Separate Trading of Registered Interest (STRIPS)

Separate Trading of Registered Interest and principal Securities (STRIPS) are securities that have their periodic interest payments separated from the final maturity payment and the two cash flows are sold to different investors.

Similar financial terms

Trading Halt
The temporary suspension of trading in a quoted security, usually for 30 minutes, while material news from the issuer is being disseminated over the news wires. A trading halt gives all investors equal opportunity to evaluate news and make buy, sell, or hold decisions on that basis. A trading halt may also be imposed for purely regulatory reasons, either by the SEC, the FSA, any index or other regulatory body.

Daytrading
Refers to trading in securities were positions are opened and closed on the same day.

Trading range
The difference between the high and low prices traded during a period of time; with commodities, the high/low price limit established by the exchange for a specific commodity for any one day's trading.

Trading posts
The posts on the floor of a stock exchange where the specialists stand and securities are traded.

Trading paper
CDs purchased by accounts that are likely to resell them. The term is commonly used in the Euromarket.

Trading costs
Costs of buying and selling marketable securities and borrowing. Trading costs include commissions, slippage, and the bid/ask spread. See: transaction costs.

Program trading
Trades based on signals from computer programs, usually entered directly from the trader's computer to the market's computer system and executed automatically.

Last trading day
The final day under an exchange's rules during which trading may take place in a particular futures or options contract. Contracts outstanding at the end of the last trading day must be settled by delivery of underlying physical commodities or financial instruments, or by agreement for monetary settlement depending upon futures contract specifications.

Insider Trading
Insider trading is the trading (buying or selling) of shares in a company by an insider - i.e. a senior manager, director, or person who owns more than 10% of the shares of a company. Insider trading is not illegal. But, if insiders trade on material privileged information - before it becomes known to the general public - that is a problem! This is perfectly legal except when trading takes place using privileged information which has not yet been released to the public. We often hear of insider ...

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is the federal agency created by Congress to regulate futures trading. The Commodity Exchange Act of 1974 became effective April 21, 1975. Previously, futures trading had been regulated by the Commodity Exchange Authority of the USDA.

Fictitious Trading
Wash trading, bucketing, cross trading, or other schemes which give the appearance of trading. Actually, no bona fide, competitive trade has occurred.

Volatility Quote Trading
Refers to the quoting of bids and offers on option contracts in terms of their implied volatilities rather than as prices.

Ginzy Trading
A trade practice in which a floor broker, in executing an order -- particularly a large order -- will fill a portion of the order at one price and the remainder of the order at another price to avoid an exchange's rule against trading at fractional increments or "split ticks." In In re Murphy, [1984-86 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut L. Rep. (CCH) at pp. 31,353-4 (Sept. 25, 1985), the Commission found that ginzy trading was a noncompetitive trading practice in violation of section 4c(a)(B) of the Com ...

Registered trader
A member of the exchange who executes frequent trades for his or her own account.

Registered representative
A person registered with the US CFTC who is employed by, and soliciting business for, a commission house or futures commission merchant.

Registered bond
A bond whose issuer records ownership and interest payments. Differs from a bearer bond which is traded without record of ownership and whose possession is the only evidence of ownership.

Interest-rate risk on bonds
The price of a typical bond will change in the opposite direction from a change in interest rates. As interest rates rise, the price of a bond will fall; as interest rates fall, the price of a bond will rise. The actual degree of sensitivity of a bond’s price to changes in market interest rates depends on various characteristics of the issue maturity, coupon and special provisions.

Accrued interest
Interest earned but not yet due and payable. In the context of bond, it is the next coupon to be paid multiplied by the time elapsed since the last payment date and divided by the total coupon period.

Zero-coupon interest rate
The interest rate that would be earned on a bond that provides no coupons.

Term structure of interest rates
The relationship between interest rates and their maturities.

Fixed interest securities
Fixed interest securities relates to bonds, bills, stocks and debentures which offer a fixed rate of interest per period. The purchaser buys the income stream and the seller receives loan.

Amortizing interest rate swap
Swap in which the principal or national amount rises (falls) as interest rates rise (decline).

True interest cost
For a security such as commercial paper that is sold on a discount basis, the coupon rate required to provide an identical return assuming a coupon-bearing instrument of like maturity that pays interest in arrears.

Times-interest-earned ratio
Earnings before interest and tax, divided by interest payments.

Stated annual interest rate
The interest rate expressed as a per annum percentage, by which interest payment is determined.

Spot interest rate
Interest rate fixed today on a loan that is made today.

Simple interest
Interest calculated only on the initial investment.

Short interest
This is the total number of shares of a security that investors have borrowed, then sold in the hope that the security will fall in value. An investor then buys back the shares and pockets the difference as profit.

Real interest rate
The rate of interest excluding the effect of inflation; that is, the rate that is earned in terms of constant-purchasing-power dollars. Interest rate expressed in terms of real goods, i.e. nominal interest rate adjusted for inflation.

Rate of interest
The rate, as a proportion of the principal, at which interest is computed.

Pooling of interests
An accounting method for reporting acquisitions accomplished through the use of equity. The combined assets of the merged entity are consolidated using book value, as opposed to the purchase method, which uses market value. The merging entities' financial results are combined as though the two entities have always been a single entity.

Open interest
The total number of derivative contracts traded that not yet been liquidated either by an offsetting derivative transaction or by delivery.

Nominal interest rate
The interest rate unadjusted for inflation.

Minority interest
An outside ownership interest in a subsidiary that is consolidated with the parent for financial reporting purposes.

Benchmark interest rate
Also called the base interest rate, it is the minimum interest rate investors will demand for investing in a non-Treasury security. It is also tied to the yield to maturity offered on a comparable-maturity Treasury security that was most recently issued ("on-the-run").

Best-interests-of-creditors test
The requirement that a claim holder voting against a plan of reorganization must receive at least as much as he would have if the debtor were liquidated.

Capitalized interest
Interest that is not immediately expensed, but rather is considered as an asset and is then amortized through the income statement over time.

Cash flow after interest and taxes
Net income plus depreciation.

Compound interest
Interest paid on previously earned interest as well as on the principal.

Covered interest arbitrage
A portfolio manager invests dollars in an instrument denominated in a foreign currency and hedges his resulting foreign exchange risk by selling the proceeds of the investment forward for dollars.

Net interest margin (NIM)
The difference between interest income and interest expense as a percentage of assets.

Nominal rate of interest
The annual return form lending money expressed as a percentage, without having taken account of the rate of inflation.

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Did you know?

Cramdown

When investors get heavily diluted by a susbsequent round of investment especially when the investment is a down round. Also known as a Washout.


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