Template:Gmsla 11.4 summ: Difference between revisions

From The Jolly Contrarian
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Created page with "{{subst:M summ GMSLA 11.4}}"
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[11.4 - GMSLA Provision|How]] you value a [[mini close-out]] where a party can’t redeliver a stock (because it's been suspended or something). It boils down to how you value either leg of the trade.
How you value a [[mini close-out]] where a party can’t redeliver a stock (because it’s been suspended or something). It boils down to how you value either leg of the trade.


If the {{gmslaprov|Non-Defaulting Party}} has actually sold securities {{gmslaprov|equivalent}} to those it lent, in can treat the price it got as the {{gmslaprov|Default Market Value}}. If it hasn’t, it must get two or more reference [[market maker]] [[quotation]]s and average those.
If the {{{{{1}}}|Non-Defaulting Party}} has actually sold securities {{gmslaprov|equivalent}} to those it lent, in can treat the price it got as the {{{{{1}}}|Default Market Value}}. If it hasn’t, it must get two or more reference [[market maker]] [[quotation]]s and average those.


{{buy-in}}
{{buy-in|{{{1}}}}}

Revision as of 10:48, 7 June 2021

How you value a mini close-out where a party can’t redeliver a stock (because it’s been suspended or something). It boils down to how you value either leg of the trade.

If the {{{{{1}}}|Non-Defaulting Party}} has actually sold securities equivalent to those it lent, in can treat the price it got as the {{{{{1}}}|Default Market Value}}. If it hasn’t, it must get two or more reference market maker quotations and average those.

  1. redirectGmsla deliverable and receivable securities capsule