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Fixed Income Security - Law Dictionary Search Results

fixed-income security

fixed-income security see security

security

Commission (as those relating to registration on a security exchange) fixed-income security : a security (as a bond) that provides a fixed

spread

4 : the difference between the yields on investments in fixed-income securities equal in quality but with different maturity dates or … between the highest and lowest prices of a product or security for a given period c : the difference between bid

mortgage

usually initially lower than that of a mortgage with a fixed rate but which is adjusted periodically according to an index … mortgage by a court of equity because the parties intended it to be a mortgage first mortgage : a mortgage that … dead (from Latin mortuus) + gage security] 1 a : a conveyance of

note

an unconditional promise to pay on demand or at a fixed or determined future time a particular sum of money to … note that continues an obligation due under a previous note tax an·tic·i·pa·tion note : a note issued by a state or … judgment collateral note : a note secured esp. by a collateral mortgage and

Batta, or Butta

currency in which it is paid as compared with a fixed standard coin.'-Indian. Means a unit of the Force constituted as … deducted from, any judgment according to the currency in which it is paid as compared with a fixed standard coin.'-Indian. Means … battalion by the Central Government. [Border Security Force Act, 1968 (47 of 1968),

Debenture

165] of certain pro-perty with the repayment at a time fixed of money lent by person therein named at a given … Precedents, Pt. III., p. 1); and a document which, though it mentions to security and is only a promise to pay,

Magna Carta

desire that a place and time of meeting might be fixed for the purpose of his complying with their demands. Accordingly, … in 1215 and Henry III and Edward I later confirmed. It is generally regarded as one of the great common-law documents … public revenue is at once the security of peace and the sinews of

Funds, public

fresh ones. At length the practice of borrowing for a fixed period, or, as it is called, upon terminable annuities, was … it was customary to borrow upon the security of some tax, or portion of a tax, set apart as a fund

Annuity

annuity, the payment to be made periodically should be a fixed or predetermined one, and it should not be liable to … depending upon or on any ground relating to the general income of the fund or estate which is charged for such … the borrower has not any available security, the borrower undertaking to pay an

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