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Amortization
The process by which loan payments are applied to the principal, or amount borrowed, as well as the interest on a loan according to a set schedule.
Annual Fee
The amount that credit card companies charge for the use of a credit card.
Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
The finance charge or total amount it costs per year to use credit, calculated as a percentage of the amount borrowed (percentage rate), including interest, transaction fees, and service charges.
Annual Percentage Yield (APY)
The actual interest rate an account pays per year with compounding included; calculated the same way by all banks/credit unions.
Appreciation
A rise in value or price.
Assets
What a person owns, such as cash, stocks, bonds, real estate, and personal possessions.
Automated Teller Machine (ATM)
An electronic machine that bank customers and credit union members can use to withdraw cash and make financial transactions.
Back-end load
A sales charge paid when investments are sold
Bait and switch
An illegal sales technique in which sells advertise a product with the intention of persuading customers to buy a more expensive product.
Bank
A for-profit company that is owned by its stockholders and provides saving and checking accounts and other financial services to its customers.
Bankruptcy
Legal process for selling most of the debtor’s property to help satisfy debts that can’t be repaid, in exchange for (a) relieving debtors of the responsibility of paying their financial obligations or (b) protecting them while a plan is created and they try to repay debts.
Bond
A formal agreement where you lend money to a borrower who can then use that money for a set period of time. In exchange, you as the lender will get paid a specific amount of interest.
Borrower
an individual, business or government that has received and used something belonging to somebody else, with the intention of returning or repaying it - often with interest in the case of borrowed money
Budget
A plan for managing money, dividing up expected income and expenses among spending and saving options based on personal goals during a given time period.
Capacity
Ability to repay a loan from present income; one of three factors in credit scoring.
Capital
The value of personal items that one owns, including savings, investments, and property, one of three factors used in credit scoring.
Capital Gain
The difference between the purchase price and the selling price when an investor buys a sock and later sells it at a higher price.
Capital Loss
The difference when an investor ends up selling a stock at a lower price than the purchase price.
Cash Flow
Movement of the money you receive and the money you spend.
Certificate of deposit (CD)
a certificate issued by a bank to a person depositing money in an account for a specified period of time. A penalty is charged for early withdrawal from most CD accounts.
Character
Refers to trustworthiness; one of three factors in credit scoring (e.g., paying bills on time shows financial responsibility). Creditworthiness indicating a responsible attitude towards living up to agreements.
Check
Written order directing a bank or credit union to pay a person or business a specific sum of money.
Checking Account
A bank or credit union account that allows withdrawals by writing a check.
Compound interest
a situation in which interest is earned on previously earned interest in such a way that earnings accumulate more rapidly over time
Compounding, or compound interest, Rule of 72
Earning interest on interest. Rule of 72-how long it takes money to double in value. Divide 72 by the interest to determine the number of years it will take money to double.
Consumer advocates
Individuals or groups that actively promote consumer interest in areas such as health and safety, education, redress, truthful advertising, fairness in the marketplace, and environmental protection.
Cost/benefit analysis, risk/reward relationship
Tool used to choose among alternatives involves weighing the cost of a product or service against the benefit it will provide.
Coverage Limit
The maximum amount an insurance company will pay if you file a claim.
Credit
Amount of money a creditor is willing to loan another to purchase goods and services, based on trust and the expectation that the money will be repaid as promised with interest.
Credit Card
Credit Limit
The maximum amount of credit a lender will extend to a customer.
Creditworthiness
A measure of one’s ability and willingness to repay a loan.
Credit rating/score
A measure of creditworthiness based on an analysis of the consumer’s financial history, often computed as a numerical score, using the FICO or other scoring systems to analyze the consumer’s credit. A creditor’s evaluation of a person’s willingness and ability to pay debts as judged by character, capacity, and capital; a mathematical model used by lenders to predict the likelihood that bills will be paid as promised.
Credit report
a written record collected by a credit agency that tracks a borrower's credit payments, whether or not these payments are made on a timely basis, and how long the borrower has had various credit accounts
Credit Union
A financial institution owned by its members that provides savings and checking accounts and other services to its membership at low fees.
Debit Card
A card used to pay for goods and services directly from a checking account by transferring funds electronically from one’s checking account to the store’s account to pay for a purchase; also called check cards.
Debt
The entire amount of money owed to lenders.
Deductible
The amount of a loss you must pay out of your own pocket before the insurance company will step in and pay the rest.
Delayed Gratification
The willingness to give up something you want now in order to get something better in the future.
Depreciation
Decline in a product’s value that starts the moment a product is purchased (car).
Diversification
Distributing funds among different types of investments to minimize overall risk.
Dividend
The portion of the profits paid to the shareholders of a company.
Dollar Cost Averaging
The practice of investing a fixed amount into the same investment at regular intervals, regardless of what the stock market is doing.
Earned Interest
The payment you receive for allowing a financial institution or corporation to use your money.
Employee benefits
Additional benefits, beyond a paycheck, offered by employers (e.g., health insurance or pension plan).
Endorse
To sign the back of a check to make it payable to the specified payee.
Expense
An amount of money spent to buy something or do something.
Financial plan, financial planning
Personal financial planning is the process of (a) setting goals, (b) developing a plan to achieve them, and (c) putting the plan into action. Ongoing thinking process to develop an orderly program or blueprint for handling all aspects of one’s money, including spending, credit, saving and investing.
Finance charges
the interest paid on unpaid credit balances
Financial institutions
intermediaries that help channel funds from savers to borrowers
Financial literacy
basic financial knowledge, including an understanding of banks and the banking system, financial markets, credit and credit cards, and tax laws, as well as the ability to apply this knowledge in making decisions on how to spend, earn, or save money today to build wealth for tomorrow
Fixed Expenses
Expenses that cost the same amount every time.
Fraud
Intentional misrepresentation of information with the intent to deceive or mislead.
Front-end load
A sales charge paid when investments are purchased and sometimes when dividends are reinvested.
Grace Period
On a credit card, the length of time you have before you start accumulating interest on an unpaid balance.
Gross Income
The total amount of income from wages before any payroll deductions.
High balling
An excessively high offer for a trade-in vehicle.
Identity Theft
When someone uses your name, Social Security number, credit card number, and other personal information without your permission.
Implied warranty
Unwritten guarantee that a product is of sufficient quality to fulfill the purpose for which it was designed.
Impulse purchase
A purchase made on a whim, without using a decision making process.
Income
Any money an individual receives.
Information processing
Analyzing and organizing information for decision making.
Insurance
Risk management tool that limits financial loss due to illness, injury, or damage in exchange for its promise of protection and help.
Insurance premium
Installment plan
a closed-end loan for a specific product such as furniture or appliances
Interest
Payment for use of someone else’s money; usually expressed as an annual rate in terms of a percent of the principal (the amount owed).
Investment
Setting aside money for future income, benefit, or profit to meet long-term goal; using savings to earn a financial return.
Late Fee
A penalty on all types of credit for making a payment after its due date.
Lender
one who lends; may be an individual, a business or a government
Liabilities
Amount a person owes, such as unpaid bills, credit card charges, personal loans, and taxes.
Liquidity
The ease with which an asset can be converted to cash without serious loss.
Loan sharks
Unlicensed lenders who charge illegally high interest rates.
Loan Term
The length of time you have to pay off a loan.
Minimum payment
the smallest amount a per- son is required to pay in a given month on an open- ended credit account
Money market account
an interest-bearing account that offers limited check-writing privileges. Deposits may be added at any time; some money market accounts limit the withdrawals depositors may make without paying a penalty. Money market accounts are low-risk investments that serve as a cross between saving and checking accounts. Money market accounts offered within the banking system are known as money market deposit accounts. Money market accounts offered by mutual funds are known as money market mutual funds.
Money order
a form of payment that a person can buy for a specific amount and sign over to the person or firm named on the money order. People must pay a fee to obtain a money order. A money order cannot bounce because full payment is needed before the money order is issued.
Mortgage
Loan to buy real estate, such as land or a home.
Mutual Fund
An investment security that is actually a diversified portfolio of equities, bonds, or other securities. Investors purchase shares and can sell them at any time.
Net Income
Also called “take-home pay”; it’s the amount of income left after payroll deductions.
Net worth
The difference between a person’s assets and liabilities.
Open-ended credit
a form of credit that allows a person to borrow funds to make purchases for which there is no predetermined repayment period
Opportunity Cost
Whenever choices are made, the cost of something expressed in terms of what had to be given up to obtain it. The resources used to satisfy one goal that cannot be used for another, i.e., weighing of one alternative against another rather than merely considering the cash price or value of a specific good or service.
Origination Fee
A charge for setting up a loan that is typically associated with home loans.
Payroll deductions
Amounts subtracted from gross income that are withheld by an employer for items such as taxes and employee benefits.
Pay Yourself First (PYF)
Disciplined saving or setting aside money as a regular part of the budget for later spending or investing.
Personal Identification Number (PIN)
The unique pass code number you use to get access to your savings and/or checking account.
Philanthropy
A personal or corporate interest in helping others, especially through gifts to charities or endowments to institutions.
Phishing
An identity theft tool that appears in the form of an E-mail or pop-up message; usually looks like it’s from a legitimate financial institution and prompts you to provide your personal information in order to fix a “problem” with your account.
Points-mortgage
A one-time service charge by mortgage lenders at closing to increase the return on the loan; each point is one percent to the amount of the principal.
Predatory lending
Lending practices which promise loans that are “too good to be true” and pressure borrowers to take loans on the spot. Lending practices include a variety of financial abuses such as excessive fees, penalties for early pay-off of the loan, balloon payments, loan flipping, high interest rates, monthly payments the borrower can’t afford, the unauthorized refinancing of loans. Examples of the practice include predatory mortgages, payday loans, overdraft loans, excessive credit card debt, and instant tax refund loans.
Profit
The difference between the costs required to create a product or supply a service that can be bought with it.
Principal
The amount of money someone is willing to loan you. Also, the amount that is still owed on a loan.
Resources
Human resources are those resources people have within themselves, such as working knowledge, skill, mental effort, motivation, energy. Non-human or external resources include money, time, and equipment.
Rate of return
How fast money in savings account or investment grows.
Return
earnings from an investment, usually expressed as an annual percentage rate
Reverse mortgage
An arrangement in which a homeowner borrows against the equity in his/her home and receives regular monthly tax-free payments from the lender. Also called reverse-annuity mortgage or home equity conversion mortgage.
Revolving credit
an open-ended account with a limit to how much can be borrowed but no time limit for repayment
Risk management
Deliberately and systematically using various strategies for controlling against potential personal or financial loss from pure risks.
Risk tolerance
The amount of uncertainty or possibility of loss the individual can bear.
Savings
Money set aside for short-term goals.