Fungible
Fungible /fʌnʤəbl/ (adj.)
In all respects other than its most basic ontology, identical. For all intents and purposes, entirely interchangeable, but not the same thing. In the context of securities, being of the same issue, and having the same securities identification number. Distinct instruments that are nevertheless indistinguishable in legal and economic terms. The same, but not, if you see, the same.
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There are great divides in the bedeviling pedantry of law, between things that are the same but somehow, over a period of time, different; things that are different but nonetheless at a given point in time, the same; and — in recent days — things that don’t exist at all, but being unique representations of that nothing on a blockchain, in a Cartesian sense do exist, but weakly, and only along the very single fragile dimension that they are ontologically distinct. Amendment describes that first class; fungibility the second; credulous gulls the third.
So, with feeling:
- Fungible: Individual securities comprising part of a single series (and having a the same ISIN are fungible with each other.
- Not fungible: Securities from different series, even if issued by the same issuer, are not fungible with each other.
- Non-fungible: Tokenised representations of meritless gobbets of intellectual property (Banksy prints, memes, tweets etc.) that are created on a blockchain and sold to stupids are unique, by design, representations of the empty set. This picture with the lens cap on is different from that picture with the lens cap on. A non-
Definition
Assets are fungible where their nature allows them to be replaced in whole or in part with other assets of a like nature. However, it applies only to the equivalence of each unit of a commodity with other units of the same commodity. Fungibility does not describe or relate to any exchange of one commodity for some other, different commodity.
Examples
For example shares in a company can be described as fungible as you can replace those shares with other equivalent shares in the same company. However, shares of an “equivalent” value in another company would not be considered a valid replacement.
Money can also be considered a fungible asset. If you borrow £10 from someone, you do not need to give the same £10 note back. You could give that person another £10 note, or two £5 notes, or any combination of coins that add up to £10 (as long as they are happy to accept that many coppers!)
“Equivalent” and “fungible”: la même chose
Note: in financial markets speak, “equivalent” means fungible. It doesn’t mean “somewhat like". Go see our “equivalent” article for more.