Concept cluster: Tasks > Fund management
n
(business, obsolete) A shareholder in a joint-stock company.
n
(finance) An alternative investment or alternative fund.
n
(finance) An investment in any asset class other than stocks, bonds, or cash.
n
(finance) collective investment scheme investing in all asset classes and a wide range of financial instruments
n
(software) Any component, model, process or framework of value that can be leveraged or reused.
n
(business) The process of managing, monitoring and maintaining the value of a commercial entity.
n
(finance) Collective investment (such as a company or syndicate) where the investors have little or no idea what is being done.
n
percentage ratio of a financial institution's primary capital to its assets, used as a measure of its financial strength and stability
n
(finance) An asset in the sense of accounting, but also including financial assets such as stocks or bonds.
n
(business, accounting) Money that is spent on permanent assets (fixed assets) of a business, as opposed to operating expenses.
n
the The total value of the assets and/or investment of a entity, the total value of all the assets of an entity.
n
(finance) A mutual fund that closely resembles an index fund, while charging higher fees for active management.
n
(Britain, finance) A way of investing money with other people to participate in a wider range of investments than may be feasible for an individual investor, and to share the costs of doing so.
n
(UK, law) A stock short title used for an Act of Parliament that authorises HM Treasury to issue funds out of the consolidated fund.
n
A fund for emergencies or unexpected outflows, mainly economic crises.
n
(economics) The set of points representing final allocations of two goods between two people that could occur as a result of mutually beneficial trading between those people given their initial allocations of the goods.
n
(finance) A security whose value is derived from one or more other, more fundamental, assets.
n
(finance) An investment strategy in which the same amount of money is invested each period.
n
(collective, finance) Individual, noninstitutional investors considered as a group; by extension, the money invested by such people.
n
An investment fund which does almost all of its investments through a master fund via a master-feeder relationship.
n
Abbreviation of finance. [The management of money and other assets.]
n
A multidisciplinary field involving finance, engineering, mathematics and programming.
n
(finance) The efficient and effective management of money in such a manner as to accomplish the objectives of an organization.
n
A money-management operation, such as a mutual fund.
n
(finance) A company that owns and operates a mutual fund.
n
(economics) The holding of a fund.
n
(countable, finance) A group of securities with the same maturity, interest rate, and terms and conditions issued by a government.
n
(finance) A fund that tracks a specific basket of underlying investments.
adj
(finance) Of financial products such as bonds, savings accounts, pension schemes, etc., yielding returns that are calculated based on the level of a referenced financial index, such as a consumer price index, typically to keep pace with inflation.
adj
(finance) Similar to an index fund.
n
(finance) A fund consisting of investments made by a group of people and managed by a professional investment manager.
n
(finance) set of rules, behaviors or procedures, designed to guide an investor's selection of an investment portfolio
n
(finance) The liability of an owner or a partner of a company for no more capital than they have invested.
n
(finance) A collection of financial assets consisting of cash and other assets that can be readily converted to cash at close to face value.
n
(economics, in particular New Keynesian economics) circumstance when nominal interest rates are near or at zero and circulating additional money doesn't lower interest rates.
n
(economics) A small fund, especially a venture capital fund.
n
(finance) A mutual fund (US) that invests almost exclusively in short-term money market instruments whose value is deemed unlikely to fluctuate.
n
Alternative spelling of money market fund [(finance) A mutual fund (US) that invests almost exclusively in short-term money market instruments whose value is deemed unlikely to fluctuate.]
n
(derivative securities) The degree to which a derivative security is in the money, because of the relationship of the price of the underlying security to a conversion price or exercise price.
n
A mutual fund.
n
(finance) A form of collective investment in which money from many investors is pooled and invested in stocks, bonds, short-term money market instruments, or other securities under the direction of a fund manager.
n
(finance) A mutual fund that charges no sales load.
n
(finance) The aggregate value of the different stocks in which a loan to government is usually funded.
n
(finance) A collective investment scheme which can issue and redeem shares at any time.
v
Synonym of part-finance.
n
(economics) A theory attempting to describe how agents spread consumption over their lifetimes, supposing that a person's consumption at a point in time is determined not just by their current income but also by their expected income in future years, which is seen as the driver of change.
n
(finance) A group of investment funds that are aggregated together.
n
A system in which some of the profit of an enterprise are divided among the workers, giving them an incentive for profits without an equity interest.
n
Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor
n
(finance) An investment fund that makes investment decisions by sophisticated quantitative analysis.
n
(business) Money explicitly available for investment into a high-risk business or security.
n
(law) Equal rights to or equal portions of profits, assets, bequests, or other valuable items legally owed to investors, partners, beneficiaries, or other named associates. If one beneficiary is unable to benefit (for instance, if they have died), their share is divided among the others.
n
A state-owned investment fund investing in real and financial assets such as stocks, bonds, real estate, precious metals, etc.
n
(finance) A fund making up part of a larger fund.
n
(finance) An investment fund that invests in other investment funds; a fund of funds.
n
(accounting) Any asset, such as buildings, land, equipment etc., that has physical form.
n
(business) The share of profits paid to the management or to the board of directors under a profit sharing scheme.
n
(economics, finance) A measure of a bank's creditworthiness, equal to ratio of the bank's nonperforming assets (nonperforming loans plus other real estate owned) to the sum of its tangible equity capital plus loan-loss reserves.
n
(finance) Total invested capital.
n
(finance) A collective investment scheme that exists as a single legal entity but has several distinct subfunds traded like individual investment funds.
n
(accounting) In California community property law, a mechanism to deal with community funds and/or labor used to enhance the value of separate property. The manager's services are valued at a market rate, and community expenses are subtracted from that amount. The result is considered community property.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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