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Glossary
The following definitions may help you
better understand the capital markets.
A
Agent
A securities firm is classified as an agent when it acts on behalf of
its clients as buyer or seller of a security. The agent does not own
the security at any time during the transaction.
Alberta Securities Commission
(ASC)
The provincial regulatory agency responsible for overseeing the capital
market in Alberta.
All-or-none order
An order that must be filled completely or the trade will not take place.
American-style options
Options that can be exercised any time during their lifetime. These are
also known as open options.
Annual report
A publication, including financial statements and a report on operations,
issued by a company to its shareholders at the company's fiscal year-end.
Arbitrage
The simultaneous purchase of a security on one stock market and the sale
of the same security on another stock market at prices which yield
a profit.
Ask or offer
The lowest price at which someone is willing to sell the security. When
combined with the bid price information, it forms the basis of a stock
quote.
Assets
Everything a company or person owns, including money, securities, equipment
and real estate. Assets include everything that is owed to the company
or person. Assets are listed on a company's balance sheet or an individual's
net worth statement.
Assignment
The notification to the seller of an option by the clearing corporation
that the buyer of the option is enforcing the terms of the option's
contract.
At-the-money
When the price of the underlying equity, index or commodity equals the
strike price of the option.
Averages and indices
Statistical tools that measure the state of the stock market or the economy,
based on the performance of stocks, bonds or other components. Examples
are the S&P/TSX Venture Composite Index, the S&P/TSX Composite
Index, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Consumer Price Index.
Averaging down
Buying more of a security at a price that is lower than the price paid
for the initial investment. The aim of averaging down is to reduce
the average cost per unit of the investment.

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B
Basis point
One-hundredth of a percentage point. For example, the difference between
5.25% and 5.50% is 25 basis points.
Bear market
A market in which stock prices are falling.
Best-efforts underwriting
A type of underwriting where the investment firm acts as an agent. The
firm agrees to use its best efforts to sell the new issue of securities,
but does not guarantee the issuing company that the securities to be
issued will be sold.
Beta
A measurement of the relationship between the price of a stock and the
movement of the whole market.
Better-price-limit orders
An order with a limit price better than the best price on the opposite
side of the market. A better-priced buy order has a limit price higher
than the best offering. A better-priced sell order has a limit price
lower than the best bid. These are available only at the opening.
Bid
The highest price a buyer is willing to pay for a stock. When combined
with the ask price information, it forms the basis of a stock quote.
Black-Scholes model
A mathematical model used to calculate the theoretical price of an option.
Block trades
Any trade for 10,000 shares or more, which has a value of at least $100,000.
Blue chip stocks
Stocks of leading and nationally known companies that offer a record
of continuous dividend payments and other strong investment qualities.
Board lot
A regular trading unit. The board lot size of a stock on Toronto Stock
Exchange or TSX Venture Exchange can be 1000, 500, or 100 shares depending
on the price of the stock. An investor buying or selling a board lot
usually pays less commission than an investor buying or selling an
odd lot.
| Security Price |
Board lot size |
| $0.005 to $0.095 |
1,000 shares |
| $0.10 to $0.995 |
500 shares |
| $1.00 or over |
100 shares |
Book
An electronic record of all pending buy and sell orders for a particular
stock.
Booked orders
Orders that do not trade immediately upon entry. These orders are also
known as outstanding orders.
Bonds
Promissory notes issued by a corporation or government to its lenders,
usually with a specified amount of interest for a specified length
of time.
Bought-deal underwriting
A type of underwriting where the brokerage firm acts as principal. The
brokerage firm risks its own capital to purchase all of the securities
to be issued. If the price of the securities decreases before the brokerage
firm has had a chance to resell the securities to its clients, the
firm absorbs the loss.
British Columbia International
Commercial Arbitration Centre (BCICAC)
An arbitration centre established to resolve business disputes that have
not been resolved through normal channels. As part of its services, the
centre will accept claims up to $50,000 from clients of participating
member firms of the Investment Dealers Association of Canada (Pacific
Division) and TSX Venture Exchange.
British Columbia Securities
Commission (BCSC)
The provincial government agency responsible for administering and enforcing
the Securities Act and the Commodity Contract Act of British Columbia.
Broker or brokerage firm
A securities firm or a registered investment advisor affiliated with
a firm. Brokers are the link between investors and the stock market.
When acting as a broker for the purchase or sale of listed stock, the
investment advisor does not own the securities but acts as an agent
for the buyer and seller and charges a commission for these services.
Bull market
A market in which stock prices are rising.
Buy-in
If a broker fails to deliver securities sold to another broker on the
settlement date, the receiving broker may buy the securities at the
current market price of the stock and charge the delivering broker
the cost difference of such a purchase.

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C
Call option
An option which gives the holder the right, but not the obligation, to
buy a fixed amount of a certain stock at a specified price within a
specified time. Calls are purchased by investors who expect a price
increase.
Canadian Depository for Securities
(CDS)
The designated central clearing corporation for all equity trades in
Canada.
Canadian Derivatives Clearing
Corporation (CDCC)
The designated central clearing corporation for options and futures trading
on the Bourse de Montreal. Previously known as Trans Canada Options Inc.
(TCO).
Canadian Investor Protection
Fund (CIPF)
A fund established to protect customers in the event of insolvency of
a member of any of the following sponsoring self-regulatory organizations:
the Bourse de Montréal, Toronto Stock Exchange, TSX Venture Exchange
and the Investment Dealers Association of Canada.
Canadian Securities Institute
(CSI)
The national educational organization of the securities industry sponsored
by the Investment Dealers Association of Canada, Toronto Stock Exchange,
TSX Venture Exchange and the Bourse de Montréal.
Capital
To an economist, capital means machinery, factories and inventory required
to produce other products. To investors, capital means their cash plus
the financial assets they have invested in securities, their home and
other fixed assets.
Capital gain or loss
Profit or loss resulting from the sale of certain assets classified under
the federal income tax legislation as capital assets. This includes
stocks and other investments such as investment property.
Capital pool companies
The TSX Venture Exchange Capital Pool Company (CPC) program offers a
unique listing opportunity that brings experienced management teams
with proven public financing ability together with development-stage
companies in need of capital and management expertise. Unlike traditional
public companies, capital pools list and begin trading without an operating
business. The nature of their business is to find and acquire a promising
early-stage venture, and their treasuries are funded expressly for
the search and due diligence process.
Capital stock
All shares representing ownership of a company, including preferred and
common shares.
Capitalization or capital
structure
Total dollar amount of all money invested in a company, such as debt,
preferred and common stock, contributed surplus and retained earnings
of a company.
Cash
A special term attached to an equity order that requires the trade to
be settled either the same day or the following business day for cash.
Cash settlement
Settlement of an option contract not by delivery of the underlying shares,
but by a cash payment of the difference between the strike or exercise
price and the underlying settlement price.
Certificate
The physical document that shows ownership of a bond, stock or other
security.
Client order
An order from a retail customer of an investment dealer.
Closing transaction
An order to close out an existing open futures or options contract.
Commission
The fee charged by an investment advisor for buying or selling securities
as an agent on behalf of a client.
Committee on Uniform Security
Identification Procedure (CUSIP)
CUSIP is a standard system of securities identification and securities
description that is used in electronically processing and recording securities
transactions in North America.
Commodities
Products used for commerce that are traded on a separate, authorized
commodities exchange. Commodities include agricultural products and
natural resources such as timber, oil and metals. Commodities are the
basis for futures contracts traded on these exchanges.
Common shares or common stock
Securities that represent part ownership in a company and generally carry
voting privileges. Common shareholders may be paid dividends, but only
after preferred shareholders are paid. Common shareholders are last
in line after creditors, debt holders and preferred shareholders to
claim any of a company's assets in the event of liquidation.
Complete fill
When an order trades all of its specified volume.
Continuous disclosure
A company's ongoing obligation to inform the public of significant corporate
events, both favourable and unfavourable.
Convertible
A feature of certain bonds, debentures and preferred shares. They may
be exchanged by the holder usually for the common stock of the same
company, in accordance with the terms of the conversion privilege.
Corporation or company
A form of business organization created under provincial or federal laws
that has a legal identity separate from its owners. The shareholders
are the corporation's owners and are liable for the debts of the corporation
only up to the amount of their investment. This is known as limited
liability.
Crosses
A trade that occurs when two accounts within brokerage firms wish to
buy and sell the same stock at an agreed price and volume. A cross
can only occur at or between the current bid and ask for the stock.
Crossing session
After the close of the regular trading day, crosses can be executed between
4:05 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. ET at the last sale price of the stock.
Cum dividend
With dividend. The owner of shares purchased cum dividend is entitled
to an upcoming already-declared dividend. The opposite of this is ex
dividend.
Cum rights
With rights. The owner of shares purchased cum rights is entitled to
forthcoming, already-declared rights. The opposite of this is ex rights.
Cyclical stock
A stock purchased from a company in an industry sector that is particularly
sensitive to swings in economic conditions.

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D
Daily price limit
The maximum price advance or decline permitted for a futures contract
in one trading session compared to the previous day's settlement price.
Day order
An order that is valid only for the day it is entered. If the order is
still outstanding when the market closes, it will be purged overnight.
Debenture
A certificate of indebtedness of a government or company backed only
by the general credit of the issuer and unsecured by property or assets.
Defensive stock
A stock purchased from a company that has maintained a record of stable
earnings and continuous dividend payments through periods of economic
downturn.
Delayed delivery order
A special term order in which there is a clear understanding between
the buying and selling parties that the delivery of the securities
will be delayed beyond the usual three-day settlement period to the
date specified in the order.
Delist
The removal of a security's listing on a stock exchange. This is done
when the security no longer exists, the company is bankrupt, the public
distribution of the security has dropped to an unacceptably low level,
or the company has failed to comply with the terms of its listing agreement.
Delivery
The tender and receipt of the underlying commodity or the payment or
receipt of cash in the settlement of an open futures contract.
Delivery month
The calendar month in which a futures contract may be satisfied by making
or taking delivery.
Delta
A ratio that measures an option's price movement compared to the underlying
interest's price movement. Delta values have a range of 0 to 1. Deep
in-the-money options have deltas that approach 1.
Demand
The combined desire, ability and willingness on the part of consumers
to buy goods or services. Demand is determined by income and by price,
which are, in part, determined by supply.
Discretionary account
A securities account created when a client gives a partner, director
or qualified portfolio manager of an investment dealer specific written
authorization to select securities and execute trades on the client's
behalf.
Diversification
Limiting investment risk by purchasing different types of securities
from different companies representing different sectors of the economy.
Dividend
An amount distributed out of a company's profits to its shareholders
in proportion to the number of shares they hold. A preferred dividend
usually is for a fixed amount, while a common dividend may fluctuate
with the profits of the company. A company is under no legal obligation
to pay either preferred or common dividends.
Dividend yield
The dividend yield on either common or preferred stock is the indicated
annual dividend expressed as a percentage of the current market price
of the stock.
Dividend reinvestment plan
A means of reinvesting dividends, which would otherwise be paid to the
shareholder in cash, in additional stock of the company.
Dollar cost averaging
Investing a fixed amount of dollars in a specific security at regular
set intervals over a period of time. Dollar cost averaging results
in a lower average cost per share, compared with purchasing a constant
number of shares at set intervals. The investor buys more shares when
the price is low and buys fewer shares when the price is high.
Dow Jones Industrial Average
(DJIA)
An average made up of 30 actively traded stocks. The DJIA is calculated
by adding the prices of each of the 30 stocks and dividing by a divisor.
The DJIA is one of the most widely quoted stock market averages in the
media.
Downtick
A trade is on a downtick when the last trade occurred at a price lower
than the previous one.

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E
Equities
Common and preferred stocks, which represent a share in the ownership
of a company.
Equity option
An option contract that grants the holder the right to buy or sell a
specific number of shares of stock at a specified price during a specific
period of time.
Escrow
Issued stock held separately from free-trading shares until certain conditions
are met.
European-style option
Options that can be exercised only on their expiration date.
Ex dividend
The holder of shares purchased ex dividend is not entitled to an upcoming
already-declared dividend, but is entitled to future dividends.
Ex right
The holder of shares purchased ex rights is not entitled to forthcoming
rights.
Exchange offering prospectus
(EOP)
A form of prospectus that allows a company to conduct a prospectus offering
through the facilities of a stock exchange, rather than issuing them
directly to the public. The company then applies to list the securities
on the exchange.
Exercise
The act of an option holder who chooses to take delivery (calls) or make
delivery (puts) of the underlying interest against payment of the exercise
price.
Expiration date or warrant
right
The date at which an option contract expires. This means that the option
can't be exercised after that date

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F
Filing statement
A disclosure document submitted by a listed company to outline material
changes in its affairs. Filing statements are not used for the purposes
of a financing.
Fill or kill (FOK) order
A tradable limit order marked "FOK" will trade as much stock
as possible upon entry, but will immediately cancel or kill any unfilled
volume.
Freeze
An interruption in trading on a stock, triggered when an order violates
parameters set by Market Regulation Services Inc. for that particular
stock.
Front month
The closest month to expiration for a futures or option contract.
Futures
Contracts to buy or sell securities at a future date.

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G
Good delivery
The term used to describe a security that is in proper form to transfer
title, which means that the registered owner has endorsed it. To settle
a sale, the certificate must be surrendered on good delivery by the
seller. A certificate that bears a share transfer restriction will
not constitute good delivery.
Growth stock
The shares of companies that have enjoyed better-than-average growth
over recent years and are expected to continue their climb.
Guaranteed investment certificate
(GIC)
A deposit instrument most commonly available from trust companies or
banks requiring a minimum investment at a predetermined rate of interest
for a stated term, such as one or five years. GICs are generally non-redeemable
and non-transferable before maturity.

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H
Halt
A halt stops all trading activity on a stock. Halts can only be authorized
by Market Surveillance Officers, who also authorize trading activity
to resume. Market Surveillance Officers can halt trading in stock any
time there is unusual trading activity or the company releases material
information.
Hedge
A strategy used to limit investment loss by making a transaction that
offsets an existing position.

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I
Improving the market
An order that either raises the bid price or lowers the offering price
is said to be improving the market. The market improves because the
spread between the bid and offer decreases.
Income stock
A security with a solid record of dividend payments and which offers
a dividend yield higher than the average common stock.
Index
A statistical measure of the state of the stock market, based on the
performance of stocks. Examples are the S&P/TSX Composite Index,
the S&P/TSX Venture Composite Index, and the Dow Jones Industrial
Average.
Inflation
An overall increase in prices for goods and services, usually measured
by the percentage change in the Consumer Price Index.
Initial public offering (IPO)
A company's first issue of shares to the general public.
Inside Information
Non-public information pertaining to the business affairs of a corporation
that could affect the company's share price should the information
be made public.
Insider
All directors and senior officers of a company, and those who are presumed
to have access to inside information concerning the company. An insider
is also anyone owning more than 10% of the voting shares of a company.
Insider trading
There are two types of insider trading. The first type occurs when insiders
trade in the stock of their company. Insiders must report these transactions
to the appropriate securities commissions. The other type of insider
trading is when anyone trades securities based on material information
that is not public knowledge. This type of insider trading is illegal.
Interlisted
A stock which is listed on one or more exchanges.
Intermarket Surveillance Group
(ISG)
An association of major U.S. stock exchanges, NASD (U.S.) members (the
regulatory arm of NASDAQ), TSX Venture Exchange, Toronto Stock Exchange
and the Bourse de Montréal, which shares regulatory information
relevant to violations of rules in different markets.
Intrinsic value
The difference between the current market value of the underlying interest
and the strike price of an option. In-the-money is a term used when
the intrinsic value is positive.
Investment
The purchase or ownership of a security in order to earn income, capital
or both. Investments may also include artwork, antiques and real estate.
Investment advisor
A person employed by an investment dealer who provides investment advice
to clients and executes trades on their behalf in securities and other
investment products.
Investment capital
Initial investment capital necessary for starting a business. Investment
capital usually consists of inventory, equipment, pre-opening expenses
and leaseholds.
Investment counsellor
A specialist in the investment industry paid by fee to provide advice
and research to investors with large accounts.
Investment dealer
Securities firms that employ investment advisors to work with retail
and institutional clients. Investment dealers have underwriting, trading
and research departments.
Investment Dealers Association
of Canada (IDA)
The national self-regulatory organization of the securities industry.
The Association's role is to foster efficient capital markets by encouraging
participation in the savings and investment process and by ensuring the
integrity of the marketplace.
Investor relations
A corporate function, combining finance, marketing and communications,
to provide investors with accurate information about a company's performance
and prospects.
Issue
Any of a company's securities or the act of distributing the securities.
Issued shares refer to the portion of a company's shares that have
been issued for sale. A company does not have to issue the total number
of its authorized shares.

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J
Junior corporation
A young company in the early stages of operations and growth.

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L
Last trading day
The last day on which a futures or option contract may be traded.
Liabilities
The debts and obligations of a company or an individual. Current liabilities
are debts due and payable within one year. Long-term liabilities are
those payable after one year. Liabilities are found on a company's
balance sheet or an individual's net worth statement.
Limit order
An order to buy or sell stock at a specified price. The order can be
executed only at the specified price or better. A limit order sets
the maximum price the client is willing to pay as a buyer, and the
minimum price they are willing to accept as a seller.
Liquidating order
An order to close out an existing open futures or options contract. A
liquidating order involves the sale of a contract that has been purchased
or purchase of a contract that has been sold.
Liquidity
This refers to how easily securities can be bought or sold in the market.
A security is liquid when there are enough units outstanding for large
transactions to occur without a substantial change in price. Liquidity
is one of the most important characteristics of a good market. Liquidity
also refers to how easily investors can convert their securities into
cash and to a corporation's cash position, which is how much the value
of the corporation's current assets exceeds current liabilities.
Listed company
A company whose shares are publicly traded on a stock exchange.
Listed stock
Shares of a company that are traded on a stock exchange. Companies pay
fees to the exchange to be listed and must abide by the rules and regulations
set out by the exchange to maintain listing privileges.
Listing application
The document that a company completes and submits to an exchange when
it applies to list its shares on the exchange. The company must disclose
its activities, plans, management and finances in the application.
Long
A term that refers to ownership of securities. For example, if you are
long 100 shares of XYZ, this means that you own 100 shares of XYZ company.

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M
Margin account
A client account that uses credit from the investment dealer to buy a
security. A client needs to deposit a margin amount with the balance
advanced by the investment dealer against collateral such as investments.
The investment dealer can make a margin call, which means the client
must deposit more money or securities if the value of the account falls
below a certain level. If the client does not meet the margin call,
the dealer can sell the securities in the margin account at a possible
loss to cover the balance owed. The investment dealer also charges
the client interest on the money borrowed to buy the securities.
Market
The place where buyers and sellers meet to exchange goods and services.
It also represents the actual or potential demand for a product or
service.
Market capitalization
A company's market capitalization for a security is calculated by multiplying
the last board lot price at the close of trading on the most recent
market close by the number of shares outstanding, net of any escrowed
shares.
Market maker
A trader employed by a securities firm who is required to maintain reasonable
liquidity in securities markets by making firm bids or offers for one
or more designated securities up to a specified minimum guaranteed
fill. Exchanges may have different designations for these individuals.
For example, market makers for the stock of companies listed on Toronto
Stock Exchange are referred to as Registered Traders.
Market order
An order to buy or sell stock immediately at the best current price.
Material change
A change in a company's affairs that could have a significant effect
on the market value of its securities, such as a change in the nature
of the business or control of the company. Under the principle of continuous
disclosure, a listed company must issue a news release and report to
the applicable self-regulatory organization as soon as a material change
occurs.
Member firm
A brokerage firm or investment dealer that owns a seat on TSX Venture
Exchange, or is a member of the Investment Dealers Association of Canada.
Also known at Toronto Stock Exchange as a Participating Organization.
Minimum fill order
A special term order with a minimum fill condition will only begin to
trade if its first fill has the required minimum number of shares.
For example, an order to buy 5,000 shares with a minimum volume of
2,000 shares can only trade if 2,000 or more shares become available.
Minimum guaranteed fill (MGF)
orders
These orders are guaranteed a complete fill upon entry. On Toronto Stock
Exchange, a Registered Trader will provide the stock should the book
be below the required limit. To be eligible for MGF, an order has to
be a tradable client order with a volume less than or equal to the MGF
size, which varies from stock to stock.
Minimum price fluctuation
The minimum price change or tick on a futures contract.
Mixed lot or broken lot
An order with a volume that combines any number of board lots and an
odd lot.
Money market
Part of the capital market established to buy and sell short-term financial
obligations. These include federal government treasury bills, short-term
Government of Canada bonds, commercial paper, bankers' acceptances
and guaranteed investment certificates. Longer-term securities are
also traded in the money market when their term shortens to three years.
Multi-jurisdictional disclosure
system (MJDS)
A disclosure system that facilitates certain Canadian-U.S. cross-border
securities offerings, issuer bids and takeover bids. It is intended to
reduce costly duplication of disclosure requirements and other filings
when issuers from one country register securities offerings in the other.
Under the rules, eligible cross-border offerings are governed by the
disclosure requirements of the issuer's home country.
Must-be-filled (MBF) order
Orders placed before the market opens to buy or sell shares of stocks
when their options expire. These orders are guaranteed a complete fill
at the opening price to offset expiring options. On Toronto Stock Exchange
they must be ordered between 4:05 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. on the Thursday
before the third Friday of each month.
Mutual fund
A fund managed by an expert who invests in stocks, bonds, options, money
market instruments or other securities. Mutual fund units can be purchased
through brokers or, in some cases, directly from the mutual fund company.

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N
Naked writer
A seller of an option contract who does not own a position in the underlying
security.
Net change
The difference between the previous day's closing price and the last
traded price.
Net earnings
A company's remaining profits after all expenses and taxes have been
paid. Dividends may be paid from net earnings.
Net worth
The difference between a company's or individual's total assets and its
total liabilities. Also known as shareholders' equity for a company.
New issue
A stock or bond issue sold by a company for the first time. Proceeds
may be used to retire the company's outstanding securities, or be used
for a new plant, equipment or additional working capital. New debt
issues are also offered by governments.
Non-certificated issues
An issue that is recorded on the transfer agent's electronic book rather
than being held as a physical note.
Non-client order
An order from an investment dealer or an order a firm is executing on
behalf of an institution, such as a mutual fund.
Non-exempt company
A listed company that is subject to special reporting rules.
Non-net order
A special-term order when there is a clear understanding between the
buying and selling parties that they will settle the trade directly
with each other.
Non-resident order
A special term order when one or more participants in the trade is not
a Canadian resident.

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O
Odd lot
A number of shares that are less than a board lot, which is the regular
trading unit decided upon by the particular stock exchange. An odd
lot is also an amount that is less than the par value of one trading
unit on the over-the-counter market. For example, if a board lot is
100 shares, an odd lot would be 99 or fewer shares.
Offer
See Ask
Offset
To liquidate or close out an open futures or option contract.
On-stop (O/S) order
A special-term order placed with the intention of trading at a later
date when the price of the stock reaches the specified stop price.
An on stop order becomes a limit order once a trade at the trigger
price has occurred.
Ontario Securities Commission
The government agency that administers the Securities Act (Ontario) and
the Commodity Futures Act (Ontario) and regulates securities and listed
futures contract transactions in Ontario.
Open interest
The net open positions of a futures or option contract.
Open order
An order that remains in the system for more than a day. See good till
cancelled or good till date.
Option
The right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell certain securities
at a specified price within a specified time. A put option gives the
holder the right to sell the security, and a call option gives the
holder the right to buy the security.
Option class
All options of the same type, either calls or puts, that have the same
underlying security.
Option cycle
A set pattern of months when a class of options expires.
Option holder
The buyer of an option contract who has the right to exercise the option
during its lifetime.
Option series
An individual option contract for a given security.
Option type
A call or put contract.
Option writer
The seller of an option contract who may be required to deliver (call
option) or to purchase (put option) the underlying interest covered
by the option, before the contract expires.
Over-the-counter (OTC) market
The market maintained by securities dealers for issues not listed on
a stock exchange. Almost all bonds and debentures, as well as some
stocks, are traded over-the-counter in Canada. An OTC market is also
known as an unlisted market.

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P
Par value
A security's nominal face value.
Partial fill
An order receives a partial fill when it trades only part of its total
committed volume.
Participating Organization
A firm entitled to trade through Toronto Stock Exchange or TSX Venture
Exchange. Participating Organizations are involved in all aspects of
the securities business, including underwriting new issues, corporate
finance and assisting companies in the IPO process. The equivalent
of a Toronto Stock Exchange Participating Organization is known as
a Member Firm on TSX Venture Exchange.
Penny stock
Low-priced speculative issues of stock selling at less than $1.00 a share.
Portfolio
Holdings of securities by an individual or institution. A portfolio may
include various types of securities representing different companies
and industry sectors.
Position limit
The maximum number of futures or options contracts any individual or
group of people acting together may hold at one time.
Preferred shares
A class of stock that entitles shareholders to a fixed dividend that
is paid before dividends to common shareholders. Preferred shareholders
are also entitled to a stated dollar value per share if the company
liquidates. Preferred shareholders usually don't have voting rights.
Preferred shares are generally considered income investments.
Premium
An option contract's price.
Price-earnings (P/E) Ratio
A common stock's last closing market price per share divided by the latest
reported 12-month earnings per share. This ratio shows you how many
times the actual or anticipated annual earnings a stock is trading
at.
Principal trade
A trade when an investment dealer is either buying from, or selling to
its client.
Priority
If there are several orders competing for a stock at the same price,
a priority determines when one of these orders will be filled before
any other at this price. Priority is based on the time at which the
order is received into the system.
Private placement
The private offering of a security to a small group of buyers. Resale
of the security is limited. See best efforts and bought deal underwriting.
Profit
What is left over for the owners of a business after all expenses have
been deducted from revenues. Gross profit is the profit before corporate
income taxes. Net profit is the final profit of the business after
taxes have been paid.
Prospectus
A legal document describing securities being offered for sale to the
public. It must be prepared in accordance with provincial securities
commission regulations. Prospectus documents usually disclose pertinent
information concerning the company's operations, securities, management
and purpose of the offering.
Public float
The number of issued and outstanding shares of a company, excluding shares
held by persons who, individually or in conjunction with other persons,
hold 20% or more of the company's voting securities.
Push-out
A push-out occurs during a stock split when new shares are forwarded
to the registered holders of old share certificates, without the holders
having to surrender the old shares. Both the old and new shares have
equal value.
Put option
A put option is a contract that gives the holder the right to sell a
specified number of shares at a stated price within a fixed time period.
Put options are purchased by those who think a stock may decline in
price.

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Q
Quoted market value (QMV)
The applicable listed securities of the issuer that are issued and outstanding
multiplied by the closing price of such securities on the exchange
which they are listed as at the most recent market close.

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R
Rally
A brisk rise in the general price level of the market or price of a stock.
Record date
The date when a shareholder must own shares to receive a dividend or
right.
Registered traders
A trader employed by a securities firm who is required to maintain reasonable
liquidity in securities markets by making firm bids or offers for one
or more designated securities up to a specified minimum guaranteed
fill.
Revenue
The total amount of funds generated by a business.
Reverse takeover (RTO)
A method of listing on a stock exchange when a private company acquires
or takes over the shares of a listed company.
Rights
A temporary privilege that lets shareholders purchase additional shares
directly from the company at a stated price. The price is usually less
than the market price of the common shares on the day the rights are
issued. The rights are only valid within a given time period.
Risk
The future chance or probability of loss.

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S
S&P/TSX Venture Composite
Index
Formally known as the S&P/CDNX Composite Index, it provides a benchmark
used to measure the price performance of the Canadian venture capital
equity market.
S&P/TSX Composite Index
A benchmark used to measure the price performance of the broad Canadian
equity market.
Seat
The traditional term for membership on a stock exchange. An investment
dealer or brokerage buys a seat on the exchange and one employee is
designated as the seat holder. As the Toronto Stock Exchange is now
a publicly held company, there are no longer seats on this exchange.
Securities
Transferable certificates of ownership of investment products such as
notes, bonds, stocks, futures contracts and options.
Securities commission
Each province has a securities commission or administrator that oversees
the provincial securities act. This act is a set of laws and regulations
that set down the rules under which securities may be issued or traded
in that province.
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC)
The federal regulatory body for interstate securities transactions in
the United States.
Securities Industry Association
(SIA)
The trade association representing more than 600 securities firms throughout
Canada and the United States. Members include banks, brokers, dealers
and mutual fund companies.
SEDAR*
The System for Electronic Document Analysis Retrieval. SEDAR is an electronic
filing system that allows listed companies to file prospectuses and
continuous disclosure documents. The Canadian Securities Administrators,
Canadian Depository for Securities Limited and the filing community
developed it, with co-operation from legal firms and stock exchanges.
*SEDAR is a trademark of the
Canadian Securities Administrators.
Seed stock
The shares or stock sold by a company to provide start-up capital before
carrying out an initial public offering (IPO).
Self-regulatory organization
An organization recognized by securities administrators as having powers
to establish and enforce industry regulations to protect investors
and to maintain fair, equitable and ethical practices in the security
industry. Examples include the Ontario Securities Commission and the
Investment Dealers Association.
Settlement
The process that follows a transaction when the seller delivers the security
to the buyer and the buyer pays the seller for the security.
Settlement date
The date when a securities buyer must pay for a purchase or a seller
must deliver the securities sold. Settlement must be made on or before
the third business day following the transaction date in most cases.
Settlement price
The price used to determine the daily net gains or losses in the value
of an open futures or options contract.
Share certificate
A paper certificate that represents the number of shares an investor
owns.
Shares in escrow
The number of issued shares that are currently subject to escrow restrictions.
Escrow shares are issued non-tradable stock held separately from free-trading
shares until certain conditions are met.
Short selling
The sale of securities that the seller does not own. This is a speculative
practice done when the seller believes a stock's price is going to
fall and the seller will be able to cover the sale by buying the security
back at a lower price. The profit is the difference between the initial
selling price and the subsequent purchase price. It is illegal for
a seller not to declare a short sale when placing the order.
Special terms
Orders which must trade under special conditions. For example, a cash
order will be settled sooner than the usual three-day settlement period.
Speculator
Someone prepared to accept calculated risks in the marketplace for attractive
potential returns.
Split
A division of a company's outstanding shares into a larger number of
shares. Each outstanding share entitles its owner to a pre-determined
number of new shares.
Spread
The difference between the bid and the ask prices of a stock.
Stock index futures
Futures contracts which have a stock index as the underlying interest.
Stock price index
A statistical measure of the state of the stock market, based on the
performance of certain stocks. Examples include the S&P/TSX Composite
Index and the S&P/TSX Venture Composite Index.
Stock symbol
A one to three-character root symbol that represents a company listed
on the exchange. This symbol is uniform throughout Canada.
Street certificate
These are certificates registered in the name of a securities firm rather
than the owner of the security. This makes the certificate easily transferable
to a new owner.
Strike price
The price the owner of an option can purchase or sell the underlying
security. The purchases and sales are also known as calls and puts.

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T
Thin market
A market that occurs when there are comparatively few bids to buy or
offers to sell, or both. The phrase may apply to a single security
or to the entire stock market. In a thin market, price fluctuations
between transactions are usually larger than when the market is liquid.
A thin market in a particular stock may reflect lack of interest in
that issue, or a limited supply of the stock.
Tick
Slang used for minimum spread. Depending on the stock price it could
be a half-cent, one cent or five cents.
Ticker tape
Each time a stock is bought and sold, it is displayed on an electronic
ticker tape. It is a record of current trading activity on an exchange.
Ticket fee
The administrative fee charged for each trade.
Time value
The difference between an option's premium and its intrinsic value.
Timely disclosure policy
This policy requires all listed companies to publicly disclose material
information in a timely manner.
Total number of shares
The total number of issued and outstanding shares for the security.
Transaction date
The date when the purchase or sale of a security takes place.
Trading halt
A trading halt is imposed by the exchange, usually due to the dissemination
of news that might impact a stock's price.
Trading symbol
The symbol, usually one to three letters, which is shorthand for the
names of listed stocks. Also known as stock symbol.
Transfer agent
A trust company appointed by a listed company to keep a record of the
names, addresses and number of shares held by its shareholders. Frequently,
the transfer agent also distributes dividend cheques to the company's
shareholders.

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U
Underlying interest
The specific security, commodity, index or financial instrument in which
an option or futures contract is traded.
Underwriting
The purchase for resale of a new issue of securities by an investment
dealer or group of dealers who are also known as underwriters. The
formal agreements for these transactions are called underwriting agreements.
Unlisted
A security not listed on a stock exchange, but traded on the Over-the-Counter
market.
Uptick
A stock is said to be on an uptick when the last trade occurred at a
higher price than the one before it.

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V
Venture capital
Money raised by companies to finance new ventures.
Venture company
A general term referring to a company in the early stages of development.
Volatility
A statistical measure of changes in price over a period of time.
Volume
Volume is the number of shares traded during a specified time period,
i.e., day, week or month.

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W
Warrant
A certificate that gives the holder the right to buy the underlying security
at a set price for a specified time directly from the company.
World Federation of Exchanges
(WFE)
The World Federation of Exchanges (WFE) is a global trade association
for the exchange industry. The membership is comprised of 56 regulated
exchanges from all regions of the world. Together, these exchanges account
for over 97% of world stock market capitalization, and most of its exchange-traded
futures, options, listed investment funds, and bonds.
Writer
The seller of an option. The writer has an obligation associated with
the contract to either purchase or sell a specified number of shares
at the strike price on or before expiry.

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Y
Yield
This is the measure of the return on an investment and is shown as a
percentage. A stock yield is calculated by dividing the annual dividend
by the stock's current market price. For example, a stock selling at
$50 and with an annual dividend of $5 per share yields 10%. A bond
yield is a more complicated calculation, involving annual interest
payments, plus amortizing the difference between its current market
price and par value over the life of the bond.

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Z |
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