Rule 14 d


 

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Rule 14 d

Often used in risk arbitrage. Regulations and restrictions covering public tender offers and related disclosure requirements.



Rule 14 d

Similar Matches

Uptick rule

Uptick rule

SEC rule that selling SEC is allowed only on an SEC.


The rule of twenty

The rule of twenty

An investing axiom that says the domestic inflation rate plus the P/E ratio of the stock market as a whole should equal 20.If the sum of those two figures is less than 20, the market is cheap; if more, it's expensive.


Rule of 72

Rule of 72

An arithmetic equation used to calculate how many years it would take for an investment to double in value, given knowledge of its annual rate of return and reinvestment (compounding) of income.The rule says that if you divide the compound growth rate of any investment into 72, you get the approximate number of years it takes to double your money.BZW research shows that over the past 70 years the average return from shares was 12% p.a., from gilts it was 6% and from cash deposits it was 2%. Based on these figures, the Rule of 72 indicates:Shares: you double your money in 6 yearsGilts: you double your money in 12 yearsCash deposits: you double your money in 36 yearsOf course, in real life the performance of your investments will vary according to which particular investment you choose and the timing of your entry and exit.


Three steps and a stumble rule

Three steps and a stumble rule

A rule predicting that stock and bond prices will fall following three increases in the discount rate by the Federal Reserve. This is a result of increased costs of borrowing for companies and the increased attractiveness of money market funds and CDs over stocks and bonds as a result of the higher interest rates.


Tick test rules

Tick test rules

SEC-imposed restrictions on when a SEC may be SEC, intended to prevent SEC from destabilizing the price of a SEC when the SEC is falling. A short sale can be made only when either (1) the sale price of the particular SEC is higher than the last SEC price (referred to as an SEC trade) or (2) if there is no change in the last SEC price of the particular stock, the previous trade price must be higher than the trade price that preceded it (referred to as a SEC).


Further Suggestions

Prudent man rule
One share one vote rule
Rule 144a
Quote rule
Variance rule
rule of 113
Rules of origin
20% cushion rule
Rule of 72
48 hour rule
Origin rule
Rule 144
Nine bond rule
Allocation of income rules
Rule of law
Rule lOb 5
Rule 415
prudent man rule
Rules of fair practice
Administrative pricing rules
Income exclusion rule
Net present value rule
Discounted payback period rule
Thirty day wash rule
Friedman rule


 
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