Side effects
Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm. |
Similar financial terms
InsiderAn officer or director of a company, anyone who owns more than 10 percent of a corporation's voting stock and his or her immediate family members, or anyone who has information about a company that is not available to other investors.
Two-sided market
A market in which both bid and asked prices, good for the standard unit of trading, are quoted.
Sell-side analyst
Also called a Wall Street analyst, a financial analyst who works for a brokerage firm and whose recommendations are passed on to the brokerage firm's customers.
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 ...
Buy-side analyst
A financial analyst employed by a non-brokerage firm, typically one of the larger money management firms that purchase securities on their own accounts.
Nonresident of the US alien (NRA)
Not a U.S. person as defined under the Internal Revenue Code (IRC).
Design Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (DFMEA)
An analytical technique used by a design responsible engineer/team as a means to assure, to the extent possible, that potential failure modes and, their associated causes/mechanisms have been considered and addressed.
