Contingent risk and Convention: Difference between pages

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A risk that may arise depending on particular events.  
1. ''International law - treaties.''


Often this term is used in currency risk to refer to the situation where a bid for a commercial contract has been submitted at a fixed currency price.
A treaty between states, especially a multilateral treaty.
 
Examples include the OECD model tax convention.
 
 
2.  ''Constitutional law - unwritten parts.''
 
Parts of the rules and practices of a state that are not written down, but are followed as if they were.
 
 
3.  ''Ethics - law - regulation - markets.''
 
Conventions are standards and principles of conduct that are additional to compliance with regulations and law.
 
For example, the ACT's Ethical Code requires the ACT's members to comply with "the laws, regulations and conventions of the countries and markets in which they transact business..."
 
 
4.  ''Markets - professional practice.''
 
A generally understood and accepted method of doing or saying something.
 
 
For example the ACT/360 day count convention for many major currencies, used to calculate short-term interest payable and receivable.
 
Another example is the ''dual aspect convention'' - or ''double entry principle'' - in bookkeeping, that every accounting transaction affects two accounts.


The risk is contingent on both being successful in the bid and the size of the eventual order placed.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Currency risk]]
* [[ACT/360]]
* [[Pre-transaction risk]]
* [[ACT Ethical Code]]
* [[Account]]
* [[Bookkeeping]]
* [[Compliance]]
* [[Conventional year]]
* [[Double entry]]
* [[Ethics]]
* [[Law]]
* [[Multilateral]]
* [[OECD model tax convention]]
* [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development]]  (OECD))
* [[Regulation]]
* [[Sign convention]]
* [[Treaty]]
* [[United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change]]  (UNFCCC)
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
[[Category:Investment]]
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Risk_reporting]]

Revision as of 13:32, 16 December 2021

1. International law - treaties.

A treaty between states, especially a multilateral treaty.

Examples include the OECD model tax convention.


2. Constitutional law - unwritten parts.

Parts of the rules and practices of a state that are not written down, but are followed as if they were.


3. Ethics - law - regulation - markets.

Conventions are standards and principles of conduct that are additional to compliance with regulations and law.

For example, the ACT's Ethical Code requires the ACT's members to comply with "the laws, regulations and conventions of the countries and markets in which they transact business..."


4. Markets - professional practice.

A generally understood and accepted method of doing or saying something.


For example the ACT/360 day count convention for many major currencies, used to calculate short-term interest payable and receivable.

Another example is the dual aspect convention - or double entry principle - in bookkeeping, that every accounting transaction affects two accounts.


See also