Daisy Chaining Daisy chaining is an illegal practice undertaken by brokers and investors to artificially inflate stock prices for personal gain.
Daisy chain may refer to: A daisy garland created from daisy flowers, the original meaning and the one from which the following derive by analogy: Daisy chain (electrical engineering) Daisy chain (information technology) ...
Daisy Chaining Daisy Chaining definition : Manipulation of the market by traders to create the illusion of active volume to attract investors. FTSE 100, S&P 500 All In One ...
Daisy chain Manipulation of the market by traders to create the illusion of active volume to attract investors. ...
Daisy chain Definition 1. Manipulation of the market by traders to create the illusion of active volume to attract investors.
Paper cargoes are traded in daisy chains for speculative or hedging purposes. A daisy chain is also known as a paper chain.
Daisy Chain Brokerage lingo used to describe a pattern of fictitious trading by a group of persons buying and selling to create the appearance of active volume to entice legitimate investors.
Daisy Chain - A group of unscrupulous investors who, practicing a kind of fictitious trading or wash selling, artificially inflate the price of a security so that they sell it at a profit.
Daisy chain Market manipulation of the by traders to create the illusion of active volume to attract investors. Date of issue ...
daisy chaining: The illegal practice by brokers of creating artificial transactions to give the appearance of activity and interest in a particular security. day order: An order that is automatically canceled if it is not filled that day.
Daisy Chain - Illegal act of creating the illusion of trading activity in a stock through collusion of a number of brokers or brokerage offices. (See "Painting The Tape") ...
daisy chaining Daisy Chaining is an illegal form of price manipulation where brokers create... damages The financial compensation that is given to a plaintiff in response to injuries sustained or property damaged by another.
These are also known as daisy chains. They are usually full of misrepresentation and conflicting information.
The level at which many commodity, futures, and options markets are allowed to rise or fall in a day. Exchanges usually impose a daily price limit on each contract. Daisy chain ...
See also: Banks, Manipulation, Ex-dividend, Discount broker, Bills
 
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