For credit instruments, it refers to isolating the key pricing characteristics. Among these, are issuer, type of collateral or issue, maturity, maturity to first option date, average life, duration, option adjusted duration and so forth.
The currency or credit instruments of a foreign country. FOREIGN FIRST (FOFI) An accounting method based on an assumption regarding the flow of goods that foreign status merchandise is disposed of first.
What is really important is the volume of credit instruments in circulation. It is on their amount that price movements depend.
corporate and government notes and bonds, mortgage securities and other credit instruments), (2) equity capital (e.g. listed and unlisted company shares), ...
Refers to the poor credit status of the user of credit instruments, i.e. the person taking out a loan or mortgage, based on credit scoring. ...(Read more) Subordinated Debt ...
The concept of CDS was developed by JP Morgan in the 1990's as to allow financial institutions to transfer financial risks of credit instruments to other entities.
Investment market based on short-term credit instruments. An acceptance is a time draft or bill of exchange that is accepted as payment for goods.
But with the expanding use of credit instruments, it has come to include checks drawn on bank accounts, postal money orders, and prepaid travelers checks that usually require identification of maker or endorser.
The shift away from bank credit instruments, such as Note Issuance Facilities, toward Floating Rate Notes and Eurocommercial paper began in the early 1980s, and was aided by the strong secondary market in Eurobond financings.
BOND FUNDS - Are mutual funds that invest in credit instruments. There can be distinctions, such as, tr... BOND INDENTURE - A document that sets forth the terms of a bond issue, the obligations of a bond issuer...
and business firm savings placed with financial intermediary firms such as banks, thrift institutions, and insurance companies or else mobilized directly from individual lenders through the issuance of bonds, notes and other credit instruments ...
Prior to World War I, "currency" generally meant coins and paper money, but with the expanding use of credit instruments, it has come to include checks drawn on bank accounts, ...
Foreign Exchange. The currency or credit instruments of a foreign country. Also, transactions involving purchase or sale of currencies.
Market participants refer to notional principal because, unlike bonds or other conventional credit instruments, these types of derivatives do not involve an exchange of principal.
a good that can be used to buy all other goods and services, that serves as a standard of value, and has a store of value. Money market - A term denoting the set of institutions that handle the purchase or sale of short-term credit instruments ...
See also: Banks, Expense, Compensation, Barter, Administration
 
|