Financial Jargon Buster - C
- Cancellation Clause
- A provision in an insurance contract
that permits the insurer or the insured to cancel a policy at any time before
its expiration date.
- Capacity
- The largest amount of insurance or
reinsurance available from a company. It can also refer to the largest amount
.of insurance or reinsurance available in the marketplace
- Capital
- A lump sum of money. This usually
refers to the amount you invest in a fund at the outset - e.g. your original
capital.
- Capital Campaign
- An organized drive to raise substantial
funds to finance major needs of an organization, including construction,
renovations, or endowment.
- Capital and Interest Mortgage
- Your monthly payments are partly to pay
the interest on the amount you borrowed, and partly to repay the amount you
borrowed. At the end of the mortgage, the capital and the interest is all
completely repaid. It is also known as a repayment mortgage.
- Capital Claims
- An organized drive to raise substantial
funds to finance major needs of an organization, including construction,
renovations, or endowment.
- Capital Gains Tax
- A tax on the realised value of capital
gains. Applies only to individuals (a company may be liable to Corporation Tax
on such gains).
- Capital Grant
- Grant to provide funding for buildings,
construction, or equipment, rather than program or operating
expenses.
- Capitalised Value
- Used in relation to group life policies
that provide a pension for the spouse or other dependant of a member. The
capitalised value is used for underwriting purposes and is an approximation of
the lump sum that would be required to secure the pension.
- Carpet-bagger
- A person who joins a mutual
organisation (usually a building society or an insurance company) in the hope
that the organisation may be converted to a limited company owned by
shareholders and that in this event he will realise a substantial profit by
receiving a cash amount or selling any shares allocated to him. (See also
'de-mutualisation')
- Capped rate
- 1. Like a fixed rate, but the rate is
guaranteed not to go above a certain level for a set period of time. It can,
however, move downwards. 2. An arrangement that caps your mortgage rate for a
specified period of time. On the first day of the month following expiry of the
capped rate period, the interest rate will change to the then prevailing
Standard Variable Rate.
- Cashback
- A payment (either a fixed or a
percentage of the mortgage amount) offered by some lenders as an incentive to
borrow from them. Sometimes there are redemption penalties associated with
these types of deals.
- Cash Surrender Value
- The amount of money received when a
policyholder surrenders a life insurance policy with cash value.
- CAT standards
- CAT stands for low Charges, easy Access
and fair Terms. The standards were brought in by the government as an incentive
to offer savers an even better deal, and to make it easier for you to spot the
best value ISAs.
- Caveats
- Conditions attached to an insurance
quotation.
- Cede
- To transfer all or part of a risk
written by an insurer to a reinsurer.
- CGT
- Capital Gains Tax.
- Challenge Grant
- A grant that is made on the condition
that other funding be secured, either on a matching basis or by some other
formula, usually within a specified period of time, with the objective of
encouraging expanded fundraising from additional sources.
- CHAPS (clearing house automatic payment system) payment
- An electronic transfer of money between
two bank accounts that will clear the payee's account on the same working day
provided instructions are received before 3.15 pm.
- Charges
- Companies can charge for financial
services in different ways, some more straightforward than others.
- CII
- Chartered Insurance Institute. A body
controlling professional standards (educational, ethical etc.) in the insurance
industry.
- Claim
- Notification to an insurance company
that payment of an amount is due under the terms of a policy.
- Claims Experience
- The relationship of claims to premiums
for a period. Usually expressed as a percentage or ratio.
- Claims Reserve
- Amounts set aside by an insurer to meet
costs of claims incurred but not yet settled.
- Clawback
-
- A practice whereby a pension scheme will offset an amount equivalent to the state pension against a target pension so as to arrive at the amount payable by the scheme.
- If commission is paid to an intermediary by a financial institution for the introduction of business and this does not stay in force for a certain pre-determined period a part of the commission may be repayable to the institution. This is known as 'clawback'. The practice is more prevalent among insurance companies.
- Co-insurance
- An arrangement by which a number of
insurance companies cover a particular risk.
- Collective investment
- Investments such as unit trusts and
investment trusts schemes
- Commercial Lines
- Insurance for businesses,
professionals, and commercial establishments.
- Commission
- An amount paid by a financial
institution to an intermediary for the placing of business. Normally calculated
as a percentage of the amount paid (i.e. of the premium for an insurance policy
or of the amount invested in a fund or used to purchase securities). Commission
is also payable in a number of other situations where the payment for a service
is a proportion of the value of the transaction (e.g. the provision of foreign
currency, the sale of a house, etc).
- Committed Funds
- A portion of a donor's budget that has
already been pledged for future allocation.
- Commutation
- The giving up of part or the entire
pension that would be paid at retirement in exchange for a lump sum. Applied to
any exchange of a series of payments to which someone is entitled for a lump
sum. In the case of approved pension arrangements the amount that is commutable
is strictly limited.
- Commutation Factors
- Factors used to determine the amount of
pension to be given up in exchange for a lump sum benefit.
- Community Funds
- A type of foundation formed by
broad-based community support from multiple sources: trusts, endowments,
individual contributions, private foundations, or corporate grants. A community
foundation generally makes grants only within a specified geographic area and
is governed by a board representing the community it serves. Some community
foundations offer donor-advised funds to contributors.
- Company representative
- A financial adviser who can only advise
on their own company's products.
- Compound interest
- Compound interest is interest earned on
interest and makes a huge difference to the value of long term savings. Say
you've invested £100, which is earning 10% interest each year.
Year 1, you earn 10% on £100 = £110
Year 2, instead of earning another 10% on your £100, you earn 10% on £110 = £121
Year 3, you earn 10% on £121 = £133.10
And so on, so longer you leave it, the more you benefit from compounding.
- Compulsory purchase
- An annuity you buy with the fund built
up in your personal pension scheme annuity
- Compulsory Purchase Annuity
- Some approved occupational pension
schemes produce a benefit at retirement that is expressed in cash terms rather
than pension. The cash sum produced must then be used to purchase an annuity
known as a 'Compulsory Purchase Annuity' (but see Commutation).
- Conditions
- Provisions in an insurance contract
that state the rights and duties of the insured and of the insurer.
- Confirmation
- (in Scotland) A court order confirming
the validity of a Will and the identity of Executors. The equivalent under
English law is Probate.
- Consequential Loss
- A financial loss occurring as the
result of some other loss. Also known as an indirect loss. (e.g. a shop is
destroyed by fire. The loss of the building, stock etc is a direct loss. The
loss of ongoing profit because of the inability to continue trading is a
consequential loss).
- Continuation Option
- Allows employees to continue their
group insurance coverage under certain conditions after their employment has
terminated (much less common today).
- Continuing Professional Development
- A formal procedure by which a
professional body ensures that its members keep their expertise up to date with
current developments. Applies to doctors, lawyers, accountants, financial
advisers etc.
- Contract
- A legally enforceable agreement between
two parties
- Contracted In
- This describes a member of an
occupational or personal pension scheme who is also a member of SERPS (or the
scheme itself).
- Contracted Out
- This describes a member of an
occupational or personal pension scheme who is not a member of SERPS (or the
scheme itself).
- Contributions Committee
- A corporate group organized to make
grant decisions usually with the guidance of a corporate foundation or
contributions administrator. Typical responsibilities include setting and
interpreting policy, approving an annual budget, and reviewing grant
requests.
- Convertible Term Insurance
- Term insurance which can be changed
into a permanent policy without further evidence of insurability or medical
examination.
- Conveyancing
- The legal process involved with buying
and selling of a property.
- Cooling Off Period
- A period allowed in certain
circumstances during which a person who has entered into a contract (for
example, an insurance policy or a personal loan) may cancel it without
incurring any penalty.
- Corporate Bond
- Companies issue bonds to raise money
and pay interest on the bonds. Usually bonds expire on a fixed date, when the
company repays you. You can buy and sell bonds easily (like shares). Bond
prices tend to change when interest rates change and are usually not as risky
as shares because a company will pay off all it's debts (including bonds)
before the shareholders get anything.
- Corporate Contributions
- A general term referring to charitable
contributions by a corporation. Usually used to describe cash contributions
only, but may also include other items, such as the value of loaned executives,
products, and services.
- Corporate Foundation
- A foundation that receives its income
from a profit-making company but is a legally independent entity. Usually this
type of foundation carries the name of the parent company. Corporations may
fund these foundations with a donation of permanent assets or with periodic
contributions. (Also called a company-sponsored foundation)
- Corporate Giving Programme
- (Also called a corporate contributions
program - see above.) Funding that is distributed directly by a corporation,
rather than through a foundation. Often such a program is handled by the Public
Affairs or Public Relations office.
- Corporation Tax
- A tax payable by companies on their
profits.
- Cost Adjusting Factor
- Used in relation to group insurance in
reference to rate-adjusting factors calculated by actuaries and based on claims
experience, occupation, location etc.
- Cover Note
- A temporary certificate confirming that
an insurance policy is in force. Used in motor insurance for
taxation/registration purposes and in some other contexts such as life
assurance to confirm that cover is effective on a temporary basis while further
information is being gathered.
- CPD
- Continuing Professional
Development.
- Credit Card
- A credit card gives you the power to
buy goods or services now and pay for them later. It represents an approval by
a bank or company to use their money. Credit card issuers are usually banks,
even though the card may bear another company name or logo. The name of the
issuer appears somewhere on the card.
Trade names such as VISA and MasterCard are not actually card issuers. They are termed "membership associations." Banks use them for their payment processing services, policy setting and marketing assistance. Many different banks can package their own cards and different terms of credit using the logo and services of an association membership.
- Critical Illness Policy
- A Critical Illness policy will provide
a lump sum payment to the insured should he or she be diagnosed as having one
of a number of specified illnesses, conditions or diseases.
- Custom Excise
- A government department responsible for the collection of duties on imports, VAT and other taxes including Insurance Premium Tax.
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