Trading positions are understood to mean the bank's proprietary positions in financial instruments 3 which are taken on with the intention of benefiting in the short term from actual or expected differences between their buying and selling prices or of... Risk Analysis for Islamic Banks - Strana 107autor/autoři: Hennie van Greuning, Zamir Iqbal - 2008 - 309 str.Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Banking, Finance, and Urban Affairs - 1994 - 1506 str.
...rule. Trading book: an institution's proprietary positions in financial instruments which are taken on with the intention of benefiting in the short term...differences between their buying and selling prices or of hedging other elements of the trading book, or which are held for short-term resale, or in order... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Banking, Finance, and Urban Affairs - 1994 - 1506 str.
...are understood to mean the bank's proprietary positions in financial instruments 3 which are taken on with the intention of benefiting in the short term...differences between their buying and selling prices or of hedging other elements of the trading book, or which are held for short-term resale, or in order... | |
| Diem Ho, Thomas Schneeweis - 1998 - 356 str.
...trading book includes the banks' proprietary positions in financial instruments which are taken on with the intention of benefiting in the short term...differences between their buying and selling prices or to hedge other elements of the trading book, or which are held for short term resale, or in order toe... | |
| Reto Gallati - 2003 - 577 str.
...intentionally held for short-term resale. The financial instruments may also be acquired by the bank with the intention of benefiting in the short term...differences between their buying and selling prices, or from other price or interest-rate variations; positions in financial instruments arising from matched principal... | |
| Hennie van Greuning, Sonja Brajovic Bratanovic - 2003 - 394 str.
...including positions in derivative products and off-balance-sheet instruments. The bank takes these positions with the intention of benefiting in the...short term from actual or expected differences between buying and selling prices, or from other price or interest rate variations. A bank's trading book may... | |
| |