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Financial terms in "Bonds and Treasuries"

1. interest rate collar

2. asset class breakdown

3. management accounting

4. construction bond

5. CMO

6. blanket fidelity bond

7. Coupon

8. extendable bond

9. 10-Year Treasury Note

10. any-interest-date call

11. preliminary official statement

12. Original issue discount

13. bond dividend

14. recapitalization

15. continuously offered longer-term securities (COLTS)

16. net revenue pledge

17. asset swapped convertible option transaction

18. credit analyst

19. non-interest-bearing note

20. surety bond

21. leveraged loan

22. bond trustee

23. with interest

24. financing flows

25. registered coupon bond

26. super senior

27. convertible bond arbitrage

28. industrial bond

29. reverse swap

30. bond valuation

31. forward

32. active tranche

33. intermediate bond

34. bill announcement

35. yield burning

36. absolute rate

37. duration gap

38. flat yield curve

39. CBO

40. convertibility clause

41. Scrip

42. curve steepener trade

43. Certificates for Amortizing Revolving Debts

44. bond for bond lending

45. liquidity risk

46. fiscal agent

47. market risk premium

48. dual currency bond

49. FHLMC

50. amortizing security

51. 30-Year Treasury

52. Bill

53. long-term investor

54. pure discount instrument

55. Offer

56. payment-in-kind security

57. interest bearing investment

58. project completion restriction

59. G7 bond

60. airbag swap

61. covered bond

62. blanket bond

63. industrial development revenue bonds (IDRBs)

64. fidelity bond

65. de minimis tax rule

66. delayed annuity

67. call price

68. Bond Buyer 20

69. Government Securities Clearing Corporation

70. undiversifiable risk

71. spreadlock

72. consumer debenture

73. capital budgeting

74. rentier

75. debt warrant

76. Series I Bond

77. nominal rate

78. delivery option

79. market index deposit (MID)

80. cash in

81. Long Position

82. European Covered Bond Council (ECBC)

83. auction rate

84. Oslo Bors (OSE)

85. fitch sheets

86. CUSIP

87. on-the-run Treasuries

88. dwarf

89. total bond fund

90. Face value

91. premium over bond value

92. full coupon bond

93. limited-tax general obligation bond

94. installment bond

95. citizen bond

96. corporate bond equivalent

97. Euroequity issues

98. discounted

99. convertible exchangeable preferred stock

100. Fannie Mae

Note: Maximum 100 records reached. Please narrow your search.

Featured term of the day

Definition / Meaning of

Stockholm Syndrome

Categories: Business and Management,

The effect in which hostage victims form emotional attachment or fondness towards their captors. The Syndrome is named after the 1973 'Norrmalmstorg Robbery' - an armed raid on Kreditbanken at Norrmalmstorg in Stockholm, Sweden. The bank's employees were held hostage from 23-28 August, during which time some of the victims became emotionally attached to their captors, even defending them after being freed. The term Stockholm Syndrome was first used by criminologist/psychiatrist Nils Bejerot, when assisting police during the siege, referring to the Syndrome in a news broadcast. It was defined in more detail by psychiatrist Frank Ochberg to aid the management of hostage situations. While Stockholm Syndrome chiefly and originally refers to hostage situations the term extends to other forms of 'traumatic bonding', not necessarily dependent on a hostage situation, more broadly describing the somewhat counter-intuitive tendency among certain folk for strong emotional connections to develop within an abusive relationship. At a slightly milder but nevertheless still very worrying level we see the same principle extending to abusive employment situations and other 'working' relationships, where badly-treated and exploited workers can develop strangely positive feelings towards abusive bosses/employers. Whether driven by fear, dependence, gratitude (for limiting the level of abuse), survival impulse, or various other possible factors, the Stockholm Syndrome remains puzzling and paradoxical at any level, and yet a very real human tendency in certain situations.

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