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Investment Terms

by Africa Business Radio

An audio glossary of investment terms for young people and intending investors.
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Episodes

Investment Term for the Day - Economies of Scale

1m · Published 08 Apr 10:48
Economies of scale are cost advantages reaped by companies when production becomes efficient. Companies can achieve economies of scale by increasing production and lowering costs. This happens because costs are spread over a larger number of goods. Costs can be both fixed and variable.
The business size generally matters when it comes to economies of scale. The larger the business, the more the cost savings. Economies of scale can be both internal and external. Internal economies of scale are based on management decisions, while external ones have to do with outside factors. Internal functions include accounting, information technology, and marketing, which are also considered operational efficiencies and synergies.
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Investment term for the Day - Attorney-in-Fact 

1m · Published 02 Apr 09:44
An attorney-in-fact, also called an agent, is a person who is authorized to act on behalf of another person, known as the principal, typically to perform business or other official transactions.
The principal usually designates someone as their attorney-in-fact by assigning them power of attorney, although a court may choose to assign it if the person being represented is incapacitated. The rules regulating power of attorney vary from state to state.
An attorney-in-fact is not necessarily a lawyer. Power of attorney may also be granted to more than one person.
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Investment Term for the Day - Bank Bill Swap Rate 

1m · Published 25 Mar 12:42
The Bank Bill Swap Rate, or Bank Bill Swap Reference Rate, is a short-term interest rate used as a benchmark for the pricing of Australian dollar derivatives and securities—most notably, floating rate bonds.
The BBSW is an independent reference rate that's used for pricing securities. Fixed-income investors use BBSW since it's the benchmark to price floating-rate bonds and other securities.
There is a risk premium added to the BBSW to compensate for the risk of the securities, as compared with the risk-free rate, which is typically based on government bonds.
The BBSW is calculated and published by the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX), which maintains this rate. The bank bill swap rate is Australia's equivalent of the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) and is used as a reference rate in much the same way on an institutional level.
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Investment Term for the Day - Affordable Care Act

1m · Published 25 Mar 12:39
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is the comprehensive healthcare reform signed into law by then-President Barack Obama in March 2010. Formally known as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and commonly referred to as Obamacare, the law includes a list of healthcare policies intended to expand access to health insurance to millions of uninsured Americans.1
The law expanded Medicaid eligibility, created health insurance exchanges, mandated that Americans purchase or otherwise obtain health insurance, and prohibited insurance companies from denying coverage due to preexisting conditions
The ACA was designed to reform the health insurance industry and help reduce the cost of health insurance coverage for individuals who qualify. The law includes premium tax credits and cost-sharing reductions to help lower expenses for lower-income individuals and families.
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Investment Term for the Day - Kiting

1m · Published 18 Mar 12:59
Kiting is the fraudulent use of a financial instrument to obtain additional credit that is not authorized. Kiting encompasses two main types of fraud:Issuing or altering a check or bank draft, for which there are insufficient funds andMisrepresenting the value of a financial instrument to extend credit obligations or increase financialleverage.kiting typically involves passing a series of checks at two or more banking institutions, using accounts that have insufficient funds. Relying on thefloat time required for a check deposited at one bank to clear at another, the kiter typically writes a check at the first bank against an account at the other. Before that check clears, they then withdraw the funds from the second bank account and deposit the funds back into the first. The process may then be repeated in the opposite order, sometimes repeatedly. The net result is a series of fraudulent withdrawals that rely on being a step ahead of the fraudulent check on which they are based having cleared.
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Investment Term for the Day - Joint Tenants with Right of Survivorship

1m · Published 18 Mar 12:40
The term joint tenant with the right of survivorship (JTWROS) refers to a legal ownership structure involving two or more parties for any financial account or another asset. When one of the co-owners dies in a joint tenancy with the right of survivorship, then the surviving co-owner automatically owns the asset.
Each tenant has an equal right to the account's assets and is afforded survivorship rights if one of the account holder(s) dies.
A surviving member inherits the total value of the other member's share of property upon the death of that other member.
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Investment Term for the Day - J Curve

1m · Published 11 Mar 10:48
A J Curve is an economic theory which states that, under certain assumptions, a country'strade deficitwill initially worsen after thedepreciation of its currency—mainly because in the near term higher prices on imports will have a greater impact on total nominal imports than the reduced volume of imports.
This results in a characteristic letter J shape when the nominal trade balance is charted as a line graph.

Investment Term for the Day - Null Hypothesis

1m · Published 11 Mar 10:42
A null hypothesis is a type of statistical hypothesis that proposes that no statistical significance exists in a set of given observations. Hypothesis testing is used to assess the credibility of a hypothesis by using sample data. Sometimes referred to simply as the "null," it is represented as H0.
The null hypothesis, also known as the conjecture, is used in quantitative analysis to test thA null hypothesis is a type of conjecture in statistics that proposes that there is no difference between certain characteristics of a population or data-generating process.eories about markets, investing strategies, or economies to decide if an idea is true or false.

Investment Term for the Day - Hard Skills

1m · Published 19 Feb 12:08
Hard skills are technical skills required for a job. They are learned abilities acquired and enhanced through education and experience. Hard skills are important for your resume, as employers look for them when hiring. Hard skills alone don’t translate into success, as employees also need other skills, such as soft skills. Unlike soft skills, hard skills can be quantified. For example, a hard skill might be proficiency in a second language, while a soft skill could be the ability to work well on a team.

Investment Term for the Day - Gini Index

1m · Published 14 Feb 10:44
The Gini index, or Gini coefficient, measures income distribution across a population. Developed by Italian statistician Corrado Gini in 1912, it often serves as a gauge of economic inequality, measuring income distribution or, less commonly, wealth distribution among a population.
The coefficient ranges from 0 (or 0%) to 1 (or 100%), with 0 representing perfect equality and 1 representing perfect inequality. Values greater than 1 are theoretically possible due to negative income or wealth
A country in which every resident has the same income would have an income Gini coefficient of 0. Conversely, a country in which one resident earned all the income, while everyone else earned nothing, would have an income Gini coefficient of 1

Investment Terms has 304 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 11:44:41. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on November 20th 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on May 10th, 2024 21:10.

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