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金融職場最常見英語詞匯

With another year under our belt, we thought we?d update our list of the most reviled clich?s in all of financial services ? the empty phrases your colleagues and bosses utter on a daily basis that make your skin crawl.

 We talked to a group of bankers, traders, consultants and other financial pros to freshen up the list. We also included a few that you left in the comments last year. Some are very industry-specific, others are more general clich?s that are likely uttered in most any business meeting. Did we miss any?

 Action items: Essentially just a list of things that need to get done.

 Hard stop: One that?s oft-used in journalism as well. It means you have to stop a meeting at a specific time as you have another appointment that you can?t move or be late to. ?I have a hard stop at 11 a.m.?

 Dead cat bounce: Used to discuss a particular asset. It is a recovery ? usually short ? in the price of stock/commodity/etc. after a massive decline. It comes from the idea that something has fallen so far that even a dead cat would bounce.

 Best practices: A seemingly formal, informal way of telling you that didn?t do something correctly. Common in investment banking. You didn?t follow ?best practices.?

 You?re only as good as your last trade: Self-explanatory but uttered every day according to one sell-side trader.

 Bandwidth: One you alerted us to last time. Having ?bandwidth? means you have the knowledge to go into greater detail on something. You can also ?provide? bandwidth.

 Over the wall: You are in the know. You have information that others don?t.

 Parking lot: To put an end to a conversation with the idea of coming back to it later. ?Let?s put that in a parking lot and move on.? Giving an idea ?some air,? or time to resonate, is similar.

 Scrimmage it: Also common in investment banking. Similar to another clich?: to ?hash something out.?

 Dig out: To get through all your backlog of work. ?Let me dig out and I?ll come see you in an hour.?

 Circle back: To re-evaluate something or give it a second look. You can also circle back ? or re-connect ? with a person to solve an issue. ?Let me circle back with Bob and I?ll let you know.?

 Deep dive: Giving a thorough analysis.

 Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered: Don?t be overly greedy, lest you get the chop. Sort of an anti-Gordon Gekko.

 Touch base: To make contact or catch up. ?Let?s touch base later today.?

 Give me a buzz: ?Call me.?

 Ping: Similar to a buzz, except it doesn?t have to be a phone call. You can ?ping? someone through any means of contact.

 Ready, fire, aim: The idea of being aggressive and moving quickly without over-thinking. Some eggs will likely get broken, to explain one clich? with another.

 Get alignment: To get everyone on the same page.

 30,000 foot view: The abridged version of an issue. You don?t want every detail, but just a general idea of what?s happening.

 This is a perishable: Another one left by a commenter. It means that something is time sensitive.