| SAYE |
|
Save As You
Earn. Employer run schemes for employees to buy shares
in the company. |
| scaling down |
- |
When a new issue is oversubscribed,
the procedure whereby applicants receive a proportion of the
number of shares for which they applied. |
| scrip dividends |
- |
Scrips and enhanced scrip
dividends - In this instance the company will announce that
shares can be offered in lieu of a cash dividend. |
| scrip issue
|
|
This is where
investors in a company are given shares free of charge by the
company as a 'bonus'. The result is to increase the number of
shares in issue. |
| SEATS |
- |
Stock Exchange Automated
Trading Services. Allows sales and purchases to be matched
electronically. |
| securities
|
|
The general name given to stocks and shares of all types. |
| securities house |
- |
General term
for a bank/financial institution that conducts securities investment
business. |
| sector |
- |
Investment funds are grouped into
a variety of sectors reflecting their investment strategy and
objectives. E.g. Global Growth, UK Equity Income and Specialist.
Dividing funds into sectors makes it easier to make comparisons
between similar funds. |
| sector average |
- |
Shows the average of all funds within
the same sector. |
| sector ranking |
- |
Shows the position of a fund relative
to equivalent funds in the same sector. |
| SEDOL |
- |
The identification number for investments.
SEDOL stands for Stock Exchange Daily Official List. |
| self
invested personal pension (SIPP) |
|
A SIPP is a form of personal pension giving the holder control
over how the fund is invested. |
| SETS |
- |
Stock Exchange
Electronic Trading System. Order driven electronic trading
system employed to deal in the FTSE 100 and ex FTSE 100 equities. |
| Settlement
date |
|
The date that any monies outstanding for deals placed needs
to be paid by. |
| Share certificates
|
|
See 'certificate'. |
| Share exchange |
- |
Facility offered by ISA
managers whereby they sell your shares and invest the proceeds
in an ISA. |
| share option
|
|
The right
(but not the obligation) to buy shares at a certain price within
a given time frame. |
| shares |
|
Companies
divide their capital into equal units called shares. Buying
the shares brings rights - a stake in the business- and the
risk of losing your investment. |
| short |
|
A short position
is when someone sells a warrant or the underlying asset. Contrasts
with Long position. |
| short position |
|
Selling shares
that are not owned by the individual in hope of being able to
buy them back at a cheaper rate. |
| short termism |
- |
Allegation made against
fund managers that they expect prices of shares in which they
have invested to rise quickly and are not willing to exert influence
on management to improve corporate performance |
| six month performance indicators
|
- |
How an investment has
performed in the last 6 months. |
| specialist sector |
- |
Specific investment type.
Identifies industry sector of specific investment focus, for
example Government bonds, commodity shares, smaller companies,
index tracking and convertible bonds. |
| spread |
|
The difference
between the Bid and the Offer Price. |
| stag |
- |
Someone who applies for
a new issue of shares intending selling them (at a profit) as
soon as secondary market dealings start. |
| stamp
duty/Stamp Duty Reserve Tax (SDRT) |
|
These
are the UK government taxes, charged on the purchases of shares. |
| Stochastics |
- |
The stochastic oscillator is a momentum indicator used in technical analysis, introduced by George Lane in the 1950s, to compare the closing price of a commodity to its price range over a given time span. The idea behind this indicator is that prices tend to close near their past highs in bull markets, and near their lows in bear markets. Transaction signals can be spotted when the stochastic oscillator crosses its moving average. |
| stocks |
|
Generally
used as another word for equities. Technically, this more
accurately refers to fixed interest securities. |
| Stocks and Shares ISA |
- |
One of the two main types of Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs) which allow tax efficient investment. |
| stock
settlement |
|
The
warrant holder receives the underlying if the warrant can be
exercised profitably at expiry. |
| stock
split |
|
The
division of a company's outstanding common shares into a larger
number of common shares. A three-for-one split by a company
with one million shares outstanding would result in three million
shares outstanding. |
| stockbroker |
|
The agent
that buys and sells shares on your behalf and earns commission
on the value of the transaction. |
| stop order |
|
An order
to buy/sell shares when the share price rises to or above/falls
to or below a specified stop price. When buying, a Stop order
is used to make an investment but only when an upward trend
in the share price has been established. When selling, a Stop
order is used as protection from a sudden fall in the share
price or lock-in profits already made. |
| stop order (to sell) |
- |
Also known as a Stop
Loss order. An order to sell shares when the share
price falls to or below a specified stop price. Used to cap
the amount you are prepared to lose on a holding. |
| stop price |
- |
The price at which a
Stop order is triggered. For purchases the stop price acts as
a minimum price you will pay if an investment is made and for
sales the stop price acts as the maximum price you will receive
if a holding is sold. |
| strike price
|
|
The price
at which the investor may buy or sell the underlying during
(if American style) or at the end (if European style) of the
expiry period. Also referred to as 'expiry price' and 'exercise
price'. It is known when the warrant is issued. |
| striking
price |
|
The
price at which the underlying security can be bought or sold. |

|