Trojan and Securitisation swap: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Add origin - source - Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trojan_Horse#:~:text=Trojan%20Horse%20refers%20to%20a,briefly%20mentioned%20in%20the%20Odyssey.)
 
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''Cyberthreats''.
''Interest rate risk management''.


A trojan is computer software designed to breach the security of a system, while ostensibly performing a useful or innocuous function.
A securitisation swap is an interest rate swap or a cross-currency interest rate swap undertaken in a securitisation.


'Trojan' is an abbreviation of 'Trojan horse'.
It is designed to hedge the interest rate risk or currency risk arising from any mismatches between the securities issued and the assets in the securitisation portfolio.




The term originates from the myth in which soldiers attacking Troy hid inside an innocuous wooden horse, that the defenders then pulled through the gates of their own besieged city.
== See also ==
* [[Cross-currency interest rate swap]]
* [[Interest rate swap]]
* [[Securitisation]]
* [[Securitisation special purpose vehicle]]
* [[Security]]
* [[Swap]]


 
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
==See also==
*[[Cyber security]]
*[[Cyberthreat]]
*[[Malware]]
*[[Ransomware]]
 
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]

Latest revision as of 23:45, 23 January 2024

Interest rate risk management.

A securitisation swap is an interest rate swap or a cross-currency interest rate swap undertaken in a securitisation.

It is designed to hedge the interest rate risk or currency risk arising from any mismatches between the securities issued and the assets in the securitisation portfolio.


See also