Green curve and Social engineering: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Create page - source - Reuters - 2 Sep 2020 - https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-bonds-green-germany-analysis-idUKKBN25T2ZS)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
m (Note alternative spelling.)
 
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''Securities - borrowings - pricing - ESG.''
''Cyberthreat''


A green yield curve describes the prices of green securities trading in the secondary market, differentiated by their maturities.
In the context of cyber attacks, 'social engineering' means deceiving employees into voluntarily making fraudulent payments or other transactions, by causing them to believe that the fraudulent transactions are legitimate.




:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''Germany to create a green curve'''''</span>
<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''Frauds socially engineered'''''</span>


:"Germany's green debt plan differs from peers such as France and the Netherlands in that each green bond sold will be matched with a conventional twin...
:"... the frauds were successful because, at the final stage of the process, the victims’ employees were either directly or indirectly ‘socially engineered’ into willingly handing over company money, because they believed that they were engaged in legitimate transactions.  


:The structure will show investors the exact cost of going green. Until now, gauging the green premium meant examining an issuer’s regular yield curve to gauge where a hypothetical conventional bond identical to the green bond in question might trade.
:In their defence, there are some ‘very good reasons’ why they were so easy to manipulate."


:'For the first time, we will be able to exactly see what the (green) premium looks like without having to do any maths, except for a simple "minus" calculation, one yield minus the other,' said Christoph Rieger, head of rates and credit research at Commerzbank in Frankfurt...
:''The Treasurer magazine, March 2017, p39 - Lesley Meall, freelance journalist specialising in technology and finance.''


:... accurately gauging relative issuance costs should convince more borrowers of the financial benefits of going green, said Piet Christiansen, chief strategist at Danske Bank in Copenhagen.


:So Germany’s structuring of this issue could well be key in drawing more borrowers to the green market.
Sometimes written 'social-engineering'.


:'When Germany will (create) a green curve, then this is what we will price the green projects off of. So it is really that there will be a benchmark of where green pricing will be, going forward,' Danske’s Christiansen said."
:''Reuters - Yoruk Bahceli - 2 September 2020''




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Bond]]
* [[CEO fraud]]
* [[Green bond]]
* [[Cyber attack]]
* [[Green gilt]]
* [[Fraud]]
* [[Maturity]]
* [[Layering]]
* [[Premium]]
* [[Phishing]]
* [[Secondary market]]
* [[Ransomware]]
* [[Yield curve]]
* [[Spoofing]]
 
* [[Whaling]]
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
[[Category:Investment]]
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:Ethics]]
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Risk_reporting]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 13:46, 1 June 2018

Cyberthreat

In the context of cyber attacks, 'social engineering' means deceiving employees into voluntarily making fraudulent payments or other transactions, by causing them to believe that the fraudulent transactions are legitimate.


Frauds socially engineered

"... the frauds were successful because, at the final stage of the process, the victims’ employees were either directly or indirectly ‘socially engineered’ into willingly handing over company money, because they believed that they were engaged in legitimate transactions.
In their defence, there are some ‘very good reasons’ why they were so easy to manipulate."
The Treasurer magazine, March 2017, p39 - Lesley Meall, freelance journalist specialising in technology and finance.


Sometimes written 'social-engineering'.


See also