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Stock Market Terminology
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ont>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. 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.
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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Net Change
The difference between the previous day’s closing price and the last traded price.
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.
New Issuer Listing
Occurs concurrently with the posting of the new issuer’s securities for trading. The preconditions for listing include the acceptance by the Exchange that all listing requirements and conditions have been satisfied. The effective listing date is the date when the listed securities open for trading.
New Issuer Listing - Application
An issuer whose application for listing was based on Exchange listing application form. These applications in themselves provide prospectus-level disclosure; however, often the listing application is accompanied by an offering document or a prospectus.
New Issuer Listing - IPO (Initial Public Offering)
An IPO (initial public offering) is an issuer’s first offering of its securities made to the public in accordance with a prospectus. The offering is often made in conjunction with an issuer’s initial application for listing on an exchange.
New Listing
A security issue that is newly added to the list of tradable security issues of an exchange. It is accompanied with a new listing date.
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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.
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