Deutscher rahmenvertrag: Difference between revisions

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{{drvfanat|}}The ''[[deutscher rahmenvertrag]]'' is the [[Germany|German]] {{tag|master agreement}}, also known as the “[[DRV]]”<ref>Though careful: it is not to be confused with the ''Deutscher Radfahrer-Verband'', the cycling unit in the sports office of a certain, ahhh, earlier political regime in Germany.</ref> or just the plain old “[[rahmenvertrag]]” (literally “framework agreement”). It is published by [[Bundesverband deutscher Banken]] and comes in at least three varieties, all governed by {{tag|German law}}. I know very little about them, other than their names, and that they are used for swaps, repo and stock lending:
{{a|drvf|}}The ''[[deutscher rahmenvertrag]]'' is the [[Germany|German]] {{tag|master agreement}}, also known as the “[[DRV]]”<ref>Though careful: it is not to be confused with the ''Deutscher Radfahrer-Verband'', the cycling unit in the sports office of a certain, ahhh, earlier political regime in Germany.</ref> or just the plain old “[[rahmenvertrag]]” (literally “framework agreement”). It is published by [[Bundesverband deutscher Banken]] and comes in at least three varieties, all governed by {{tag|German law}}. I know very little about them, other than their names, and that they are used for swaps, repo and stock lending:


*[[Deutscher Rahmenvertrag für Finanztermingeschäfte]] ({{tag|Derivatives}} and {{tag|Futures}})
*[[Deutscher Rahmenvertrag für Finanztermingeschäfte]] ({{tag|Derivatives}} and {{tag|Futures}})

Revision as of 16:30, 20 January 2020

DRV for Derivatives and Futures Anatomy™
This is an informal, non-binding and, by the looks, not massively idiomatic translation of the Deutscher Rahmenvertrag für Finanztermingeschäfte. So treat it, and the JC's summary of and uninformed musings about it, with even more caution than normal.


Resources: Bankenverbad | DRV-F · (wikitext) · (nutshell wikitext)
Navigation: Table of contents | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 (being the Elections)

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The deutscher rahmenvertrag is the German master agreement, also known as the “DRV[1] or just the plain old “rahmenvertrag” (literally “framework agreement”). It is published by Bundesverband deutscher Banken and comes in at least three varieties, all governed by German law. I know very little about them, other than their names, and that they are used for swaps, repo and stock lending:

The DRV has a collateral annex the Besicherungsanhang für Variation Margin which, charmingly, translates as “safety attachment”.

References

  1. Though careful: it is not to be confused with the Deutscher Radfahrer-Verband, the cycling unit in the sports office of a certain, ahhh, earlier political regime in Germany.