We use this with respect to options trades in determining if we like an option enough to buy it or if we are in an option, if we want to stay in it. This calculation tells you how far the underlying stock must move before the option will double in value. We prefer a 7%-10% value, less if we can get it. This does not mean we will not buy an option, but it does give us insight as to how long we will hold it. Percent to double is a Smith Barney proprietary calculation.
Archives
Portfolio
Holdings of securities by an individual or institution. A portfolio may include various types of securities representing different companies and industry sectors.
Post-Offering Shares
The number of shares that will be outstanding after an IPO.
One-Sided Market
A market that has only buy orders or only sell orders booked for a particular security.
Ontario Securities Commission
The government agency that administers the Securities Act (Ontario) and the Commodity Futures Act (Ontario) and regulates securities and listed futures contract transactions in Ontario.
Open
This is the price at which a security opens for the trading day. A stock can open at the previous closing price, gap up or gap down.
Open End Mutual Fund
Investors buy shares directly from fund, and sell shares directly to fund. Share price is Net Asset Value (NAV).
Open Order
An order that remains in the system for more than a day. See Good-Till-Cancelled or Good-Till-Date.
Open-End Investment Fund
An investment fund that continuously offers its securities to investors and stands ready to redeem its securities at all times. Transactions in shares/units of mutual funds are based on their net asset value (NAV), determined at the close of each business day. Examples of an open-end fund are traditional mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
Opening
The market opens at 9:30 a.m. ET each business day.