Business Dictionary
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An alphabetical listing of General terms and items. |
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The result when not all sectors of an economy can grow at the same rate.
Dividing a company into separate constituent companies, often to sell all or some of them after a takeover.
A study designed to assess the extent to which the variability in an outcome variable is caused by uncertainty at the time of estimating the input parameters of the study.
Used to describe an asset that is available for purchase at a price lower than it is worth.
To assume risk, especially for a new issue or an insurance policy
A person or organization that buys an issue from a corporation and sells it to investors
Income received from sources other than employment
A collection of securities traded together as one item
The smallest amount that can be bought or sold of a share of stock, or a contract included in an option
Profile of the United Kingdom of Great Britain or the UK in Europe.
Information on the north American country with one of the largest economies in the world.
Full responsibility for the obligations of a general partnership
Money borrowed without supplying collateral
Products that are usually purchased due to adversity rather than desire. For example, coffins, crutches, and medicine are all unsought goods. Another form of unsought goods are products such as life insurance and encyclopedias. They are products that the consumer seldom goes out looking for, therefore, a constant, aggressive selling process is required.
To sell customers a higher-priced version of a product they have bought previously
The portion of a line of credit that is no longer available
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