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Glossary of Terms
JPMorgan Chase & Co./2014 Annual Report 309
Active foreclosures: Loans referred to foreclosure where
formal foreclosure proceedings are ongoing. Includes both
judicial and non-judicial states.
Active online customers: Users of all internet browsers and
mobile platforms who have logged in within the past 90
days.
Active mobile customers: Users of all mobile platforms,
which include: SMS, mobile smartphone and tablet, who
have logged in within the past 90 days.
Allowance for loan losses to total loans: Represents
period-end allowance for loan losses divided by retained
loans.
Alternative assets - The following types of assets constitute
alternative investments - hedge funds, currency, real estate,
private equity and other investment funds designed to focus
on nontraditional strategies.
Assets under management: Represent assets actively
managed by AM on behalf of its Private Banking,
Institutional and Retail clients. Includes “Committed capital
not Called,” on which AM earns fees.
Beneficial interests issued by consolidated VIEs:
Represents the interest of third-party holders of debt,
equity securities, or other obligations, issued by VIEs that
JPMorgan Chase consolidates.
Benefit obligation: Refers to the projected benefit
obligation for pension plans and the accumulated
postretirement benefit obligation for OPEB plans.
Central counterparty (“CCP”): A CCP is a clearing house
that interposes itself between counterparties to contracts
traded in one or more financial markets, becoming the
buyer to every seller and the seller to every buyer and
thereby ensuring the future performance of open contracts.
A CCP becomes counterparty to trades with market
participants through novation, an open offer system, or
another legally binding arrangement.
Chase LiquidSM cards: Refers to a prepaid, reloadable card
product.
Client advisors: Investment product specialists, including
private client advisors, financial advisors, financial advisor
associates, senior financial advisors, independent financial
advisors and financial advisor associate trainees, who
advise clients on investment options, including annuities,
mutual funds, stock trading services, etc., sold by the Firm
or by third-party vendors through retail branches, Chase
Private Client locations and other channels.
Client assets: Represent assets under management as well
as custody, brokerage, administration and deposit accounts.
Client deposits and other third party liabilities: Deposits,
as well as deposits that are swept to on-balance sheet
liabilities (e.g., commercial paper, federal funds purchased
and securities loaned or sold under repurchase
agreements) as part of client cash management programs.
Client investment managed accounts: Assets actively
managed by Chase Wealth Management on behalf of clients.
The percentage of managed accounts is calculated by
dividing managed account assets by total client investment
assets.
Credit cycle: A period of time over which credit quality
improves, deteriorates and then improves again (or vice
versa). The duration of a credit cycle can vary from a couple
of years to several years.
Credit derivatives: Financial instruments whose value is
derived from the credit risk associated with the debt of a
third party issuer (the reference entity) which allow one
party (the protection purchaser) to transfer that risk to
another party (the protection seller). Upon the occurrence
of a credit event by the reference entity, which may include,
among other events, the bankruptcy or failure to pay its
obligations, or certain restructurings of the debt of the
reference entity, neither party has recourse to the reference
entity. The protection purchaser has recourse to the
protection seller for the difference between the face value
of the CDS contract and the fair value at the time of settling
the credit derivative contract. The determination as to
whether a credit event has occurred is generally made by
the relevant International Swaps and Derivatives
Association (“ISDA”) Determinations Committee.
CUSIP number: A CUSIP (i.e., Committee on Uniform
Securities Identification Procedures) number consists of
nine characters (including letters and numbers) that
uniquely identify a company or issuer and the type of
security and is assigned by the American Bankers
Association and operated by Standard & Poor’s. This system
facilitates the clearing and settlement process of securities.
A similar system is used to identify non-U.S. securities
(CUSIP International Numbering System).
Deposit margin/deposit spread: Represents net interest
income expressed as a percentage of average deposits.
Distributed denial-of-service attack: The use of a large
number of remote computer systems to electronically send
a high volume of traffic to a target website to create a
service outage at the target. This is a form of cyberattack.
Exchange-traded derivatives: Derivative contracts that are
executed on an exchange and settled via a central clearing
house.
FICO score: A measure of consumer credit risk provided by
credit bureaus, typically produced from statistical models
by Fair Isaac Corporation utilizing data collected by the
credit bureaus.