Numbers dressed up in fancy suits pretending to be words.
Tradeable financial instruments like stocks and bonds, given a name that implies safety despite being approximately as secure as a sandcastle at high tide. The irony of calling them securities when they can lose 50% of their value overnight is Wall Street's longest-running joke.
Borrowing a stock, selling it, and hoping to buy it back cheaper, which is basically betting against a company's success while profiting from their misery. It's the financial equivalent of rooting for the villain, and occasionally, the villagers fight back with meme stocks.
A combination of financial instruments engineered to replicate the risk/return profile of another investment without actually owning it. It's like creating a financial doppelgänger using derivatives, which surely can't go wrong.
A simulation that models how financial institutions would perform under adverse economic scenarios, like asking 'what if everything goes wrong at once?' The results are somehow always better than reality when crises actually hit.
A separate legal entity created for a specific financial purpose, often to isolate risk or achieve off-balance-sheet treatment. It's a corporate subsidiary with one job, usually something the parent company wants plausible deniability about.
Financial intermediation that happens outside traditional regulated banks, including hedge funds, money market funds, and other entities that act like banks without pesky regulations. It's called 'shadow' because regulators prefer not to see what's happening there.
A tiny slice of corporate ownership that lets you pretend you're a business mogul while actually just gambling on quarterly earnings reports. When it goes up, you're a financial genius; when it drops, the market is 'irrational.' Comes with the bonus feature of limited liability, meaning you can't lose more than you invested (small consolation when you've invested everything).
The readjustment of an asset's value for tax purposes when inherited, eliminating capital gains tax on appreciation that occurred during the deceased's lifetime. It's the tax code's way of saying 'fresh start' while making estate planners very wealthy.
The financial alchemy of bundling loans or receivables together and selling them as securities to investors, because apparently individual mortgages aren't exciting enough. It's how banks turn illiquid assets into tradeable products, which worked brilliantly until 2008 when everyone realized some of those bundles were basically garbage wrapped in AAA ratings. Still practiced today, but with slightly more supervision.
In finance, debt or claims that get paid last in the hierarchy of bankruptcy proceedings—basically the financial equivalent of standing at the back of the line. Subordinated debt holders only get paid after senior creditors are satisfied, making it riskier but typically offering higher returns. It's the 'you'll get yours if there's anything left' category of obligations.
Forcing distributors to buy more inventory than they can sell to inflate current sales figures, essentially borrowing from future sales to make today look better. It's corporate kicking-the-can-down-the-road at its finest.
Government money injected into the economy during crises, based on the economic theory that the best way to fix problems is to print cash and hope for the best. It's designed to stimulate spending and growth, though recipients often prefer to save it or pay down debt, completely missing the point. Politicians love stimulus packages because they get to look generous with other people's money while economists argue about whether it actually works.
Breaking down financial results by business unit, geography, or product line to show which parts of the company are actually making money. It's where corporate winners and losers get exposed despite management's attempts at averaging.
In finance and accounting, a formal document summarizing financial transactions, positions, or activity over a specific period. Whether it's your bank statement showing where your paycheck disappeared to or a company's financial statement proving they're actually profitable, it's numbers arranged to tell a story. Reading these carefully is the difference between financial awareness and unpleasant surprises.
Modeling how a portfolio or institution would perform under adverse scenarios like market crashes or economic meltdowns. Like a financial fire drill, except the fire is hypothetical and the panic is very real.
A preliminary month-end financial closing process that produces rough numbers quickly, allowing management to see how the month went before accountants spend weeks perfecting every accrual. It's the financial equivalent of a rough draft.
Money already spent that cannot be recovered and therefore should not factor into future decisions, though humans are psychologically terrible at ignoring it. Your brain keeps asking 'but what about the money we already spent?' and economics keeps answering 'it's gone, move on.'
The practice of manipulating earnings to reduce volatility and create the appearance of steady, predictable growth, because investors apparently can't handle reality. It's the financial equivalent of Instagram filters for your P&L.
The ability to meet long-term obligations and survive beyond next quarter—unlike liquidity, which only cares about immediate bills. A company can be liquid but insolvent (cash now, doomed later) or illiquid but solvent (asset-rich, cash-poor).
A polite financial euphemism for 'risky as hell' that describes loans given to borrowers with sketchy credit histories at interest rates that would make a loan shark blush. These loans were so responsible they nearly collapsed the global economy in 2008. Now used as both a technical term and a cautionary tale.
The financial alchemy of bundling loans or other assets into securities that can be sold to investors, because why hold boring old mortgages when you can slice, dice, and trade them? This process converts illiquid assets into tradable securities, spreading risk around like a game of hot potato—which worked great until 2008 taught us what happens when the music stops. Banks love it because it gets debt off their books; investors tolerate it for the yields.
Paying employees with equity instead of cash, diluting shareholders while claiming the expense is somehow not real money. Tech companies love it because it preserves cash while making EBITDA look artificially high.
In finance, the blessed state of actually being able to pay your debts when they come due—a concept that feels increasingly mythical. Your assets exceed your liabilities, you can sleep at night, and creditors aren't calling. In chemistry, it's the liquid that dissolves other substances, which is coincidentally what financial insolvency does to your peace of mind.
A bank account that automatically transfers excess funds to higher-yielding investments overnight, then sweeps them back for daily operations. Like having a very diligent financial butler who never sleeps.