Template:M summ Equity Derivatives 1: Difference between revisions

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This is dreadful, leaden literature — but everyone has sort of put up with it, and got used to it. They were meant to be superseded, in 2011, by the [[2011 Equity Derivatives Definitions]], thrillingly written by a squadron of [[chatbot]]s from [[Linklaters]] in bang-up-to-date, state-of-the-art, super duper hi-tech [[Financial products Markup Language]], but — well, every one still uses the stupid old 2002 versions. The [[JC]] being in the first rank a pragmatist, you will find little information here about the newer booklet — other than the odd wry remark about the [[Hindenburg]], and the mortal scarring to those poor folk at [[Linklaters]] who wrote the damn things, but plenty about the ghastly old {{2002equitydefs}} — a whole [[Equity Derivatives Anatomy|anatomy]] dedicated to that — seeing as that is what everyone still uses.
This is dreadful, leaden literature — but everyone has sort of put up with it, and got used to it. They were meant to be superseded, in 2011, by the [[2011 Equity Derivatives Definitions]], thrillingly written by a squadron of [[chatbot]]s from [[Linklaters]] in bang-up-to-date, state-of-the-art, super duper hi-tech [[Financial products Markup Language]], but — well, every one still uses the stupid old 2002 versions. The [[JC]] being in the first rank a pragmatist, you will find little information here about the newer booklet — other than the odd wry remark about the [[Hindenburg]], and the mortal scarring to those poor folk at [[Linklaters]] who wrote the damn things, but plenty about the ghastly old {{2002equitydefs}} — a whole [[Equity Derivatives Anatomy|anatomy]] dedicated to that — seeing as that is what everyone still uses.
In any case bunch these definitions into the following subgroups:
*{{eqderivprov|Transaction}}s — Sections {{eqderivprov|1.1}} - {{eqderivprov|1.12}}
*{{eqderivprov|Underliers}} — Sections {{eqderivprov|1.13}} - {{eqderivprov|1.16}}
*{{eqderivprov|Trade Details}} — Sections {{eqderivprov|1.17}} - {{eqderivprov|1.24}}
*{{eqderivprov|Exchanges,  Clearing Systems and Currencies}} — Sections {{eqderivprov|1.25}} - {{eqderivprov|1.37}}
*{{eqderivprov|Trade Features}} — Sections {{eqderivprov|1.38}} - {{eqderivprov|1.41}}
*{{eqderivprov|Knock-ins and Knock-outs }} — Sections {{eqderivprov|1.42}} - {{eqderivprov|1.51}}

Revision as of 09:06, 19 May 2022

This is dreadful, leaden literature — but everyone has sort of put up with it, and got used to it. They were meant to be superseded, in 2011, by the 2011 Equity Derivatives Definitions, thrillingly written by a squadron of chatbots from Linklaters in bang-up-to-date, state-of-the-art, super duper hi-tech Financial products Markup Language, but — well, every one still uses the stupid old 2002 versions. The JC being in the first rank a pragmatist, you will find little information here about the newer booklet — other than the odd wry remark about the Hindenburg, and the mortal scarring to those poor folk at Linklaters who wrote the damn things, but plenty about the ghastly old 2002 ISDA Equity Derivatives Definitions — a whole anatomy dedicated to that — seeing as that is what everyone still uses.