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derivative A financial instrument which derives its value from an underlying security or notional amount.
Ãâó: www.mortgageminders.net/mortgageglossary.shtml
derivative A financial instrument whose characteristics and value depend upon the characteristics and value of an underlying security, typically a commodity, bond, equity or currency. Examples of derivatives include futures and options. Investors sometimes purchase or sell derivatives to manage the risk associated with the underlying security, to protect against fluctuations in value, or to profit from periods of inactivity or decline. These techniques can be quite complicated and quite risky.
Ãâó: www.arpllp.com/page.asp
derivative A financial instrument whose value is based on, or "derived" from, another security, or index. Examples of derivatives are warrants, futures and options contracts.
Ãâó: www.kgieworld.com/kgi_site/financialplanning/gloss...
derivation is the process of adding a morpheme to a base by which the meaning and/or wordclass of the base changes.
Ãâó: www.spectrum.uni-bielefeld.de/Courses/Summer02/How...
derivation Accepted philological conclusions are utilized for classifying separate uses of the same word as of similar or different derivation. This is purely a matter of convenience, and the rulings must seem arbitrary to a foreigner where historical data are relied on. Thus relay', s. and 'relay', v. are of separate derivation, the one being from the Fr. relaise, and the other a compound of re- and lay, while 'cross', s. and 'cross', adj. are of the same derivation. ...
Ãâó: ogden.basic-english.org/dictionary.html
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