount an insured person must pay for a covered medical and/or dental
expense if his or her insurance doesn't provide 100 percent coverage.
Commodities:
The generic term for goods such as grains, foodstuffs, livestock, oils, and metals
which are traded on national exchanges. These exchanges deal in both "spot"
trading (for current delivery) and "futures" trading (for delivery in future months).
Common Stock:
A unit of ownership in a corporation. Common stockholders participate in the
corporation's profits or losses by receiving dividends and by capital gains or
losses in the stock's share price.
Community Property:
State laws vary, but generally all property acquired during a marriage -excluding
property one spouse receives from a will, inheritance, or gift -is considered
community property, and each partner is entitled to one half. This includes debt
accumulated. There are currently nine community property states: Arizona,
California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, and
Wisconsin.
Compound Interest:
Interest that is computed on the principal and on the accrued interest. Compound
interest may be computed continuously, daily, monthly, quarterly, semiannually,
or annually.
Consumer Price Index:
The U.S. Department of Labor's main indicator of inflation. The Consumer Price
Index is calculated each month from the cost of some 400 retail items in urban
areas throughout the United States.
Deduction:
An amount that can be subtracted from gross income, from a gross estate, or
from a gift, thereby lowering the amount on which tax is assessed.
Defined Benefit Plan:
A qualified retirement plan under which a retiring employee will receive a
guaranteed retirement fund, usually payable in installments. Annual contributions
may be made to the plan by the employer at the level needed to fund the benefit.
The annual contributions are limited to a specified amount, indexed for inflation.
Defined Contribution Plan:
A retirement plan under which the annual contributions made by the employer or
employee are generally stated as a fixed percentage of the employee's
compensation or company profits. The amount of retirement benefits is not
guaranteed; rather, it depends upon the investment performance of the
employee's account.
Diversification:
Investing in different companies, industries, or asset classes. Diversification may
also mean the participation of a large corporation in a wide range of business
activities.
Dividend:
A pro rata portion of earnings distributed in cash by a corporation to its
stockholders. In preferred stock, dividends are usually fixed; with common
shares, dividends may vary with the fortunes of the company.
Dollar Cost Averaging:
A system of investing in which the investor buys a fixed dollar amount of
securities at regular intervals. The investor thus buys more shares when the price
is low and fewer shares when it rises, and the average cost per share is lower
than the average price per share. This strategy does not protect against loss in
declining markets and involves continuous investments, regardless of fluctuating
price levels.
Efficient Frontier:
A statistical result from the analysis of the risk and return for a given set of assets
that indicates the balance of assets that may, under certain assumptions,
achieve the best return for a given level of risk.
Employer-Sponsored Retirement Plan:
A tax-favored retirement plan that is sponsored by an employer. Among the more
common employer-sponsored retirement plans are 401(k) plans, 403(b) plans,
simplified employee pension plans, and profit-sharing plans.
Equity:
The value of a person's ownership in real property or securities; the market value
of a property or business, less all claims and liens upon it.
ERISA:
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act is a federal law covering all
aspects of employee retirement plans. If employers provide plans, they must be
adequately funded and provide for vesting, survivor's rights, and disclosures.
ESOP (employee stock ownership plan):
A defined contribution retirement plan in which company contributions must be
invested primarily in qualifying employer securities.
Estate Conservation:
Activities coordinated to provide for the orderly and cost-effective distribution of
an individual's assets at the time of his or her death. Estate conservation often
includes wills and trusts.
Estate Tax:
Upon the death of a decedent, federal and state governments impose taxes on
the value of the estate left to others (with limitations).
Executive Bonus Plan:
The employer pays for a benefit that is owned by the executive. The bonus could
take the form of cash, automobiles, life insurance, or other items of value to the
executive.
Executor:
A person named by the probate courts or the will to carry out the directions and
requests of the decedent.
Fixed Income:
Income from investments such as CDs, Social Security benefits, pension
benefits, some annuities, or most bonds that is the same every month.
401(k) Plan:
A defined contribution plan that may be established by a company for retirement.
Employees may allocate a portion of their salaries into this plan, and
contributions are excluded from their income for tax purposes (with limitations).
Contributions and earnings will compound tax deferred. Withdrawals from a
401(k) plan are taxed as ordinary income, and may be subject to an additional 10
percent federal tax penalty if withdrawn prior to age 59 1/2.
403(b) Plan:
A defined contribution plan that may be established by a nonprofit organization or
school for retirement. Employees may allocate a portion of their salaries into this
plan, and contributions are excluded from their income for tax purposes (with
limitations). Contributions and earnings will compound tax deferred. Withdrawals
from a 403(b) plan are taxed as ordinary income, and may be subject to an
additional 10 percent federal tax penalty if withdrawn prior to age 59 1/2.
Fundamental Analysis:
An approach to the stock market in which specific factors -such as the price-toearnings
ratio, yield, or return on equity -are used to determine what stock may
be favorable for investment.
Gift Taxes:
A federal tax levied on the transfer of property as a gift. This tax is paid by the
donor. The first $12,000 a year from a donor to each recipient is exempt from tax.
Most states also impose a gift tax. The gift tax exemption is indexed annually for
inflation.
Holographic Will:
A will entirely in the handwriting of the testator. Without witnesses, holographic
wills are valid and enforceable only in some states.
Index:
A calculation that uses a selection of stocks or bonds to gauge a certain market.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, for example, is an index of 30 large industrial
companies on the New York Stock Exchange.
Individual Retirement Account (IRA):
Contributions to a traditional IRA are deductible from earned income in the
calculation of federal and state income taxes if the taxpayer meets certain
requirements. The earnings accumulate tax deferred until withdrawn, and then
they are taxed as ordinary income. Individuals not eligible to make deductible
contributions may make nondeductible contributions, the earnings on which
would be tax deferred.
Inflation:
An increase in the price of products and services over time. The government's
main measure of inflation is the Consumer Price Index.
Intestate:
The condition of an estate left by a decedent without a valid will. State law then
determines who inherits the property or serves as guardian for any minor
children.
Investment Category:
A broad class of assets with similar characteristics. The five investment
categories include cash equivalents, fixed principal, equity, debt, and tangibles.
Irrevocable Trust:
A trust that may not be modified or terminated by the trustor after its creation.
Joint and Survivor Annuity:
Most pension plans must offer this form of pension plan payout that pays over
the life of the retiree and his or her spouse after the retiree dies. The retiree and
his or her spouse must specifically choose not to accept this payment form.
Joint Tenancy:
Co-ownership of property by two or more people in which the survivor(s)
automatically assumes ownership of a decedent's interest.
Jointly Held Property:
Property owned by two or more persons under joint tenancy, tenancy in common,
or, in some states, community property.
Keogh Plan:
This retirement plan, named for Eugene Keogh, is designed for self-employed
individuals. Up to $44,000 of self-employed income may be deducted from
compensation and set aside into the plan.
Liability:
Any claim against the assets of a person or corporation: accounts payable,
wages, and salaries payable, dividends declared payable, accrued taxes
payable, and fixed or long-term obligations such as mortgages, debentures, and
bank loans.
Limited Partnership:
Limited partnerships pool the money of investors to develop or purchase income-
producing properties. When the partnership subsequently receives income from
these properties, it distributes the income to its investors as dividend payments.
Liquidity:
The ease with which an asset or security can be converted into cash without loss
of principal.
Living Trust:
A trust created by a person during his or her lifetime.
Lump-Sum Distribution:
The disbursement of the entire value of a profit-sharing plan, pension plan,
annuity, or similar account to the account owner or beneficiary. Lump-sum
distributions may be rolled over into another tax-deferred account.
Marginal Tax Bracket:
The range of taxable income that is taxable at a certain rate. Currently, there are
six marginal tax brackets: 10 percent, 15 percent, 25 percent, 28 percent, 33
percent, and 35 percent.
Marital Deduction:
A provision of the tax codes that allows all assets of a deceased spouse to pass
to the surviving spouse free of estate taxes. This provision is also referred to as
the unlimited marital deduction.
Money Market Fund:
A mutual fund that specializes in investing in short-term securities and that tries
to maintain a constant net asset value of $1.
Municipal Bond:
A debt security issued by municipalities. The income from municipal bonds is
usually exempt from federal income taxes. In many states, it is also exempt from
state income taxes in the state in which the municipal bond is issued.
Municipal Bond Fund:
A mutual fund that specializes in investing in municipal bonds.
Mutual Fund:
A collection of stocks, bonds, or other securities purchased and managed by an
investment company with funds from a group of investors.
Net Asset Value:
The price at which a mutual fund sells or redeems its shares. The net asset value
is calculated by dividing the net market value of the fund's assets by the number
of outstanding shares.
Pooled Income Fund:
A trust created by a charitable organization that combines the contributions of
several donors and distributes income to those donors based on the earnings of
the trust. The trust is managed by the charitable organization, and contributions
are partially deductible for income tax purposes.
Portfolio:
All the investments held by an individual or a mutual fund.
Preferred Stock:
A class of stock with claim to a company's earnings, before payment can be
made on the common stock, and that is usually entitled to priority over common
stock if the company liquidates. Generally, preferred stocks pay dividends at a
fixed rate.
Prenuptial Agreement:
A legal agreement arranged before marriage stating who owns property acquired
before marriage and during marriage and how property will be divided in the
event of divorce. ERISA benefits are not affected by prenuptial agreements.
Price/Earnings Ratio (P/E Ratio):
The market price of a stock divided by the company's annual earnings per share.
Because the P/E ratio is a widely regarded yardstick for investors, it often
appears with stock price quotations.
Principal:
In a security, the principal is the amount of money that is invested, excluding
earnings. In a debt instrument such as a bond, it is the face amount.
Probate:
The court-supervised process in which a decedent's estate is settled and
distributed.
Profit-Sharing Plan:
An agreement under which employees share in the profits of their employer. The
company makes annual contributions to the employees' accounts. These funds
usually accumulate tax deferred until the employee retires or leaves the
company.
Prospectus:
A document provided by mutual fund companies to prospective investors. The
prospectus gives information needed by investors to make informed decisions
prior to investing in a specific mutual fund. The prospectus includes information
on the minimum investment amount, the fund's objectives, past performance, risk
level, sales charges, management fees, and any other expense information
about the fund, as well as a description of the services provided to investors in
the fund.
Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO):
At the time of divorce, this order would be issued by a state domestic relations
court and would require that an employee's ERISA retirement plan accrued
benefits be divided between the employee and the spouse.
Qualified Retirement Plan:
A pension, profit-sharing, or qualified savings plan that is established by an
employer for the benefit of the employees. These plans must be established in
conformity with IRS rules. Contributions accumulate tax deferred until withdrawn
and are deductible to the employer as a current business expense.
Revocable Trust:
A trust in which the creator reserves the right to modify or terminate the trust.
Risk
The chance that an investor will lose all or part of an investment.
Risk-Averse:
Refers to the assumption that rational investors will choose the security with the
least risk if they can maintain the same return. As the level of risk goes up, so
must the expected return on the investment.
Rollover:
A method by which an individual can transfer the assets from one retirement
program to another without the recognition of income for tax purposes. The
requirements for a rollover depend on the type of program from which the
distribution is made and the type of program receiving the distribution.
Roth IRA:
A nondeductible IRA that allows tax-free withdrawals when certain conditions are
met. Income and contribution limits apply.
Security:
Evidence of an investment, either in direct ownership (as with stocks),
creditorship (as with bonds), or indirect ownership (as with options).
Simplified Employee Pension Plan (SEP):
A type of plan under which the employer contributes to an employee's IRA.
Contributions may be made up to a certain limit and are immediately vested.
Single-Life Annuity:
An insurance-based contract that provides future payments at regular intervals in
exchange for current premiums. Generally used as a supplement to retirement
income and pays over the life of one individual, usually the retiree, with no rights
of payment to any survivor.
Split-Dollar Plan:
An arrangement under which two parties (usually a corporation and employee)
share the cost of a life insurance policy and split the proceeds.
Spousal IRA:
An IRA designed for a couple when one spouse has no earned income. The
maximum combined contribution that can be made each year to an IRA and a
spousal IRA is $8,000 (in 2005 through 2007) or 100 percent of earned income,
whichever is less. This total may be split between the two IRAs as the couple
wishes, provided the contribution to either IRA does not exceed $4,000.
Tax Bracket:
The range of taxable income that is taxed at a certain rate. Brackets are
expressed by their marginal rate.
Tax Credit:
Tax credits, the most appealing type of tax deductions, are subtracted directly,
dollar for dollar, from your income tax bill.
Tax Deferred:
Interest, dividends, or capital gains that grow untaxed in certain accounts or
plans until they are withdrawn.
Tax-Exempt Bonds:
Under certain conditions, the interest from bonds issued by states, cities, and
certain other government agencies is exempt from federal income taxes. In many
states, the interest from tax-exempt bonds will also be exempt from state and
local income taxes.
Taxable Income:
The amount of income used to compute tax liability. It is determined by
subtracting adjustments, itemized deductions or the standard deduction, and
personal exemptions from gross income.
Technical Analysis:
An approach to investing in stocks in which a stock's past performance is
mapped onto charts. These charts are examined to find familiar patterns to use
as an indicator of the stock's future performance.
Tenancy in Common:
A form of co-ownership. Upon the death of a co-owner, his or her interest passes
to his or her chosen beneficiaries and not to the surviving owner or owners.
Term Insurance:
Term life insurance provides a death benefit if the insured dies. Term insurance
does not accumulate cash value and ends after a certain number of years or at a
certain age.
Testamentary Trust:
A trust established by a will that takes effect upon death.
Testator:
One who has made a will or who dies having left a will.
Total Return :
The total of all earnings from a given investment, including dividends, interest,
and any capital gain.
Trust:
A legal entity created by an individual in which one person or institution holds the
right to manage property or assets for the benefit of someone else. Types of
trusts include: Testamentary Trust – A trust established by a will that takes effect
upon death; Living Trust – A trust created by a person during his or her lifetime;
Revocable Trust – A trust in which the creator reserves the right to modify or
terminate the trust; Irrevocable Trust – A trust that may not be modified or
terminated by the trustor after its creation
Trustee:
An individual or institution appointed to administer a trust for its beneficiaries.
Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer:
A method of transferring retirement plan assets from one employer's plan to
another employer plan or to an IRA. One benefit of this method is that no federal
income tax will be withheld by the trustee of the first plan.
Universal Life Insurance:
A type of life insurance that combines a death benefit with a savings element
which accumulates tax deferred at current interest rates. Under a universal life
insurance policy, the policyholder can increase or decrease his or her coverage,
with limitations, without purchasing a new policy.
Variable Universal Life Insurance:
A type of life insurance that combines a death benefit with a savings element that
accumulates tax deferred at current interest rates. Under a variable universal life
insurance policy, the cash value in the policy can be placed in a variety of
subaccounts with different investment objectives. The policyholder can transfer
funds among the subaccounts as he or she wishes. Fees are charged after a
certain number of transfers.
Volatility:
The range of price swings of a security or market over time.
Welfare Benefit Plan:
An employee benefit plan that provides such benefits as medical, sickness,
accident, disability, death, or unemployment benefits.
Whole Life Insurance:
A type of life insurance that offers a death benefit and also accumulates cash
value, tax deferred at fixed interest rates. Whole life insurance policies generally
have a fixed annual premium that does not rise over the duration of the policy.
Whole life insurance is also referred to as "ordinary" or "straight" life insurance.
Will:
A legal document that declares a person's wishes concerning the disposition of
property, the guardianship of his or her children, and the administration of the
estate after his or her death.
Yield:
In general, the yield is the amount of current income provided by an investment.
For stocks, the yield is calculated by dividing the total of the annual dividends by
the current price. For bonds, the yield is calculated by dividing the annual interest
by the current price. The yield is distinguished from the return, which includes
price appreciation or depreciation.
Zero-Coupon Bond:
This type of bond makes no periodic interest payments but instead is sold at a
steep discount from its face value. Bondholders receive the face value of their
bonds when they mature.
David Danda is an attorney, comedian and national marketing coach and columnist who
helps businesses market more effectively by leveraging technology. He can be reached at
770.938.0977, or through his website at
www.daviddanda.com.
You may reproduce and distribute this copyrighted© material provided the author is
appropriately identified.
Author
David Danda
770.938.0977
www.daviddanda.com
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