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| Financial Glossary |
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| Z - ABI
- Association
of British Insurers
- AER
- stands
for Annual Equivalent Rate and usually specifies the interest paid from
current, deposit or savings accounts. This new term replaces CAR (Compound Annual
Rate) which denoted much the same thing.
- AVCs
- stands for Additional Voluntary
Contributions. Contributions made by a member of an Occupational Pension Scheme,
to that scheme, over and above the normal contribution level, in order to purchase
additional retirement benefits.
- Accelerated
Accrual (Uplifted 60ths)
- For members
of an Approved Occupational Pension Scheme who have continuous rights prior to
17 March 1987, the Pension Schemes Office can permit benefits to accrue (grow)
at a rate which exceeds the normal rate of one sixtieth of Final Salary (Final
Remuneration) for each year of service.
- Acceptance
letter
- An offer of life assurance,
setting out the terms.
- Access
To Medical Records Act 1988
- The terms
of this Act require an insurance company to obtain prior written consent from
an individual before approaching any medical practitioner for a medical report
pertaining to them. The individual has certain other rights including the right
(subject to some restrictions) to see any report before it is submitted by the
doctor.
- Accidental
Death Benefit
- A provision that may
be added to a life insurance policy which provides payment of an additional benefit
in the case of death resulting from an accident.
- Accidental
Death and Dismemberment
- Loss of life
or limbs through accident. Insurance against such eventualities is generally available.
- Accrual rate
- Rate
at which Pension benefits accrue within an Occupational Pension Scheme for each
year in service. Expressed as a fraction of Final Salary (Final Remuneration),
Eg 1/60, 1/80.
- Act
of God
- An accident or event which
happens independently of human intervention and due to natural causes such as
storm earthquake etc. which no human foresight can provide against. Suggesting
that an event was an "act of God" may be a defence in English law against a claim
for liability since it may be held that it could not have been foreseen or safeguarded
against.
- Actively
at Work
- A clause in a group insurance
policy that requires a new member or one with an increase in cover, to be at work
(or on holiday i.e. not absent due to sickness, industrial action, etc.) on the
day of joining/day of increase.
- Activities
of Daily Living
- Everyday living functions
and activities performed by individuals without assistance. These functions include
mobility, dressing, personal hygiene and eating. The inability to undertake these
activities may be used in some circumstances to define disability in insurance
contracts.
- Actuary
- A
professional trained in the technical aspects of insurance and its related fields,
particularly in the mathematics of insurance, for example, the calculation of
premiums and reserves. An actuary will use complex mathematical methods, often
with the aid of computers, to provide analysis of claims data and other statistics.
In certain circumstances insurance companies, pension schemes etc. are required
to have documents, calculations etc. certified by an actuary. In this and other
legal contexts the word means a qualified Fellow of the Institute or Faculty of
Actuaries.
- ADD
- Accidental
Death and Dismemberment
- Additional
Borrowing
- Similar to a traditional
current account overdraft. It is the extra money you can borrow on top of what
you've already borrowed. Your Additional Borrowing = Your Agreed/Total Facility
- Total Borrowing.
- Additional
Voluntary Contributions
- Contributions
made by a member of an Occupational Pension Scheme, to that scheme, over and above
the normal contribution level, in order to purchase additional retirement benefits.
- Adjuster
- See:
Loss Adjuster.
- ADLs
- Activities of daily living.
- Advance
- The
mortgage loan.
- Advance
Payment
- Pay beforehand; up front.
- Advance
Underwriting
- Describes a system
used for underwriting members of some group schemes. Once an underwritten member
is accepted for insurance at 'ordinary rates', they may increase their cover by
a predetermined percentage in any year without the need for further underwriting.
- Advice
- Where
an authorised adviser looks at your individual circumstances and advises on suitable
products for your financial needs.
- AFPC
- Advanced
Financial Planning Certificate - a professional qualification for financial advisers
obtained by examination through the Chartered Insurance Institute. Holders are
eligible for membership of the Society of Financial Advisers.
- Age Allowance
- Increased
personal allowance for Income Tax for persons aged over 65. A further increase
is available to persons over 75.
- Agent
- Someone
who acts on behalf of another. Traditionally, insurance company salesmen have
often been called agents. This has led to a certain amount of confusion since
in some situations they are acting on behalf of the client and at other times
they are acting on behalf of the insurance company: the distinction is not always
clear.
- All
Risks
- Extension of the cover provided
by household insurance to damage, theft if outside the home, etc. in respect of
individual high value items.
- Allocation
rate
- This is the percentage of your
payment that is actually invested (e.g. 75%) after initial charges have been taken
into account.
- Alpha
- Alpha
is the term used to describe the risk adjusted outperformance of an investment.
A large alpha indicates good performance relative to the market.
- Alternative Dispute
Resolution
- A means of resolving disputes
without resort to the Courts. Particularly used in relation to disputes between
pension schemes, trustees and members.
- Amount
- Amount
purchased or sold in Gift Fund Pools as a result of a contribution or miscellaneous
activity.
- AMRA
- Access
To Medical Records Act 1988.
- Analyst
- person
who studies particular stock markets or industry sectors and makes buy or sell
recommendations regarding the shares of specific companies within them. These
are arrived at through a combination of research, economic statistics and, frequently,
visits to the companies themselves. For example, in 1998 alone, Flemings' analysts
have made over 3,000 company visits around the world. (See also Fund Manager)
- Annual
Percentage Rate (APR)
- This rate takes
into account all the costs, interest charges, arrangement fees etc. Theoretically
it allows you to compare mortgages on a like for like basis. However, you need
to be careful as different lenders calculate it in different ways.
- Annual management
fee
- A charge made every year for
running your fund. It is usually a percentage of the amount you've got invested.
- Annual Report
- A
voluntary report published by a foundation or corporation describing its grant
activities. It may be a simple typed document listing the year's grants or an
elaborately detailed publication. A growing number of foundations and corporations
use annual reports to inform the community about their contributions activities,
policies, and guidelines. (This annual contributions report is not to be confused
with a corporation's annual report to stockholders.)
- Annual Volatility
- Volatility
is one measure used to assess the risk of a portfolio as it helps to describe
the likely range of returns achieved by the fund. In statistical terms it is the
standard deviation of the return distribution. Greater volatility of monthly fund
returns means that there is a wider range of likely returns in the future, or
greater uncertainty regarding the fund return. Most investors would equate this
greater uncertainty with greater risk.
- Annuitant
- The
person entitled to receive payments from an annuity contract.
- Annuity
- A
series of payments, possibly subject to increases, made at specified intervals
until a particular event occurs. Most commonly an annuity will cease after a specified
period or upon the death of the annuitant. An annuity is most commonly purchased
by the accrued value of a pension fund, in order to secure pension benefits in
retirement.
- Annuity
Certain
- A contract that provides
payments for a specified number of years, regardless of life or death of the annuitant
- Appointed representative
- This
is a salesperson, company or organisation that advises on the investment products
(endowments, pensions, unit trusts and so on) of one single life assurance company.
It can also refer to an Independent Financial Adviser who is a member of a network.
- Appropriate
Personal Pension
- A Personal Pension
Plan which can be used for the purpose of contracting out of the State Earnings
Related Pension Scheme.
- Approved
Scheme
- A pension scheme that is approved
by the Inland Revenue under the relevant legislation (the Income & Corporation
Taxes Act 1988). Members and their employers are able to obtain certain tax advantages
in respect of contributions and/or benefits. (See Exempt Approved Scheme).
- APR
- 1.
Annual Percentage Rate. This is the compounded rate used to give a standard comparison
of the amount of interest you are likely to pay on loans or outstanding credit
card balances. 2. A statutory method of calculating the Annual Percentage Rate
of charge to repay the total charge for credit over the period of the loan. 3.
Allows customers to compare like with like when comparing costs between different
lenders. 4. This is meant to be a way of comparing the cost of credit. It takes
into account most of the up-front and on-going costs involved in taking out a
mortgage. You cannot always rely on it because lenders work it out in different
ways.
- Arbitrage
- profiting
from the differences in price when the same security, currency or commodity is
traded on two or more markets.
- Arbitration
- A
means of arriving at an acceptable agreement between two disputing parties. An
independent person or body hears the arguments of both parties and makes a decision
that is then binding on all concerned. Often conducted by members of the Institute
of Arbitrators.
- Arrangement
fee
- A fee you pay to the lender
in return for a mortgage deal. This deal could be fixed, discounted or cashback.
The fees are known as the: · application fee · booking fee ·
completion fee · drawdown fee · reservation fee.
- Assets
- another
word for the investments which a unit trusts holds within its portfolio.
- Assignment
- The
transfer of one person's interest in a legal right or duty to another person or
organisation.
- Association
of British Insurers
- An association
representing some 450 insurance companies which account for over 95% of the business
transacted by UK insurance companies. Is the forum through which UK insurance
companies collectively liaise with Government Departments and other bodies. Brings
insurance companies together to set industry standards and codes of practice.
- ASU Insurance
- This
covers accident, sickness and unemployment. It provides a monthly payment if you
cannot work for an extended period due to an accident, sickness or unemployment.
- AUTIF
- the
Association of Unit Trusts and Investment Funds, which is the industry trade body
of unit trusts and investment trusts management companies.
- Average
- Apportionment
of loss on an equitable basis.
- Average
Annual Return
- Average Annual Return
is used to compare returns over different periods on a consistent basis with the
unit being years, hence per annum. Normally only returns over periods greater
than one year are annualised. The average annual return is the rate that an investor
would have earned in each year to achieve the total cumulative return over the
period.
- Aviation
Hazard
- The extra hazard of death
or injury resulting from participation in aeronautics, usually as other than a
fare-paying passenger in licensed aircraft. For insurance, this often requires
an extra premium or the exclusion of certain risks.
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