Generally, securities mean financial assets, for example, shares,
government stocks, bonds, debentures unit trusts, et al.
A means of raising money (or lending it), securitisation is
basically another form of debt finance, though more complex than many other variations.
Packages of income-generating assets are bundled into debt securities backed up
by these assets. (Such assets can include mortgages, financial receivables, corporate
loans, or even future cashflows).
This might be designated discovery capital. It is provided by
specialist investors, occasionally venture capitalists, and comprises very early
stage finance for companies with a business idea that has yet to come to life.
Seed capital is designed to enable development so that an early stage company
emerges.
Shares mean what the word says. A share provides the owner of it with
a share of a company. When you buy shares you are issued with a share certificate.
This tells you how many shares in the company you own. Shares usually entitle
the owner to a proportion of the company profits, usually via dividend payments.
If you own more than 50 per cent of the voting shares of a company, then you effectively
control the company. Shares in public companies can be traded on stock exchanges.
They come in a variety of forms. The most common ones are ordinary shares and
preference shares (see below).
Generally, ordinary shares carry voting rights but no guaranteed
amount of dividend payment. They do usually carry the right to receive most of
the profits/capital growth if things go well, however they can quickly become
worthless if things go badly.
Generally, preference shares carry no voting rights but
do have fixed dividend rights and take preference over ordinary shares on a repayment
of capital. In other words they are 'preferred' to a certain specified extent
over ordinary shares.
The options are the important thing here, providing the right
to buy shares at a pre-agreed price usually within a specified period of time.
If the option is not exercised within the time period, it lapses.
The UKLA is effectively a division
of the FSA (see above) and is the body responsible for all company listing matters
in the UK. It is responsible for maintaining the Official List (see above) and
has three primary objectives as defined by the Treasury: to provide an appropriate
level of protection for investors in listed securities, to facilitate access to
listed markets for a broad range of enterprises, and to seek to maintain the integrity
and competitiveness of UK markets for listed securities.
While warrants sound like warranties, which are a form of guarantee,
in the stock market the holders of warrant certificates are able to buy pre-determined
numbers of shares within a specified period at a pre-agreed price. Warrants are
thus a type of share option (see above).