Could you spot a ‘doorbuster’? Our guide to the latest financial lingo

Could you spot a ‘doorbuster’ in a ‘spendemic’? Those are just two of the wacky new terms it pays to get to grips with in the world of modern finance

As our world changes, the English language has to adapt and keep up – and the world of money is no different. 

Here, language  expert Adam Jacot de Boinod, a former researcher on TV’s QI, provides an alphabetical list of some financial  words and phrases coined since the turn of the century…

Money talks: As our world changes, the English language has to adapt and keep up – and the world of money is no different

Ant hill family — the trend whereby children move back in with their parents so that all work together towards group financial goals.

Bankster — a member of the banking industry perceived as a predator, who grows rich at the expense of those affected by an economic recession.

Challenger bank — a relatively small retail bank competing with long-established national banks.

Clipped-wing generation — young adults unable to be independent from their parents because they can’t afford living costs.

Crony capitalism — an economic system characterised by close relationships between business leaders and government officials.

Doorbuster — a product sold very cheaply in order to attract customers into a shop and make them buy other, more expensive things.

Eurogeddon — total economic meltdown in Europe.

Farecasting — predicting the best date to buy a plane ticket, especially on a website or an app.

Flash crash — a very rapid decline in the price of one or more commodities or securities, typically the result of auto- mated trading.

Flat white economy — the wealth created through the large number of people using a coffee shop or cafe to work in, rather than working in an office.

Flat white economy: The wealth created through the large number of people using a coffee shop or café to work in, rather than working in an office

Freecycle — to give away something used or unwanted, as opposed to selling it or throwing it away.

Gender tax — the pricing disparities between products aimed at men and women, usually showing a premium on those products that are sold to women.

Hunkvertising — the use of pictures of attractive, scantily clad young men to advertise products.

Jackpotting — hacking into a cash machine in order to obtain money.

Menoporsche — middle-aged men attempting to recapture their lost youth by buying themselves an expensive sports car.

Misery index — an informal measure of an economy, generated by adding together its rates of inflation and unemployment.

Price gouging — increasing the price of goods or services beyond what is considered fair, normally during a state of emergency.

Menoporsche: Middle-aged men attempting to recapture their lost youth by buying themselves an expensive sports car.

Menoporsche: Middle-aged men attempting to recapture their lost youth by buying themselves an expensive sports car.

Shop dropping — leaving messages hidden in a shop (often in the pockets of a piece of clothing) to raise awareness of the ethical malpractices of the manufacturer or retailer.

Slow gifting — shopping carefully and thoughtfully for gifts and buying high-quality, often handmade items from small shops or individual sellers.

Spendemic — a sudden tendency for people to spend money, usually on unnecessary things.

Stoozing — borrowing money on a credit card with a 0 per cent interest rate, then investing the same money in a bank account that pays a high interest rate, so that a profit can be made when the original loan is repaid.

Subprime — mortgages that are offered to applicants who do not have a good credit history or who will struggle to meet the cost of the loan.

Surge pricing — the practice of charging more for services at times of higher demand.

Tech wreck — a collapse in the price of shares in high- technology industries.

Upcycle — to reuse discarded objects or material in such a way as to create a product of higher quality or value than the original.

Know your acronyms 

BYOD — bring your own devices: describes a situation, such as a job, where an employee is expected to bring their own equipment.

CIVETS — Colombia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, Turkey and South Africa (seen as key markets for economic growth).

FAANG — the companies Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google.

FIRE — financial independence, retire early: a way of life that involves working hard and saving as much money as possible during your 20s and 30s in order to be able to retire when you are in your 40s.

HENRY — high earner not rich yet; refers to a person with an income of between £73,000 and £184,000.

JAM — just about managing; used to describe people who have just enough money to survive but no more than that.

MINT — the countries of Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey, which are considered together as they are thought to be possible emerging economic giants.

SINDIE — (a woman who fits the description of) single income now divorced.

TWAG — tech wife and girlfriend: the wife or girlfriend of an entrepreneur in the technology industry.

WOOPIES — well-off older people.

YUCCIE — young urban creative; someone who wants to be creative and free-spirited but also wealthy.

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