Margin and Queuing: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Expand.)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
(Identify risk management context.)
 
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1. ''Accounting''.  
''Risk management''.


Profit margin measures the surplus of revenues over relevant costs, often expressed as a percentage.
Queuing is a risk management arrangement whereby transfer orders are held pending by the originator/deliverer or by the system until sufficient cover is available on the originator’s/deliverer’s clearing account or under the limits set against the payor.  


 
In some cases, cover may include unused credit lines or available collateral.
2. ''Banking''.
 
Net interest margin (NIM).
 
 
3. ''Bank lending''.
 
Lending margin is a percentage amount added to a market reference rate, to calculate the total rate of interest payable by a borrower.
 
 
4. ''Derivatives markets''.
 
Margin is a refundable cash deposit payable by market participants to protect other participants in the market against the risk of a default.
 
 
5. ''Financing''.
 
An amount built in to an interest rate or discount rate charged to a client to cover risk and a level of profit for the finance provider.
 
 
6. ''Secured lending''.
 
An amount deducted from the value of an asset used as collateral, to calculate the maximum amount of any loan to be secured against the asset.
 
Also known as a 'haircut'.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Caps]]
* [[Collateral]]
* [[Collateral]]
* [[Futures]]
* [[Credit line]]
* [[Haircut]]
* [[Gridlock]]
* [[Initial margin]]
* [[Risk management]]
* [[Maintenance margin]]
 
* [[Margin call]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
* [[Margin risk]]
* [[NII]]
* [[NIM]]
* [[Stepped margin]]
* [[Tax sparing]]
* [[Variation margin]]
* [[WGMR]]

Latest revision as of 14:44, 18 August 2018

Risk management.

Queuing is a risk management arrangement whereby transfer orders are held pending by the originator/deliverer or by the system until sufficient cover is available on the originator’s/deliverer’s clearing account or under the limits set against the payor.

In some cases, cover may include unused credit lines or available collateral.


See also