Draft and Risk free rate of return: Difference between pages

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imported>P.F.cowdell@shu.ac.uk
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imported>Doug Williamson
(Source: http://www.bis.org/publ/bppdf/bispap72l.pdf)
 
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''Documentation.''
The theoretical rate of return which can be earned on hypothetical investments which are considered to be risk-free for modelling purposes.
 
 
Historically, the rates of return on certain types of domestic central government debt were considered to be a close enough proxy for such hypothetical risk-free investments.
 
In the modern era, domestic central government debt is no longer considered to be risk-free for this purpose, nor for a number of other purposes for which it was historically considered to be risk-free.
 


A written order from one party (the drawer) to another (the drawee) to pay a party identified on the order (payee) or the bearer a specified sum, either on demand (sight draft) or on a specified date (time draft).


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Bank draft]]
* [[Credit spread ]]
* [[Banker's acceptance]]
* [[Gilts]]
* [[Cheque]]
* [[Interest rate risk]]
* [[Documentary collection]]
* [[Payable through draft ]]
* [[Trade acceptance]]
 
[[Category:Bank_Lending]]
[[Category:Trade_Finance]]
[[Category:Short-Term_Liquidity]]

Revision as of 11:56, 12 August 2013

The theoretical rate of return which can be earned on hypothetical investments which are considered to be risk-free for modelling purposes.


Historically, the rates of return on certain types of domestic central government debt were considered to be a close enough proxy for such hypothetical risk-free investments.

In the modern era, domestic central government debt is no longer considered to be risk-free for this purpose, nor for a number of other purposes for which it was historically considered to be risk-free.


See also