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- Rally
- An upward movement of prices. Opposite of recovery. Related: Recovery
- Range
- The high and low prices, or high and low bids and offers recorded during a
specified time.
- Rate anticipation swaps
- An exchange of bonds in a portfolio for new bonds that will achieve the
target portfolio duration, based on the investor's assumptions about future
changes in interest rates.
- Reaction
- A decline in prices following an advance. Opposite of rally. Related: Rally
- Reference rate
- A benchmark 'interest rate (such as LMOR), used to specify conditions of
an interest rate swap or an interest rate agreement.
- Refunded bond
- Also called a prerefunded bond, one that originally may have been issued
as a general obligation or revenue bond but that is now secured by an
"escrow fund" consisting entirely of direct U.S. government
obligations that are sufficient for paying the bondholders.
- Refunding
- The redemption of a bond with proceeds received from issuing lower-cost
debt obligations ranking equal to or superior to the debt to he redeemed.
- Registered representative
- A person registered with the CFTC who is employed by, and soliciting
business for, a commission house or futures commission merchant. Related:
CFTC, Futures commission merchant
- Regression analysis
- A statistical technique that can be used to estimate relationships between
variables.
- Regulatory pricing risk
- Risk that arises when regulators restrict the premium rates that insurance
companies can charge.
- egulatory surplus
- The surplus as measured using regulatory accounting principles (RAP) which
may allow the non-market valuation of assets or liabilities and which may be
materially different from economic surplus.
- Reinvestment risk
- The risk that proceeds received in the future will have to be reinvested
at a lower potential interest rate.
- Relative strength
- Also called price momentum or price persistence, the ratio of the price of
a stock to some price index. Changes in the ratio can be interpreted as
uptrends or downtrends relative to the price index.
- Relative yield spread
- The ratio of the yield spread to the yield level.
- Rembrandt market
- The foreign market in the Netherlands.
- Replicating portfolio
- A portfolio constructed to match an index or benchmark.
- Reproducible assets
- A tangible asset with physical properties that can be reproduced, such as
a building or machinery.
- Repurchase agreement
- An agreement with a commitment by the seller to buy a security back from
the purchaser at a specified price at a designated future date. Also called
a repo, it represents a collateralized short-term loan, where the collateral
may be a Treasury security, money market instrument, federal agency
security, or mort- gage-backed security.
- Required reserves
- The dollar amounts based on reserve ratios that banks are required to keep
on deposit at a Federal Reserve Bank.
- Required yield
- Generally referring to bonds, the yield required by the marketplace to
match available returns for financial instruments with comparable risk.
- Reserve
- An accounting entry that properly reflects the contingent liabilities of
an insurance company.
- Reserve ratios
- Specified percentages of deposits, established by the Federal Reserve
Board, that banks must keep in a non-interest-bearing account at one of the
twelve Federal Reserve Banks.
- Reset frequency in an interest rate swap
- The frequency with which the floating rate changes.
- Residual claim
- Related: Equity claim
- Residual risk
- Related: Unsystematic risk
- Retail investors Individual investors.
- Institutional investors
- Retention rate
- The percentage of present earnings held back or retained by a corporation.
- Return
- The change in the value of a portfolio over an evaluation period,
including any distributions made from the portfolio during that period.
- Return on stockholders' equity
- The ratio of earnings to stockholders' equity.
- Return on total assets
- The ratio of earnings available to common stock holders to total assets.
- Return-to-maturity expectations interpretation
- A variant of pure expectations theory which suggests that the return that
an investor will realize by rolling over short-term bonds to some investment
horizon will be the same as holding a zero-coupon bond with a maturity that
is the same as that investment horizon.
- Revenue bond
- A bond issued by a municipality to finance either a project or an
enterprise where the issuer pledges to the bondholders the revenues
generated by the operating projects financed, for instance, hospital revenue
bonds and sewer revenue bonds.
- Revenue fund
- A fund accounting for all revenues from an enterprise financed by a
municipal revenue bond.
- Rings
- Trading arenas located on the floor of an exchange in which traders
execute orders. Sometimes called a pit. Related: Pit
- Risk averse
- A risk-averse investor is one who when faced with two investments with the
same expected return but two different risks will prefer the one with the
lower risk.
- Risk-free or riskless asset
- An asset whose future return is known today with certainty. The risk free
asset is commonly defined as short-term obligations of the U.S. government.
- Risk indexes
- Categories of risk used to calculate fundamental beta, including (1)
market variability, (2) earnings variability, (3) low valuation and
unsuccess, (4) immaturity and smallness, (5) growth orientation, and (6)
financial risk.
- Risk premium
- The reward for holding the risky market portfolio rather than the risk-
free asset. The spread between Treasury and non-Treasury bonds of comparable
maturity.
- Risk premium approach
- The most common approach for tactical asset allocation to determine the
relative valuation of asset classes based on expected returns.
- Risky asset
- An asset whose future return is uncertain.
- Round lot
- A trading order typically of 100 shares of a stock or some multiple of
100. Related: Odd lot
- Round-trip transactions costs
- Costs of completing a transaction, including commissions, market impact
costs, and taxes.
- Round-turn
- Procedure by which the long or short position of an individual is offset
by an opposite transaction or by accepting or making delivery of the actual
financial instrument or physical commodity.
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