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Securities which are nearly risk-free.
Semi Related Terms: 122 CLICK HERE TO VIEW
10-K,
At risk,
As is,
A shares,
Benchmark risk,
B shares,
Call risk,
Committee on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures,
Credit risk,
Country risk,
C shares,
Counterparty risk,
Class A Shares,
Class B Shares,
Close a position,
Drawn securities,
Default risk,
Diversifiable risk,
Downside risk,
Equity risk premium,
Event risk,
ECU,
E-mini,
Excluded risk,
Early exercise,
Early withdrawal penalty,
Free bond,
Free riding,
Forward P/E,
Free enterprise,
Free market,
Free market price,
Free trade,
Form 8-K,
Form S-1,
Financial risk,
Free and clear,
Free float,
Free right of exchange,
Free delivery,
Government securities,
Government Securities Clearing Corporation,
General Securities Representative Examination,
Interest rate risk,
International Securities Identification Number,
Income risk,
I/O strip,
Idiosyncratic risk,
Limited risk,
Lending at a rate,
Long-Term Equity Anticipation Securities,
Legal risk,
Level I quotes,
Make a market,
Mortgage risk,
Marketable securities,
Near money,
National Association of Securities Dealers,
National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations system,
National Securities Clearing Corporation,
National Securities Trade Association,
Near option,
Price Value of a Basis Point,
Public Securities Association,
P&L,
Prepayment risk,
Principal risk,
Risk adjusted return,
Risk,
Regulation T,
Regulation U,
Reinvestment risk,
Regulation A,
Risk/return trade-off,
Risk arbitrage,
Risk-averse,
Risk management,
Risk neutral,
Risk premium,
Risk seeking,
Risk capital,
SEC filing,
SG&A,
S&L,
SEC,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
Series EE bond,
SEC fee,
Securities analyst,
Securities Industry Association,
Securities Investor Protection Corporation,
Securities loan,
Segregation of securities,
Systemic risk,
Securities lending,
S Corporation,
Subchapter S Corporation,
Schedule C,
Securities Act of 1933,
Securities Acts Amendments of 1975,
Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
Securities fraud,
Seek a market,
S&P phenomenon,
T-Bill,
Take a position,
Trailing P/E,
Tax-free bond fund,
Take a bath,
U.S. Government Agency Security,
U.S. Savings Bond,
U.S. Treasury,
U.S. Treasury Bill,
U.S. Treasury Bond,
U.S. Treasury Note,
U.S. Treasury Securities,
Unlimited risk,
Uniform Securities Act,
Unsystematic risk,
W-2 Form,
W formation,
Y shares