Commodity index funds are where the assets of the funds are invested in financial instruments (tradeable financial assets such as shares or cash) that are linked to a commodity index like Dow Jones AIG. You can invest in the fund which operates by buying and selling commodity futures, but not the index.
Commodities are services and goods. Soft commodities are goods that are grown, hard commodities are goods that are mined. A futures is a contract to buy commodities or financial instrument set in certain time in the future. These contracts are traded.
The term "commodities trading" basically means that things are being traded instead of stocks. The things that are often traded are in goods, like food. Typically, as supply goes down, demand goes up, and so does price.
another term for gross domestic product
Fixed capital is something that is need for long term ...working capital is the capital or funds for managing and carrying out day to day operations. Apart from this a important point to note is that usually fixed assets or long term assets of the company are bought from fixed capital. Buying short term current assets from funds for long term would be illogical.
The goods consumers can buy an it helps to analyzed
Index (plural indices).
Index case
The meaning of the term 'chargebacks' is usually when a customer get a return of their funds which is normally done by the customers own bank. It can also be used if there has been fraudulent use on your account.
EBIT Return on long term funds = ------------------- x 100 Long term funds
Commodities are services and goods. Soft commodities are goods that are grown, hard commodities are goods that are mined. A futures is a contract to buy commodities or financial instrument set in certain time in the future. These contracts are traded.
An Index Fund is usually a mutual fund that invest in stocks that make up a specific index (i.e. S&P 500). Index funds were made big during the seventies by John Bogle, founder of the Vanguard Group, who created the first index fund for retail investors. Index funds eliminate the risk of managers who may make bad decisions, and lower cost or research that would further hinder the long-term performance of the fund. By owning the index, you receive the earnings of the who market which is more predictable over long term periods than own small segments of the market. It is not to say that more "active" strategies can not outperform this "passive" strategy, but research has shown that over long term periods very few have beat the industry average. Exchange Traded funds (the close cousin to Mutual funds) can also follow and index, and are oftens used interchangeably. ---- In simple words, it is a mutual fund that buys stocks that mirrors the performance of the whole stock market. The stocks that are included in this list are carefully chosen (such as the list of 500 stocks chosen by S&P Index committee) and, usually, every sector or industry is represented
Many forms of MITTS (Market Index Target Term Securities) are traded on the stock exchanges. They are essentially index funds tied to the performance of stock or bond price indexes. They offer a limited return in exchange for the safety of principal.
A somewhat conservate investor who is looking for stable companies for long term appreciation gain. Little risk with smaller but consistant returns. Investing in the top mutual funds, index-funds, and bluechip stocks and bonds has been the typical mix.
-Income Funds These funds focus on generating an income stream with low risk of capital loss. tend to be heavily weighted in cash and fixed interest type investments. - Growth Funds These funds focus on long term capital growth. tend to be heavily weighted in property securities, Australian shares, international shares or all three.-Single sector Funds Single sector funds invest in just one asset class-Diversified Funds These funds tend to diversify across a number of asset classes.-Index Funds These funds aim to achieve performance returns broadly in line with a selected market index (e.g. the ASX Top 100).-Active Funds These funds are actively managed and aim to outperform a particular index (for example outperform the returns of the S&P ASX Top 100).-Platforms This isn't a managed fund, but an administrative structure which allows you to invest in a broad range of investments such as managed funds, master trusts, direct shares and insurance products.-Multi-manager funds -Rather than investing directly in shares, cash or fixed interest, the fund invests in a selection of other managed funds.
Borrowing funds at short term and lending the funds obtained at longer term.
consumer price index
The common abbreviation for the term "sensitive index" is "Sensex." It is the stock market index of the Bombay Stock Exchange in India, comprising a select group of top companies.