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Book-entry securities

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Book-entry securities
The Treasury and federal agencies are moving to a book-entry system in which securities are not represented by engraved pieces of paper but are maintained in computerized records at the ...

 


book-entry securities
securities that are not represented by a certificate. Purchases and sales of some municipal bonds, for instance, are merely recorded on customers' accounts; no certificates change hands.

BOOK-ENTRY SECURITIES - Securities which are not represented by paper certificates but are maintained i...
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Book-entry securities. Securities that are registered to an owner without the issuance of a physical certificate. Ownership is reflected by an entry in the issuer's books.

book-entry securities:Securities that are recorded in electronic records, called book entries, rather than as
paper certificates. Ownership of U.S. government book-entry securities is transferred over Fedwire.

Book-entry securities are electronic versions of stock and bond certificates. Instead of printing a certificate and mailing it to you, the issuing company records the details of your purchase in its computer files.

Book-entry securities are stocks, bonds, and similar investments whose ownership is recorded electronically rather than in certificate form.

securities Paper certificates (definitive securities) or electronic records (book-entry securities) evidencing ownership of equity (stocks) or debt obligations (bonds).

See: Book-entry securities. Certified checkA bank guaranteed check for which funds are immediately withdrawn, and for which the bank is legally liable.

BOOK-ENTRY SECURITIES These transactions signify securities that are not represented by certificates of ownership, but are simply recorded on customers' accounts.

Paper certificates (definitive securities) or electronic records (book-entry securities) evidencing ownership of equity (stocks) or debt obligations (bonds).
Securities Act of 1933 ...

[FRB][FRBC][FRBM] book-entry securities Electronically recorded securities that include each creditor's name, address, Social Security or tax identification number, and dollar amount loaned, (i.e.

Securities that are issued in the form of a paper certificate as opposed to book-entry securities which are electronic entries into a computer. Examples of definitive securities include bearer and registered bonds.

Municipal bonds with one certificate which is valid for the entire issue, and having no individual certificates, easing transactions. See: Book-entry securities.
Certified check ...

Certificateless municipals
Municipal bonds with one certificate which is valid for the entire issue, and having no individual certificates, easing transactions. See: Book-entry securities.

Ownership and liens are recorded in the records of the trustee rather than evidenced by physical possession of the certificate. Also called immobilized. Less often, dematerialized is used to refer to book-entry securities that have never been issued ...

See also: Banks, Member bank, Bills, Expense, Values

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