Business impact analysis and Constant net asset value: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Update.)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
(Update - source - Association of Corporate Treasurers - email from Naresh Aggarwal 16 Feb 2022.)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
(BIA).
''Money market funds''.


The process of analysing business activities and the effect that a business disruption might have upon them.
(CNAV).


A form of money market fund whose distributing shares maintain a ‘constant’ price through the application of amortised cost accounting, rather than marking to market the value of the investments held in its portfolio.


==See also==
 
*[[BCM]]
Money Market Fund (MMF) reforms in 2019 replaced ''prime'' constant net asset value (CNAV) funds with two new categories:
*[[Business continuity plan]]
 
*[[Cyber attack]]
: - the Public Debt CNAV fund, and
*[[Cyber security]]
 
*[[Cyberspace]]
: - the low-volatility NAV (LNAV) fund.
 
 
 
== See also ==
* [[Accumulating net asset value]]
* [[Amortised cost]]
* [[Constant]]
* [[Distributing]]
* [[Mark to market]]
* [[Money market fund]]
* [[Money market fund reform: a light at the end of the tunnel?]]
* [[Net asset value]]
* [[Prime]]
* [[Public Debt CNAV]]
* [[Variable]]
* [[Variable net asset value]]
* [[Volatility]]
 
[[Category:Financial_management]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]

Revision as of 09:12, 16 February 2022

Money market funds.

(CNAV).

A form of money market fund whose distributing shares maintain a ‘constant’ price through the application of amortised cost accounting, rather than marking to market the value of the investments held in its portfolio.


Money Market Fund (MMF) reforms in 2019 replaced prime constant net asset value (CNAV) funds with two new categories:

- the Public Debt CNAV fund, and
- the low-volatility NAV (LNAV) fund.


See also