1
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Restricted funds
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These are funds used by an
organization that are restricted or earmarked by a donor for a specific
purpose, which can be extremely specific or quite broad, eg., endowment or
pensions investment; research (in the case of donations to a charity or
research organization); or a particular project with agreed terms of
reference and outputs such as to meet the criteria or terms of the donation
or award or grant. The source of restricted funds can be from government,
foundations and trusts, grant-awarding bodies, philanthropic organizations,
private donations, bequests from wills, etc. The practical implication is
that restricted funds are ring-fenced and must not be used for any other than
their designated purpose, which may also entail specific reporting and
timescales, with which the organization using the funds must comply. A
glaring example of misuse of restricted funds would be when Maxwell spent
Mirror Group pension funds on Mirror Group development.
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2
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T/T (telegraphic
transfer)
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International banking payment
method: a telegraphic transfer payment, commonly used/required for
import/export trade, between a bank and an overseas party enabling transfer
of local or foreign currency by telegraph, cable or telex. Also called a
cable transfer. The terminology dates from times when such communications
were literally 'wired' - before wireless communications technology.
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3
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Advance-Decline
Ratio
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A ratio that technical analysts
use to assess market breadth by two of its indicators: Advances – increases
in trading volume – and declines – decreases in trading volume. Essentially,
it is the number of stocks that rose divided by the number of stocks that
fell during a given time period. An increasing ratio is considered very
bullish, especially if the rise is associated with increasing volume; a
falling ratio is bearish.
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4
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Market Breadth
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A technique used in technical
analysis that attempts to gauge the direction of the overall market by
analyzing the number of companies advancing relative to the number declining.
Positive market breadth occurs when more companies are moving higher than are
moving lower, and it is used to suggest that the bulls are in control of the
momentum. Conversely, a disproportional number of declining securities is
used to confirm bearish momentum.
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5
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Third Market
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A market for trading listed securities that does not occur on the trading
floor and often involves orders big enough to disrupt trading. The two
parties to the trade negotiate the price between themselves, often
facilitated through a third market broker. The third market consists of a
number of firms that trade large blocks of listed stock for institutions
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6
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Bellwether Stocks
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Key stocks that may be indicators of the economy’s direction (i.e.
whether it is headed into a bear or bull market). A rally in these stocks,
which are generally blue-chip stocks, may indicate an end to a bear market,
because it shows that institutional investors are ready to re-invest.
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