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Account Set-up Fee |
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The fee charged to open a new account, usually
a one-time charge. |
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Activation
Fee |
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The fee charged for
establishing the credit line and the related securities accounts,
usually a one-time charge. |
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Advance
Rate |
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A term that is used
interchangeably with LTV (Loan-To-Value) or Collateral Ratio or
Borrowing Power Ratio (see Borrowing Power Ratio). |
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Advisor
|
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An organization employed
by a mutual fund to give professional advice on the fund’s
investments and asset management practices, also, known as an
“Investment Advisor”. |
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Ammortization
|
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Repayment of a debt with
equal periodic payments of both principal and interest, calculated
to pay off the debt at the end of a fixed period of time. Does not
apply to equity lines of credit. |
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Applicant
|
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A prospective borrower
who has completed an application. |
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APR
|
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Annual Percentage Rate.
The periodic rate times the number of periods in a year. For
example, a 5% quarterly return has an APR of 20%. |
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Assets
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Any possession that has
value in an exchange. |
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Automatic
Reinvestment |
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Any market in which
prices exhibit a declining trend, for a prolonged period, usually
falling by 20% or more. |
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Bear
Market |
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Any market in which
prices exhibit a declining trend, for a prolonged period, usually
falling by 20% or more. |
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Borrowing
Power Ratio |
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The percentage that the
loan amount is of the total market value of the securities being
pledged to secure the loan. |
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Broker/Dealer
(or B/D) |
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A firm that buys and
sells mutual fund shares and other securities from and to investors.
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Bull
Market |
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Any market in which
prices are in an upward trend. |
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Capital
Gain |
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When a stock is sold for
a profit, the capital gain is the difference between the net sales
price of the securities and their net cost, or original basis. If a
stock is sold below cost, the difference is a capital loss.
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Capital
Gains Distribution |
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A distribution to the
shareholders of a mutual fund out of profits from selling stocks or
bonds, that is subject to capital gains taxes for the shareholders.
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Capital
Gains Tax |
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The tax levied on
profits from the sale of capital assets. A long-term capital gain,
which is achieved once an asset that is held for at least 12 months,
is taxed at a maximum rate of 20% (taxpayers in 28% tax bracket) and
10% (taxpayers in 15% tax bracket). Assets that are held for less
than 12 months are taxed at regular income tax levels, and, since
January 1, 2000, assets that are held for at least five years are
taxed at 18% and 8%. |
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Closed-end
Fund |
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An investment company
that sells shares like any other corporation and usually does not
redeem its shares. A publicly traded fund sold on stock exchanges or
over the counter that may trade above or below its net asset value.
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Closed
Fund |
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A mutual fund that is no
longer issuing shares, mainly because it has grown too large.
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Collateral
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Property pledged as
security for a debt. Relating to the Mutual Fund line of credit any
investment security that is held in the custody account and coded as
pledged collateral. |
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Collateral
Maintenance Call |
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A notice or demand from
the Bank to the borrower to reduce the principal amount of the
indebtedness or to pledge additional Collateral in the form of
Liquid Assets in order to remedy the insufficient collateral.
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Commission
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A fee paid by an
investor to a broker or other sales agent for investment advice and
execution in buying and selling securities. |
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Committee
on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures |
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CUSIP Committee that
assigns identifying numbers and codes for all securities. These
"CUSIP" numbers and symbols are used when recording all buy or sell
orders. |
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Contingent
Deferred Sales Charge (CDSC) |
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A fee imposed when
shares are redeemed (sold back to the fund), typically during the
first few years of ownership. This fee is an alternative way to
compensate financial professionals for their service and is
sometimes called a “back-end load.” |
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Credit
Advances |
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The used portion of the
“Line of Credit”. |
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Credit
Limit |
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Is the maximum amount
that you may have outstanding at any one time on your Credit Line
however it may never exceed the principal amount. |
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Credit
Report |
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A report to a
prospective lender on the credit standing of a prospective borrower,
used to aid in verifying that the borrower’ is credit-worthiness.
(When taking a phone application, ALWAYS inform the borrower that a
credit report will be pulled). Relating to the “Credit Report’s” use
for the Mutual Fund line of credit product; it will be used only to
verify the validity of borrower’s personal information that is
provided on the application. |
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CUSIP
Number |
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Unique number given to a
security to distinguish it from other stocks and registered bonds.
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Custodian
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Either a bank, agent,
trust company, or other organization responsible for safeguarding
financial assets, or the individual who oversees the assets of a
minor's custodial account. |
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Custody
Agreement |
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The agreement executed
by the Grantor whereby the Grantor as custodian of assets of the
Grantor appoints the bank. |
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Custody
Fees |
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Those account fees
usually charged annually or semi-annually, on a per security basis,
for the costs of custodial services. |
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Distribution
|
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A method for selling
mutual funds to the public. |
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Distribution
Period |
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The few days between the
board of directors' declaration of a stock dividend (declaration
date) and the record date, or the date an individual must own shares
to be entitled to a dividend. |
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Diversification
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The practice of
investing broadly across a number of securities to reduce risk.
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Dividend
|
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A portion of a company's
profit paid to common and preferred shareholders. A sock selling for
$20 a share with an annual dividend of $1 a share yields the
investor 5%. |
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Draw
Period |
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Period of time during
which you are permitted to obtain credit advances by drawing on your
Credit Line, before you must begin repaying the loan. |
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Ex-Dividend
Date |
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|
For mutual funds, the
date on which declared distributions (dividends and capital gains)
are deducted from the fund’s assets before it calculates its Net
Asset Value (NAV) per share. The NAV will drop by the amount of the
distribution per share. |
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Exchange
Fee |
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|
The fee that may be
charged when transferring money from one fund to another within the
same fund family. |
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Exchange
Privilege |
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|
A fund option enabling
shareholders to transfer their investments from one fund to another
within the same family as needs or objectives change. |
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Face
Value |
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The amount that a bond’s
issuer must repay to the bondholder at the maturity date.
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Family
of Funds |
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A group of mutual funds,
each typically with it’s own investment objective, managed and
distributed by the same company. |
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Front-end
Sales Charge or Load |
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|
The % charged by a
broker or sales professional for the purchase of some mutual fund
shares. It is reflected in the offering price and is described as
the “front-end load” when part of the initial purchase cost. By law,
the maximum sales charge is 8.5%, although most fund families charge
less than the maximum. |
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Grantor
|
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One who gives to another
the possession or title to their property. |
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Hedge
Fund |
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A private investment
pool for wealthy investors that, unlike a mutual fund, is exempt
from SEC regulation. |
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Historical
Price Volatility |
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|
Historic volatility is a
measure of the variability of the range of closing prices seen over
a past period of time. To put it another way, historic volatility is
essentially the standard deviation of closing prices over a period
of time. A wide range of closing prices results in a higher standard
deviation and thus in a higher historic volatility. Thus, a Stock
with an historic volatility of 20% would have been closing over a
broader range than did a similar Stock with an historic volatility
of only 10%. Historical volatility can also be used as a tool by
traders who are trading only the underlying instrument. Quantifying
the volatility in a market can affect a trader's perception of how
far the market can move and thus provides some help in making price
projections and placing orders. High volatility may indicate a trend
reversal as heavy buying/selling comes into the market and may sharp
price reversals. Also, referred to as the “Risk Factor”.
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Inflation
Risk |
|
|
The risk that a portion
of an investment’s return may be eliminated by inflation.
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Initial
Advance |
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The first draw request
amount. |
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Interest
Rate Risk |
|
|
The possibility that a
bond’s or bond mutual fund’s value will decrease due to rising
interest rates. |
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Investment
Company |
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|
A corporation, trust, or
partnership that invests pooled shareholder dollars in securities to
achieve the institution’s objective. Mutual funds, closed-end funds
and unit investment trusts (UITs) are the three types of investment
companies. |
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Investment
Objective |
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The goal that an
investor and a mutual fund pursue together. |
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Issuer
|
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The company, government
agency or municipality that issues a security such as a stock, bond,
or money market instrument. |
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Issuer
|
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|
The company, government
agency or municipality that issues a security such as a stock, bond,
or money market instrument. |
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Line of
Credit |
|
|
A loan arrangement
between a bank and a customer allowing the customer to borrow up to
a prespecified amount. |
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Liquid
Assets |
|
|
Assets included in the
Collateral and consisting of cash, deposit accounts (net of any
applicable withdrawal fees); mutual fund shares (net of any
applicable redemption charges) that may be currently and ordinarily
redeemed in cash at the current net asset value per share each day.
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Liquidity
|
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|
The ability to have
ready access to invested money. MutuaLoanTM provides
liquidity, an access to cash, on invested assets that stay invested.
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Long-term
funds |
|
|
A mutual fund industry
descriptive term for all funds other than money market funds.
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LTV
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|
A term that is used
interchangeably with LTV (Loan-to-Value) or Advance Ratio or
Borrowing Power Ratio (see Borrowing Power Ratio above.)
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Market
Value |
|
|
The price at which a
security is trading and could presumably be purchased or sold. What
investors believe a firm is worth; calculated by multiplying the
number of shares outstanding by the current market price of a firm's
shares. |
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Maturity
|
|
|
The date on which an
issuer promises to repay a bond’s face value. |
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Maturity
Date |
|
|
Is the earlier of the
two dates of any demand made by the lender for immediate repayment
of the loan in full or the end of the Repayment Period.
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Maximum
Line of Credit |
|
|
The maximum amount that
you may have outstanding at any one time on your Credit Line. When
your Credit Line Account is approved, the Lender will determine, and
will notify you of, the amount of your initial Credit Limit.
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Mutual
Fund |
|
|
Mutual funds are pools
of money that are managed by an investment company. They offer
investors a variety of goals, depending on the fund and its
investment charter. Some funds, for example, seek to generate income
on a regular basis. Others seek to preserve an investor's money.
Still others seek to invest in companies that are growing at a rapid
pace. Funds can impose a sales charge or load, on investors when
they buy or sell shares. Many funds these days are no load and
impose no sales charge. Mutual funds are investment companies
regulated by the Investment Company Act of 1940. Related: open-end
fund, closed-end fund. |
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Mutual
Fund |
|
|
Mutual funds are pools
of money that are managed by an investment company. They offer
investors a variety of goals, depending on the fund and its
investment charter. Some funds, for example, seek to generate income
on a regular basis. Others seek to preserve an investor's money.
Still others seek to invest in companies that are growing at a rapid
pace. Funds can impose a sales charge or load, on investors when
they buy or sell shares. Many funds these days are no load and
impose no sales charge. Mutual funds are investment companies
regulated by the Investment Company Act of 1940. Related: open-end
fund, closed-end fund. |
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Net
Asset Value (NAV) |
|
|
The value of a fund's
investments. For a mutual fund, the net asset value per share
usually represents the fund's market price, subject to a possible
sales or redemption charge. For a closed-end fund, the market price
may vary significantly from the net asset value. |
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No-load
Fund |
|
|
A mutual fund whose
shares are sold without a sales commission and without a 12b-1 fee
of more than 0.25% per year. |
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Open-End
Fund |
|
|
Mutual fund that
continually creates new shares on demand. Mutual fund shareholders
buy the funds at net asset value and may redeem them at any time at
the prevailing market prices. Antithesis of closed-end fund.
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Open-end
Investment Company |
|
|
The legal name for a
mutual fund, indicating it stands ready to redeem (buy back) its
shares from investors. |
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|
|
Penalty
Fees |
|
|
Fees charged for
services that are not normally exercised or for services that the
fees act as a modest deterrent to actions with unfavorable costs to
the service provider. |
|
|
Pooling
|
|
|
The aggregation of
assets provided by investors who have a common financial goal. The
investment pool is used to buy a portfolio of stocks and bonds; this
diversified portfolio becomes mutually owned by the mutual fund
investors who have “per share” interests. |
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|
Portfolio
|
|
|
A collection of
securities owned by an individual or an institution (including a
mutual fund). |
|
|
Prepayment
Risk |
|
|
The possibility that a
bond owner will receive his or her principal investment back, from
the bond issuer, prior to a bond’s maturity date. |
|
|
Principal
Amount |
|
|
The maximum line of
credit amount. |
|
|
Private
Banking |
|
|
Many banks have some
form of Private Banking, which designates a service unit that
provides securities safekeeping, investment advice and lending to
their wealthiest customers. Larger banks and some brokerage firms
have a service unit that provides global Private Banking and have
security asset minimums ranging from $500,000 to $5,000,000.
|
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|
Redeem
|
|
|
Cashing in mutual fund
shares by selling them back to the fund. |
|
|
Redemption
Fee |
|
|
Another type of back-end
charge for redeeming shares. It is expressed as a dollar amount or
as a percentage of the redemption price. |
|
|
Repayment
Period |
|
|
The repayment period
will begin at the end of the Draw Period and will continue for a
period of exactly 8 years, during which time the borrower pays the
balance due on the line of credit in monthly increments, but no new
draws may be made. |
|
|
Risk-Reward
Tradeoff |
|
|
The principle that an
investment must offer higher returns as compensation for the
probability of greater volatility and risk. |
|
|
Risk-Reward
Tradeoff |
|
|
The principle that an
investment must offer higher returns as compensation for the
probability of greater volatility and risk. |
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
|
Stocks, Bonds or Mutual
Fund Shares. |
|
|
Security
Agreement |
|
|
The Grantor assigns,
grants and pledges to the Bank a security interest in the
Collateral, including without limitation all Investment Securities
held in the custodial account(s) to secure the Indebtedness, and
agrees that the Bank shall have the rights stated in this Agreement
with respect to the Collateral, in addition to all other rights
which the Bank may have by law. |
|
|
Sell Out
Margin |
|
|
When the collateral is
insufficient to secure the indebtedness the Bank may sell any
security included in the Collateral held in the Trust Custody
account in order to reduce the used line of credit principal amount
to an amount that can be secured by the value of the collateral.
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|
|
Series
Fund |
|
|
A group of different
mutual funds, each with its own investment objective, which is
structured into a single business trust or corporation.
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|
|
Share
Classes (Class A, Class B, Class Institutional, etc.)
|
|
|
The same fund buy with
different sales charge structures (for example, front-end load;
back-end load, level-load, etc.), which provide alternatives to meet
differing investor needs. |
|
|
Signature
Guarantee |
|
|
STAMP “Securities
Transfer Association Medallion Program” – Most commercial banks,
savings banks, credit unions, trust companies, and member firms of
U.S. stock exchanges offer this service. This service is the
authentication of a signature in the form of a stamp. A notary
public cannot provide a signature guarantee. A signature guarantee
is a common requirement when transferring or redeeming shares or
changing the ownership of an account. For a signature guarantee to
be valid, it must appear in the following
format: "Signature(s)
Guaranteed" By (Signature
& Title) Institution's
Name |
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|
|
Transfer
Agent |
|
|
The organization used by
a mutual fund to prepare and maintain records for shareholder
accounts. |
|
|
Trust
|
|
|
A fiduciary relationship
calling for a trustee to hold the title to assets for the benefit of
the beneficiary. The person creating the trust, which may or may not
also be the beneficiary, is called the grantor. |
|
|
12b-1
Fees |
|
|
The percent of a mutual
fund's assets used to defray marketing and distribution expenses.
The amount of the fee is stated in the fund's prospectus. The SEC
has recently proposed that 12B-1 fees in excess of 0.25% be classed
as a load. A true no load fund has neither a nor a 12B-1 fee.
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|
|
12B-1
Funds |
|
|
Mutual funds that do not
charge an up-front or back-end commission, but instead take out up
to 1.25% of average daily fund assets each year to cover the costs
of selling and marketing shares, an arrangement allowed by the SEC's
Rule 12B-1 (passed in 1980). |
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|
|
Underwriter
|
|
|
The organization that sells a mutual fund’s
shares to the investing public and to broker/dealers.
|