Face Value |
The nominal amount shown on coins, bank notes etc.; the nominal value of securities. |
Facility Fee |
A fee payable for a banking service - most commonly, but not exclusively, applied to lending. The bank will provide a loan facility letter which will set out all the conditions of the loan or credit made available to the customer. |
FESE |
Federation of European Securities Exchanges. |
FIBV |
World Federation of Stock Exchanges. |
Final Dividend |
The dividend paid by a company at the end of the financial year. |
Finance House |
A hire purchase and leasing finance company. |
Financial ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº Authority (FSA) |
The independent non-governmental body that replaced the Securities and Investments Board (SIB). It has been given its powers by the Financial ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº and Markets Act 2000 and regulates the financial services industry in the UK. |
Fixed Interest |
Loans issued by a company, the Government (Gilts or Gilt-Edged Securities) or a local authority, where the amount of interest to be paid each year is set on issue. Usually the date of repayment is included in the title. |
Fixed Interest Rate |
Rate which is agreed at the outset of a loan, and does not vary during the period of the loan. |
Fixed Interest Security |
A security paying a guaranteed interest rate, usually maturing in a specified period. |
Floating Interest Rate |
Rate which is based on the current market rates such as the LIBOR; varies throughout the period of the loan. |
Floating Rate Note (FRN) |
A loan stock (i.e. to be repaid at a known date) paying variable interest linked to a market rate such as the LIBOR. Also known as Floating Rate Securities. |
Flotation |
The occasion on which a company’s shares are offered on the market for the first time. |
Foreign Currency Option |
The right without obligation to buy (‘call’) or sell (‘put’) an agreed amount of currency against another at an agreed rate and within an agreed period. A premium is charged for writing the option. Foreign currency options can be traded or used to hedge against established risks. |
Forfaiting |
A method of financing international trade whereby the forfaiting house agrees to buy a Bill of Exchange from an exporter at discount. |
Forward Foreign Exchange Contracts |
A contract to pay and receive specific amounts of one currency for another at a predetermined exchange rate on a future date. |
Forward Rate Agreement (FRA) |
An agreement granting the right to borrow at a predetermined interest rate, the FRA is a binding agreement guaranteeing the interest rate for a ‘borrowing’ (as opposed to the actual right to borrow). The customer with an FRA will know how much interest he will be required to pay under the FRA on a future loan. |
Front End Fees |
A fee payable in advance of the service being supplied. |
FTSE Indices |
Figures which show the performance of the UK and the European markets over a period of time. The FTSE indices are run by FTSE International Ltd and include: FTSE 100; FTSE 250; FTSE Small Cap; FTSE 350 Yield; FTSE All-Share; FTSE Fledgling; FTSE Eurotrack 100; and FTSE Eurotrack 200. |
Fungible |
Term used to describe assets (usually securities) that can be exchanged with similar assets and are capable of being ‘loaned’. Such assets may be the subject of true Stock Lending. |
Futures |
Securities or goods bought or sold at a fixed price for future delivery. There may be no intention to take them up but to rely upon price changes in order to sell at a profit before delivery. |
Futures Contract |
A legally binding agreement on a recognised exchange, e.g. IPE, to make or take delivery of a specified instrument, at a fixed date in the future, at a price agreed upon at the time of dealing. |