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Institution

Stock market Installment paymentsInstitutional fund

Institutional fund management is fund management conducted by large financial firms such as banks, insurance companies and major investment organisations (e.g. Fidelity or Vanguard). The activity of institutional fund management has several facets e.

 


Institutional investor - some related terms:
Investment company
Block
Fourth market ...

Institutional Ownership
Percent of a company's shares owned by banks, mutual funds, pension funds, insurance companies and other institutions, all of them characterized by a propensity to buy and sell in bulk.

institutional lenders
Definition 1
Institutional investors who invest a substantial part of their funds in corporate, government, and municipal debt securities (bonds, debentures, notes) or participate in mortgage loan pools.

Institutional Trader
An institutional trader manages relatively large amounts of capital, compared to most traders. Institutional traders will typically have larger positions and hold them for longer periods of time.

Institutionalization
The gradual domination of financial markets by institutional investors, as opposed to individual investors. This process has occurred throughout the industrialized world.
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Institutional investors are large buyers and sellers of stocks representing banks, pension funds, mutual funds, hedge funds, and any other large entity.
intrinsic value ...

Institutional money funds are high minimum investment, low expense share classes which are marketed to corporations, governments, or fiduciaries. They are often set up so that money is swept to them overnight from a company's main operating accounts.

INSTITUTIONAL CUSTOMER - A term that generally refers to banks, financial institutions, bond funds, insurance companies or other business organizations that possess or control considerable assets for large scale investing.

Institutional Sponsorship
The biggest source of supply and demand comes from institutional buyers (e.g., mutual funds, banks, insurance companies, etc).

Institutions are also part of the framework of the capital market. Stock exchanges are one of the more visible examples of established operations that give form and function to the capital market.

Institution responsible for safekeeping securities and ensuring that the decisions made by fund managers are lawful.

Institutional Investors
Organizations whose primary purpose is to invest their own assets or those entrusted to them by others. The most common are employee pension funds, insurance companies, mutual funds, university endowments, and banks.

Institutional Clients
Money Manager Services
Introducing Brokers
White Labeling
Strategic Partnerships ...

Institutional Investors and Fundamentals
Fundamental Analysis
Fundamental Analysis vs Technical Analysis ...

Institutional Investor - An organization whose primary purpose is to invest its own assets or those held in trust by it for others. Includes pension funds, investment companies, insurance companies, insurances and banks.

Institutional Investors
Mutual funds, banks, pension funds, insurance companies, etc. engaged in investing.

Institutional Buying/Selling around Year-end
Returns in January vs Other Months- Major
Financial Markets
The Weekend Effect ...

Institutional investor Organizations that invest in the markets. These typically include depository firms, insurance companies, pension funds, investment companies, mutual funds and endowments.

Institutional Investor
A person or organization that trades securities in large enough share quantities or dollar amounts that it qualifies for preferential treatment and lower commissions. An institutional order can be of any size.

Institutional investors
Organizations that invest, including insurance companies, depository institutions, pension funds, investment companies, and endowment funds.
Institutionalization ...

Institutional Fund - A mutual fund that targets pension funds, endowments, and other high net worth entities and individuals.

INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS
Groups that trade large volumes of securities. Some examples include mutual funds, pension funds, banks, insurance firms, college endowment plans, among others.
INTER VIVOS TRUST ...

Institutional Investor
A financial intermediary (a mutual fund or a pension fund, for example) that invests in the securities markets for clients.

Institutional Investor - A very large, typically financially sophisticated investor, such as a mutual fund, insurance company, or corporate investment account.

Institutional broker
A broker who buys and sells securities for institutional investors such as banks, and mutual funds, pensions.

Institutional Investor
An institution such as an investment company, mutual fund, insurance company, pension fund, or endowment fund, which generally has substantial assets and experience in investments.

Institution
The name of the institution issuing a CD or money market.
Institutions Holding ...

Institutional investor: A investor who is a bank, savings and loan association, insurance company, registered investment company, federal- or state-registered investment adviser, or any other person, corporation, partnership, trust, ...

An institutional day trader is a trader who works for a larger financial institution.

An institution might own Citibank (CCI Quote - Cramer on CCI - Stock Picks), GE (GE Quote - Cramer on GE - Stock Picks) and IBM (IBM Quote - Cramer on IBM - Stock Picks) shares, ...

An institution who buys services from a broker/dealer, i.e., pays a commission on the execution of an order.
Buyout
Purchase of a controlling interest (or percent of shares) of a company's stock. A leveraged buyout is done with borrowed money.

The institution that acted as transfer agent for a company before the current transfer agent was appointed.
Privately Held Company
A company whose stock is closely held and not publicly traded.

What Institutions Qualify for the Exclusion? Post secondary institutions, colleges, universities, and various vocational schools. The schools qualify must participate in federally assisted programs (ex. They offer a guaranteed student loan program).

Most institutions hold stocks for the long-term and do not concern themselves with short-term fluctuations. They want to know the annual compound growth rate; a very different concept from short-term velocity.
What Chart Scale Should I Use?

See: Institutional Investor; Volume
Moving Average
An average that is based on security or commodity prices over a period of time (few days to few years) that shows trends for the latest period.

Large institutional investor such as a pension fund or mutual fund, with a huge impact on the prices of a given security because of the size of their transactions.

Thrift institution
An organization formed as a depository for primarily consumer savings. Savings and loan associations and savings banks are thrift institutions.

Individual and institutional traders are constantly looking for such well-known trading signals. The Technical Live Picks feature makes their lives much easier by helping them to find what they want promptly.

Fiduciary: An individual or institution occupying a position of trust. An executor, administrator or trustee. Hence, "fiduciary" duties.
Fiscal policy: The policy pursued by government to manage the economy through its spending and taxation powers.

Clearinghouse
An institution established separately from the exchanges to ensure timely payment and delivery of securities.
Close
The price of the last transaction for a particular security each day.

I also found that institutional investors managing billion dollar transactions or individuals working with grandma's "blue chip" stock all share something in common, regardless of the method of trading or the size of the portfolio.

Non-Bank Financial Institution (NBFI)
A generic term describing any financial institution not covered by Reserve Bank supervision, but more commonly referring to institutions such as Building Societies, Credit Unions and Friendly Societies, ...

[Harvey] ABA number A nine digit number (eight digits and a check digit) that identifies a specific financial institution.

cancelled check A check cleared by a financial institution. A cancelled check may serve as proof of payment. Candlestick Charting Explained Intro to Candles Bullish Reversals Bearish Reversals Continuation...

Individual Retirement Account (IRA) A tax-deferred retirement account set up with a financial institution such as a bank, broker, or mutual fund in which contributions may be invested in many types of securities such as stocks, bonds, ...

The Catastrophe Bond is an ideal instrument for an unscrupulous security salesman to present to unsuitably naive retail or even institutional customers, who lack any concept of that game's odds, or perhaps even its basic rules.

Institution A professional investment management company. Typically, this term is used to describe large money managers such as banks, pension funds, mutual funds, and insurance companies.

Certificate of deposit (CD)Also called a time deposit, a certificate issued by a bank or thrift that indicates a specified sum of money has been deposited at the issuing depository institution.

Withdrawals or transfers of funds made by authorized financial institutions through electronic terminal, telephone, computer or magnetic tape.
Equity
A property's value in excess of the total amount of charges or liens against it.

The blocks being offered may have been held by large investors or institutions, and proceeds of the sale go to those holders, not the issuing company. Also called secondary distribution.

General definition of accredited investors: institutional type accounts and persons of wealth (persons with a net worth of $1 Million or more, persons with annual income of $200,000 or more, persons who purchase $150, ...

Cy Group Trading - Our model is simple: provide top notch trading and execution services to private traders and institutions.

Bank : A bank is a financial institution where it´s possible to deposit money...
Bank Line : Line of credit granted by a bank to a customer, also known as a "line".

WHETHER A PRISONER OR ON THE PAYROLL Prison is an institution and an organization. Your company is an institution and an organization. When you stop to think about their structures, they are not that different.

Its mission is to support NASD members in London, serve as a liaison to international companies seeking to list securities on NASDAQ, encourage foreign institutional participation in NASDAQ stocks, ...

Signature Medallion Guaranty: Program used by banks and other institutions to verify a signature.

Off-Shore : The operations of a financial institution which although phys...
Offer : The price at which a seller is willing to sell. The best offer is...
Offered Market : Temporary situation where offers exceed bid.

Institutions will hide their intentions. GSCO and MLCO will use ARCA or ADFN to secretly get into a large position. If they are buyers, they will often post a best bid for 100 shares. This is when you need to watch the tape.

The acronym stands for:- Current quarterly earnings per share / Annual earnings growth / New products, New Management, New Highs / Shares outstanding / Leading industry / Institutional sponsorship / Market direction.

See also: Trading, Stock, Investment, Trade, Price