Financial Jargon Buster - P
- P/E
- Price/Earnings Ratio. Calculated by
dividing the market price of a company's ordinary shares by its earnings per
share figure.
The ratio reflects the market's expectation of the future earnings of a company in relation to its current earnings; in other words, its performance potential.
- Paid Up Insurance
- Insurance on which all required
premiums have been paid.
- Paid Up Scheme
- A pension scheme where contributions
have ceased, but which has assets that are held and used by an administrator in
accordance with the scheme rules.
- Partial Disability
- A disability which is less than total
(according to the particular definition relating to the contract in question)
but still sufficient to hamper the individual in his or her occupation.
- PAYE
- Pay-As-You-Earn method of income tax
collection.
- Payment holiday
- A feature offered by some mortgages
that allow you to miss monthly payments on your mortgage. Payment holidays are
particularly useful if you have some other major expense - like a new baby or a
wedding - to cater for!
- Payout Requirement
- Private foundations are required by law
to pay out at least five percent of the fair market value of their assets each
year in grants and administrative expenses.
- Pension
- A continuing income that is usually
associated with the post-retirement period of a person's life.
- Pension Scheme
- A vehicle by which an individual can
make pension provision. This may be either collective or individual and with or
without the involvement (by means of contributions or otherwise) from the
individual's employer.
- Pension Schemes Office
- A division of the Inland Revenue which
oversees the approval of pension schemes for tax relief purposes.
- Pensionable Earnings
- The earnings on which benefits and/or
contributions for a pension scheme are calculated.
- Pensionable Service
- The period of service with an employer
that is used in calculating pension benefits from an occupational pension
scheme.
- Per Capita
- Per person, by or for each
individual
- Per Mille
- Per Thousand. The Premium Rate for some
types of group insurance is quoted per £1000 of benefit.
- Permanent Health Insurance
- Permanent Health Insurance will pay you
an income if you become ill for a long period or if you become disabled and
can't work.
- Permanent Total Disability
- Disability from which the individual is
unlikely to recover at any time in the future. Some insurance contracts may
specify that permanent is to be taken as meaning 'extending to normal
retirement date'.
- Persistency
- A term used to refer to the length of
time insurance remains continuously in force with a company.
- Personal Equity Plan (PEP)
- A Personal Equity Plan allows
individuals to enjoy the profits from stockmarket-related investment free of
income tax and capital gains tax. PEPs were introduced in 1987 but from 6 April
1999, new investment in PEPs is no longer possible. However, existing PEPs can
continue in existence and for up to five years.
- Personal Lines
- Insurance designed for individuals
rather than businesses or organisations.
- Personal Loan
- An amount of money borrowed from a bank
or other lender by an individual.
- Personal Pension Plan
- 1. A pension plan which produces income
and possibly a tax-free lump sum on retirement or death. Personal pensions
commenced in July 1988 and are designed to allow anyone who is either employed
but not a member of an occupational pension scheme or self-employed to make
provision for a pension in retirement. Personal pensions can be used to
'contract out' of the State Earnings Related Pension Scheme. Employers can
normally contribute to the personal pension of an employee. Employees who are
members of an occupational scheme cannot contribute to their own personal
pension plan. 2. Personal pensions are a way of making your own pension
provision if you are not a member of an employer's scheme. The return from a
personal pension or part of it can be used to pay off the capital sum of a
mortgage at the end of the mortgage term usually 25 years or, sometimes,
earlier. They have the benefit of being tax efficient but to find out if they
are suitable you should discuss with your financial adviser
- Philanthropic Advisor
- An individual or firm which provides
counseling and evaluative services to donors before and after grantmaking
decisions.
- PLC
- Public Limited Company. Denotes any
company which has share capital of at least a fixed amount.
- PMAR
- Private Medical Attendant's
Report.
- Polarisation
- The requirement for a financial adviser
to be either 'tied' to one financial product provider, or completely
independent. A provision of the Financial Services Act.
- Policy
- The legal document issued by the
insurance company to the policyholder, which states the terms and conditions of
the insurance, it may also be called the policy contract or the
contract.
- Policy Reserves
- The measure of the funds that a life
insurance company holds specifically for fulfilment of its policy obligations.
- Policy Term
- The period of time for which an
insurance policy provides coverage.
- Policyholder
- The person or organisation who owns an
insurance policy.
- Pooled Investment Fund
- A vehicle for bringing together the
investments of many people or organisations and using the combined funds to
obtain economies of scale and investment management skills not available to
individuals. Examples include unit trusts, investment trusts, etc.
- Portability
- All the interest rates in this range
are portable. This means that if you move home during the discounted or fixed
rate period, you can enjoy the same rate, on the amount outstanding on your
original loan, for the remainder of the discounted or fixed rate period.
Conditions apply - please ask for details.
- Pound cost averaging
- Pound cost averaging is a benefit of
making regular savings in the stock market, especially when the market is
volatile. In practice it means that you can get more for your money by
investing in smaller, regular amounts.
- Pre-existing Condition
- Any physical or mental conditions that
exist prior to the effective date of insurance coverage.
- Premium
- The single or regular periodic payment
made to an insurance company in respect of an insurance policy.
- Pre-tax Net Income
- A corporation's annual net income
before it has paid taxes. In the USA, The Internal Revenue Service currently
allows corporations to deduct charitable contributions as much as 10 percent of
their pre-tax net income.
- Private Foundation
- A foundation that receives most of its
income from, and is subject to control of, an individual or other single or
limited source. See Foundation. Also in the US, the technical IRS term for an
organisation which is tax-exempt under Section 501(c)(3) and classified as a
private foundation under the Internal Revenue Code. In the US, a private
foundation is referred to as 'having a 501(c)(3) status'.
- Private Operating Foundation
- A legal classification for an endowed
organisation which uses its income to operate a charitable activity, such as a
school or camp, rather than to make grants.
- Private Medical Attendant's Report
- A report from an individual's own
doctor ('Private Medical Attendant') which does not require a medical
examination to be carried out. Used for underwriting purposes.
- Private medical insurance
- Pays towards private medical treatment
if your condition is covered by the policy.
- Processed Date
- The date the contribution was credited
to the account by the Charitable Gift Fund (USA).
- Probate
- The process by which the Will of
someone who dies while living in England or Wales is validated. A local Probate
Office will issue a Grant of Probate to validate a will and authorising the
executors to administer the estate. This Grant has the status of a decree of
the High Court. Hence anyone dealing in good faith with the executors named in
the Grant has legal protection against any other party claiming to represent
the deceased.
- Professional Indemnity Insurance
- Protects professionals against
liability claims resulting from negligent work.
- Pro Rata Premium
- A rate charged for a period of
insurance cover shorter than the normal period. For example, if an insured had
cover for one quarter of a year, the Pro Rata premium might be only one quarter
of the annual premium.
- PSO
- Pension Schemes Office.
- Public Charity
- In the USA, charitable organisations
(those designated under Section 501(c)(3) by the Internal Revenue Code) that
qualify as public charities, private operating foundations, or private
foundations. A public charity as defined in Section 509 (identified by the
Service as "not a private foundation") normally receives a substantial part of
its income, directly or indirectly, from the general public or from government
sources. The public support must be fairly broad, not limited to a few
individuals or families.
- Public Company
- A company listed on the stock exchange
and hence one whose shares are available for public investment.
- Public Foundation
- A nonprofit organisation that receives
at least one-third of its annual income from the general public (including
government agencies and foundations). Public foundations may make grants or
engage in charitable activities.
- Purchased Life Annuity
- An income for life purchased from an
insurance company. That part of the annuity that is deemed to be return of
capital is tax-free but any balance is treated as interest and is subject to
income tax.
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