Expiration Time - Equity Derivatives Provision: Difference between revisions

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{{eqderivanat|3.1(e)}}
{{eqderivanat|3.1(e)}}
As will be obvious when you stop to think about it, an {{eqderivprov|Expiration Time}}<ref>Couldn’t they have called it an ''expiry time'', by the way?</ref> is only germane for {{eqderivprov|Option Transaction}}s, which are prone to ''expire'' in a way that  {{eqderivprov|Swap Transaction}}s ''terminate'' (if indeed they even do that, he says, thinking wistfully of the [[synthetic equity swap]]s world.
As will be obvious when you stop to think about it, an {{eqderivprov|Expiration Time}}<ref>Couldn’t they have called it an ''expiry time'', by the way?</ref> is only germane for {{eqderivprov|Option Transaction}}s, which are prone to ''expire'' in a way that  {{eqderivprov|Swap Transaction}}s ''terminate'' (if indeed they even do that, he says, thinking wistfully of the [[synthetic equity swap]]s world.
{{ref}}

Revision as of 17:21, 6 October 2019

Template:Eqderivanat As will be obvious when you stop to think about it, an Expiration Time[1] is only germane for Option Transactions, which are prone to expire in a way that Swap Transactions terminate (if indeed they even do that, he says, thinking wistfully of the synthetic equity swaps world.

References

  1. Couldn’t they have called it an expiry time, by the way?