ITLOCUS.COM

Products & Services  |  News   |  Support     


     About  |  Contacts
WWW.ITLOCUS.COM

Art Investing

Prices
Free Services
Getting Started
Traders Chat
Forums
Glossary
Download
Site map




 Glossary   >   U   >   "Underwriter" Definition   

        Underwriter

A party that guarantees the proceeds to the firm from a security sale, thereby in effect taking ownership of the securities. Or, stated differently, a firm, usually an investment bank, that buys an issue of securities from a company and resells it to investors.

A technician trained in evaluating risks and determining rates and coverage for them. The term derives from the practice at Lloyd"s of each person willing to accept a portion of the risk writing his name under the description of the risk.

A financial institution which, in return for a fee or commission, agrees to purchase unsold shares in a new issue, if the issue is not fully subscribed.From the company"s point of view, having its new issue underwritten is a form of insurance. It means that if it has priced an issue too high and the market shuns it, the company can still be sure that it will get money from the new issue.Of course, security comes at a price. Underwriters charge a fee for the back-up they provide. If the new issue is very popular, it will pocket that fee and make a handsome profit. Occasionally, they get badly burned. New issues underwritten immediately before the 1987 stock market crash lost a lot of money.Sometimes companies do a rights issue at a deep discount to reduce the underwriting fees.

Underwriter


Glossary   

Dictionary Search (powered by Google)
Google
WWW ITLOCUS.COM GLOSSARY.ITLOCUS.COM


Translate a web page (powered by Google)
     to


Dictionary

http://paulmann-light.ru http://deregulation.ru
ITLOCUS.COM Copyright © 2004 itlocus.com. All rights reserved   
Privacy Policy   
paulmann

Paulmann

Дизайн

Каталог

Дневник

bruck

wofi

sische

bankamp

grossmann

rzb

metal-lux

lussole

Underwriter - A party that guarantees the proceeds to the firm from a security sale, thereby in effect taking ownership of the securities. Or, stated differently, a firm, usually an investment bank, that buys an issue of securities from a company and resells it to investors.

A technician trained in evaluating risks and determining rates and coverage for them. The term derives from the practice at Lloyd"s of each person willing to accept a portion of the risk writing his name under the description of the risk.

A financial institution which, in return for a fee or commission, agrees to purchase unsold shares in a new issue, if the issue is not fully subscribed.From the company"s point of view, having its new issue underwritten is a form of insurance. It means that if it has priced an issue too high and the market shuns it, the company can still be sure that it will get money from the new issue.Of course, security comes at a price. Underwriters charge a fee for the back-up they provide. If the new issue is very popular, it will pocket that fee and make a handsome profit. Occasionally, they get badly burned. New issues underwritten immediately before the 1987 stock market crash lost a lot of money.Sometimes companies do a rights issue at a deep discount to reduce the underwriting fees.


Underwriter : a party that guarantees the proceeds to the firm from a security sale, thereby in effect taking ownership of the securities. or, stated differently, a firm, usually an investment bank, that buys an issue of securities from a company and resells it to investors.

a technician trained in evaluating risks and determining rates and coverage for them. the term derives from the practice at lloyd"s of each person willing to accept a portion of the risk writing his name under the description of the risk.

a financial institution which, in return for a fee or commission, agrees to purchase unsold shares in a new issue, if the issue is not fully subscribed.from the company"s point of view, having its new issue underwritten is a form of insurance. it means that if it has priced an issue too high and the market shuns it, the company can still be sure that it will get money from the new issue.of course, security comes at a price. underwriters charge a fee for the back-up they provide. if the new issue is very popular, it will pocket that fee and make a handsome profit. occasionally, they get badly burned. new issues underwritten immediately before the 1987 stock market crash lost a lot of money.sometimes companies do a rights issue at a deep discount to reduce the underwriting fees.