释义 |
rolloverenUK
roll·o·ver R0290500 (rōl′ō′vər)n.1. The act or process of rolling over.2. An accident in which a motor vehicle overturns.3. The act or an instance of rolling over funds: an IRA rollover.roll•o•ver (ˈroʊlˌoʊ vər) n. the reinvestment of funds, as from one stock or bond into another. [1960–65] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | rollover - the act of changing the institution that invests your pension plan without incurring a tax penaltychange - the action of changing something; "the change of government had no impact on the economy"; "his change on abortion cost him the election" | Translations
rolloverenUK
rollover[′rōl‚ō·vər] (computer science) A keyboard feature that allows more than one key to be depressed simultaneously, enabling the keys to be depressed more rapidly in sequence. rolloverA graphic element in an application or on a Web page that changes its color or shape when the pointer is moved (rolled) over it. See JavaScript rollover. See also n-key rollover.rolloverenUK
rollover Audiology A popular term for the shape of the curve in speech discrimination–SD audiometry, related to a defect in retrocochlear cranial nerve VIII, in which SD improves as sound intensity ↑ until a maximum–PBmax is reached, after which SD worsens. See Hearing test. RolloverenUK
RolloverMeans that a loan is periodically repriced at an agreed spread over the appropriate, currently prevailing rate. Most term loans in the Euromarket are made on a rollover basis as to current LIBOR rate.Roll Over1. The act or practice of taking profits or other proceeds from investments and making other investments with them. It nearly always means that one is investing in more of the same security. For example, one may take dividends from a stock and buy more shares with it or may take coupon payments to buy more of the same bond issue. It is also called reinvesting. Colloquially, rolling over refers to reinvesting proceeds from one retirement account in another retirement account without causing a taxable event.
2. A loan that a borrower may renew upon maturity. This may happen when the borrower has only been making interest payments over the life of the loan. See also: Refinancing.rollover The reinvestment of money received from a maturing security in another similar security. Rollover usually applies to short-term investments such as certificates of deposit, commercial paper, and Treasury bills. For example, investors often want a rollover of the proceeds from a maturing certificate of deposit into a new certificate of deposit. See also IRA rollover, pension rollover.Rollover.If you move your assets from one investment to another, it's called a rollover. For example, if you move money from one IRA to another IRA, that transaction is a rollover. In the same vein, if you move money from a qualified retirement plan, such as a 401(k), into an IRA, you create a rollover IRA. Similarly, when a bond or certificate of deposit (CD) matures, you can roll over the assets into another bond or time deposit. RolloverThe tax-free transfer of an employer plan distribution to another employer plan or to a traditional IRA, or the tax-free transfer from one IRA to another or to an eligible employer plan.AcronymsSeeROrolloverenUK Related to rollover: rollover loanWords related to rollovernoun the act of changing the institution that invests your pension plan without incurring a tax penaltyRelated Words |