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| Financial Glossary |
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- BBA
- British Bankers
Association. This is the trade organisation of the banks.
- Balloon
Lease
- Balloon leases or loans are
those in which repayments are not made in a regular manner, but are made, as
funds become available, in balloons.
- Balloon
Payment
- A large sum repaid as an
irregular instalment of a loan repayment. This is similar to the 'residual
value' but normally where you, the customer, can control the amount (only down
from the 'residual value') so you can customise the control to suit your
requirements.
- Bancassurer
- A company or group offering
a range of financial services to its customers. Usually applied to banks having
subsidiary insurance companies.
- Bank
- A business that holds money
for its clients, lends money at interest and trades generally in
money.
- Bank Giro
Credit (BGC)
- A one-off cash or cheque
payment to an organisation or individual. Processing a payment made using a
Bank Giro Credit takes three working days.
- Bankers'
draft
- A guaranteed payment
delivered to your home address by registered post. If we receive the request
before 4 pm we'll send the draft to you on the same day.
- Base
Rate
- the base interest rate
determined usually by a country's central bank (such as the Bank of England)
upon which all other lending or savings interest rates are based.
- Basic State
Pension
- The standard pension which
individuals over retirement age receive from the state (subject to National
Insurance contribution conditions). The Basic State Pension is a fixed amount,
not connected to earnings.
- Bear
Market
- A market which is
experiencing a consistent fall in share prices.
- Bed
Breakfasting
- The former practice of
selling shares one day and buying them back the following day so as to
establish a realised loss (or gain) for tax purposes. The tax advantages were
removed by the Finance Act 1997.
- Beneficiary
- The person who is or will
be the ultimate recipient of a benefit. Examples could be someone named to
receive a legacy under a Will or an individual nominated to receive benefit
from a trust fund.
- Benefit
Basis
- The benefit structure of a
group insurance policy or pension arrangement. It defines the type and level of
benefits for each category of membership. For example, life assurance cover for
one category of employees might be 3 x salary and for another category of
employees it might be 4 x salary (the categories must be clearly defined groups
in terms of jobs carried out so as to ensure there is no illegal
discrimination).
- Benefits
- The monetary amounts
payable by the insurance company to a claimant, assignee, or beneficiary under
the terms of an insurance policy.
- Benefits In
kind
- Benefits other than cash,
provided to a person through their employment (for example, cars, or private
medical insurance). These benefits are usually subject to tax. Inland Revenue
rules normally allow their value to be included in the calculation of maximum
pension benefits.
- Bequest
- A sum of money or other
property available upon the donor's death.
- Bid
Offer
- Shares, units in unit
trusts and other investment vehicles are bought at one price and sold at
another. The higher price is called the 'offer price' since this is the price
at which the unit trust company or other institution offers the security for
sale. The lower price is called the 'bid price' and is the price at which the
investor can sell the security back to the institution in question.
- Bid-Offer
Spread
- the difference between the
prices at which you buy units from us and sell them back to us. The buying
(offer) price is usually higher than selling (bid) price and the difference
between them may vary within the limits of a formula laid down by the Financial
Services Act 1986. Both offer and bid prices are quoted for each of our funds
on the Daily Prices page.
- Bid
price
- The price at which you can
sell a security or a unit in a unit trust.
- Bonds
- otherwise known as
fixed-interest securities, bonds are basically IOUs which are issued by
governments, financial institutions and companies. Generally, the issuer
undertakes to pay investors a fixed rate of interest for a fixed number of
years (e.g. 7% for 5 years). The fact that the interest rate is fixed makes
bonds attractive because their return is so predictable. Bonds are traded in
open markets, in the same way as shares. (See also Gilts)
- Bonus
- 1. An amount added to a
basic figure. For instance bonus is added each year to a with-profit life
insurance policy, thus increasing the amount ultimately payable when a claim
arises. See also: Dividend. 2. These are payments that a life assurance company
adds to a 'with-profits' policy. Bonuses are usually added at the end of each
year, and there may be a final (terminal) bonus when the policy comes to the
end of its term. This normally coincides with when you have to repay the
mortgage. Bonuses aren't guaranteed and the amount awarded can change each
year. However, once a bonus is made by the life company, they can't take it
away.
- Bridging
Loan
- If a house purchase
arrangement involves the sale of one property and the purchase of another it
will normally be most convenient if the two deals are concluded simultaneously.
If this is not possible and the purchase of the second property is to be
concluded before the sale of the first is completed then additional financing
may be necessary. This is a 'bridging loan' & it bridges the gap between
the two transactions.
- Broker
- An agent who brings two
parties together, enabling them to enter into a contract to which he is not a
principal. His remuneration consists of a brokerage, which is usually
calculated as a percentage of the sum involved in the contract but may be fixed
according to a tariff. Brokers are used because they have specialized knowledge
of certain markets or to conceal the identity of a principal, in addition to
introducing buyers to sellers.
- BSA
- Building Societies'
Association. This is the trade organisation of the building
societies.
- Building
Campaign
- A drive to raise funds for
construction or renovation of buildings.
- Building
Society
- A financial institution
owned by its members (rather than by shareholders) which pays interest on
deposits and lends money on the security of property to enable members to buy
their own homes. The distinction between building societies and banks (which
have historically offered a much wider range of financial services but often at
a higher cost) is now much reduced and the main difference is often the
question of ownership.
- Buildings
insurance
- This covers the cost of
rebuilding or repairing the structure of the property. Lenders insist you have
enough buildings insurance before they give you a mortgage. With leasehold
properties, it is the freeholder's responsibility to arrange buildings
insurance, although the freeholder will usually pass on the charges to the
leaseholder.
- Buildings
and contents insurance
- This is combined insurance,
which may be cheaper than one policy for buildings insurance and another
separate policy for contents insurance.
- Bulk
Transfer
- The transfer of a group of
pension scheme members and their scheme assets from one occupational pension
scheme to another.
- Bull
Market
- A market which is
experiencing a consistent rise in share prices.
- Buy
Back
- 1) A payment made to
reinstate into SERPS a person belonging to a contracted out pension
scheme.
2) Reinstatement of life
assurance cover after a claim has been paid on critical illness under a policy
that provides cover against critical illness and death. (Normally a policy of
this type will cease on the claim being paid; the life assurance cover is then
automatically cancelled.)
- Buy
Out
- The purchase of an
insurance policy for a pension scheme member in lieu of benefits from the
scheme following the termination of pensionable service.
- Buy Out
Policy (Section 32 Policy)
- Used for the purpose of
transferring pension entitlement from an Occupational Pension Scheme to a
stand-alone policy.
Unlike a Personal Pension Plan, a Section 32 Policy
guarantees that if a transfer payment includes an element relating to the
contracting out of the State Earnings Related Pension Scheme (GMP element) then
a minimum GMP will be provided at Retirement Age. Unlike a Personal Pension
Plan, benefits in retirement from a Section 32 Policy are subject to maximum
limits based on the limits laid down in the Occupational Pension Scheme from
which the entitlement was transferred.
- Buy-to-let
- This is when you buy a
property to rent it out rather than live in.
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