Home
E-Mail
Latest

TRS Financial Glossary

What is it? Trading sell

Finance Term Definition Added By: Sophia

The TRS definition has been viewed 4776 Time(s)!




Send To Friends!

If you'd like to send the TRS definition to yourself or to your friends/colleagues, just enter the e-mail addresses in the boxes below -





We hope you now understand the meaning of TRS. If you need any more information on this term, please don't hesitate to contact us.

Other Similar Finance Terms:

Financial Term Dow Jones Industrial Average is Widely quoted stock index composed of 30 blue-chip stocks. The value of this index, which does not include dividends, is calculated daily.

Financial Term Condominium is A building or development with individually-owned apartments or houses. The owner has a deed, and possibly a mortgage, on the unit. The owner holds a common or joint ownership in all common areas and facilities that serve the project; land, roofs, hallways, entrance, elevators, etc.

Financial Term Fund Supermarkets is Mutual fund supermarkets, the likes of Charles Schwab and Fidelity Investments, are financial services companies that sponsor mutual funds, i.e., they provide investors with easy access to a broad range of mutual funds.

Financial Term Discount Bond is A bond that sells at value below par value.

Financial Term duration is A sophisticated measure of the average timing of cash flows from an asset or a liability or from an asset portfolio or a liability portfolio. Essentially, duration is a more accurate measure of maturity because it reflects the timing of cash flows from periodic interest and/or principal payments in addition to the cash flows represented by the funds transferred at maturity. Duration is computed by summing the present values of all of the future cash flows after multiplying each by the time until receipt, and then dividing that product by the sum of the present value of the future cash flows without weighting them for the time of receipt. One way to view duration is as the balancing point for a series of cash flows. One author described it as that sweet spot or balancing point somewhere between the day a position is acquired and the day that it matures, where the return remains practically unchanged no matter what happens to interest rates.