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  2. Clean price - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clean_price

    Traders tend to think of bonds in terms of their clean prices. Clean prices are more stable over time than dirty prices. When clean prices change, it is for an economic reason such as a change in interest rates or the bond issuer's credit quality. Dirty prices change day to day depending on the date relative to the coupon payment dates, as well ...

  3. Sustainability Bonds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainability_Bonds

    Sustainability Bonds are fixed-income financial instruments where the proceeds will be exclusively used to finance or re-finance a combination of Green and Social Projects and which are aligned with the four core components of the International Capital Market Association (ICMA) Green Bonds Principles and Social Bonds principles.

  4. Dirty price - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirty_price

    The bonds are purchased from the market at $985.50. Given that $2.00 pays the accrued interest, the remainder ($983.50) represents the underlying value of the bonds. The following table illustrates the values of these terms. The market convention for corporate bond prices assigns a quoted (clean price) of $983.50.

  5. Economics terminology that differs from common usage

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics_terminology_that...

    While "marginal" in common usage tends to mean tangential, implying limited importance, in economics "marginal" means "incremental". For example, the marginal propensity to consume refers to the incremental tendency to spend income on consumer goods: the fraction of any additional income which is spent on additional consumption (or conversely ...

  6. Green bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_bond

    Apple, for example, became the first tech company to issue a green bond in 2016, and Poland became the first sovereign country to issue a green bond at the end of 2016. [29] In 2021, the European Investment Bank was the leading issuer of green and sustainability bonds among multilateral development banks, with sustainability funding reaching ...

  7. What does clean energy economic development mean in NC ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/does-clean-energy-economic...

    The economic impact analysis from E2 looked at NC factories, projects announced in the year after the Inflation Reduction Act passed. What does clean energy economic development mean in NC ...

  8. How lower rates from the Fed impact bond investors - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/lower-rates-fed-impact-bond...

    Monetary policy — specifically, actions by the Fed to tame inflation or stimulate economic growth — has a direct influence on interest rates and, therefore, bond prices. When interest rates ...

  9. Feed-in tariff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feed-in_tariff

    A feed-in tariff (FIT, FiT, standard offer contract, [1] advanced renewable tariff, [2] or renewable energy payments [3]) is a policy mechanism designed to accelerate investment in renewable energy technologies by offering long-term contracts to renewable energy producers.