Financial Markets and Institutions (2-downloads)



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Mishkin Eakins - Financial Markets and Institutions, 7e (2012)

exercise price or strike price, within a specific

period of time (the term to expiration). 606

originate-to-distribute model:

A business model in

which the mortgage is originated by a separate

party, typically a mortgage broker, and then dis-

tributed to an investor as an underlying asset in

a security. 171

overfunded:

Describing a pension plan that has

assets greater than needed to make the pro-

jected benefit payments owed by the plan. 532

overnight cash rate:

The interest rate for very-

short-term interbank loans in the euro area. 230

oversubscribed:

Having received more offers to buy

than there are securities available for sale. 549

over-the-counter (OTC) market:

A secondary

market in which dealers at different locations

who have an inventory of securities stand

ready to buy and sell securities to anyone who

comes to them and is willing to accept their

prices. 19

passbook savings account:

An interest-bearing

savings account held at a commercial bank. 

pecking order hypothesis:

The hypothesis that the

larger and more established is a corporation, the

more likely it will be to issue securities to raise

funds. 144

Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (Penny

Benny):

A government agency that performs a

role similar to that of the FDIC, insuring pension

benefits up to a limit if a company with an

underfunded pension plan goes bankrupt. 538

pension plan:

An asset pool that accumulates over

an individual’s working years and is paid out dur-

ing the nonworking years. 531

perpetuity:

A perpetual bond with no maturity date

and no repayment of principal that makes peri-

odic fixed payments forever. 44

policy instrument:

A variable that is very respon-

sive to the central banks tools and indicates the

stance of monetary policy (also called an

operating instrument). 246

political business cycle:

A business cycle caused by

expansionary policies before an election. 210

portfolio:

A collection of assets. 25

preferred stock:

Stock on which a fixed dividend

must be paid before common dividends are dis-

tributed. It often does not mature and usually

does not give the holder voting rights in the

company. 303

premium:

The amount paid for an option

contract. 298, 606

present discounted value:

See present value. 37

present value:

Today’s value of a payment to be

received in the future when the interest rate is i.

Also called present discounted value. 37

price earnings ratio (PE):

A measure of how much

the market is willing to pay for $1 of earnings

from a firm. 311

price stability:

Low and stable inflation. 232

primary dealers:

Government securities dealers,

operating out of private firms or commercial banks,

with whom the Fed’s open market desk trades. 225

primary market:

A financial market in which new

issues of a security are sold to initial buyers.

18, 543

principal-agent problem:

A moral hazard problem

that occurs when the managers in control (the

agents) act in their own interest rather than in

the interest of the owners (the principals) due

to differing sets of incentives. 145, 171

private equity buyout:

When a public company

becomes private. 562

private mortgage insurance (PMI):

Insurance that

protects the lender against losses from defaults

on mortgage loans. 328

private pension plan:

A pension plan sponsored by

an employer, group, or individual. 533

property insurance:

Insurance that protects against

losses from fire, theft, storm, explosion, and

neglect. 524

proprietary trading:

Financial institutions that

trade with their own money. 449

prospectus:

A portion of a security registration

statement that is filed with the Securities and

Exchange Commission and made available to

potential purchasers of the security. 546

prudent man rule:

This rule states that those with

the responsibility of investing money for others



G-12

Glossary



should act with prudence, discretion, intelli-

gence, and regard for safety of capital as well as

income. 560

public pension plan:

A pension plan sponsored by

a government body. 534

put option:

An option contract that provides the

right to sell a security at a specified price. 604

quotas:


Restrictions on the quantity of foreign

goods that can be imported. 351

random walk:

The movements of a variable whose

future changes cannot be predicted because,

given today’s value, the variable is just as likely

to fall as to rise. 121

rate of capital gain:

The change in a security’s

price relative to the initial purchase price. 52

rate of return:

See return.

real exchange rate:

The rate at which domestic

goods can be exchanged for foreign goods, mean-

ing the price of domestic goods relative to foreign

goods denominated in domestic currency. 349

real interest rate:

The interest rate adjusted for

expected changes in the price level (inflation) so

that it more accurately reflects the true cost of

borrowing. 48

real terms:

Terms reflecting actual goods and ser-

vices one can buy. 48

registered bonds:

Bonds requiring that their own-

ers register with the company to receive interest

payments. Registered bonds have largely

replaced bearer bonds, which did not require

registration. 289

registration statement:

Information about a firm’s

financial condition, management, competition,

industry, and experience that must be filed with

the Securities and Exchange Commission prior

to the sale to the public of any security with a

maturity of more than 270 days. 546

Regulation Z:

The requirement that lenders dis-

close the full cost of a loan to the borrower; also

known as the “truth in lending” regulation. 

regulatory arbitrage:

An attempt to avoid regula-

tory capital requirements by keeping assets on

banks’ books that have the same risk-based capi-

tal requirement but are relatively risky, while

taking off their books low-risk assets. 431

regulatory forbearance:

Refraining from exercising

a regulatory right to put insolvent savings and

loans out of business. 539 

reinsurance:

Allocating a portion of the risk to

another company in exchange for a portion of

the premium. 525

reinvestment risk:

The interest-rate risk associated

with the fact that the proceeds of short-term

investments must be reinvested at a future inter-

est rate that is uncertain. 54

repossession:

The taking of an asset that has been

pledged as collateral for a loan when the bor-

rower defaults. 

repurchase agreement:

A form of loan in which the

borrower simultaneously contracts to sell securi-

ties and contracts to repurchase them, either on

demand or on a specified date. 174, 226

required reserve ratio:

The fraction of deposits that

the Fed requires to be kept as reserves. 216, 401

required reserves:

Reserves that are held to meet

Fed requirements that a certain fraction of bank

deposits be kept as reserves. 215, 401

reserve account:

An account used to make insur-

ance and tax payments due on property securing

a mortgage loan. A portion of each monthly loan

payment goes into the reserve account. 334

reserve currency:

A currency such as the U.S. dollar

that is used by other countries to denominate the

assets they hold as international reserves. 381

reserve for loan losses:

An account that offsets the

loan accounts on a lender’s books that reflects

the lender’s projected losses due to default. 

reserve requirements:

Regulations making it oblig-

atory for depository institutions to keep a cer-

tain fraction of their deposits in accounts with

the Fed. 218, 401

reserves:

Banks’ holding of deposits in accounts

with the Fed, plus currency that is physically

held by banks (vault cash). 215, 401

Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC):

A temporary

agency created by FIRREA that was responsi-

ble for liquidating the assets of failed savings

and loans. 

restrictive covenants:

Provisions that specify cer-

tain activities that a borrower can and cannot

engage in. 137, 289

return:

The payments to the owner of a security

plus the change in the security’s value,

expressed as a fraction of its purchase price;

more precisely called the rate of return. 50

return on assets (ROA):

Net profit after taxes per

dollar of assets. 411

return on equity (ROE):

Net profit after taxes per

dollar of equity capital. 411

revaluation:

Resetting of the par value of a cur-

rency at a higher level. 383

Glossary

G-13



revenue bonds:

Bonds for which the source of

income that is used to pay the interest and to

retire the bonds is from a specific source, such

as a toll road or an electric plant. If this revenue

source is unable to make the payments, the

bonds can default, despite the issuing municipal-

ity being otherwise healthy. 287

reverse transactions:

Purchase or sale of eligible

assets by the European Central Bank under

repurchase agreements or credit operations

against eligible assets as collateral that are

reversed within two weeks. 231

risk:

The degree of uncertainty associated with the



return on an asset. 25, 64

risk premium:

The spread between the interest

rate on bonds with default risk and the interest

rate on default-free bonds. 90

risk sharing:

The process by which financial inter-

mediaries create and sell assets with risk charac-

teristics that people are comfortable with and

then use the funds they acquire by selling these

assets to purchase other assets that may have

far more risk. 25

risk structure of interest rates:

The relationship

among the various interest rates on bonds with

the same term to maturity. 89

roll over:

To renew a debt when it matures. 

seasoned issues:

Securities that have been trading

publicly long enough to have let the market

clearly establish their value. 546

secondary market:

A financial market in which

securities that have previously been issued can

be resold. 18, 543

secondary reserves:

U.S. government and agency

securities held by banks. 402

secured debt:

Debt guaranteed by collateral. 137

secured loan:

A loan guaranteed by collateral. 546

securitization:

The process of transforming illiquid

financial assets into marketable capital market

instruments. 171, 464

securitized mortgage:

See mortgage-backed


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