bounce
A check returned by a bank because it is not payable, usually because of insufficient funds. Also used in the context of securities to refer to the rejection and ensuing reclamation of a security; a stock price's abrupt decline and recovery. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary
* * *
▪ I. bounce bounce 1 [baʊns] verb
1. [intransitive, transitive] BANKING if a cheque bounces or a bank bounces it, the bank will not pay any money because there is not enough money in the account of the person who wrote the cheque:
• Every time a cheque bounces it costs us £25 in bank charges.
• His bank bounced the cheque and cancelled his overdraft.
2. [intransitive] FINANCE ECONOMICS to quickly increase in price or amount, especially after having fallen:
• The airline's shares bounced to 617p before settling back to 604p.
3. [intransitive] FINANCE if a stockmarket bounces, it suddenly becomes very active and share prices rise:
• Tokyo's beleaguered stock market bounced dramatically to erase some of its recent losses.
4. [intransitive, transitive] also bounce back COMPUTING if an email that you send bounces or is bounced back, it is returned to you and the other person does not receive it because of a technical problem
bounce back phrasal verb [intransitive]
to quickly increase or become successful again after falling or having problems:
• The shares dropped to 430p, before bouncing back to close at 468p.
[m0] ▪ II. bounce bounce 2 noun [countable]
a sudden rise in something such as prices, sales, or share prices:
• Economists agree that there could be a bounce in prices next year.
ˌdead cat ˈbounce
FINANCE an occasion when a share price or stockmarket rises a small amount after a large fall, before falling further:
• The market refers to short term recovery in a falling market as a dead cat bounce.
* * *
Ⅰ.
bounce UK US /baʊns/ verb [I or T]
► BANKING »
The bank immediately froze the account and bounced outstanding cheques.
»
Payments of $1 million were coming due, but when investors went to cash the checks, they bounced.
► IT,
COMMUNICATIONS »
Customers may be annoyed that spam defences bounce their legitimate e-mail.
»
The report they'd asked me to send bounced, because the email address was invalid.
► FINANCE,
ECONOMICS »
Analysts say that the US economy has bounced.
bounce 10%/10p/10 points »
The Group's shares bounced 20% yesterday as it unveiled its half-year results.
Ⅱ.
bounce UK US /baʊns/ noun [C, usually singular]
► ECONOMICS,
FINANCE »
Dealers took their cue from a strong bounce on Wall Street to push prices higher.
a bounce in sth »
Confidence is growing that we will see a bounce in consumer spending.
»
Today's recovery is being led by a bounce in the technology sector.
a bounce back »
Despite a bounce back in prices after the sales, the volume of business in stores rose in August.
Financial and business terms.
2012.