Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) was founded in 1973, initially as a clearing house for five listed markets for equity options. Prior to its establishment, due to a great deal of encouragement from the SEC, the Chicago Board Options Exchange had its clearing entity, the CBOE Clearing Corporation. [citation needed]
Options Clearing Corporation's (OCC) Options Symbology Initiative (OSI) mandated an industry-wide change to a new option symbol structure, resulting in option symbols 21 characters in length. March 2010 - May 2010 was the symbol consolidation period in which all outgoing option roots will be replaced with the underlying stock symbol. [1]
Prior to 2010, [1] standard equity option naming convention in North America, as used by the Options Clearing Corporation, was as follows: For example, an Apple Inc AAPL.O call option that would have expired in December 2007 at a $122.50 strike price would be displayed as APVLZ in old convention (AAPL071222C00122500 in new convention).
OneChicago was a US-based all-electronic futures exchange with headquarters in Chicago, Illinois. [4] The exchange offered approximately 12,509 single-stock futures (SSF) products [5] with names such as IBM, Apple and Google.
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Options Clearing Corporation; S. Shanghai Clearing House; SIX Swiss Exchange
Electronic ticker monitor display, showing the bid and offer status of securities. Securities market participants in the United States include corporations and governments issuing securities, persons and corporations buying and selling a security, the broker-dealers and exchanges which facilitate such trading, banks which safe keep assets, and regulators who monitor the markets' activities.
Optical Cable Corporation, a manufacturer of fiber optic and copper datacom cabling and connectivity products; Options Clearing Corporation, a clearing organization; Orange County Choppers, a custom motorcycle manufacturer; Organic composition of capital, a theory in Marxian economics; Osborne Computer Corporation, an American computer company
The Clearing House Payments Company (also known as PayCo), which operates the Clearing House Interbank Payments System (CHIPS) in the U.S. CME Clearing , ICE Clear Credit , and the Options Clearing Corporation , involved in derivatives clearing in the U.S.