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Financial terms starting with "C"

1. COICOP (classification Of Individual Consumption By Purpose)

2. Cash Reporting

3. change

4. covered bond

5. Catastrophic Losses

6. Current Transfers Payments Of Compensation

7. Certification Of Trust

8. contingent annuitant

9. cash pooling

10. Cash Contract

11. Canada savings bond

12. cavil

13. Clearing House Automated Payments System (CHAPS)

14. Coverage Problems

15. California bungalow

16. capital-protected fund

17. conditional prepayment rate (CPR)

18. Comoros Franc

19. collection

20. Controlled Vocabulary

21. campanile

22. covered interest rate arbitrage

23. capital budget

24. Calendar Adjustment

25. certified financial statement

26. contingency planning

27. casement window

28. Copey

29. carry trade

30. CSWD Index

31. concrete pipe

32. Contumacy

33. Collaterized Loan Obligation

34. concealed

35. Clear And Present Danger

36. CCT

37. contracted out

38. corporate reimbursement coverage

39. cross tie

40. coemployment

41. Cross-Collateral

42. central banker

43. commissioner

44. cohabitation

45. Core-satellite Portfolio

46. combustion air intake

47. carport

48. contingent credit default swap (CCDS)

49. carnauba

50. carpenters pencil

51. competition policy

52. complete fusion

53. consumption

54. Classification Of Visitors

55. corporate action

56. CBOE

57. compounded interest rate

58. Covenant Not To Compete

59. CTA

60. commuted cash value

61. commercial general liability (CGL) policy

62. Consignee

63. Communication Industry ETF

64. ceded premiums

65. common area charges

66. Complete Set Of Conflict Rules

67. currency market

68. Current return

69. C. Steven McMillan

70. Cross-border factoring

71. Container Ship (fully Cellular - Fc)

72. classified stock

73. creditworthy

74. cold applied

75. cross border financing

76. core CPI

77. compounding method

78. confiscation, expropriation, nationalization (CEN), and deprivation (CEND) insurance

79. compound growth rate

80. combined loan to value ratio

81. capital accumulation

82. construction to permanent loan

83. Closing Costs

84. Cosign

85. comparative market analysis (CMA)

86. combination policy

87. Common Value Auction

88. Capitalized Inventory Costs

89. consequential damage

90. Combined Heat And Power Plants (CHP)

91. compensatory trade

92. competitive devaluation

93. Control No.

94. credit card sale

95. creep speed

96. Cost and Freight (CFR)

97. cash basis loan

98. Current Activity Status

99. crossover credit

100. Chroma Key Filter

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

Featured term of the day

Definition / Meaning of

Money Supply

Categories: Economics,

The money supply is the total amount of liquid or near-liquid assets in the economy. The federal reserve, or the Fed, manages the money supply, trying to prevent either recession or serious inflation by changing the amount of money in circulation. The Fed increases the money supply by buying government bonds in the open market, and decreases the supply by selling these securities.In addition, the Fed can adjust the reserves that banks must maintain, and increase or decrease the rate at which banks can borrow money. This fluctuation in rates gets passed along to consumers and investors as changes in short-term interest rates.The money supply is grouped into four classes of assets, called money aggregates. The narrowest, called M1, includes currency and checking deposits. M2 includes M1, plus assets in money market accounts and small time deposits. M3, also called broad money, includes M2, plus assets in large time deposits, eurodollars, and institution-only money market funds. The biggest group, L, includes M3, plus assets such as private holdings of us savings bonds, short-term us treasury bills, and commercial paper.

Most popular terms

1. Gross Margin
2. National Association Of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations System
3. Discrimination
4. Additional Insured
5. Lead Time
6. Stale Price Arbitrage
7. Franchised Monopoly
8. Price-to-earnings Ratio (P/E)
9. Life Settlement
10. Self-insured Retention (SIR)

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