D
Daily Margin Interest Accrued
The daily margin interest accrued is
based on the previous business day's margin balance and refers
to interest applicable for that day.
When the previous
business day is a Friday or the day preceding a market
holiday, interest is accrued forward. As such, in a typical
week, the number shown on Saturday morning will account for
interest accrued for Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.
Daily Reference CPI
The daily CPI rate used to calculate the Index Ratio (Inflation Factor)
Daily Unit Value
The most recent value of a variable
annuity investment
option. The value of an investment option is measured in
units.
The value will rise
and fall each business day depending on investment
performance.
Date
The date a trade order was
received by Fidelity, or the date a transaction in your account
or annuity contract's transaction history occurred. In tax information the date on which the corresponding
transaction took place. Depending on the transaction, this may
be the date that payment was made (dividends, interest) or withholding took place.
Date Acquired
The date on which shares are added to a
Fidelity account.
- If you originally
acquired the shares through this account, the date acquired is
the trade date. For example, if you bought the shares through
this account on 7/15/1999, the date acquired is
7/15/1999.
- If you acquired the
shares in an online trading account at another brokerage firm,
and transferred the shares to this Fidelity account, the date
acquired is the date Fidelity received the shares. For
example, if you bought the shares at another brokerage on
8/15/1999 and transferred them to this Fidelity account on
9/30/1999, the Date Acquired defaults to 9/30/1999, unless you
update the information.
When entering or
editing date acquired, use the mm/dd/yyyy format.
Date and Time
On the Employee Stock Purchase Plan
History screen, this is the date that a balance-altering transaction
type (contributions, matching contributions, withdrawals)
took place.
Dated Date
For some new
issue fixed-income securities (e.g., bonds), this is the
date on which coupon
interest will begin to accrue.
Dated Date Reference CPI
CPI used when security is dated to begin accruing interest.
Date of First Principle Payment
For a bond ladder, enter the desired month and year for the first bond to mature and first return of principal.
Date Range
On the Option Chain Filter
Settings screen, Date Range refers to the available time frame
for retrieving data. The system defaults to All, or you can
specify a range by selecting 3 months, 9 months, or a duration
of up to 3 years. Settings are persistent, i.e., settings are
saved until modified again. Note that not all long-term equity
anticipation securities (LEAPs) will have data up to 3
years.
Date Sold
The date on which the security was
sold. The date a security is sold determines in which tax year
the gain/loss has tax implications.
Date/Time
When displayed in a chart:
- If you originally
acquired the shares through this account, the date acquired is
the trade date. For example, if you bought the shares through
this account on 7/15/1999, the date acquired is
7/15/1999.
- If you acquired the
shares in an online trading account at another brokerage, and
transferred the shares to this Fidelity account, the date
acquired is the date Fidelity received the shares. For
example, if you bought the shares at another brokerage on
8/15/1999 and transferred them to the Fidelity account on
9/30/1999, the Date Acquired defaults to 9/30/1999, unless you
update the information.
If you enter tax lots
in the Enter
Lots section of the Tax Lots Choose Specific Shares
screen, enter this date in mm/dd/yyyy format.
Day
A time-in-force limitation
on the execution of an order. Day orders are canceled if they cannot be executed
before the current day's market close (4 p.m. ET).
Day Count Basis
Indicates how many days in a month and days in a year are counted when performing interest calculations.
Day High (High)
The highest price traded for the
security during the current trading day. For Fidelity variable
annuity investment
option quotes, this information is not applicable and N/A
displays in the Day High field.
Day Low (Low)
The lowest price traded for this
security during the current trading day.
Day Order
A trade order that will be
canceled at the end of the trading day if it is not triggered
by conditions specified by the investor placing the
order.
Note: On realized gain/loss screens, "Wash
Sale" displays in the Date Sold column if the date it was
sold identifies the transaction as a wash
sale.
Day Trade
A day trade occurs when you buy
and sell or execute a short
sale and then buy the same security during the same
business day.
Day Trade Buying Power
For an account that is not restricted and does not have an outstanding day trade call, you can execute day trades of marginable securities valued at up to four times your account's exchange surplus by utilizing time and tick.
The value of the securities you hold in margin is calculated using the
securities' previous day closing prices. If a day trade minimum equity
call has been issued against the account, your account balances will
reflect the Day Trade Minimum Equity Call rather than your Day Trade Buying Power.
Day Trade Call
A day trade call occurs when your account
exceeds its day trading buying power. When this occurs, you
must generally deposit funds to settle the call within five
business days. However, Fidelity reserves the right to meet
margin calls at any time prior to the stated due date.
Day Trade Calls Due Today
This is the total amount you owe today
for all day trade calls due on this date and any prior calls
that may be past due. This amount does not include any margin
call amounts that may also be due.
Day Trade Calls Issued
This is the total dollar amount for any
day trade calls that have been officially issued against your
account.
You generally have
five business days from the date a day trade call is issued to
deposit additional cash or securities to settle the call
amount. Fidelity reserves the right to meet
margin calls at any time prior to the stated due date.
Day Trade Minimum Equity Call
A type of margin call.
If your account equity falls below the $25,000 minimum day trade equity
requirement, a day trade minimum equity call is issued against your
account. You generally have five business days to settle the call, but
Fidelity reserves the right to meet margin calls at any time prior to
the stated due date. If your account is not restricted and does not
have an outstanding day trade minimum equity call, your account
balances will reflect your Day Trade Buying Power rather than the Day Trade Minimum Equity Call.
Day Trader
You are considered a pattern day
trader if you execute four or more day trades, you buy and
sell or execute a short
sale and then buy the same security during the same
business day, over a five business day period.
Debit Spread
An options strategy consisting of the buying and selling of options on
the same underlying stock, in which the cost of the option purchases is
greater than the proceeds of the sale, resulting in a debit at the time
of entry into the strategy. Breaking even or profiting from a debit
spread requires that the value of the purchased options increase to
cover at least the debit.
Rules: A debit spread consists of either all calls or all puts on the same underlying with the same expiration date.
Example: Calls – Long call strike is lower than the short call strike
Puts – Short put strike is lower than the long put strike
Debt Type
When searching for U.S.
Treasuries, you can select one of the following to limit your
search results to just one type of Treasury security or view
all types:
- Bills
- Notes
- Bonds
- Zero-Coupons
- All, include Treasury
bills, notes, bonds, and zero-coupons in the search
results
For fixed-income
(e.g., bond) Fixed
Rate Capital Securities and Corporate bond type
examples:
- Senior, securities for
which the security holder may request repayment and the issuer
must remit payment before doing so for other obligations in
the event the corporation goes out of business
- Convertible,
securities that may be exchanged for a fixed number of another
type of security (usually common stock) at a pre-stated
price
Municipal bond type
examples:
- Revenue, a municipal
bond that is issued to fund particular public works projects
and that is backed by the revenues (e.g., tolls from bridge
construction) that are collected as a result of the
project
- General Obligation, a
municipal bond that is backed by the full faith, credit, and
taxing power of the issuer for payment of interest and
principal
Declined Awards
The total number of awards
declined by the participant.
Declined Grants
The total number of grants declined by the participant.
Declined Rights
The total number of rights
declined by the participant.
Deduction Method
The method that can be used to
select a payroll deduction amount. There are two methods that
may be elected, if permissible under plan rules: dollar
payroll deductions and percentage payroll deductions (or a
combination of both).
Default
If a bond issuer fails to make either a coupon or principal payment on
its bonds as they come due, or fails to meet some other provision of
the bond indenture, it is said to be in default.
Credit agencies such as Moody's and S&P
rate bonds to indicate the issuer's credit quality, and thus provide
insight into the likelihood of default. Moody's rates defaulted bonds
as "Ca" and "C", and S&P rates defaulted bonds "D".
Default Date
Date of actual/monetary or technical default.
Default Event
The event that caused the default. Possible values are:
- Bankrupt leasor/operator
- Failure to replenish LOC or reserve fund
- Monetary failure of guarantor
- Notice of defeasance
- Unscheduled draw on credit enhancement or reserve fund
- Violation of covenants
- Missed interest payments
- Missed principal or redemption payment
- Missed tender or put payments
Default Status
The current status of a defaulted issue. Possible values are:
- In bankruptcy proceedings
- In foreclosure
- In liquidation
- Under negotiation
- Workout plan implemented
- Workout plan submitted
- Project terminated
- Rescheduling debt payments
- In reorganization
- Settlement reached
- Status unknown
Default Type
Indicates the type of default by an issuer which may be actual or
technical. An actual default occurs when the issuer misses an interest
or principal payment. A technical default occurs when Issuer violates
the covenants in the bond indenture.
Deferment period
A period during which a bond can be either non-callable or nonrefundable. Also known as a period of call protection.
Delete
For an open indication
of interest in a new
issue fixed-income offering (e.g., bond) for which
securities have not been allocated, this is an option you can
select to delete an indication of interest and end your
participation in a new issue offering. Once deleted, you will
not be eligible to receive an allocation of securities even if
you had previously confirmed
your indication of interest.
You can attempt to
delete an indication of interest at any time before securities
are allocated.
Attempts to delete
indications of interest are performed on a best efforts basis.
There is no guarantee that an indication of interest can be
deleted, in whole or in part.
Delivery
The
action by which a security used to settle a trade is delivered or
received to/from the other side of the trade. Possible values are:
- Not Applicable
- Registered Only
- Book Entry Only
- Coupon Entry Only
- Registered as to Principal Only
- Fully Interchangeable
- Coupon or Registered as to Principal
- Coupon or Registered
- Registered or Registered as to Principal
Delivery Option
The method and means by which you identify devices
to receive alerts. When you set up a delivery option, you specify a
device type, e-mail address, nickname, and alert format. To receive
alerts, you must set up at least one delivery option.
Delta
The amount by which an option's price will change for a one-point change in price by the underlying entity.
Example:
A position delta of 0.50 means that for every $1 change in the
underlying, the combined option value would rise/fall by $0.50.
DeMinimis
A DeMinimis
rollover occurs when an employee with a defined benefit or defined
contribution plan account with a balance between $1,000 and $5,000 is
terminated by an employer. To prevent immediate taxation, the balance
is automatically rolled over to a rollover IRA account, which allows
the employee to retain the balance in a tax-deferred account.
Dependents
You may be able to declare a
person a dependant if the person meets the following
requirements:
- That person is a
relative (as defined under the Internal Revenue Code), or is a
member of the taxpayer's household.
- That person makes less
than $2,900 in gross income annually (unless the individual to
be claimed as a dependent is a child of the taxpayer and
either is under age 19 at the close of the calendar year or is
a full-time student under age 24 at the close of the calendar
year).
- You provide more than
half of that person's support (subject to some
exceptions).
- The individual to be
claimed as a dependent must not have filed a joint return with
a spouse, (subject to some exceptions).
- The individual to be
claimed as a dependent must be a citizen, national or resident
of the United States (subject to some exceptions).
Deposit Funds
When you deposit cash to cover your tax withholding due, you will
receive all of the shares in your grant, but you will need to deposit
enough funds in your account by the transaction date to cover your tax
withholding obligation.
Derivative
Securities
A derivative's value may be based on another security, an index,
or an interest rate. For example, an option is a derivative
instrument because its value derives from an underlying stock
or stock index.
Description, Issue Description
The full name of the security corresponding to a symbol or a CUSIP.
- For fixed-income securities (e.g., bonds), the name of the issuer, maturity, and coupon rate are included in the description.
- For certain securities whose principal value is calculated with the inclusion of a factor (e.g., mortgage-backed securities), the value of the factor is displayed in the description of the security.
- For an option, the underlying security's full name, the expiration date, whether the option is a call or a put, and the strike price
- For
bond ladders, varies by the type of bond, but generally includes the
type of fixed income security (e.g., U.S. Treasury Note, Tennessee
Housing Development Agency), whether it is callable or subject to
alternative minimum tax, the coupon interest rate, the date the first
coupon interest payment was paid, the maturity date, the call date, etc.
Device, Device Type
A place where you can receive alerts. You can receive Fidelity alerts at any of the following devices:
- Desktop E-mail
- Small Device E-mail
- Skytel Pager One-way
- Skytel Pager Two-way
- RIM Handheld
- Other Pager
- Web-enabled Personal Data Assistant (PDA)
- Web-enabled phone
- Your Fidelity (your personalized home page on Fidelity.com)
Diagonal Spread
The diagonal spread is a variation of the calendar spread involving the
simultaneous purchase and sale of two options of the same class (i.e.,
calls or puts), with different expiration dates, and different strike
prices. Diagonal spreads are used by traders who have specific notions
about the direction of the underlying stock's price, the velocity of
that movement, the magnitude and timing of it, or implied volatility
views. Diagonal spreads can be established for either a credit or
debit, depending upon which strikes and expiration months have been
selected. In some cases, diagonal spreads may be less expensive than
calendar spread.
The basic diagonal spread is created by the purchase of a deferred call
or put and the sale of a near term call or put with different strike
prices, or the sale of a deferred call or put and the purchase of a
near term call or put with different strike prices. Because the
different strike prices can change the premium paid or collected when
initiating a diagonal spread, it's necessary to spell out exactly which
month and strike price is "the long" and which month and strike price
is "the short."
Different Fund Families (Cross Family Trade)
Funds owned by one company are considered to be in a different family
than funds owned by another company. For example, Fidelity funds are in
a different family than Janus funds. When you perform a cross family
trade, you are selling the shares you own in one fund family and using
the proceeds to buy shares in another fund family. Though submitted as
one transaction, a cross family trade is actually two: a sell order,
which generally settles on the trade date, and a buy order, which
generally settles on the next business day after the sell order's
settlement date.
When you exchange funds, you are selling shares of a fund you own and using the proceeds to buy shares in another fund in the same fund family.
Directed
Order information you specified indicating you want your order directed
to a specific exchange for execution. When you ask for an order to be
directed to a specific exchange for execution, you assume
responsibility for best execution of the order.
Disallowed Loss
The monetary amount of loss realized from
selling shares that cannot be counted as a loss due to the
IRS' wash sale rule.
Discount
This refers to when a fixed-income
security (e.g., a bond) is bought or sold at a price that is
below the face
value. For example, if a bond's face value is $1,000 and
it sells for $900, it was sold at a discount.
Discount Yield
This is the yield on a security
that is sold at a discount, a security you buy for less than
the face
value at maturity
and then get the full face value once the security
matures.
For example, Treasury
bills (T-bills) are sold at a discount. If a T-bill sold
for $975 and you could redeem it for $1,000 at maturity in 90
days, your gain would be $250 and the yield for the 90 day
period would be a discount yield.
Display
The amount of results you would like shown for your search request on
the multi-leg option tools. (i.e.: 10, 25 or 50 results)
Disqualifying Disposition
For U.S. federal tax purposes the sale, gift, or exchange of shares acquired through exercise of an incentive stock option or a Section 423 employee stock purchase plan within two years of the grant date or within one year of the purchase date.
Upon a disqualifying disposition, participants in employee stock
purchase plans and incentive stock option plans are required to
recognize any resulting gain (up to the spread at exercise and
purchase) as taxable ordinary compensation income.
The sale, gift, or exchange of shares acquired through exercise of a qualified stock option
prior to the end of the disqualifying disposition period may cause you
to cease to qualify for favorable tax treatment of your grant. Consult
your grant agreement and your tax advisor for the rules applicable to
your grant.
Disqualifying Exercise
For non-U.S. tax purposes the exercise of a qualified stock option
prior to the end of the disqualifying exercise period may cause you to
cease to qualify for favorable tax treatment of your grant. Consult
your grant agreement and your tax advisor for the rules applicable to
your grant.
Distributed In
The form in which the value of restricted stock awards and restricted
stock units are to be distributed to you: cash or shares.
Distributed Through
Defines how net cash proceeds from this transaction will be distributed
to you. The method of distribution depends on your company's plan rules
and may include an automated distribution to you through your company's
payroll or a deposit into your Fidelity brokerage account.
For RSAs and RSUs, the method by which the value of your awards or units are to be distributed to you.
Distribution By
This refers to the party that is
issuing a new
issue offering (e.g., a new issue bond). For
example:
- Issuer: the
municipality, government, government agency, or corporation
that is offering a new
issue security
- Security holder: the
investor who owns a bond that is offering the bond in the
secondary market, a secondary
offering
Distribution By Issuer Represents
This refers to the reason for the new
issue offering (e.g., new issue of bonds). For
example:
- New Financing:
proceeds from the offerings will provide the initial funding
for a new project (e.g., building a hospital)
- Refunding: proceeds
from the offering will be used to repay the principal and any
accrued
interest to bondholders of and to retire previously issued
securities (e.g., bonds)
Distribution Date
The date on which vested grants or units are distributed to you.
Distribution Method
The method by which the value of restricted stock awards and restricted
stock units are to be distributed to you: cash to brokerage, shares to
brokerage, or via payroll.
Distribution Pending
A dividend or capital gain distribution
is pending on your security. Distribution Pending appears in the Change
Since Last Close $ and Change Since Last Close % columns from the time
the mutual fund prices are reported on the ex-dividend date
until the market closes on the next business day. If you have elected
automatic reinvestment of shares, the Quantity and Most Recent Value
fields will reflect the shares by the morning of the next business day.
Distribution Posted
A dividend or capital gain distribution
has been reported and paid on your security. Distribution Posted
appears in the Closing Value, Change Since Last Close $, and Change
Since Last Close % columns from the time the mutual fund prices are
reported on the ex-dividend date until the market close on the next business day.
Distribution Value
The dollar value of a grant at distribution. This value is calculated
using the previous business day's closing price of the stock, minus the
cost of the grant, multiplied by the number of shares or units. Fair
market value is determined under your employer's plan rules and grant
agreement.
Diversification
Diversification is the concept of
spreading your money across different types of investments
and/or issuers to potentially moderate your investment
risk.
Dividend
A distribution of a security's
earnings to the shareholders.
Dividend 5-Year Growth Rate (%)
This growth rate is the compound annual
growth rate of cash dividends per common share of stock over
the last 5 years.
On some screens, this
field only displays if capital gains or dividends are
reinvested.
Dividend Growth Rate (%)
In a Company Profile, this growth rate is
the compound annual growth rate of cash dividends per common
share of stock over the last 1, 3, or 5 years.
On some screens, this
field only displays if capital gains or dividends are
reinvested.
Dividend Income
The dividend distribution option
you chose for an account (e.g., hold, remit, etc.).
On some screens, this
field only displays if capital gains or dividends are
reinvested.
Dividend Pay Date
The date on which a dividend was
paid.
Dividend Rate
The dollar amount per share of the
latest dividend paid.
Dividend Yield (%)
This value is the current
percentage dividend yield based on the present cash dividend
rate. It is calculated as the indicated annual dividend
divided by the current price, multiplied by 100.
Dividend Yield, 5-year Average (%)
This value is the averages of the
dividend yield over the last 60 months.
Dividends
The dollar amount of distributions
of money, stock, or other property credited to the account or
paid to you by mutual funds investment, real estate investment
trusts (REITs), or other dividend-paying instrument.
Dividends Accrued
The total of dividend and interest payments accrued in the account that are designated to be paid:
- In cash and remitted by check or EFT
- In cash and deposited into another Fidelity account
Distributions are shown in the Dividends Accrued field until payment is made.
Note: Payments are made according to the instructions on the account
(daily, weekly, or monthly) as long as there is a distribution greater
than $25. If the daily payment schedule is elected, payment must be
sent by EFT or directed to another Fidelity account.
Dividends Achieved Pending Payment
The number of dividends pending payment that you have achieved as a result of meeting your performance criteria.
Dividends and Distributions
1099-reportable income that includes
distributions of money credited to an account or paid to you
by mutual funds investments, (REITs), or other dividend-paying
instruments.
Dividends Paid
The number of dividends paid.
Dividends Pending Achievement
The potential number of target dividends you may achieve if you meet
your performance criteria at the end of your performance period.
Dollar Amount
This refers to the
following:
- For a Fidelity
Electronic Funds Transfer request, this is the dollar amount to
transfer between your Fidelity account and your bank
account
- For a mutual fund
trade order, this is the dollar amount to trade for the
order
This is also a field
in which you enter the amount for a mutual fund trade
order.
Dollar Amount of Contribution
The dollar amount of an annual contribution to your Fidelity IRA that is made by transferring money from a bank account using Fidelity Electronic Funds Transfer.
Dollar Amount of Contribution Via Transfer
The amount of an annual
contribution to your Fidelity IRA that is made by transferring
money from a non-retirement (Individual or Joint) account to
your IRA account (Traditional, Roth, or Rollover) account.
Please note the
following:
- For a brokerage IRA,
the minimum amount to transfer is $10. All contributions are
made to the Core
account.
- For a mutual fund
account transfer, the minimum amount is $250 and the amount
must be entered in whole dollars (e.g., 1000 not
1000.25)
- Effective January 1,
2002, annual IRA contribution limits have increased for the
2002 tax year and beyond.
Dollar Amount to Deposit into a College Savings Plan
This is the amount you want to transfer
from your bank account to your Fidelity College Savings Plan
account.
Your College Savings
Plan account must have the Fidelity Electronic Funds Transfer service
already established to transfer from your bank account
online.
The amount transferred
is a deposit to the account and will be used to buy additional
units of the existing portfolio (e.g., Unique Portfolio 2015,
DE Portfolio 2018) in the account.
$ Change Per Share or Unit
The difference between the last price per
share or unit of an investment option in a Fidelity
NetBenefits® account and the most recent price
as of the date displayed.
For example, the change
in price of a share in a mutual fund held in a 403(b), 401(k),
or 457 account.
Dollar-Cost-Averaging
With dollar-cost-averaging, you
invest a fixed amount on a regular basis - regardless of the
current market trends. The investor buys more shares when the
price is low and fewer shares when the price is high; the
overall cost is lower than it would be if a constant number of
shares were bought at set intervals. Dollar-cost-averaging
does not assure a profit or protect against a loss in a
declining market. You must continue to purchase shares both in
market ups and downs. The goal of dollar-cost-averaging is to
attain a lower average cost per share.
$ Gain
For a security listed in a watch
list, this is the difference between the purchase price per
share x share quantity and the last price quoted for the
security.
Dollars, Shares, All
Select one of these options to
specify whether a Fidelity
Electronic Funds Transfer request to transfer between your Fidelity
mutual fund account and bank account is by dollars, shares, or
the total value of the position (All).
Domestic
This refers to U.S. equities as
opposed to non-U.S. (foreign) equities.
- In the Equity
Domestic vs. Foreign section the Graphical View screen,
this is the percentage of your holdings that are U.S. and
non-U.S. equities.
- In the Equity
Domestic vs. Foreign Holdings Detail section on the
Holdings Detail screen, this is the dollar amount of each your
U.S. and non-U.S. equities. All dollar amounts are as of the
date and time shown on the Control Panel.
The percentages and
dollar amounts include the securities in your portfolio or the
one or more accounts you select. The percentages and dollar
amounts also include equities which constitute the underlying
securities in your mutual funds.
Domestic Bond
A bond denominated in the currency of the country in which it is
issued, for example, a French bond denominated in French
Francs.
Domestic Equity Industry Sector
This is a section on the Graphical View
screen. This section shows the percentage of your domestic
holdings that are classified as equities
that are invested across different U.S. industry
sectors (e.g., health, finance, retail, etc.).
Domestic Equity Industry Sector Holdings Detail
This is a section on the Holdings Detail
screen. This section shows the dollar amounts of your domestic
holdings that are classified as equities
across different U.S. industry
sectors (e.g., health, finance, retail, etc.).
All values are as of
the date and time shown on the Control Panel.
Domestic Equity Style Profile
On the Graphical
View screen, this shows the characteristics of your
domestic holdings that are classified as equities
including size (the total dollar value of a company's
outstanding stock or market
capitalization such as small
cap, mid cap,
and large
cap) and investment
type (value, growth, and
blend).
The percentages
include the holdings in your portfolio or the one or more
accounts you select. The percentages also include underlying
securities in your mutual funds.
Domestic Equity Style Profile Holdings Detail
On the Holdings Detail screen, this shows
the characteristics of your domestic holdings that are
classified as equities
including size (the total dollar value of a company's
outstanding stock or market
capitalization such as small
cap, mid cap,
and large
cap) and investment
type (value, growth, and
blend).
The dollar amounts
include the holdings in your portfolio or the one or more
accounts you select. The dollar amounts also include underlying
securities in your mutual funds.
All dollar amounts are as of the date and time shown on the Control Panel.
Domicile Country
Indicates the country where the company for the security is incorporated.
Do Not Reduce
A condition on a good
'til canceled limit order to buy or a stop order to sell a security. This
condition prevents the order limit or stop price from being reduced by the
amount of the dividend when a stock goes ex-dividend or the stock's price
is reduced due to a split.
Do Not Show Fidelity NetBenefits® Account Information
Select this option on the Name/Hide
Accounts screen to suppress the display of your Fidelity
NetBenefits account. This link
only displays if you have a NetBenefits account in your
portfolio.
The availability of
Fidelity NetBenefits and the
options and services available to you depend on the specific
features of your employer's plan.
Do Not Show Positions with a Zero Balance
This is an option that displays on
the Name/Hide Accounts screen. Select this option to suppress
accounts and mutual fund account positions with a zero balance
from displaying on the Portfolio screen.
If you hide an account
or position with a zero balance, and the balance changes to an
amount other than zero, the account or position will
display.
Dow Jones Industrial Average
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, published by Dow Jones & Company,
is an unmanaged average of 30 actively traded stocks (primarily
industrials) that assumes reinvestment of dividends.
Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index
The Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 is an unmanaged, float-adjusted,
market-capitalization-weighted index of substantially all equity
securities of U.S. headquartered companies with readily available price
data.
Downside Protection
The protection against loss a strategy offers solely in terms of the
premium a seller would receive from the sale of an option, regardless
of the profit or loss on the underlying stock. This calculation assumes
the stock is not assigned. This calculation does not include margin and
is not annualized.
Driver's License Number
A driver's license or state-issued I.D. number is requested for
verification purposes when you attempt to add Electronic Funds Transfer to your Fidelity Account or brokerage IRA
online.
If you do not have a
driver's license, you can add the Electronic Funds Transfer service by completing a form
and sending the form to Fidelity. To access the form, select
Get a Form under Before You Begin on the Electronic Funds Transfer Setup
screen.
Due Date
The date by which a margin or day
trade call is or was due. House and federal margin calls and
day trade calls are generally due within five business days
from the date a call is issued. Exchange margin calls are
generally due within 48 hours. However, Fidelity reserves the right to meet
margin calls at any time prior to the stated due date.
Calls due from six
prior and five future business days can display on the Margin
Call screens.
Duration
Duration estimates how much a
bond's price fluctuates with changes in comparable interest
rates. If rates rise 1.00%, for example, a bond or fund with a 5-year
duration is likely to lose about 5.00% of its value.
For a bond with known cash flows,
duration is computed using all cash flows until the bond's maturity.
Duration to Worst
Duration to Worst is the duration of a bond computed using the bond's
nearest call date or maturity, whichever comes first. This measure
ignores future cash flow fluctuations due to embedded optionality.
Dutch Auction
An auction system during which the price is set, based on auction bids, at the lowest level that will raise the requisite funds.