Bonds are essentially "IOUs" issued by entities to raise capital. When you buy a bond, you are lending money to the issuer for a set period in exchange for regular interest payments (coupons) and the return of your principal at maturity.
Posts tagged as “treasury”
Token-based governance is a decentralized decision-making framework where the authority to influence a project’s direction is distributed among holders of a specific digital asset, typically…
Calculating the Risk-Adjusted Rate of Return involves using specific metrics to evaluate an investment's performance relative to the level of risk taken.
The primary difference between the 10-Year Treasury Note and the 30-Year Treasury Bond is their term-to-maturity.
The 0x Protocol is an open-source, decentralized exchange infrastructure that allows for the peer-to-peer exchange of tokenized assets, primarily on the Ethereum blockchain and other EVM-compatible chains.
Its primary aim is to ensure the company has the necessary liquidity to meet its obligations, optimize cash flows, manage financial risks, and ultimately support its overall financial stability and growth objectives.
A Decentralized Autonomous Organization (DAO) is an organization structured and managed by rules encoded in computer programs, known as smart contracts, operating on a blockchain.
Quantitative finance—often referred to as “quant finance”—has become a cornerstone of modern markets, blending mathematics, statistics, and computer science with traditional financial theory.
The global savings glut is a macroeconomic theory that posits that the world has experienced a significant surplus of desired savings over desired investment, leading to a decline in global real interest rates and contributing to major economic imbalances.
Currency assets are a type of financial asset that holds a fixed value in terms of a specific currency. They are also known as "monetary assets."
Economic institutions are the formal and informal rules, laws, and organizations that govern economic activity within a society.
Money markets are a component of the financial system that provides short-term funding for a period of a year or less.
Financial management is the strategic planning, organizing, directing, and controlling of financial undertakings in an organization or institute.