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6.A. -Page 20 of 22 <br />CITY OF REDWOOD CITY <br />INVESTMENT POLICY <br />to its informal oversight. Primary dealers include Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) -registered <br />securities broker-dealers, banks, and a few unregulated firms. <br />PRUDENT PERSON RULE: An investment standard. In some states the law requires that a fiduciary, such <br />as a trustee, may invest money only in a list of securities selected by the custody state—the so-called <br />legal list. In other states the trustee may invest in a security if it is one which would be bought by a <br />prudent person of discretion and intelligence who is seeking a reasonable income and preservation of <br />capital. <br />QUALIFIED PUBLIC DEPOSITORIES: A financial institution which does not claim exemption from the <br />payment of any sales or compensating use or ad valorem taxes under the laws of this state, which has <br />segregated for the benefit of the commission eligible collateral having a value of not less than its <br />maximum liability and which has been approved by the Public Deposit Protection Commission to hold <br />public deposits. <br />RATE OF RETURN: The yield obtainable on a security based on its purchase price or its current market <br />price. This may be the amortized yield to maturity on a bond the current income return. <br />REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (REPO): A holder of securities sells these securities to an investor with an <br />agreement to repurchase them at a fixed price on a fixed date. The security "buyer" in effect lends the <br />"seller" money for the period of the agreement, and the terms of the agreement are structured to <br />compensate him for this. <br />REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (REVERSE REPO): A reverse -repurchase agreement (reverse repo) <br />involves an investor borrowing cash from a financial institution in exchange for securities. The investor <br />agrees to repurchase the securities at a specified date for the same cash value plus an agreed upon <br />interest rate. Although the transaction is similar to a repo, the purpose of entering into a reverse repo is <br />quite different. While a repo is a straightforward investment of public funds, the reverse repo is a <br />borrowing. <br />SAFEKEEPING: A service to customers rendered by banks for a fee whereby securities and valuables of <br />all types and descriptions are held in the bank's vaults for protection. <br />SECONDARY MARKET: A market made for the purchase and sale of outstanding issues following the <br />initial distribution. <br />SECURITIES & EXCHANGE COMMISSION: Agency created by Congress to protect investors in securities <br />transactions by administering securities legislation. <br />SEC RULE 15(C)3-1: See Uniform Net Capital Rule. <br />STRUCTURED NOTES: Notes issued by Government Sponsored Enterprises (FHLB, FNMA, SLMA, etc.) and <br />corporations, which have imbedded options (e.g., call features, step-up coupons, floating rate coupons, <br />derivative -based returns) into their debt structure. Their market performance is impacted by the <br />fluctuation of interest rates, the volatility of the imbedded options and shifts in the shape of the yield <br />curve. <br />TREASURY BILLS: A non-interest bearing discount security issued by the U.S. Treasury to finance the <br />national debt. Most bills are issued to mature in three months, six months, or one year. <br />TREASURY BONDS: Long-term coupon -bearing U.S. Treasury securities issued as direct obligations of the <br />U.S. Government and having initial maturities of more than 10 years. <br />TREASURY NOTES: Medium-term coupon -bearing U.S. Treasury securities issued as direct obligations of <br />the U.S. Government and having initial maturities from two to 10 years. <br />Approved update: °% 17 <br />