Economics/Glossary
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- Securitisation [r]: The conversion of a cash flow into a marketable security (usually a claim upon debt repayments) and often categorised according to the expected risk of default (examples include collateralised debt obligations and structured investment vehicles.) [e]
- Selling short [r]: Selling borrowed stock in the expectation that its price will fall, and with the intention of subsequently buying it back and returning it. [e]
- Shadow banking system [r]: a collective term often used to denote institutions other than banks that lend money. [e]
- Sharpe ratio [r]: Measure of the rate of return per unit of variability of an investment portfolio, obtained by subtracting the current risk-free interest rate from the portfolio's current rate of return and dividing the result by the standard deviation of its rate of return. [e]
- Skewness [r]: a measure of the "lobsideness" of a probability distribution. Positive skewness indicates that the tail of the distribution is more stretched on the side above the mean - indicating that there are more positive than negative deviations from the mean. [e]
- Sovereign default [r]: The failure of a government to comply with its interest payment or debt repayment obligations. [e]
- Sovereign spread [r]: the difference between the yield on a country's bond issue and the yield on a comparable bond issued by a benchmark country such as the United States or Germany. [e]
- Spread - see Yield spread
- Standard deviation [r]: A statistical measure for the fluctuation of a random variable about its mean value (the square root of the variance). [e]
- Standardised budget deficit [r]: the cyclically adjusted budget deficit, after further adjustments to exclude transitory influences. [e]
- Structured investment vehicle [r]: (SIV) a fund that borrows money - usually at LIBOR rates - by the issue of asset backed commercial paper and uses it to finance longer term loans at higher interest rates. [e]
- Supply-side measures [r]: measures taken with the purpose of increasing a country's economic efficiency, e.g. by removing barriers to competition or counter market failures. [e]
- Swap contract [r]: An agreement to exchange financial obligations between two organisations with complementary needs, for example an agreement to swap fixed interest obligations for variable interest obligations. [e]
- Systemic failure (finance) [r]: The inability of a large proportion of a country's financial institutions to perform their financial intermediary function. [e]