Calendar effect and Monetary: Difference between pages

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''Behavioural economics - technical analysis.''
1.


Calendar effects predict that equity prices and other traded asset prices have a tendency to move in relatively predictable ways in the periods around certain dates in the calendar year.
Relating to money, particularly the supply of, and confidence in, the official central currency.


There is a range of opinion about their possible causes, and about their existence.
Government monetary policies are often contrasted with, or combined with, fiscal policies.




== See also ==
2. ''Financial reporting''.
* [[Behavioural economics]]
* [[Classical economics]]
* [[Cognitive bias]]
* [[Cognitive science]]
* [[Dunning-Kruger effect]]
* [[Emotional intelligence]]
* [[Game theory]]
* [[Fractal markets hypothesis]]
* [[Herd behaviour]]
* [[Impostor syndrome]]
* [[Irrational]]
* [[Metaeconomics]]
* [[Neuroeconomics]]
* [[Santa Claus rally]]
* [[Technical analysis]]


In financial reporting, monetary items are amounts held - or to be received or paid - in a fixed or readily determinable amount of money.
Contrasted with 'non-monetary' items such as property, plant and equipment.
==See also==
*[[Arab Monetary Fund]]
*[[Committee for Economic and Monetary Affairs]]
*[[European Economic and Monetary Union]]
*[[Fiscal]]
*[[International Monetary and Financial System]] 
*[[International Monetary Fund]]  (IMF)
*[[International Monetary Market]]
*[[Modern Monetary Theory]]
*[[Monetary and Financial Conditions Index]]
*[[Monetary asset]]
*[[Monetary authority]]
*[[Monetary base]]
*[[Monetary financial institution]]  (MFI)
*[[Monetary items]]
*[[Monetary liability]]
*[[Monetary/non-monetary method]]
*[[Monetary policy]]
*[[Monetary Policy Committee]]  (MPC)
*[[Monetary Policy Report]] 
*[[Monetary policy space]]
*[[Monetary stability]]
*[[Monetary union]]
*[[Money]]
*[[Nominal]]
*[[Non-monetary items]]
*[[Non-standard monetary policy]]
*[[Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum]]
*[[Outright Monetary Transactions]]
* [[Real]]
*[[Sterling Monetary Framework]]  (SMF)
*[[Unconventional monetary policy]]
*[[West African Monetary Zone]]
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[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]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Latest revision as of 20:21, 25 March 2023

1.

Relating to money, particularly the supply of, and confidence in, the official central currency.

Government monetary policies are often contrasted with, or combined with, fiscal policies.


2. Financial reporting.

In financial reporting, monetary items are amounts held - or to be received or paid - in a fixed or readily determinable amount of money.

Contrasted with 'non-monetary' items such as property, plant and equipment.


See also