Contingent liability
Liability which is difficult to quantify, or which may or may not come to pass, such as an Outstanding lawsuit.
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10-Q, 
All or any part, 
Antitrust laws, 
Action to quiet title, 
As is, 
Assignment to creditors, 
Attorney in fact, 
A shares, 
Additional paid-in capital, 
Automated Pricing and Reporting System, 
Bid-to-cover ratio, 
Bill pass, 
Blue Sky Laws, 
Blue Laws, 
Bailing out, 
B shares, 
Buy and write, 
Capital liability, 
Coupon pass, 
Closed out, 
Cash and carry trade, 
Cheapest to deliver, 
Common-law voting, 
Class action suit, 
Contingent liability, 
Cash-out refinancing, 
Crowding out, 
C shares, 
Close to the money, 
Cash or Deferred Arrangement, 
Class A Shares, 
Class B Shares, 
Child and dependent care credit, 
Cup and handle, 
Close a position, 
Close out, 
Curbs in, 
Curbs out, 
Days Sales Outstanding, 
Deposit in transit, 
Do Not Reduce, 
Dividend in arrears, 
Doing business as, 
Debtor in possession, 
Debtor-in-possession financing, 
Deep in the money, 
Deep out of the money, 
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 
Escrowed to maturity, 
Either-or order, 
E-mini, 
First In First Out, 
Form 10-Q, 
Federal Savings and Loan Association, 
Flight to quality, 
Fill or kill, 
Front-ending an order, 
Forward P/E, 
Fed pass, 
Form S-1, 
Friends and family offering, 
Full faith and credit, 
Free and clear, 
Ginnie Mae pass-through, 
G-7, 
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, 
G-8, 
Growth and income fund, 
Gather in the stops, 
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, 
Holder in due course, 
Hang out loan, 
Head and shoulders, 
In escrow, 
In-house, 
In line, 
In intestacy, 
In play, 
In-process research and development, 
I/O strip, 
In-service withdrawal, 
In and out, 
In sympathy, 
In the tank, 
Jointly and severally, 
Joint and several liability, 
Joint and survivor annuity, 
Knock-out option, 
Last In First Out, 
Liability, 
Law day, 
Law of one price, 
Lending at a rate, 
Law of demand, 
Law of supply, 
London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange, 
Loan-to-cost, 
Loan-to-value, 
Lock-in, 
Limited Liability Company, 
Locked in, 
Long-term gain or loss, 
Level I quotes, 
Mortgage pass-through security, 
Make a market, 
Market if touched order, 
Mark-to-market, 
May Day, 
Marginal propensity to consume, 
Modified pass-through, 
No limit order, 
No quote, 
No-Fault, 
No-Action Letter, 
Null and void, 
No-lien affidavit, 
No-load, 
No-load stock, 
No book, 
Out-of-favor, 
Outstanding, 
Or better, 
Out of the money, 
Old age, survivors, and disability insurance, 
Profit and loss statement, 
Pass-through, 
Pass-through coupon rate, 
Payment-in-kind security, 
Price Value of a Basis Point, 
Private sector pass-through, 
P&L, 
Paid-in capital, 
Paid-in surplus, 
Private Investment in Public Equity, 
Point-and-figure chart, 
Priced out, 
Quant, 
Reports and Records, 
Regulation Q, 
Regulation D, 
Regulation G, 
Regulation T, 
Regulation U, 
Regulation A, 
Right to Know, 
Selling, General and Administrative Expenses, 
SG&A, 
Savings and Loan, 
S&L, 
Securities and Exchange Commission, 
Second-to-die insurance, 
Severally but not jointly, 
Sunshine laws, 
Sale and leaseback, 
S Corporation, 
Short-term gain or loss, 
Subchapter M, 
Subchapter S Corporation, 
Schedule C, 
Seek a market, 
S&P phenomenon, 
Stop and reverse, 
Stopped out, 
T-Bill, 
Term to maturity, 
Take a position, 
Trailing P/E, 
Truth in Lending, 
Top out, 
Take a bath, 
U.S. Government Agency Security, 
U.S. Savings Bond, 
U.S. Treasury, 
U.S. Treasury Bill, 
U.S. Treasury Bond, 
U.S. Treasury Note, 
U.S. Treasury Securities, 
Umbrella liability insurance, 
UIT, 
Widow-and-orphan stock, 
W-2 Form, 
W formation, 
When, as, and if issued, 
X or XD, 
Year-To-Date, 
Yield to call, 
Yield to maturity, 
Yield to worst, 
Y shares