Similar financial terms
Current AssetsThe value of assets held at the Balance Sheet date that are represented by cash, or can be expected to be converted into cash within the next 12 months.
Current Liabilities
The value of liabilities at the Balance sheet date that the company is required to settle (pay) either on demand, or within the next 12 months.
Current intrest rate
The rate being earned on a bond based on its current market value; that value varies with the degree of premium or discount value of the bond.
Current portion of long-term dept
Those liabilities that are payable within the next 12 months, including accounts and taxes payable, and the current portion (12 months' payments) of notes payable and current liabilities.
Current ratio
A ratio that tests the strength of a company's working capital. Current assets are divided by current liabilities and the result is expressed as a factor, x to y.
Other current assets
Value of non-cash assets, including prepaid expenses and accounts receivable, due within 1 year.
Current account
Net flow of goods, services, and unilateral transactions (gifts) between countries.
Current coupon
A bond selling at or close to par, that is, a bond with a coupon close to the yields currently offered on new bonds of a similar maturity and credit risk.
Current issue
In Treasury securities, the most recently auctioned issue. Trading is more active in current issues than in off-the-run issues.
Current maturity
Current time to maturity on an outstanding debt instrument.
Current / noncurrent method
Under this currency translation method, all of a foreign subsidiary's current assets and liabilities are translated into home currency at the current exchange rate while noncurrent assets and liabilities are translated at the historical exchange rate, that is, the rate in effect at the time the asset was acquired or the liability incurred.
Current rate method
Under this currency translation method, all foreign currency balance-sheet and income statement items are translated at the current exchange rate.
Yield to maturity
The total yield on a bond obtained by equating the bond's current market value to the discounted cash flows promised by the bond. Also referred to as actuarial yield or just yield.
Yield curve
The yield curve, which plots the term structure, shows the relationship between yield (interest rate) and maturity for a set of similar securities. Typically, different yield curves are drawn for zero-coupon bonds (zero-coupon yield curve) and for coupon bonds quoted at par (par yield curve).
Yield
In general, the yield is the return on an investor's capital investment. For bonds it is the coupon rate of interest divided by the purchase price, called current yield. Also, the rate of return on a bond, taking into account the total of annual interest payments, the purchase price, the redemption value, and the amount of time remaining until maturity.
Dividend yield
A stock's daily percentage summary of yield, calculated by dividing annual dividend per share by the day's closing stock price.
Yield to call
The percentage rate of a bond or note, if you were to buy and hold the security until the call date. This yield is valid only if the security is called prior to maturity. Generally bonds are callable over several years and normally are called at a slight premium. The calculation of yield to call is based on the coupon rate, length of time to the call and the market price.
Yield spread strategies
Strategies that involve positioning a portfolio to capitalize on expected changes inyield spreads between sectors of the bond market.
Yield ratio
The quotient of two bond yields.
Yield curve strategies
Positioning a portfolio to capitalize on expected changes in the shape of the Treasury yield curve.
Yield curve option-pricing models
Models that can incorporate different volatility assumptions along the yield curve, such as the Black-Derman-Toy model. Also called arbitrage-free option-pricing models.
Weighted average portfolio yield
The weighted average of the yield of all the bonds in a portfolio.
Annual percentage yield (APY)
The effective, or true, annual rate of return. The APY is the rate actually earned or paid in one year, taking into account the affect of compounding. The APY is calculated by taking one plus the periodic rate and raising it to the number of periods in a year. For example, a 1% per month rate has an APY of 12.68% (1.01^12).
Steepening of the yield curve
A change in the yield curve where the spread between the yield on a long-term and short-term Treasury has increased.
Riding the yield curve
Buying long-term bonds in anticipation of capital gains as yields fall with the declining maturity of the bonds.
Required yield
Generally referring to bonds, the yield required by the marketplace to match available returns for financial instruments with comparable risk.
Reoffering yield
In a purchase and sale, the yield to maturity at which the underwriter offers to sell the bonds to investors.
Relative yield spread
The ratio of the yield spread to the yield level.
Realized compound yield
Yield assuming that coupon payments are invested at the going market interest rate at the time of their receipt and rolled over until the bond matures.
Pure yield pickup swap
Moving to higher yield bonds.
Parallel shift in the yield curve
A shift in the yield curve in which the change in the yield on all maturities is the same number of basis points. In other words, if the 3 month T-bill increases 100 basis points (one percent), then the 6 month, 1 year, 5 year, 10 year, 20 year, and 30 year rates increase by 100 basis points as well.
Non-parallel shift in the yield curve
A shift in the yield curve in which yields do not change by the same number of basis points for every maturity.
Liquid yield option note (LYON)
Zero-coupon, callable, putable, convertible bond invented by Merrill Lynch & Co.
Bond equivalent yield
Bond yield calculated on an annual percentage rate method. Differs from annual effective yield.
Bond-equivalent yield
The annualized yield to maturity computed by doubling the semiannual yield.
Capital gains yield
The price change portion of a stock's return.
Convenience yield
The extra advantage that firms derive from holding the commodity rather than the future.
Coupon equivalent yield
True interest cost expressed on the basis of a 365-day year.
Yield to worst
The bond yield computed by using the lower of either the yield to maturity or the yield to call on every possible call date.
Yield burning
A municipal bond financing method. Underwriters in advance refundings add large markups on US Treasury bonds bought and held in escrow to compensate investors while waiting for repayment of old bonds after issuance of the new bonds. Since bond prices and yields move in opposite directions, when the bonds are marked up, they "burn down" the yield, which may violate federal tax rules and diminishes tax revenues.
