Omitted dividend
A dividend which was expected, but which was not declared, usually due to financial difficulties. also called passed dividend.
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Accredited Personal Financial Planning Specialist,
All or any part,
At call,
Accrued dividend,
Accumulated dividend,
All-risks coverage,
Action to quiet title,
As is,
Assignment to creditors,
Attorney in fact,
A shares,
Additional paid-in capital,
Bid-to-cover ratio,
Bill pass,
Back-end load,
B shares,
Combined financial statement,
Consolidated financial statement,
Call,
Call date,
Called away,
Called bond,
Call price,
Call protection,
Call risk,
Coupon pass,
Call money rate,
Cash dividend,
Cumulative dividend,
Cheapest to deliver,
Closed-end credit,
Closed-end fund,
Closed-end investment company,
C shares,
Call option,
Call ratio backspread,
Call swaption,
Close to the money,
Covered call,
Class A Shares,
Class B Shares,
Close a position,
Curbs in,
Deposit in transit,
Due date,
Do Not Reduce,
Declare,
Dividend clawback,
Dividend clientele,
Dividend discount model,
Dividend in arrears,
Dividend payout ratio,
Dividend rate,
Dividend Reinvestment Plan,
Dividend requirement,
Dividend rollover plan,
Due diligence,
De-escalation clause,
De facto,
Doing business as,
Due process,
Debtor in possession,
Debtor-in-possession financing,
Due-on-sale clause,
Deep in the money,
Dow dividend theory,
Due bill,
Escrowed to maturity,
Ex-legal,
E-mini,
Ex-pit transaction,
Ex-all,
Expected return,
Ex-warrants,
Ex-rights,
Ex-rights date,
Financial Accounting Standards Board,
Financial asset,
Financial capital,
Financial statement,
First In First Out,
Financial institution,
Financial instrument,
First call date,
Flight to quality,
Federal Call,
Financial analyst,
Front-ending an order,
Forward P/E,
Fed pass,
Financial futures,
Front-end load,
Form S-1,
Financial risk,
Financial advisor,
Federal ID Number,
FIN,
Ginnie Mae pass-through,
Gather in the stops,
House call,
Holder in due course,
In escrow,
In-house,
Indicated dividend,
In line,
In intestacy,
In play,
In-process research and development,
I/O strip,
In-service withdrawal,
In and out,
In sympathy,
In the tank,
Last In First Out,
Lending at a rate,
London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange,
Loan-to-cost,
Loan-to-value,
Lock-in,
Locked in,
Level I quotes,
Mortgage pass-through security,
Maintenance call,
Make a market,
Margin call,
Market if touched order,
Mark-to-market,
Marginal propensity to consume,
Modified pass-through,
Money at call,
Non-financial asset,
No limit order,
No quote,
No-Fault,
No-Action Letter,
No-lien affidavit,
No-load,
Naked call,
No-load stock,
No book,
Omitted dividend,
Optional dividend,
Open-end credit,
Open-end mortgage,
Open-end fund,
Open-end management company,
Open-end lease,
Pass-through,
Pass-through coupon rate,
Payment-in-kind security,
Price Value of a Basis Point,
Private sector pass-through,
Provisional call feature,
Participating dividend,
P&L,
Peace dividend,
Past-due balance method,
Paid-in capital,
Paid-in surplus,
Private Investment in Public Equity,
Patronage dividend,
Put/call ratio,
Regulation D,
Regulation T,
Regulation U,
Red herring,
Regulation A,
Right to Know,
SG&A,
S&L,
Special dividend,
Stock dividend,
Second-to-die insurance,
Severally but not jointly,
S Corporation,
Subchapter S Corporation,
Schedule C,
Seek a market,
S&P phenomenon,
T-Bill,
Term to maturity,
Take a position,
Trailing P/E,
TED spread,
Truth in Lending,
Take a bath,
U.S. Government Agency Security,
U.S. Savings Bond,
U.S. Treasury,
U.S. Treasury Bill,
U.S. Treasury Bond,
U.S. Treasury Note,
U.S. Treasury Securities,
Unpaid dividend,
Uncovered call,
W-2 Form,
W formation,
When, as, and if issued,
X or XD,
Year-To-Date,
Yield to call,
Yield to maturity,
Yield to worst,
Y shares