Quadruple witching day - permalink

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Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) - permalink

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Qualified domestic trust (QDOT) - permalink

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  • If your spouse isn't a US citizen and your estate is large enough to risk being vulnerable to estate taxes, you can use a qualified domestic trust (QDOT) to allow your spouse to enjoy the benefit of the marital deduction until his or her own death.

    In short, the marital deduction means that one spouse can leave the other all of his or her assets free of estate tax. The inherited assets become part of the estate of the surviving spouse, and unless the combined value is less than the exempt amount, estate tax could be due at the death of that spouse.

    The difference, with a QDOT, is that at the death of the surviving, non-citizen spouse, the assets in the trust don't become part of his or her estate, but are taxed as if they were still part of the estate of the first spouse to die. Income distributions from the trust are subject to income tax alone, but distributions of principal may be subject to estate tax.


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  • Browse Related Terms:   Estate,   Estate tax,   Executor/Executrix,   Income,   Irrevocable trust,   Revocable trust,   trustee,   will

Qualified Plan - permalink

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Qualified retirement plan - permalink

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Qualified Trusts - permalink

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Qualitative analysis - permalink

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Quantitative analysis - permalink

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Quarter - permalink

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  • The financial world splits up its calendar into four quarters, each three months long.

    If January to March is the first quarter, April to June is the second quarter, and so on, though a company's first quarter does not have to begin in January.

    The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires all publicly held US companies to publish a quarterly report, officially known as Form 10-Q, describing their financial results for the quarter. These reports and the predictions that market analysts make about them often have an impact on a company's stock price.

    For example, if analysts predict that a certain company will have earnings of 55 cents a share in a quarter, and the results beat those expectations, the price of the company's stock may increase. But if the earnings are less than expected, even by a penny or two, the stock price may drop, at least for a time.

    However, this pattern doesn't always hold true, and other forces may influence investor sentiment about the stock.


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  • Browse Related Terms:   Earnings momentum,   Earnings surprise,   Hedging,   Market cycles,   Momentum investing,   Whisper number

Quasi-public corporation - permalink

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  • In the United States, quasi-public corporations have links to the federal government although they are technically in the private sector.

    This means that their managers and executives work for the corporation, not the government. And, in many cases, you can buy stock in a quasi-public corporation, expecting to share in its profits.

    Many quasi-public corporations were originally federal agencies that have been privatized. Among the best known are Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Sallie Mae. They securitize consumer loans and sell them in the secondary market.

    The US Postal Service is also a quasi-public corporation, as is the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA).


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  • Browse Related Terms:   Agency bond,   Fannie Mae,   Freddie Mac,   Government bond,   Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae),   Mortgage-backed Security,   Sallie Mae

Qubes - permalink

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Quotation (Quote) - permalink

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  • On a stock market, a quotation combines the highest bid to buy and the lowest offer to sell a stock.

    For example, if the quotation on DaveCo stock is "20 to 20.07," it means that the highest price that any buyer wants to pay is $20, and the lowest price that any seller wants to take is $20.07.

    How that spread is resolved depends on whether the stock is traded on an auction market, such as the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), or on a dealer market, such as the Nasdaq Stock Market (Nasdaq), where the price is negotiated by market makers.


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  • Browse Related Terms:   Ask,   BID,   bid and ask,   Dealer,   Firm quote,   Make a market,   Market maker,   Offer